{"document":{"category":"csaf_vex","csaf_version":"2.0","title":"CVE-2026-9279: Shell command injection in Logseq","publisher":{"category":"vendor","name":"HarborGuard Database","namespace":"https://database.harborguard.co"},"tracking":{"id":"CVE-2026-9279","status":"final","version":"1","initial_release_date":"2026-06-09T13:23:41.892Z","current_release_date":"2026-06-09T14:38:15.131Z","revision_history":[{"date":"2026-06-09T13:23:41.892Z","number":"1","summary":"Initial machine-readable export from HarborGuard."}]},"distribution":{"tlp":{"label":"WHITE"},"text":"Public CVE data; freely redistributable."},"notes":[{"category":"description","text":"Logseq exposes an IPC handler that allows the renderer process to execute shell commands. While an allowlist restricts the command name (e.g. `git`, `pandoc`, `grep`), the argument string is concatenated with the command and passed to `child_process.spawn` with the `shell: true` option, allowing shell metacharacters in the arguments to bypass the allowlist. An attacker with JavaScript execution in the renderer (e.g. via XSS or a malicious plugin) can execute arbitrary shell commands with the privileges of the Logseq process, leading to remote code execution on the host.\nWhile only version v0.10.15 was tested and confirmed as vulnerable, status of other versions is unknown since this issue was not addressed by a patch.","title":"CVE description"}],"references":[{"category":"self","summary":"CVE-2026-9279 on HarborGuard Database","url":"https://database.harborguard.co/cve/CVE-2026-9279"},{"category":"external","summary":"CVE Record","url":"https://www.cve.org/CVERecord?id=CVE-2026-9279"},{"category":"external","summary":"cert.pl","url":"https://cert.pl/en/posts/2026/06/CVE-2026-9279/"},{"category":"external","summary":"logseq.com","url":"https://logseq.com/"}]},"product_tree":{"branches":[{"category":"vendor","name":"logseq","branches":[{"category":"product_name","name":"logseq","branches":[{"category":"product_version_range","name":"<=0.10.15","product":{"name":"logseq logseq <=0.10.15","product_id":"CSAFPID-1","product_identification_helper":{"cpe":"cpe:2.3:a:logseq:logseq:*:*:*:*:*:*:*:*"}}}]}]}]},"vulnerabilities":[{"cve":"CVE-2026-9279","title":"Shell command injection in Logseq","notes":[{"category":"description","text":"Logseq exposes an IPC handler that allows the renderer process to execute shell commands. While an allowlist restricts the command name (e.g. `git`, `pandoc`, `grep`), the argument string is concatenated with the command and passed to `child_process.spawn` with the `shell: true` option, allowing shell metacharacters in the arguments to bypass the allowlist. An attacker with JavaScript execution in the renderer (e.g. via XSS or a malicious plugin) can execute arbitrary shell commands with the privileges of the Logseq process, leading to remote code execution on the host.\nWhile only version v0.10.15 was tested and confirmed as vulnerable, status of other versions is unknown since this issue was not addressed by a patch.","title":"CVE description"}],"product_status":{"known_affected":["CSAFPID-1"]},"scores":[{"cvss_v4":{"version":"4.0","vectorString":"CVSS:4.0/AV:L/AC:L/AT:P/PR:N/UI:N/VC:H/VI:H/VA:N/SC:H/SI:H/SA:N","baseScore":8.7,"baseSeverity":"HIGH"},"products":["CSAFPID-1"]}],"remediations":[{"category":"none_available","details":"No fixed version is published yet. Monitor the upstream advisory.","product_ids":["CSAFPID-1"]}]}]}