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PraisonAI Dynamic Context history and terminal tools read files outside configured storage via path traversal

High severity GitHub Reviewed Published Jun 17, 2026 in MervinPraison/PraisonAI

Package

pip praisonai (pip)

Affected versions

>= 3.8.1, <= 4.6.58

Patched versions

4.6.59

Description

PraisonAI Dynamic Context history and terminal tools read files outside configured storage via path traversal

Summary

PraisonAI's Dynamic Context module provides filesystem-backed history and
terminal-log storage. The SDK reference describes the module as providing:

  • artifact storage for tool outputs, history, and terminal logs;
  • history persistence with search; and
  • terminal session logging.

The module also exports agent-callable tool factories:

  • create_history_tools() returns history_search, history_tail, and
    history_get.
  • create_terminal_tools() returns terminal_tail, terminal_grep, and
    terminal_commands.

Those tools accept run_id and agent_id arguments from the tool caller. The
underlying stores join those values into filesystem paths without rejecting
absolute paths or .. traversal:

history_dir = self.base_dir / run_id / "history"
return history_dir / f"{agent_id}.jsonl"
terminal_dir = self.base_dir / run_id / "terminal"
return terminal_dir / f"{agent_id}.log"

Because run_id can be an absolute path and agent_id can contain traversal,
a lower-trust prompt/user that can call these tools can read .jsonl and
.log files outside the configured Dynamic Context base directory.

Affected Product

  • Repository: MervinPraison/PraisonAI
  • Ecosystem: pip
  • Package: praisonai
  • Component: Dynamic Context history and terminal tools
  • Current source paths:
    • src/praisonai/praisonai/context/history_store.py
    • src/praisonai/praisonai/context/terminal_logger.py
  • Latest PyPI version validated: 4.6.58
  • Current origin/main validated:
    1ad58ca02975ff1398efeda694ea2ab78f20cf3e
  • Current origin/main tag validated: v4.6.58

Suggested affected range:

pip:praisonai >= 3.8.1, <= 4.6.58

Representative local sweep:

  • 3.8.1: vulnerable
  • 4.0.0: vulnerable
  • 4.5.113: vulnerable
  • 4.6.33: vulnerable
  • 4.6.34: vulnerable
  • 4.6.40: vulnerable
  • 4.6.50: vulnerable
  • 4.6.58: vulnerable

Root Cause

HistoryStore._get_history_path() and TerminalLogger._get_log_path() treat
logical identifiers as path segments, but never validate that the resolved path
stays under base_dir.

History path construction:

def _get_history_path(self, run_id: str, agent_id: str) -> Path:
    history_dir = self.base_dir / run_id / "history"
    history_dir.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
    return history_dir / f"{agent_id}.jsonl"

Terminal path construction:

def _get_log_path(self, run_id: str, agent_id: str) -> Path:
    terminal_dir = self.base_dir / run_id / "terminal"
    terminal_dir.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
    return terminal_dir / f"{agent_id}.log"

The agent tools pass caller-controlled run_id and agent_id directly into
these helpers:

def history_tail(agent_id: str = "default", run_id: str = "default", count: int = 10) -> str:
    messages = history_store.get_last_messages(agent_id=agent_id, run_id=run_id, count=count)
def terminal_tail(agent_id: str = "default", run_id: str = "default", lines: int = 50) -> str:
    return term_logger.tail_session(agent_id=agent_id, run_id=run_id, lines=lines)

There is no check equivalent to:

resolved = candidate.resolve()
base = self.base_dir.resolve()
resolved.relative_to(base)

There is also no identifier allowlist preventing /, \, or .. in
run_id or agent_id.

Local PoV

Run against the latest PyPI package:

uv run --with 'praisonai==4.6.58' \
  python poc/pov_prai_cand_027_history_terminal_tools_path_traversal.py --json

The PoV:

  1. Creates a temporary Dynamic Context base directory.
  2. Creates a separate outside directory containing secret.jsonl and
    secret.log.
  3. Creates legitimate in-base history and terminal log controls.
  4. Calls history_tail() and history_get() with
    run_id=<outside-dir> and agent_id=../secret.
  5. Calls terminal_tail() and terminal_grep() with the same traversal.
  6. Confirms the traversal paths resolve to files outside the configured base.

