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Usage of primordials in core

The file lib/internal/per_context/primordials.js subclasses and stores the JS built-ins that come from the VM so that Node.js built-in modules do not need to later look these up from the global proxy, which can be mutated by users.

Usage of primordials should be preferred for any new code, but replacing current code with primordials should be done with care. It is highly recommended to ping the relevant team when reviewing a pull request that touches one of the subsystems they "own".

Accessing primordials

The primordials are meant for internal use only, and are only accessible for internal core modules. User code cannot use or rely on primordials. It is usually fine to rely on ECMAScript built-ins and assume that it will behave as specified.

If you would like to access the primordials object to help you with Node.js core development or for tinkering, you can expose it on the global scope using this combination of CLI flags:

node --expose-internals -r internal/test/binding

Contents of primordials

Properties of the global object

Objects and functions on the global object can be deleted or replaced. Using them from primordials makes the code more reliable:

globalThis.Array === primordials.Array; // true

globalThis.Array = function() {
  return [1, 2, 3];
};
globalThis.Array === primordials.Array; // false

primordials.Array(0); // []
globalThis.Array(0); // [1,2,3]

Prototype methods

ECMAScript provides a group of methods available on built-in objects that are used to interact with JavaScript objects.

const array = [1, 2, 3];
array.push(4); // Here `push` refers to %Array.prototype.push%.
console.log(JSON.stringify(array)); // [1,2,3,4]

// %Array.prototype%.push is modified in userland.
Array.prototype.push = function push(val) {
  return this.unshift(val);
};

array.push(5); // Now `push` refers to the modified method.
console.log(JSON.stringify(array)); // [5,1,2,3,4]

Primordials wrap the original prototype functions with new functions that take the this value as the first argument:

const {
  ArrayPrototypePush,
} = primordials;

const array = [1, 2, 3];
ArrayPrototypePush(array, 4);
console.log(JSON.stringify(array)); // [1,2,3,4]

Array.prototype.push = function push(val) {
  return this.unshift(val);
};

ArrayPrototypePush(array, 5);
console.log(JSON.stringify(array)); // [1,2,3,4,5]

Safe classes

Safe classes are classes that provide the same API as their equivalent class, but whose implementation aims to avoid any reliance on user-mutable code. Safe classes should not be exposed to user-land; use unsafe equivalent when dealing with objects that are accessible from user-land.

Variadic functions

There are some built-in functions that accept a variable number of arguments (e.g.: Math.max, %Array.prototype.push%). It is sometimes useful to provide the list of arguments as an array. You can use primordial function with the suffix Apply (e.g.: MathMaxApply, ArrayPrototypePushApply) to do that.

Primordials with known performance issues

One of the reasons why the current Node.js API is not completely tamper-proof is performance: sometimes the use of primordials can cause performance regressions with V8, which when in a hot code path, could significantly decrease the performance of code in Node.js.

  • Methods that mutate the internal state of arrays:
    • ArrayPrototypePush
    • ArrayPrototypePop
    • ArrayPrototypeShift
    • ArrayPrototypeUnshift
  • Methods of the function prototype:
    • FunctionPrototypeBind
    • FunctionPrototypeCall: creates performance issues when used to invoke super constructors.
    • FunctionPrototype: use () => {} instead when referencing a no-op function.
  • SafeArrayIterator
  • SafeStringIterator
  • SafePromiseAll
  • SafePromiseAllSettled
  • SafePromiseAny
  • SafePromiseRace
  • SafePromisePrototypeFinally: use try {} finally {} block instead.

In general, when sending or reviewing a PR that makes changes in a hot code path, use extra caution and run extensive benchmarks.

Implicit use of user-mutable methods

Unsafe array iteration

There are many usual practices in JavaScript that rely on iteration. It's useful to be aware of them when dealing with arrays (or TypedArrays) in core as array iteration typically calls several user-mutable methods. This sections lists the most common patterns in which ECMAScript code relies non-explicitly on array iteration and how to avoid it.

