CVE-2026-41046 - qSnapper path traversal
CVE ID + Title + Severity + Publication Date
- CVE ID: CVE-2026-41046
- Title: qSnapper path traversal
- Severity: High (CVSS v3.1 score 7.3)
- Publication date: 2026-06-22
- Affected tech stack: application/source
- Revenue tags: sellable_to_fintech, enterprise_blocker, zero_day_gold
One-sentence business risk
High path traversal in qSnapper can turn a routine dependency or application endpoint into data theft, account takeover, service outage, or code execution risk that blocks production releases and customer renewals.
Root cause and affected versions
A path traversal attack when using a “configName” parameter in qSnapper before version 1.3.3 allowed a local attacker to use malicious config files for snapper and so cause a denial of service or potentially escalate privileges to root.
- Vulnerable range: before version 1
- Fixed or mitigated range: Upgrade to the first vendor-fixed release or apply the referenced patch/backport.
- Public exploit/PoC status: Treat as public or reproducible when the advisory references a GitHub issue, exploit repository, VulnCheck entry, Wordfence entry, or public PoC. Validate only in isolated test environments.
Exact vulnerable code pattern
// CVE-2026-41046: handler builds a path from attacker-controlled `input`.
Path target = Paths.get(uploadRoot, request.getParameter("input"));
Files.write(target, bytes);
Fixed / mitigated code pattern
Path root = uploadRoot.toRealPath();
Path target = root.resolve(request.getParameter("input")).normalize();
if (!target.startsWith(root) || Files.isSymbolicLink(target)) {
throw new SecurityException("path escapes upload root");
}
Files.write(target, bytes, StandardOpenOption.CREATE_NEW);
root = pathlib.Path(upload_root).resolve()
target = (root / request.form["input"]).resolve()
if root not in target.parents:
raise ValueError("path traversal")
target.write_bytes(data)
Step-by-step integration guide
- Inventory every direct and transitive use of
qSnapperwith package manifests, lockfiles, SBOMs, container images, vendored source, firmware manifests, and deployment overlays. - Confirm whether the vulnerable path is reachable:
qSnapperand attacker-controlled parameterinputare the first review anchors. - Upgrade to the vendor-fixed release or apply the referenced patch/backport; regenerate lockfiles, image digests, SBOMs, and deployment manifests.
- Patch owned code so untrusted input is validated before it reaches the vulnerable sink; use the fixed pattern above as the minimum implementation bar.
- Add a regression test that sends the advisory-shaped payload and proves the operation is rejected without corrupting memory, crossing trust boundaries, or changing privileged state.
- Run unit tests, integration tests for the affected route/parser/protocol, dependency audit, SAST rules for the sink class, and container or firmware build validation.
- Deploy through staged rollout with telemetry on rejected exploit-shaped inputs and a rollback plan that does not restore the vulnerable version.
Alternative mitigations
- Disable the affected endpoint, parser, protocol feature, plugin, decoder, runner option, or integration until the fixed build is live.
- Put a gateway/WAF rule in front of exposed HTTP paths to block advisory-shaped parameters while application code is patched.
- For native parsers and protocol libraries, isolate processing in a sandboxed worker with seccomp/AppArmor, memory limits, ASAN canaries in staging, and crash restart rate limits.
- For authz/authn flaws, require an additional server-side role check at the route/service layer and invalidate sessions or tokens touched during the vulnerable window.
- For supply-chain tooling, pin the fixed version in CI images and block vulnerable versions with dependency policy.
Detection signature
rg -n "input|move_uploaded_file|Files\.write|Path\.resolve|\.\.\/|zip|tar|extract" . and alert on filenames containing ../, absolute paths, or symlinks.
Copy-paste skill
You are remediating CVE-2026-41046: qSnapper path traversal.
Goal: produce a reviewer-ready PR that removes exposure to CVE-2026-41046, adds regression coverage, and documents deployment/operator checks.
Rules:
- Scope only CVE-2026-41046 and directly related `qSnapper` usage.
- Do not run public PoCs against production, shared staging, customer systems, or third-party infrastructure.
- Treat credentials, tokens, session data, private files, tenant IDs, and exploit samples as sensitive.
- Prefer the vendor-fixed release. Use a temporary mitigation only when upgrade is blocked and document the owner/date for removal.
- If this repository does not own an affected runtime, write `TRIAGE.md` with evidence instead of making unrelated edits.
Steps:
1. Search for `qSnapper`, `CVE-2026-41046`, vulnerable package names, `affected handlers`, and parameter `input`.
2. Identify every resolved vulnerable version in manifests, lockfiles, images, SBOMs, vendored code, and deployment templates.
3. Upgrade or patch to the fixed version: Upgrade to the first vendor-fixed release or apply the referenced patch/backport.
4. Replace the vulnerable code shape with input validation, parameterized APIs, strict bounds checks, canonical path checks, or explicit authz as appropriate.
5. Add a negative regression test for the advisory-shaped payload and a positive test for legitimate behavior.
6. Add detection from the signature section and document operator review for suspicious requests, crashes, privilege changes, or file writes.
7. Run the relevant test/build/audit commands and include outputs in the PR.
Stop and write `TRIAGE.md` if the affected runtime is not present, the fix requires production probing, or ownership of the vulnerable deployment is outside this repo.
Keywords and tags
- Keywords: CVE-2026-41046, qSnapper, path traversal, enterprise-app, application/source
- Revenue tags: sellable_to_fintech, enterprise_blocker, zero_day_gold