activeadmin 2.11.2
activeadmin vulnerable to stored persistent cross-site scripting (XSS) in dynamic form legends
high severity CVE-2024-37031~> 3.2.2
, >= 4.0.0.beta7
Impact
Users settings their active admin form legends dynamically may be vulnerable to stored XSS, as long as its value can be injected directly by a malicious user.
For example:
- A public web application allows users to create entities with arbitrary names.
- Active Admin is used to administrate these entities through a private backend.
- The form to edit these entities in the private backend has the
following shape (note the dynamic
name
value dependent on an attribute of theresource
):
form do |f|
f.inputs name: resource.name do
f.input :name
f.input :description
end
f.actions
end
Then a malicious user could create an entity with a payload that would get executed in the active admin administrator's browser.
Both form
blocks with an implicit or explicit name (i.e., both
form resource.name
or form name: resource.name
would suffer
from the problem), where the value of the name can be arbitrarily
set by non admin users.
Patches
The problem has been fixed in ActiveAdmin 3.2.2 and ActiveAdmin 4.0.0.beta7.
Workarounds
Users can workaround this problem without upgrading by explicitly escaping the form name using an HTML escaping utility. For example:
form do |f|
f.inputs name: ERB::Util.html_escape(resource.name) do
f.input :name
f.input :description
end
f.actions
end
Upgrading is of course recommended though.
References
https://owasp.org/www-community/attacks/xss/#stored-xss-attacks
ActiveAdmin vulnerable to CSV injection
high severity CVE-2023-51763>= 3.2.0
csv_builder.rb in ActiveAdmin (aka Active Admin) before 3.2.0 allows CSV injection.
Potential CSV export data leak
high severity CVE-2023-50448>= 2.12.0
Impact
In ActiveAdmin versions prior to 2.12.0, a concurrency issue was found that could allow a malicious actor to be able to access potentially private data that belongs to another user.
The bug affects the functionality to export data as CSV files, and was caused by a variable holding the collection to be exported being shared across threads and not properly synchronized.
The attacker would need access to the same ActiveAdmin application as the victim, and could exploit the issue by timing their request immediately before when they know someone else will request a CSV (e.g. via phishing) or request CSVs frequently and hope someone else makes a concurrent request.
Patches
Versions 2.12.0 and above fixed the problem by completely removing the shared state.
No officially reported memory leakage issues detected.
This gem version does not have any officially reported memory leaked issues.
No license issues detected.
This gem version has a license in the gemspec.
This gem version is available.
This gem version has not been yanked and is still available for usage.