Skip to content

OpenClaw: Non-owner command-authorized sender can change the owner-only `/send` session delivery policy

Moderate severity GitHub Reviewed Published Mar 27, 2026 in openclaw/openclaw • Updated Mar 30, 2026

Package

npm openclaw (npm)

Affected versions

< 2026.3.24

Patched versions

2026.3.24

Description

Fixed in OpenClaw 2026.3.24, the current shipping release.

Title
Non-owner command-authorized sender can change the owner-only /send session delivery policy

CWE
CWE-285 Improper Authorization

CVSS v3.1
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:L/A:L
Base score: 5.4 (Medium)

Severity Assessment
Medium. This is a real owner-only authorization bypass, but the demonstrated impact is limited to persistent mutation of the current session’s delivery policy rather than direct code execution, sandbox escape, or cross-host compromise.

Impact
A non-owner sender who is allowed to run commands can invoke /send on|off|inherit and persistently change the current session’s sendPolicy, even though OpenClaw documents /send as owner-only.

That lets a lower-trust participant:

  • disable reply delivery for the current session (/send off), suppressing future replies in that chat;
  • re-enable reply delivery (/send on) after the owner intentionally disabled it;
  • remove the session override (/send inherit).

Affected Component
Verified against the latest published GitHub release tag v2026.3.23 (ccfeecb6887cd97937e33a71877ad512741e82b2), published 2026-03-23T23:15:50Z.

Exact vulnerable path on the shipped tag:

  • src/auto-reply/reply/commands-session.ts:212-239
    • handleSendPolicyCommand(...) checks only params.command.isAuthorizedSender.
    • when true, it mutates params.sessionEntry.sendPolicy and persists the session entry.

Authorization behavior that makes this reachable:

  • src/auto-reply/command-auth.ts:401-407
    • senderIsOwner is computed separately from general command authorization.
  • src/auto-reply/command-auth.ts:420-429
    • command authorization can succeed even when senderIsOwner === false.
  • src/auto-reply/command-auth.owner-default.test.ts:10-47
    • existing coverage confirms a sender can be command-authorized while not treated as owner.

Documented owner-only contract:

  • docs/tools/slash-commands.md:112
    • /send on|off|inherit is documented as owner-only.
  • docs/concepts/session-tool.md:156
    • sendPolicy is documented as settable via sessions.patch or owner-only /send on|off|inherit.

Related privilege model:

  • src/gateway/method-scopes.ts:131-133
    • sessions.patch is admin-scoped, which reinforces that session-delivery-policy mutation is treated as privileged state.

Version history:

  • The vulnerable handler exists in release history going back at least to commit ea018a68ccb92dbc735bc1df9880d5c95c63ca35 (refactor(auto-reply): split reply pipeline).
  • Earliest released affected tag found: v2026.1.14-1
  • Latest released affected tag verified: v2026.3.23

Technical Reproduction

  1. Check out the shipped release tag v2026.3.23.
  2. Configure a channel where:
    • a non-owner sender is allowed to run commands, for example through commands.allowFrom;
    • the owner identity is distinct, for example via commands.ownerAllowFrom.
  3. Start or reuse a session with a live sessionEntry and sessionStore.
  4. Send /send off as the non-owner but command-authorized sender.
  5. Confirm the resolved command context has:
    • isAuthorizedSender === true
    • senderIsOwner === false
  6. Observe that the handler still accepts the command, mutates sessionEntry.sendPolicy, and persists the session entry.

Demonstrated Impact
The vulnerable handler performs a real persistent session-state change:

  • src/auto-reply/reply/commands-session.ts:232-238
    • /send inherit deletes sessionEntry.sendPolicy
    • other modes assign sessionEntry.sendPolicy = sendPolicyCommand.mode
    • the handler then calls persistSessionEntry(params)

The mutation is not gated by owner status, only by general command authorization.

That changes subsequent delivery behavior for the current session, which matches the documented meaning of sendPolicy.

Environment

  • Product: OpenClaw
  • Verified shipped tag: v2026.3.23
  • Shipped tag commit: ccfeecb6887cd97937e33a71877ad512741e82b2
  • Published GitHub release time: 2026-03-23T23:15:50Z
  • Verification date: 2026-03-24

Duplicate Check
Upon inspection there is no preexisting GHSA for /send.

This is distinct from:

  • GHSA-r7vr-gr74-94p8
    • that advisory covered owner-only authorization bypasses for /config and /debug, not /send.

This is the same authorization class, but a different privileged command surface that still lacks the owner check.

In Scope Check
This report is in scope under SECURITY.md because:

  • it does not rely on adversarial operators sharing one gateway host or config;
  • it does not rely on trusted local state tampering;
  • SECURITY.md:151-152 explicitly says non-owner sender status matters for owner-only tools and commands;
  • /send is explicitly documented as owner-only, so this is a direct owner-only authorization bypass, not a complaint about normal shared-agent steering.

This is therefore a concrete authorization flaw against a documented product boundary.

Remediation Advice

  1. Change /send to require owner status, not just command authorization.
  2. Reuse the same owner-only rejection pattern already used by privileged command surfaces such as /config, /debug, and owner-only /plugins writes.
  3. Add regression coverage for the exact case where:
    • a non-owner sender is command-authorized;
    • /send must still be rejected unless senderIsOwner === true.
  4. Verify that the owner can still use /send on|off|inherit normally.

References

@steipete steipete published to openclaw/openclaw Mar 27, 2026
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database Mar 30, 2026
Reviewed Mar 30, 2026
Last updated Mar 30, 2026

Severity

Moderate

CVSS overall score

This score calculates overall vulnerability severity from 0 to 10 and is based on the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS).
/ 10

CVSS v3 base metrics

Attack vector
Network
Attack complexity
Low
Privileges required
Low
User interaction
None
Scope
Unchanged
Confidentiality
None
Integrity
Low
Availability
Low

CVSS v3 base metrics

Attack vector: More severe the more the remote (logically and physically) an attacker can be in order to exploit the vulnerability.
Attack complexity: More severe for the least complex attacks.
Privileges required: More severe if no privileges are required.
User interaction: More severe when no user interaction is required.
Scope: More severe when a scope change occurs, e.g. one vulnerable component impacts resources in components beyond its security scope.
Confidentiality: More severe when loss of data confidentiality is highest, measuring the level of data access available to an unauthorized user.
Integrity: More severe when loss of data integrity is the highest, measuring the consequence of data modification possible by an unauthorized user.
Availability: More severe when the loss of impacted component availability is highest.
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:L/A:L

EPSS score

Weaknesses

Improper Authorization

The product does not perform or incorrectly performs an authorization check when an actor attempts to access a resource or perform an action. Learn more on MITRE.

CVE ID

No known CVE

GHSA ID

GHSA-39mp-545q-w789

Source code

Credits

Loading Checking history
See something to contribute? Suggest improvements for this vulnerability.