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📦 GitHub Actions

GHSA-f8q5-h5qh-33mh

xygeni-action v5 tag poisoned with C2 backdoor

Also known asCVE-2026-31976
Published
Mar 11, 2026
Updated
Mar 13, 2026
Affected
1 pkg
Patched
1 / 1
Exploits
None indexed

EPSS Exploitation Probability

via FIRST.org ↗
0.5%probability of exploitation in next 30 days
Lower Risk39th percentile+0.41%
0.00%0.33%0.66%1.00%0.1%0.1%0.1%0.5%Apr 26Jun 26Jun 26

EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) is a daily probability model maintained by FIRST.org. It estimates the likelihood a CVE will be exploited in production environments within the next 30 days, derived from real-world threat intelligence signals.

Blast Radius

1 pkg affected
📦xygeni/xygeni-action

Real-time download stats are indexed for npm and PyPI packages. This vulnerability affects GitHub Actions packages — download data is not available via public APIs for these ecosystems.

Description

Description

On March 3, 2026, an attacker with access to compromised credentials created a series of pull requests (#46, #47, #48) injecting obfuscated shell code into action.yml. The PRs were blocked by branch protection rules and never merged into the main branch.

However, the attacker used the compromised GitHub App credentials to move the mutable v5 tag to point at the malicious commit (4bf1d4e19ad81a3e8d4063755ae0f482dd3baf12) from one of the unmerged PRs. This commit remained in the repository's git object store, and any workflow referencing @v5 would fetch and execute it.

The malicious code, disguised as a "scanner version telemetry" step, operates as follows:

  1. Registers the CI runner with a C2 server at 91.214.78.178 (via security-verify.91.214.78.178.nip.io), transmitting hostname, username, and OS version.
  2. Polls the C2 server every 2–7 seconds for 180 seconds, receiving and executing arbitrary shell commands via eval.
  3. Compresses and base64-encodes command output before exfiltrating it back to the C2 server.

The implant runs silently in the background alongside the legitimate scan, suppresses all errors, skips TLS certificate verification, and uses randomized polling intervals to evade detection.

Impact

This is a supply chain compromise via tag poisoning. Any GitHub Actions workflow referencing xygeni/xygeni-action@v5 during the affected window (approximately March 3–10, 2026) executed a C2 implant that granted the attacker arbitrary command execution on the CI runner for up to 180 seconds per workflow run.

The severity is set to Critical based on the potential impact. However, several factors reduce the realized risk: the v5 tag was primarily referenced by Xygeni-owned and Xygeni-affiliated repositories; no external public repositories were found using the compromised tag (though usage in private repositories cannot be ruled out); the exposure window was approximately 6 days; and no confirmed exploitation of downstream users has been established to date.

Patches

The compromised v5 tag has been removed from the repository. Users should update their workflows to pin to the verified safe commit SHA corresponding to v6.4.0:

uses: xygeni/xygeni-action@13c6ed2797df7d85749864e2cbcf09c893f43b23 # v6.4.0

Workflows still referencing @v5 will fail with a reference not found error, as the tag no longer exists.

If your workflows ran with @v5 during the affected window, you should also:

  • Rotate all secrets that were available to the CI runner (repository secrets, environment secrets, deploy keys, cloud provider tokens).
  • Audit CI logs for outbound connections to 91.214.78.178 or DNS lookups for security-verify.91.214.78.178.nip.io.
  • Review recent releases and published artifacts for signs of tampering.

Workarounds

As an alternative to using the GitHub Action, you may install and run the Xygeni scanner directly via the CLI installation method documented at https://docs.xygeni.io/xygeni-scanner-cli/xygeni-cli-overview/xygeni-cli-installation. This bypasses the GitHub Action entirely and is not affected by this incident.

References

Affected Packages

1 total 1 fixed
EcosystemPackageVulnerable rangeFix
📦GitHub Actionsxygeni/xygeni-action5&&< 6.4.06.4.0

Detection & mitigation playbook

Open-source dependency
  1. Detect

    Scan your dependency tree (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, requirements.txt, go.sum, etc.) for xygeni/xygeni-action. O3's reachability analysis confirms whether the vulnerable code path is actually invoked in your application, so you act on real exposure instead of every transitive match.

  2. Fix

    Update xygeni/xygeni-action to 6.4.0 or later, then make sure no transitive (indirect) dependency still pins the vulnerable range — O3 confirms GHSA-f8q5-h5qh-33mh is resolved across your whole dependency graph.

  3. Workarounds

    If you can't upgrade right away: gate or disable the affected feature, validate untrusted input at the boundary, and avoid passing attacker-controlled data into the vulnerable path. O3's runtime protection blocks exploitation in production as an interim safeguard until the upgrade lands.

  4. How O3 protects you

    O3 pinpoints whether GHSA-f8q5-h5qh-33mh is reachable in your code and exactly where to fix it, then blocks exploitation in production at runtime until the patched version is deployed.

Tailored to GHSA-f8q5-h5qh-33mh. Runtime protection reduces exposure until a permanent patch is applied and verified — it complements patching, it doesn't replace it.

Frequently Asked Questions

### Description On March 3, 2026, an attacker with access to compromised credentials created a series of pull requests (#46, #47, #48) injecting obfuscated shell code into `action.yml`. The PRs were blocked by branch protection rules and never merged into the main branch. However, the attacker used the compromised GitHub App credentials to move the mutable `v5` tag to point at the malicious commit (`4bf1d4e19ad81a3e8d4063755ae0f482dd3baf12`) from one of the unmerged PRs. This commit remained in the repository's git object store, and any workflow referencing `@v5` would fetch and execute it.
O3 Security · Impact-Aware SCA

Is GHSA-f8q5-h5qh-33mh in your dependencies?

O3 detects GHSA-f8q5-h5qh-33mh across GitHub Actions dependencies and uses function-level reachability to confirm whether the vulnerable code path is actually reachable — not just present. No false positives.