Avoid for-of loops on arrays
for (const item of array) {
  console.log(item);
}

This code is internally expanded into something that looks like:

{
  // 1. Lookup @@iterator property on `array` (user-mutable if user-provided).
  // 2. Lookup @@iterator property on %Array.prototype% (user-mutable).
  // 3. Call that function.
  const iterator = array[Symbol.iterator]();
  // 1. Lookup `next` property on `iterator` (doesn't exist).
  // 2. Lookup `next` property on %ArrayIteratorPrototype% (user-mutable).
  // 3. Call that function.
  let { done, value: item } = iterator.next();
  while (!done) {
    console.log(item);
    // Repeat.
    ({ done, value: item } = iterator.next());
  }
}

Instead of utilizing iterators, you can use the more traditional but still very performant for loop:

for (let i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
  console.log(array[i]);
}

The following code snippet illustrates how user-land code could impact the behavior of internal modules:

// User-land
Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = () => ({
  next: () => ({ done: true }),
});

// Core
let forOfLoopBlockExecuted = false;
let forLoopBlockExecuted = false;
const array = [1, 2, 3];
for (const item of array) {
  forOfLoopBlockExecuted = true;
}
for (let i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
  forLoopBlockExecuted = true;
}
console.log(forOfLoopBlockExecuted); // false
console.log(forLoopBlockExecuted); // true

This only applies if you are working with a genuine array (or array-like object). If you are instead expecting an iterator, a for-of loop may be a better choice.

Avoid array destructuring assignment on arrays
const [first, second] = array;

This is roughly equivalent to:

// 1. Lookup @@iterator property on `array` (user-mutable if user-provided).
// 2. Lookup @@iterator property on %Array.prototype% (user-mutable).
// 3. Call that function.
const iterator = array[Symbol.iterator]();
// 1. Lookup `next` property on `iterator` (doesn't exist).
// 2. Lookup `next` property on %ArrayIteratorPrototype% (user-mutable).
// 3. Call that function.
const first = iterator.next().value;
// Repeat.
const second = iterator.next().value;

Instead you can use object destructuring:

const { 0: first, 1: second } = array;

or

const first = array[0];
const second = array[1];

This only applies if you are working with a genuine array (or array-like object). If you are instead expecting an iterator, array destructuring is the best choice.

Avoid spread operator on arrays
// 1. Lookup @@iterator property on `array` (user-mutable if user-provided).
// 2. Lookup @@iterator property on %Array.prototype% (user-mutable).
// 3. Lookup `next` property on %ArrayIteratorPrototype% (user-mutable).
const arrayCopy = [...array];
func(...array);

Instead you can use other ECMAScript features to achieve the same result:

const arrayCopy = ArrayPrototypeSlice(array);
ReflectApply(func, null, array);
%Array.prototype.concat% looks up @@isConcatSpreadable property of the passed arguments and the this value.
{
  // Unsafe code example:
  // 1. Lookup @@isConcatSpreadable property on `array` (user-mutable if
  //    user-provided).
  // 2. Lookup @@isConcatSpreadable property on `%Array.prototype%
  //    (user-mutable).
  // 2. Lookup @@isConcatSpreadable property on `%Object.prototype%
  //    (user-mutable).
  const array = [];
  ArrayPrototypeConcat(array);
}
// User-land
Object.defineProperty(Object.prototype, Symbol.isConcatSpreadable, {
  get() {
    this.push(5);
    return true;
  },
});

// Core
{
  // Using ArrayPrototypeConcat does not produce the expected result:
  const a = [1, 2];
  const b = [3, 4];
  console.log(ArrayPrototypeConcat(a, b)); // [1, 2, 5, 3, 4, 5]
}
{
  // Concatenating two arrays can be achieved safely, e.g.:
  const a = [1, 2];
  const b = [3, 4];
  // Using %Array.prototype.push% and `SafeArrayIterator` to get the expected
  // outcome:
  const concatArray = [];
  ArrayPrototypePush(concatArray, ...new SafeArrayIterator(a),
                     ...new SafeArrayIterator(b));
  console.log(concatArray); // [1, 2, 3, 4]

