TUCoPS :: Web BBS :: etc :: bx3683.htm

vBulletin 3.7.2 and lower, vBulletin 3.6.10 PL2 and lower - XSS in admin logs
XSS in admin logs - vBulletin 3.7.2 and lower, vBulletin 3.6.10 PL2 and lower
XSS in admin logs - vBulletin 3.7.2 and lower, vBulletin 3.6.10 PL2 and lower



=====================================================================
Advisory : XSS in admin logs
Release Date : July 06th 2008
Application : vBulletin
Version : vBulletin 3.7.2 and lower, vBulletin 3.6.10 PL2 and lower
Platform : PHP
Vendor URL : http://www.vbulletin.com/ 
Authors : Jessica Hope (jessicasaulhope@googlemail.com), 
Friends who wish to remain anonymous.


======================================================================
Overview

Due to various failures in sanitising user input, it is possible to
construct XSS attacks that are rather damaging.

======================================================================
Discussion

The XSS in question exists on the log viewing page of the admin control panel.

When a missing page is requested, a log is created in the admin area, however
the inputs to this log lack sanitation. The script name is taken from
basename(PHP_SELF), while the action is taken from _REQUEST['do']. Either one
can be used for introducing XSS vectors.

To highlight the severity and underline the fact that his vulnerability is
exploitable:



src="http://localhost/vB/upload/admincp/faq.php/0?do=" /> 



You then need to send the admin to
adminlog.php?do=view&script=&u=0&pp=15&orderby=script&page=1
and the XSS will render.

The limits on the XSS:
basename(PHP_SELF) is 50 characters max and no slashes
_REQUEST['do'] is limited to 20 characters, but no character restriction.

The tight character limits on the unsanitized parameters are not
mitigating the severity, as unlimited
attack space can be obtained as shown above.

As per my last exploits, all XSS in the vBulletin ACP can be used for
PHP injection instantly. This
is due to the design of the vBulletin hooks feature. As this
particular XSS is persistent and will
render in all major browsers it is particularly dangerous.

======================================================================
Solution:

Update to vBulletin 3.7.2 PL1 or vBulletin 3.6.10 PL3

Don't trust PHP_SELF and sanitise all data that is going to be
displayed to the user

======================================================================

TUCoPS is optimized to look best in Firefox® on a widescreen monitor (1440x900 or better).
Site design & layout copyright © 1986-2024 AOH