Security Advisories (3)
CVE-2026-5080 (2026-04-30)

Dancer::Session::Abstract versions through 1.3522 for Perl generates session ids insecurely. The session id is generated from summing the character codepoints of the absolute pathname with the process id, the epoch time and calls to the built-in rand() function to return a number between 0 and 999-billion, and concatenating that result three times. The path name might be known or guessed by an attacker, especially for applications known to be written using Dancer with standard installation locations. The epoch time can be guessed by an attacker, and may be leaked in the HTTP header. The process id comes from a small set of numbers, and workers may have sequential process ids. The built-in rand() function is seeded with 32-bits and is considered unsuitable for security applications. Predictable session ids could allow an attacker to gain access to systems.

CVE-2012-5572 (2014-05-30)

CRLF injection vulnerability in the cookie method allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary HTTP headers and conduct HTTP response splitting attacks via a cookie name.

CVE-2011-1589 (2011-04-05)

Directory traversal vulnerability (Mojolicious report, but Dancer was vulnerable as well).

NAME

Dancer::Logger::Diag - Test::More diag() logging engine for Dancer

SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

This logging engine uses Test::More's diag() to output as TAP comments.

This is very useful in case you're writing a test and want to have logging messages as part of your TAP.

METHODS

init

This method is called when ->new() is called. It just loads Test::More lazily.

_log

Use Test::More's diag() to poutput the log message.

AUTHOR

Alexis Sukrieh

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2009-2010 Alexis Sukrieh.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.