GHSA-xr4f-mjxj-w6w5: OpenClaw: Non-owner chat senders could issue device-pairing bootstrap codes
Summary
The bundled device-pair plugin exposed /pair on normal chat command surfaces. In affected releases, authorized non-owner chat senders could issue device-pairing bootstrap codes without having owner, admin, or pairing scope.
This issue does not affect unauthenticated users. The caller must already be allowed to send commands to the agent through a configured chat channel.
Affected configurations
This affects deployments where the bundled device-pair plugin is enabled and a non-owner sender is authorized to use normal chat commands, such as in a configured Telegram, Discord, or Slack agent.
Impact
A non-owner authorized sender could create a setup code and use it before expiry to enroll a device with operator/node capabilities. That device would then retain persistent credentials until removed.
Patched Versions
The first stable patched version is 2026.5.4.
Mitigations
Upgrade to openclaw@2026.5.4 or later. Review paired devices and remove any unexpected entries. In shared chat channels, keep command access limited to users who should be allowed to manage device pairing.
Details
Original advisory: https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-xr4f-mjxj-w6w5
More from GitHub Security Advisories
- criticalGHSA-g936-7jqj-mwv8: TSDProxy: Internal proxy auth token forwarded to backend services enables management API …2026-07-10
- highGHSA-fpg8-7664-jc5q: melange: Incomplete package integrity verification allows data section substitution2026-07-10
- mediumGHSA-48rx-c7pg-q66r: Excon does not redact additional sensitive/risky headers when following redirects2026-07-10
- highGHSA-h4g2-xfmw-q2c9: Clauster: Non-loopback deployments can serve the dashboard unauthenticated when auth.enab…2026-07-10
- mediumGHSA-rqq5-2gf9-4w4q: Secure Headers: CSP directive injection via sandbox, plugin_types, and report_to when giv…2026-07-10