Summary
Axios versions 1.7.0 through 1.15.x did not enforce configured request and response size limits when requests were sent with the fetch adapter. Applications that selected adapter: 'fetch', or ran in environments where axios resolved to the fetch adapter, could receive or send bodies larger than maxContentLength or maxBodyLength despite those limits being explicitly configured.
This can cause resource exhaustion in server-side usage when a malicious or compromised server returns an oversized response, when an attacker can supply a large data: URL, or when an application forwards attacker-controlled request bodies through axios while relying on maxBodyLength as a boundary.
Impact
The impact is availability-only. Affected applications may process, buffer, or transmit data beyond the configured limit, potentially exhausting memory, CPU, or network resources.
This does not affect axios’s default unlimited behaviour by itself: maxContentLength and maxBodyLength default to -1. The vulnerability exists when an application has configured finite limits and expects axios to enforce them.
Server-side runtimes are the primary concern. Browser impact is generally constrained by the browser process and browser fetch behavior, and should not be described as server process exhaustion.
Affected Functionality
Affected functionality includes requests using the built-in fetch adapter with finite maxContentLength or maxBodyLength values.
Relevant configurations include:
adapter: 'fetch'
adapter: ['fetch', ...] when fetch is selected
- environments where neither
xhr nor http is available and axios falls back to fetch
- custom fetch environments configured through
env.fetch
Unaffected functionality includes:
- Node.js default
http adapter enforcement
- versions before the fetch adapter was introduced
- configurations that do not rely on finite axios size limits
Technical Details
In vulnerable versions, lib/adapters/fetch.js destructured request config without maxContentLength or maxBodyLength. The adapter dispatched fetch() and then materialized the response through text(), arrayBuffer(), blob(), or related resolvers without checking the configured response limit.
The fix in e5540dc added:
maxContentLength and maxBodyLength reads in lib/adapters/fetch.js
- upfront
data: URL decoded-size checks
- outbound body-size checks before dispatch
Content-Length response pre-checks
- streaming response enforcement
- fallback checks for environments without
ReadableStream
- regression tests in
tests/unit/adapters/fetch.test.js
Proof of Concept of Attack
import http from 'node:http';
import axios from 'axios';
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
let received = 0;
req.on('data', chunk => {
received += chunk.length;
});
req.on('end', () => {
res.end(JSON.stringify({ received }));
});
});
await new Promise(resolve => server.listen(0, resolve));
const url = `http://127.0.0.1:${server.address().port}/`;
await axios.post(url, 'A'.repeat(2 * 1024 * 1024), {
adapter: 'fetch',
maxBodyLength: 1024
});
// Vulnerable versions succeed and the server receives 2097152 bytes.
// Fixed versions reject with ERR_BAD_REQUEST.
server.close();
Workarounds
Use the Node.js http adapter for server-side requests where finite size limits are security-relevant.
Validate or cap attacker-controlled request bodies before passing them to axios.
Reject or strictly allowlist attacker-controlled URL schemes, especially data: URLs, before calling axios.
Original Report
Summary
When Axios is used with adapter: 'fetch', configured body/response size limits are not enforced. This allows oversized uploads/downloads (including data: URLs) despite explicit limits, which can lead to memory/resource exhaustion in server-side usage.
Details
maxBodyLength and maxContentLength are not applied in the fetch adapter flow:
- lib/adapters/fetch.js (146-160): config destructuring does not include these controls.
- lib/adapters/fetch.js (220-234): request is dispatched with fetch() without request-size enforcement.
- lib/adapters/fetch.js (267-283): response is materialized via text(), arrayBuffer(), blob(), etc. without response-size checks.
By contrast, the HTTP adapter enforces both limits.
PoC
Environment:
- Axios main at commit f7a4ee2
- Node v24.2.0
Steps:
- Start an HTTP server that counts received bytes and echoes {received}.
- Send 2 MiB with:
- adapter: 'fetch'
- maxBodyLength: 1024
- Request a 4 KiB data: URL with:
- adapter: 'fetch'
- maxContentLength: 16
Expected secure behavior: both requests rejected.
Observed:
- Upload: success, server received 2097152
- data: response: success, length 4096
Impact
Type: DoS / resource exhaustion due to limit bypass.
Impacted: applications using Axios fetch adapter as a server-side security control boundary for untrusted request/response sizes.
References
Summary
Axios versions
1.7.0through1.15.xdid not enforce configured request and response size limits when requests were sent with thefetchadapter. Applications that selectedadapter: 'fetch', or ran in environments where axios resolved to the fetch adapter, could receive or send bodies larger thanmaxContentLengthormaxBodyLengthdespite those limits being explicitly configured.This can cause resource exhaustion in server-side usage when a malicious or compromised server returns an oversized response, when an attacker can supply a large
data:URL, or when an application forwards attacker-controlled request bodies through axios while relying onmaxBodyLengthas a boundary.Impact
The impact is availability-only. Affected applications may process, buffer, or transmit data beyond the configured limit, potentially exhausting memory, CPU, or network resources.
This does not affect axios’s default unlimited behaviour by itself:
maxContentLengthandmaxBodyLengthdefault to-1. The vulnerability exists when an application has configured finite limits and expects axios to enforce them.Server-side runtimes are the primary concern. Browser impact is generally constrained by the browser process and browser fetch behavior, and should not be described as server process exhaustion.
Affected Functionality
Affected functionality includes requests using the built-in
fetchadapter with finitemaxContentLengthormaxBodyLengthvalues.Relevant configurations include:
adapter: 'fetch'adapter: ['fetch', ...]whenfetchis selectedxhrnorhttpis available and axios falls back tofetchenv.fetchUnaffected functionality includes:
httpadapter enforcementTechnical Details
In vulnerable versions,
lib/adapters/fetch.jsdestructured request config withoutmaxContentLengthormaxBodyLength. The adapter dispatchedfetch()and then materialized the response throughtext(),arrayBuffer(),blob(), or related resolvers without checking the configured response limit.The fix in
e5540dcadded:maxContentLengthandmaxBodyLengthreads inlib/adapters/fetch.jsdata:URL decoded-size checksContent-Lengthresponse pre-checksReadableStreamtests/unit/adapters/fetch.test.jsProof of Concept of Attack
Workarounds
Use the Node.js
httpadapter for server-side requests where finite size limits are security-relevant.Validate or cap attacker-controlled request bodies before passing them to axios.
Reject or strictly allowlist attacker-controlled URL schemes, especially
data:URLs, before calling axios.Original Report
Summary
When Axios is used with adapter: 'fetch', configured body/response size limits are not enforced. This allows oversized uploads/downloads (including data: URLs) despite explicit limits, which can lead to memory/resource exhaustion in server-side usage.
Details
maxBodyLength and maxContentLength are not applied in the fetch adapter flow:
By contrast, the HTTP adapter enforces both limits.
PoC
Environment:
Steps:
Expected secure behavior: both requests rejected.
Observed:
Impact
Type: DoS / resource exhaustion due to limit bypass.
Impacted: applications using Axios fetch adapter as a server-side security control boundary for untrusted request/response sizes.
References