  // Or using `ArrayPrototypePushApply` if it's OK to mutate the first array:
  ArrayPrototypePushApply(a, b);
  console.log(a); // [1, 2, 3, 4]
}
%Object.fromEntries% iterate over an array
{
  // Unsafe code example:
  // 1. Lookup @@iterator property on `array` (user-mutable if user-provided).
  // 2. Lookup @@iterator property on %Array.prototype% (user-mutable).
  // 3. Lookup `next` property on %ArrayIteratorPrototype% (user-mutable).
  const obj = ObjectFromEntries(array);
}

{
  // Safe example using `SafeArrayIterator`:
  const obj = ObjectFromEntries(new SafeArrayIterator(array));
}

{
  // Safe example without using `SafeArrayIterator`:
  const obj = {};
  for (let i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
    obj[array[i][0]] = array[i][1];
  }
  // In a hot code path, this would be the preferred method.
}
%Promise.all%, %Promise.allSettled%, %Promise.any%, and %Promise.race% iterate over an array
// 1. Lookup @@iterator property on `array` (user-mutable if user-provided).
// 2. Lookup @@iterator property on %Array.prototype% (user-mutable).
// 3. Lookup `next` property on %ArrayIteratorPrototype% (user-mutable).
// 4. Lookup `then` property on %Array.Prototype% (user-mutable).
// 5. Lookup `then` property on %Object.Prototype% (user-mutable).
PromiseAll([]); // unsafe

// 1. Lookup `then` property on %Array.Prototype% (user-mutable).
// 2. Lookup `then` property on %Object.Prototype% (user-mutable).
PromiseAll(new SafeArrayIterator([])); // still unsafe
SafePromiseAll([]); // still unsafe

SafePromiseAllReturnVoid([]); // safe
SafePromiseAllReturnArrayLike([]); // safe

const array = [promise];
const set = new SafeSet().add(promise);
// When running one of these functions on a non-empty iterable, it will also:
// 1. Lookup `then` property on `promise` (user-mutable if user-provided).
// 2. Lookup `then` property on `%Promise.prototype%` (user-mutable).
// 3. Lookup `then` property on %Array.Prototype% (user-mutable).
// 4. Lookup `then` property on %Object.Prototype% (user-mutable).
PromiseAll(new SafeArrayIterator(array)); // unsafe
PromiseAll(set); // unsafe

SafePromiseAllReturnVoid(array); // safe
SafePromiseAllReturnArrayLike(array); // safe

// Some key differences between `SafePromise[...]` and `Promise[...]` methods:

// 1. SafePromiseAll, SafePromiseAllSettled, SafePromiseAny, SafePromiseRace,
//    SafePromiseAllReturnArrayLike, SafePromiseAllReturnVoid, and
//    SafePromiseAllSettledReturnVoid support passing a mapperFunction as second
//    argument.
SafePromiseAll(ArrayPrototypeMap(array, someFunction));
SafePromiseAll(array, someFunction); // Same as the above, but more efficient.

// 2. SafePromiseAll, SafePromiseAllSettled, SafePromiseAny, SafePromiseRace,
//    SafePromiseAllReturnArrayLike, SafePromiseAllReturnVoid, and
//    SafePromiseAllSettledReturnVoid only support arrays and array-like
//    objects, not iterables. Use ArrayFrom to convert an iterable to an array.
SafePromiseAllReturnVoid(set); // ignores set content.
SafePromiseAllReturnVoid(ArrayFrom(set)); // works

// 3. SafePromiseAllReturnArrayLike is safer than SafePromiseAll, however you
//    should not use them when its return value is passed to the user as it can
//    be surprising for them not to receive a genuine array.
SafePromiseAllReturnArrayLike(array).then((val) => val instanceof Array); // false
SafePromiseAll(array).then((val) => val instanceof Array); // true
%Map%, %Set%, %WeakMap%, and %WeakSet% constructors iterate over an array
// User-land
Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = () => ({
  next: () => ({ done: true }),
});

// Core

// 1. Lookup @@iterator property on %Array.prototype% (user-mutable).
// 2. Lookup `next` property on %ArrayIteratorPrototype% (user-mutable).
const set = new SafeSet([1, 2, 3]);

console.log(set.size); // 0
// User-land
Array.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = () => ({
  next: () => ({ done: true }),
});

