activerecord 3.2.7
Possible RCE escalation bug with Serialized Columns in Active Record
critical severity CVE-2022-32224~> 5.2.8, >= 5.2.8.1
, ~> 6.0.5, >= 6.0.5.1
, ~> 6.1.6, >= 6.1.6.1
, >= 7.0.3.1
There is a possible escalation to RCE when using YAML serialized columns in Active Record. This vulnerability has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2022-32224.
Versions Affected: All. Not affected: None Fixed Versions: 7.0.3.1, 6.1.6.1, 6.0.5.1, 5.2.8.1
Impact
When serialized columns that use YAML (the default) are deserialized, Rails
uses YAML.unsafe_load
to convert the YAML data in to Ruby objects. If an
attacker can manipulate data in the database (via means like SQL injection),
then it may be possible for the attacker to escalate to an RCE.
Impacted Active Record models will look something like this:
class User < ApplicationRecord
serialize :options # Vulnerable: Uses YAML for serialization
serialize :values, Array # Vulnerable: Uses YAML for serialization
serialize :values, JSON # Not vulnerable
end
All users running an affected release should either upgrade or use one of the workarounds immediately.
Releases
The FIXED releases are available at the normal locations.
The released versions change the default YAML deserializer to use
YAML.safe_load
, which prevents deserialization of possibly dangerous
objects. This may introduce backwards compatibility issues with existing
data.
In order to cope with that situation, the released version also contains two new Active Record configuration options. The configuration options are as follows:
config.active_record.use_yaml_unsafe_load
When set to true, this configuration option tells Rails to use the old "unsafe" YAML loading strategy, maintaining the existing behavior but leaving the possible escalation vulnerability in place. Setting this option to true is not recommended, but can aid in upgrading.
config.active_record.yaml_column_permitted_classes
The "safe YAML" loading method does not allow all classes to be deserialized by default. This option allows you to specify classes deemed "safe" in your application. For example, if your application uses Symbol and Time in serialized data, you can add Symbol and Time to the allowed list as follows:
config.active_record.yaml_column_permitted_classes = [Symbol, Date, Time]
Workarounds
There are no feasible workarounds for this issue, but other coders (such as JSON) are not impacted.
CVE-2013-0155 rubygem-actionpack, rubygem-activerecord: Unsafe Query Generation Risk in Ruby on Rails
critical severity CVE-2013-0155~> 2.3.16
, ~> 3.0.19
, ~> 3.1.10
, >= 3.2.11
Ruby on Rails 3.0.x before 3.0.19, 3.1.x before 3.1.10, and 3.2.x before 3.2.11 does not properly consider differences in parameter handling between the Active Record component and the JSON implementation, which allows remote attackers to bypass intended database-query restrictions and perform NULL checks or trigger missing WHERE clauses via a crafted request, as demonstrated by certain "[nil]" values, a related issue to CVE-2012-2660 and CVE-2012-2694.
Denial of Service Vulnerability in ActiveRecord’s PostgreSQL adapter
high severity CVE-2022-44566~> 5.2.8, >= 5.2.8.15
, ~> 6.1.7, >= 6.1.7.1
, >= 7.0.4.1
There is a potential denial of service vulnerability present in ActiveRecord’s PostgreSQL adapter.
This has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2022-44566.
Versions Affected: All. Not affected: None. Fixed Versions: 5.2.8.15 (Rails LTS), 6.1.7.1, 7.0.4.1
Impact
In ActiveRecord <7.0.4.1 and <6.1.7.1, when a value outside the range for a 64bit signed integer is provided to the PostgreSQL connection adapter, it will treat the target column type as numeric. Comparing integer values against numeric values can result in a slow sequential scan resulting in potential Denial of Service.
Workarounds
Ensure that user supplied input which is provided to ActiveRecord clauses do not contain integers wider than a signed 64bit representation or floats.
CVE-2014-3482 rubygem-activerecord: SQL injection vulnerability in 'bitstring' quoting
high severity CVE-2014-3482~> 3.2.19
>= 4.0.0
SQL injection vulnerability in activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/postgresql_adapter.rb in the PostgreSQL adapter for Active Record in Ruby on Rails 2.x and 3.x before 3.2.19 allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary SQL commands by leveraging improper bitstring quoting. It was discovered that Active Record did not properly quote values of the bitstring type attributes when using the PostgreSQL database adapter. A remote attacker could possibly use this flaw to conduct an SQL injection attack against applications using Active Record.
