When a Handlebars template contains decorator syntax referencing an unregistered decorator (e.g. {{*n}}), the compiled template calls lookupProperty(decorators, "n"), which returns undefined. The runtime then immediately invokes the result as a function, causing an unhandled TypeError: ... is not a function that crashes the Node.js process. Any application that compiles user-supplied templates without wrapping the call in a try/catch is vulnerable to a single-request Denial of Service.
In lib/handlebars/compiler/javascript-compiler.js, the code generated for a decorator invocation looks like:
fn = lookupProperty(decorators, "n")(fn, props, container, options) || fn;
When "n" is not a registered decorator, lookupProperty(decorators, "n") returns undefined. The expression immediately attempts to call undefined as a function, producing:
TypeError: lookupProperty(...) is not a function
Because the error is thrown inside the compiled template function and is not caught by the runtime, it propagates up as an unhandled exception and — when not caught by the application — crashes the Node.js process.
This inconsistency is notable: references to unregistered helpers produce a clean "Missing helper: ..." error, while references to unregistered decorators cause a hard crash.
Attack scenario: An attacker submits {{*n}} as template content to any endpoint that calls Handlebars.compile(userInput)(). Each request crashes the server process; with process managers that auto-restart (PM2, systemd), repeated submissions create a persistent DoS.
const Handlebars = require('handlebars'); // Handlebars 4.7.8, Node.js v22.x
// Any of these payloads crash the process
Handlebars.compile('{{*n}}')({});
Handlebars.compile('{{*decorator}}')({});
Handlebars.compile('{{*constructor}}')({});
Expected crash output:
TypeError: lookupProperty(...) is not a...
4.7.9Exploitability
AV:NAC:LPR:NUI:NScope
S:UImpact
C:NI:NA:H7.5/CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H