Impact
In version 10.11.0, a change to how the SDK collects request data in Node.js applications caused certain incoming HTTP headers to be added as trace span attributes. When sendDefaultPii: true was set, a few headers that were previously redacted - including Authorization and Cookie - were unintentionally allowed through.
Sentry’s server-side scrubbing (handled by Sentry's Relay edge proxy) normally serves as a second layer of protection. However, because it relied on the same matching logic as the SDK, it also failed to catch these headers in this case.
Users may be impacted if:
- Their Sentry SDK configuration has
sendDefaultPii set to true
- Their application uses one of the Node.js Sentry SDKs with version from
10.11.0 to 10.26.0 inclusively:
- @sentry/astro
- @sentry/aws-serverless
- @sentry/bun
- @sentry/google-cloud-serverless
- @sentry/nestjs
- @sentry/nextjs
- @sentry/node
- @sentry/node-core
- @sentry/nuxt
- @sentry/remix
- @sentry/solidstart
- @sentry/sveltekit
Users can check if their project was affected, by visiting Explore → Traces and searching for “http.request.header.authorization”, “http.request.header.cookie” or similar. Any potentially sensitive values will be specific to users' applications and configurations.
Patches
The issue has been patched in all Sentry JavaScript SDKs starting from the 10.27.0 version.
Workarounds
Sentry strongly encourage customers to upgrade the SDK to the latest available version, 10.27.0 or later.
If it is not possible, consider setting sendDefaultPii: false to avoid unintentionally sending sensitive headers. See here for documentation.
Resources
References
Impact
In version 10.11.0, a change to how the SDK collects request data in Node.js applications caused certain incoming HTTP headers to be added as trace span attributes. When
sendDefaultPii: truewas set, a few headers that were previously redacted - including Authorization and Cookie - were unintentionally allowed through.Sentry’s server-side scrubbing (handled by Sentry's Relay edge proxy) normally serves as a second layer of protection. However, because it relied on the same matching logic as the SDK, it also failed to catch these headers in this case.
Users may be impacted if:
sendDefaultPiiset totrue10.11.0to10.26.0inclusively:Users can check if their project was affected, by visiting Explore → Traces and searching for “http.request.header.authorization”, “http.request.header.cookie” or similar. Any potentially sensitive values will be specific to users' applications and configurations.
Patches
The issue has been patched in all Sentry JavaScript SDKs starting from the 10.27.0 version.
Workarounds
Sentry strongly encourage customers to upgrade the SDK to the latest available version, 10.27.0 or later.
If it is not possible, consider setting
sendDefaultPii: falseto avoid unintentionally sending sensitive headers. See here for documentation.Resources
References