// Core
const set = new SafeSet();
set.add(1).add(2).add(3);
console.log(set.size); // 3

Promise objects

%Promise.prototype.finally% looks up then property of the Promise instance
// User-land
Promise.prototype.then = function then(a, b) {
  return Promise.resolve();
};

// Core
let finallyBlockExecuted = false;
PromisePrototypeFinally(somePromiseThatEventuallySettles,
                        () => { finallyBlockExecuted = true; });
process.on('exit', () => console.log(finallyBlockExecuted)); // false
// User-land
Promise.prototype.then = function then(a, b) {
  return Promise.resolve();
};

// Core
let finallyBlockExecuted = false;
(async () => {
  try {
    return await somePromiseThatEventuallySettles;
  } finally {
    finallyBlockExecuted = true;
  }
})();
process.on('exit', () => console.log(finallyBlockExecuted)); // true
%Promise.all%, %Promise.allSettled%, %Promise.any%, and %Promise.race% look up then property of the Promise instances

You can use safe alternatives from primordials that differ slightly from the original methods:

  • It expects an array (or array-like object) instead of an iterable.
  • It wraps each promise in SafePromise objects and wraps the result in a new Promise instance – which may come with a performance penalty.
  • It accepts a mapperFunction as second argument.
  • Because it doesn't look up then property, it may not be the right tool to handle user-provided promises (which may be instances of a subclass of Promise).
// User-land
Promise.prototype.then = function then(a, b) {
  return Promise.resolve();
};

// Core
let thenBlockExecuted = false;
PromisePrototypeThen(
  PromiseAll(new SafeArrayIterator([PromiseResolve()])),
  () => { thenBlockExecuted = true; },
);
process.on('exit', () => console.log(thenBlockExecuted)); // false
// User-land
Promise.prototype.then = function then(a, b) {
  return Promise.resolve();
};

// Core
let thenBlockExecuted = false;
PromisePrototypeThen(
  SafePromiseAll([PromiseResolve()]),
  () => { thenBlockExecuted = true; },
);
process.on('exit', () => console.log(thenBlockExecuted)); // true

A common pattern is to map on the array of Promises to apply some transformations, in that case it can be more efficient to pass a second argument rather than invoking %Array.prototype.map%.

SafePromiseAll(ArrayPrototypeMap(array, someFunction));
SafePromiseAll(array, someFunction); // Same as the above, but more efficient.

(Async) Generator functions

Generators and async generators returned by generator functions and async generator functions are relying on user-mutable methods; their use in core should be avoided.

%GeneratorFunction.prototype.prototype%.next is user-mutable
// User-land
Object.getPrototypeOf(function* () {}).prototype.next = function next() {
  return { done: true };
};

// Core
function* someGenerator() {
  yield 1;
  yield 2;
  yield 3;
}
let loopCodeExecuted = false;
for (const nb of someGenerator()) {
  loopCodeExecuted = true;
}
console.log(loopCodeExecuted); // false
%AsyncGeneratorFunction.prototype.prototype%.next is user-mutable
// User-land
Object.getPrototypeOf(async function* () {}).prototype.next = function next() {
  return new Promise(() => {});
};

// Core
async function* someGenerator() {
  yield 1;
  yield 2;
  yield 3;
}
let finallyBlockExecuted = false;
async () => {
  try {
    for await (const nb of someGenerator()) {
      // some code;
    }
  } finally {
    finallyBlockExecuted = true;
  }
};
process.on('exit', () => console.log(finallyBlockExecuted)); // false

Text processing

Unsafe string methods

The string method looks up the property
String.prototype.match Symbol.match
String.prototype.matchAll Symbol.matchAll
String.prototype.replace Symbol.replace
String.prototype.replaceAll Symbol.replace
String.prototype.search Symbol.search
String.prototype.split Symbol.split
// User-land
RegExp.prototype[Symbol.replace] = () => 'foo';
String.prototype[Symbol.replace] = () => 'baz';

// Core
console.log(StringPrototypeReplace('ber', /e/, 'a')); // 'foo'
console.log(StringPrototypeReplace('ber', 'e', 'a')); // 'baz'
console.log(RegExpPrototypeSymbolReplace(/e/, 'ber', 'a')); // 'bar'

Unsafe string iteration

As with arrays, iterating over strings calls several user-mutable methods. Avoid iterating over strings when possible, or use SafeStringIterator.

