CVE-2026-33036: fast-xml-parser affected by numeric entity expansion bypassing all entity expansion limits (incomplete fix for CVE-2026-26278)

Published Mar 17, 2026
·
Updated

Summary

The fix for CVE-2026-26278 added entity expansion limits (maxTotalExpansions, maxExpandedLength, maxEntityCount, maxEntitySize) to prevent XML entity expansion Denial of Service. However, these limits are only enforced for DOCTYPE-defined entities. Numeric character references (&#NNN; and &#xHH;) and standard XML entities (<, >, etc.) are processed through a separate code path that does NOT enforce any expansion limits.

An attacker can use massive numbers of numeric entity references to completely bypass all configured limits, causing excessive memory allocation and CPU consumption.

Affected Versions

fast-xml-parser v5.x through v5.5.3 (and likely v5.5.5 on npm)

Root Cause

In src/xmlparser/OrderedObjParser.js, the replaceEntitiesValue() function has two separate entity replacement loops:

1. Lines 638-670: DOCTYPE entities — expansion counting with entityExpansionCount and currentExpandedLength tracking. This was the CVE-2026-26278 fix. 2. Lines 674-677: lastEntities loop — replaces standard entities including numdec (/&#([0-9]{1,7});/g) and numhex (/&#x([0-9a-fA-F]{1,6});/g). This loop has NO expansion counting at all.

The numeric entity regex replacements at lines 97-98 are part of lastEntities and go through the uncounted loop, completely bypassing the CVE-2026-26278 fix.

Proof of Concept

javascript const { XMLParser } = require('fast-xml-parser');

// Even with strict explicit limits, numeric entities bypass them const parser = new XMLParser({ processEntities: { enabled: true, maxTotalExpansions: 10, maxExpandedLength: 100, maxEntityCount: 1, maxEntitySize: 10 } });

// 100K numeric entity references — should be blocked by maxTotalExpansions=10 const xml = <root>${'&#65;'.repeat(100000)}</root>; const result = parser.parse(xml);

// Output: 500,000 chars — bypasses maxExpandedLength=100 completely console.log('Output length:', result.root.length); // 500000 console.log('Expected max:', 100); // limit was 100

Results: - 100K &#65; references → 500,000 char output (5x default maxExpandedLength of 100,000) - 1M references → 5,000,000 char output, ~147MB memory consumed - Even with maxTotalExpansions=10 and maxExpandedLength=100, 10K references produce 50,000 chars - Hex entities (&#x41;) exhibit the same bypass

Impact

Denial of Service — An attacker who can provide XML input to applications using fast-xml-parser can cause: - Excessive memory allocation (147MB+ for 1M entity references) - CPU consumption during regex replacement - Potential process crash via OOM

This is particularly dangerous because the application developer may have explicitly configured strict entity expansion limits believing they are protected, while numeric entities silently bypass all of them.

Suggested Fix

Apply the same entityExpansionCount and currentExpandedLength tracking to the lastEntities loop (lines 674-677) and the HTML entities loop (lines 680-686), similar to how DOCTYPE entities are tracked at lines 638-670.

Workaround

Set htmlEntities:false

Other sources

fast-xml-parser allows users to process XML from JS object without C/C++ based libraries or callbacks. Versions 4.0.0-beta.3 through 5.5.5 contain a bypass vulnerability where numeric character references (&#NNN;, &#xHH;) and standard XML entities completely evade the entity expansion limits (e.g., maxTotalExpansions, maxExpandedLength) added to fix CVE-2026-26278, enabling XML entity expansion Denial of Service. The root cause is that replaceEntitiesValue() in OrderedObjParser.js only enforces expansion counting on DOCTYPE-defined entities while the lastEntities loop handling numeric/standard entities performs no counting at all. An attacker supplying 1M numeric entity references like &#65; can force ~147MB of memory allocation and heavy CPU usage, potentially crashing the process—even when developers have configured strict limits. This issue has been fixed in version 5.5.6.

MITRE

Affected Software

9 affected componentsFixes available
npm/fast-xml-parser>=4.0.0-beta.3<=5.5.5
5.5.6
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser>=4.0.1<5.5.6
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0-beta3
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0-beta4
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0-beta5
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0-beta6
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0-beta7
NaturalIntelligence fast-xml-parser=4.0.0-beta8

Event History

Mar 17, 2026
Advisory Published
via GitHub·07:45 PM
Data Sourced
via GitHub·07:45 PM
DescriptionSeverityWeaknessAffected Software
Mar 20, 2026
CVE Published
via MITRE·05:17 AM
Data Sourced
via MITRE·05:17 AM
DescriptionSeverityWeakness
Data Sourced
via NVD·06:16 AM
RemedyDescriptionSeverityWeaknessAffected Software
Mar 31, 58197
Event
via FIRST·04:25 AM
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Frequently Asked Questions

1

What is the severity of CVE-2026-33036?

CVE-2026-33036 has a high severity due to the risk of Denial of Service from XML entity expansion.

2

How do I fix CVE-2026-33036?

To fix CVE-2026-33036, upgrade to fast-xml-parser version 5.5.6 or later.

3

What versions of fast-xml-parser are affected by CVE-2026-33036?

Versions from 4.0.0-beta.3 to 5.5.5 of fast-xml-parser are affected by CVE-2026-33036.

4

What does CVE-2026-33036 exploit?

CVE-2026-33036 exploits insufficient enforcement of entity expansion limits for XML parsing.

5

Are numeric character references affected in CVE-2026-33036?

Yes, numeric character references are not subject to the same limits as DOCTYPE-defined entities in CVE-2026-33036.

Contact

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