Permissions
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Permissions can be used to control what system resources the Node.js process has access to or what actions the process can take with those resources.
- Process-based permissions control the Node.js process's access to resources. The resource can be entirely allowed or denied, or actions related to it can be controlled. For example, file system reads can be allowed while denying writes. This feature does not protect against malicious code. According to the Node.js Security Policy, Node.js trusts any code it is asked to run.
The permission model implements a "seat belt" approach, which prevents trusted code from unintentionally changing files or using resources that access has not explicitly been granted to. It does not provide security guarantees in the presence of malicious code. Malicious code can bypass the permission model and execute arbitrary code without the restrictions imposed by the permission model.
If you find a potential security vulnerability, please refer to our Security Policy.
Permission Model
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This feature is no longer experimental.
The Node.js Permission Model is a mechanism for restricting access to specific resources during execution. The API exists behind a flag --permission which when enabled, will restrict access to all available permissions.
The available permissions are documented by the --permission flag.
When starting Node.js with --permission, the ability to access the file system through the fs module, access the network, spawn processes, use node:worker_threads, use native addons, use WASI, and enable the runtime inspector will be restricted (the listener for SIGUSR1 won't be created).
$ node --permission index.js
Error: Access to this API has been restricted
at node:internal/main/run_main_module:23:47 {
code: 'ERR_ACCESS_DENIED',
permission: 'FileSystemRead',
resource: '/home/user/index.js'
}
Allowing access to spawning a process and creating worker threads can be done using the --allow-child-process and --allow-worker respectively.
To allow network access, use --allow-net and for allowing native addons when using permission model, use the --allow-addons flag. For WASI, use the --allow-wasi flag.
When enabling the Permission Model through the --permission flag a new property permission is added to the process object. This property contains one function:
permission.has(scope, reference?)API call to check permissions at runtime (permission.has())
process.permission.has('fs.write'); // true
process.permission.has('fs.write', '/home/rafaelgss/protected-folder'); // true
process.permission.has('fs.read'); // true
process.permission.has('fs.read', '/home/rafaelgss/protected-folder'); // false
The Permission Model, by default, restricts access to the file system through the node:fs module. It does not guarantee that users will not be able to access the file system through other means, such as through the node:sqlite module.
To allow access to the file system, use the --allow-fs-read and --allow-fs-write flags:
$ node --permission --allow-fs-read=* --allow-fs-write=* index.js
Hello world!
By default the entrypoints of your application are included in the allowed file system read list. For example:
$ node --permission index.js
index.jswill be included in the allowed file system read list
$ node -r /path/to/custom-require.js --permission index.js.
/path/to/custom-require.jswill be included in the allowed file system read list.index.jswill be included in the allowed file system read list.
The valid arguments for both flags are:
*- To allow allFileSystemReadorFileSystemWriteoperations, respectively.- Relative paths to the current working directory.
- Absolute paths.
Example:
--allow-fs-read=*- It will allow allFileSystemReadoperations.--allow-fs-write=*- It will allow allFileSystemWriteoperations.--allow-fs-write=/tmp/- It will allowFileSystemWriteaccess to the/tmp/folder.--allow-fs-read=/tmp/ --allow-fs-read=/home/.gitignore- It allowsFileSystemReadaccess to the/tmp/folder and the/home/.gitignorepath.
Wildcards are supported too:
--allow-fs-read=/home/test*will allow read access to everything that matches the wildcard. e.g:/home/test/file1or/home/test2
After passing a wildcard character (*) all subsequent characters will be ignored. For example: /home/*.js will work similar to /home/*.
When the permission model is initialized, it will automatically add a wildcard (*) if the specified directory exists. For example, if /home/test/files exists, it will be treated as /home/test/files/*. However, if the directory does not exist, the wildcard will not be added, and access will be limited to /home/test/files. If you want to allow access to a folder that does not exist yet, make sure to explicitly include the wildcard: /my-path/folder-do-not-exist/*.
If you're using npx to execute a Node.js script, you can enable the Permission Model by passing the --node-options flag. For example:
npx --node-options="--permission" package-name
This sets the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable for all Node.js processes spawned by npx, without affecting the npx process itself.
FileSystemRead Error with npx
The above command will likely throw a FileSystemRead invalid access error because Node.js requires file system read access to locate and execute the package. To avoid this:
Using a Globally Installed Package Grant read access to the global
node_modulesdirectory by running:npx --node-options="--permission --allow-fs-read=$(npm prefix -g)" package-nameUsing the
npxCache If you are installing the package temporarily or relying on thenpxcache, grant read access to the npm cache directory:npx --node-options="--permission --allow-fs-read=$(npm config get cache)" package-name
Any arguments you would normally pass to node (e.g., --allow-* flags) can also be passed through the --node-options flag. This flexibility makes it easy to configure permissions as needed when using npx.
There are constraints you need to know before using this system:
- The model does not inherit to a worker thread.
- When using the Permission Model the following features will be restricted:
- Native modules
- Network
- Child process
- Worker Threads
- Inspector protocol
- File system access
- WASI
- The Permission Model is initialized after the Node.js environment is set up. However, certain flags such as
--env-fileor--openssl-configare designed to read files before environment initialization. As a result, such flags are not subject to the rules of the Permission Model. The same applies for V8 flags that can be set via runtime throughv8.setFlagsFromString. - OpenSSL engines cannot be requested at runtime when the Permission Model is enabled, affecting the built-in crypto, https, and tls modules.
- Run-Time Loadable Extensions cannot be loaded when the Permission Model is enabled, affecting the sqlite module.
- Using existing file descriptors via the
node:fsmodule bypasses the Permission Model.
- Symbolic links will be followed even to locations outside of the set of paths that access has been granted to. Relative symbolic links may allow access to arbitrary files and directories. When starting applications with the permission model enabled, you must ensure that no paths to which access has been granted contain relative symbolic links.