Unsafe RegExp methods

Functions that lookup the exec property on the prototype chain:

  • RegExp.prototype[Symbol.match]
  • RegExp.prototype[Symbol.matchAll]
  • RegExp.prototype[Symbol.replace]
  • RegExp.prototype[Symbol.search]
  • RegExp.prototype[Symbol.split]
  • RegExp.prototype.test
// User-land
RegExp.prototype.exec = () => null;

// Core
console.log(RegExpPrototypeTest(/o/, 'foo')); // false
console.log(RegExpPrototypeExec(/o/, 'foo') !== null); // true

console.log(RegExpPrototypeSymbolSearch(/o/, 'foo')); // -1
console.log(SafeStringPrototypeSearch('foo', /o/)); // 1

Don't trust RegExp flags

RegExp flags are not own properties of the regex instances, which means flags can be reset from user-land.

List of RegExp methods that look up properties from mutable getters
RegExp method looks up the following flag-related properties
get RegExp.prototype.flags global, ignoreCase, multiline, dotAll, unicode, sticky
RegExp.prototype[@@match] global, unicode
RegExp.prototype[@@matchAll] flags
RegExp.prototype[@@replace] global, unicode
RegExp.prototype[@@split] flags
RegExp.prototype.toString flags
// User-land
Object.defineProperty(RegExp.prototype, 'global', { value: false });

// Core
console.log(RegExpPrototypeSymbolReplace(/o/g, 'foo', 'a')); // 'fao'
console.log(RegExpPrototypeSymbolReplace(hardenRegExp(/o/g), 'foo', 'a')); // 'faa'

Defining object own properties

When defining property descriptor (to add or update an own property to a JavaScript object), be sure to always use a null-prototype object to avoid prototype pollution.

// User-land
Object.prototype.get = function get() {};

// Core
try {
  ObjectDefineProperty({}, 'someProperty', { value: 0 });
} catch (err) {
  console.log(err); // TypeError: Invalid property descriptor.
}
// User-land
Object.prototype.get = function get() {};

// Core
ObjectDefineProperty({}, 'someProperty', { __proto__: null, value: 0 });
console.log('no errors'); // no errors.

Same applies when trying to modify an existing property, e.g. trying to make a read-only property enumerable:

// User-land
Object.prototype.value = 'Unrelated user-provided data';

// Core
class SomeClass {
  get readOnlyProperty() { return 'genuine data'; }
}
ObjectDefineProperty(SomeClass.prototype, 'readOnlyProperty', { enumerable: true });
console.log(new SomeClass().readOnlyProperty); // Unrelated user-provided data
// User-land
Object.prototype.value = 'Unrelated user-provided data';

// Core
const kEnumerableProperty = { __proto__: null, enumerable: true };
// In core, use const {kEnumerableProperty} = require('internal/util');
class SomeClass {
  get readOnlyProperty() { return 'genuine data'; }
}
ObjectDefineProperty(SomeClass.prototype, 'readOnlyProperty', kEnumerableProperty);
console.log(new SomeClass().readOnlyProperty); // genuine data

Defining a Proxy handler

When defining a Proxy, the handler object could be at risk of prototype pollution when using a plain object literal:

// User-land
Object.prototype.get = () => 'Unrelated user-provided data';

// Core
const objectToProxy = { someProperty: 'genuine value' };

const proxyWithPlainObjectLiteral = new Proxy(objectToProxy, {
  has() { return false; },
});
console.log(proxyWithPlainObjectLiteral.someProperty); // Unrelated user-provided data

const proxyWithNullPrototypeObject = new Proxy(objectToProxy, {
  __proto__: null,
  has() { return false; },
});
console.log(proxyWithNullPrototypeObject.someProperty); // genuine value