title: Go Vulnerability Database layout: article

Back to Go Vulnerability Management

Overview

The Go vulnerability database (https://vuln.go.dev) serves Go vulnerability information in the Open Source Vulnerability (OSV) schema.

You can also browse vulnerabilities in the database at pkg.go.dev/vuln.

Do not rely on the contents of the x/vulndb Git repository. The YAML files in that repository are maintained using an internal format that may change without warning.

Contributing

We would love for all Go package maintainers to contribute information about public vulnerabilities in their own projects, and update existing information about vulnerabilities in their Go packages.

We aim to make reporting a low friction process, so feel free to send us your suggestions.

Please do not use the forms above to report a vulnerability in the Go standard library or sub-repositories. Instead, follow the process at go.dev/security/policy for vulnerabilities about the Go project.

API

The canonical Go vulnerability database, https://vuln.go.dev, is an HTTP server that can respond to GET requests for the endpoints specified below.

The endpoints have no query parameters, and no specific headers are required. Because of this, even a site serving from a fixed file system (including a file:// URL) can implement this API.

Each endpoint returns a JSON-encoded response, in either uncompressed (if requested as .json) or gzipped form (if requested as .json.gz).

The endpoints are:

  • /index/db.json[.gz]

    Returns metadata about the database:

    {
      // The latest time the database should be considered
      // to have been modified, as an RFC3339-formatted UTC
      // timestamp ending in "Z".
      "modified": string
    }
    

    Note that the modified time should not be compared to wall clock time, e.g. for purposes of cache invalidation, as there may a delay in making database modifications live.

    See /index/db.json for a live example.

  • /index/modules.json[.gz]

    Returns a list containing metadata about each module in the database:

    [ {
      // The module path.
      "path": string,
      // The vulnerabilities that affect this module.
      "vulns":
        [ {
          // The vulnerability ID.
          "id": string,
          // The latest time the vulnerability should be considered
          // to have been modified, as an RFC3339-formatted UTC
          // timestamp ending in "Z".
          "modified": string,
          // (Optional) The module version (in SemVer 2.0.0 format)
          // that contains the latest fix for the vulnerability.
          // If unknown or unavailable, this should be omitted.
          "fixed": string,
        } ]
    } ]
    

    See /index/modules.json for a live example.

  • /index/vulns.json[.gz]

    Returns a list containing metadata about each vulnerability in the database:

     [ {
         // The vulnerability ID.
         "id": string,
         // The latest time the vulnerability should be considered
         // to have been modified, as an RFC3339-formatted UTC
         // timestamp ending in "Z".
         "modified": string,
         // A list of IDs of the same vulnerability in other databases.
         "aliases": [ string ]
     } ]
    

    See /index/vulns.json for a live example.

  • /ID/$id.json[.gz]

    Returns the individual report for the vulnerability with ID $id, in OSV format (described below in Schema).

    See /ID/GO-2022-0191.json for a live example.

Bulk download

To make it easier to download the entire Go vulnerability database, a zip file containing all the index and OSV files is available at vuln.go.dev/vulndb.zip.

Usage in govulncheck

By default, govulncheck uses the canonical Go vulnerability database at vuln.go.dev.

The command can be configured to contact a different vulnerability database using the -db flag,which accepts a vulnerability database URL with protocol http://, https://, or file://.

To work correctly with govulncheck, the vulnerability database specified must implement the API described above. The govulncheck command uses compressed “.json.gz” endpoints when reading from an http(s) source, and the “.json” endpoints when reading from a file source.

Legacy API

The canonical database contains some additional endpoints that are part of a legacy API. We plan to remove support for these endpoints soon. If you are relying on the legacy API and need additional time to migrate, please let us know.

Schema

Reports use the Open Source Vulnerability (OSV) schema. The Go vulnerability database assigns the following meanings to the fields:

id

The id field is a unique identifier for the vulnerability entry. It is a string of the format GO-<YEAR>-<ENTRYID>.

affected

The affected field is a JSON array containing objects that describes the module versions that contain the vulnerability.

affected[].package

The affected[].package field is a JSON object identifying the affected module. The object has two required fields:

  • ecosystem: this will always be “Go”
  • name: this is the Go module path
    • Importable packages in the standard library will have the name stdlib.
    • The go command will have the name toolchain.

affected[].ecosystem_specific

The affected[].ecosystem_specific field is a JSON object with additional information about the vulnerability, which is used by Go's vulnerability detection tools.

For now, ecosystem specific will always be an object with a single field, imports.

affected[].ecosystem_specific.imports

The affected[].ecosystem_specific.imports field is a JSON array containing the packages and symbols affected by the vulnerability. Each object in the array will have these two fields:

  • path: a string with the import path of the package containing the vulnerability
  • symbols: a string array with the names of the symbols (function or method) that contains the vulnerability
  • goos: a string array with the execution operating system where the symbols appear, if known
  • goarch: a string array with the architecture where the symbols appear, if known

database_specific.url

The database_specific.url field is a string representing the fully-qualified URL of the Go vulnerability report, e.g, “https://pkg.go.dev/vuln/GO-2023-1621”.

For information on other fields in the schema, refer to the OSV spec.

Examples

All vulnerabilities in the Go vulnerability database use the OSV schema described above.

See the links below for examples of different Go vulnerabilities:

  • Go standard library vulnerability (GO-2022-0191): JSON, HTML
  • Go toolchain vulnerability (GO-2022-0189): JSON, HTML
  • Vulnerability in Go module (GO-2020-0015): JSON, HTML

Excluded Reports

The reports in the Go vulnerability database are collected from different sources and curated by the Go Security team. We may come across a vulnerability advisory (for example, a CVE or GHSA) and choose to exclude it for a variety of reasons. In these cases, a minimal report will be created in the x/vulndb repository, under x/vulndb/data/excluded.

Reports may be excluded for these reasons:

  • NOT_GO_CODE: The vulnerability is not in a Go package, but it was marked as a security advisory for the Go ecosystem by another source. This vulnerability cannot affect any Go packages. (For example, a vulnerability in a C++ library.)
  • NOT_IMPORTABLE: The vulnerability occurs in package main, an internal/ package only imported by package main, or some other location which can never be imported by another module.
  • EFFECTIVELY_PRIVATE: While the vulnerability occurs in a Go package which can be imported by another module, the package is not intended for external use and is not likely to ever be imported outside the module in which it is defined.
  • DEPENDENT_VULNERABILITY: This vulnerability is a subset of another vulnerability in the database. For example, if package A contains a vulnerability, package B depends on package A, and there are separate CVE IDs for packages A and B, we might mark the report for B as a dependent vulnerability entirely superseded by the report for A.
  • NOT_A_VULNERABILITY: While a CVE ID or GHSA has been assigned, there is no known vulnerability associated with it.

At the moment, excluded reports are not served via vuln.go.dev API. However, if you have a specific use case and it would be helpful to have access to this information through the API, please let us know.