Observed output summary from evidence/pov-pypi-4.6.58.json:

{
  "package": "praisonai",
  "package_version": "4.6.58",
  "controls": {
    "valid_history_read_works": true,
    "valid_terminal_read_works": true,
    "outside_history_file_outside_base_dir": true,
    "outside_terminal_file_outside_base_dir": true,
    "traversal_history_path_resolves_to_outside_file": true,
    "traversal_terminal_path_resolves_to_outside_file": true
  },
  "outside_history_tail": "Last 1 messages:\\n\\n[system]: PRAI-CAND-027-HISTORY-SECRET",
  "outside_terminal_tail": "PRAI-CAND-027-TERMINAL-SECRET\\nsecond line\\n",
  "outside_terminal_grep": "Found 1 matches:\\n\\n--- Line 1 ---\\n> PRAI-CAND-027-TERMINAL-SECRET\\n  second line",
  "vulnerable": true
}

The PoV is local-only. It does not start a server, contact a third-party
target, or use real credentials.

Why This Is Not Intended Behavior

This report does not claim that history and terminal helpers should be unable
to read legitimate history or terminal logs. The issue is narrower: logical
run_id and agent_id values can escape the configured Dynamic Context base
directory.

The controls show the intended boundary:

  • legitimate in-base history remains readable;
  • legitimate in-base terminal logs remain readable;
  • the outside .jsonl and .log files are not under the configured
    base_dir; and
  • the tools still disclose those outside files through traversal identifiers.

The official context reference describes history persistence and terminal
logging as filesystem-backed Dynamic Context features. The context security
documentation also treats absolute paths, path traversal, and sensitive files
as privacy/security risks. Reading files outside the configured context store
conflicts with that documented boundary.

Impact

If a PraisonAI application exposes these Dynamic Context tools to untrusted or
lower-trust prompts, the lower-trust caller can read files outside the
configured context storage when the target file can be reached with the
tool-imposed suffix:

  • history_* tools can disclose reachable .jsonl files;
  • terminal_* tools can disclose reachable .log files; and
  • cross-run or cross-agent context/history/logs can be disclosed if their path
    is known or guessable.

This can expose conversation history, prompts, terminal output, command logs,
tokens, API keys, cloud credentials, operational data, or other secrets stored
in JSONL/log files readable by the PraisonAI process.

The impact is confidentiality-only in the tested surface. Integrity and
availability are not claimed for this report.

Severity

Suggested severity: High.

Rationale:

  • AV: applies when an application exposes an agent with these tools over a
    network chat/API surface.
  • AC: the traversal needs only chosen run_id and agent_id values.
  • PR: an unauthenticated or public-facing agent endpoint can be exploited
    without an account. Deployments that require authenticated chat/API access
    may score this as PR:L.
  • UI: the attacker directly supplies the prompt/tool argument to the
    exposed agent surface.
  • C: conversation history and terminal logs can contain secrets and private
    operational data.
  • I:N/A: this report demonstrates read-only disclosure.

Remediation

Treat run_id and agent_id as logical identifiers, not path components.

Recommended fixes:

  1. Reject absolute paths, path separators, and traversal components in
    run_id and agent_id.
  2. Build candidate paths, call .resolve(), and reject any path that is not
    under self.base_dir.resolve().
  3. Apply the same containment helper to history append/read/search/clear/export
    and terminal log/read/search/clear/export paths.
  4. Prefer opaque server-generated run and agent IDs in tool schemas.
  5. Add regression tests for absolute run_id, ../ in run_id, and ../ in
    agent_id for history and terminal tool factories.

Minimal containment shape:

def _safe_child(self, *parts: str) -> Path:
    candidate = self.base_dir.joinpath(*parts).resolve()
    base = self.base_dir.resolve()
    try:
        candidate.relative_to(base)
    except ValueError as exc:
        raise PermissionError("Context path is outside configured base_dir") from exc
    return candidate

Pair this with an identifier allowlist, because run_id and agent_id should
not need filesystem syntax.

References

@MervinPraison MervinPraison published to MervinPraison/PraisonAI Jun 17, 2026
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database Jun 18, 2026
Reviewed Jun 18, 2026

Severity

High

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
None
User interaction
None
Scope
Unchanged
Confidentiality
High
Integrity
None
Availability
None

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:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:N/A:N

EPSS score

Weaknesses

Improper Limitation of a Pathname to a Restricted Directory ('Path Traversal')

The product uses external input to construct a pathname that is intended to identify a file or directory that is located underneath a restricted parent directory, but the product does not properly neutralize special elements within the pathname that can cause the pathname to resolve to a location that is outside of the restricted directory. Learn more on MITRE.

Exposure of Sensitive Information to an Unauthorized Actor

The product exposes sensitive information to an actor that is not explicitly authorized to have access to that information. Learn more on MITRE.

CVE ID

No known CVE

GHSA ID

GHSA-22cj-m4wf-fv2c

Credits

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