CVE-2013-1854 rubygem-activerecord: attribute_dos Symbol DoS vulnerability
high severity CVE-2013-1854~> 2.3.18
, ~> 3.1.12
, >= 3.2.13
~> 3.0.0
The Active Record component in Ruby on Rails 2.3.x before 2.3.18, 3.1.x before 3.1.12, and 3.2.x before 3.2.13 processes certain queries by converting hash keys to symbols, which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via crafted input to a where method. A flaw was found in the way Ruby on Rails handled hashes in certain queries. A remote attacker could use this flaw to perform a denial of service (resource consumption) attack by sending specially crafted queries that would result in the creation of Ruby symbols, which were never garbage collected.
Nested attributes rejection proc bypass in Active Record
medium severity CVE-2015-7577>= 5.0.0.beta1.1
, ~> 4.2.5, >= 4.2.5.1
, ~> 4.1.14, >= 4.1.14.1
, ~> 3.2.22.1
~> 3.0.0
, < 3.0.0
There is a vulnerability in how the nested attributes feature in Active Record handles updates in combination with destroy flags when destroying records is disabled. This vulnerability has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2015-7577.
Versions Affected: 3.1.0 and newer Not affected: 3.0.x and older Fixed Versions: 5.0.0.beta1.1, 4.2.5.1, 4.1.14.1, 3.2.22.1
Impact
When using the nested attributes feature in Active Record you can prevent the
destruction of associated records by passing the allow_destroy: false
option
to the accepts_nested_attributes_for
method. However due to a change in the
commit a9b4b5d the _destroy
flag prevents the :reject_if
proc from
being called because it assumes that the record will be destroyed anyway.
However this isn't true if :allow_destroy
is false so this leads to changes
that would have been rejected being applied to the record. Attackers could use
this do things like set attributes to invalid values and to clear all of the
attributes amongst other things. The severity will be dependent on how the
application has used this feature.
All users running an affected release should either upgrade or use one of the workarounds immediately.
Releases
The FIXED releases are available at the normal locations.
Workarounds
If you can't upgrade, please use the following monkey patch in an initializer that is loaded before your application:
$ cat config/initializers/nested_attributes_bypass_fix.rb
module ActiveRecord
module NestedAttributes
private
def reject_new_record?(association_name, attributes)
will_be_destroyed?(association_name, attributes) || call_reject_if(association_name, attributes)
end
def call_reject_if(association_name, attributes)
return false if will_be_destroyed?(association_name, attributes)
case callback = self.nested_attributes_options[association_name][:reject_if]
when Symbol
method(callback).arity == 0 ? send(callback) : send(callback, attributes)
when Proc
callback.call(attributes)
end
end
def will_be_destroyed?(association_name, attributes)
allow_destroy?(association_name) && has_destroy_flag?(attributes)
end
def allow_destroy?(association_name)
self.nested_attributes_options[association_name][:allow_destroy]
end
end
end
Patches
To aid users who aren't able to upgrade immediately we have provided patches for the two supported release series. They are in git-am format and consist of a single changeset.
- 3-2-nested-attributes-reject-if-bypass.patch - Patch for 3.2 series
- 4-1-nested-attributes-reject-if-bypass.patch - Patch for 4.1 series
- 4-2-nested-attributes-reject-if-bypass.patch - Patch for 4.2 series
- 5-0-nested-attributes-reject-if-bypass.patch - Patch for 5.0 series
Please note that only the 4.1.x and 4.2.x series are supported at present. Users of earlier unsupported releases are advised to upgrade as soon as possible as we cannot guarantee the continued availability of security fixes for unsupported releases.
Credits
Thank you to Justin Coyne for reporting the problem and working with us to fix it.
CVE-2013-0276 rubygem-activerecord/rubygem-activemodel: circumvention of attr_protected
medium severity CVE-2013-0276~> 2.3.17
, ~> 3.1.11
, >= 3.2.12
ActiveRecord in Ruby on Rails before 2.3.17, 3.1.x before 3.1.11, and 3.2.x before 3.2.12 allows remote attackers to bypass the attr_protected protection mechanism and modify protected model attributes via a crafted request.
Ruby on Rails find_by_* Methods Authlogic SQL Injection Bypass
medium severity CVE-2012-6496~> 3.0.18
, ~> 3.1.9
, >= 3.2.10
Due to the way dynamic finders in Active Record extract options from method parameters, a method parameter can mistakenly be used as a scope. Carefully crafted requests can use the scope to inject arbitrary SQL.
No officially reported memory leakage issues detected.
This gem version does not have any officially reported memory leaked issues.
Author did not declare license for this gem in the gemspec.
This gem version has a MIT license in the source code, however it was not declared in the gemspec file.
This gem version is available.
This gem version has not been yanked and is still available for usage.