phlex 1.9.1
Phlex vulnerable to Cross-site Scripting (XSS) via maliciously formed HTML attribute names and values
high severity CVE-2024-32970~> 1.9.3
, >= 1.10.2
There is a potential cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability that can be exploited via maliciously crafted user data.
The reason these issues were not detected before is the escapes were working as designed. However, their design didn't take into account just how recklessly permissive browser are when it comes to executing unsafe JavaScript via HTML attributes.
Impact
If you render an <a>
tag with an href
attribute set to an
user-provided link, that link could potentially execute JavaScript
when clicked by another user.
a(href: user_profile) { "Profile" }
If you splat user-provided attributes when rendering any HTML or SVG tag, malicious event attributes could be included in the output, executing JavaScript when the events are triggered by another user.
h1(**JSON.parse(user_attributes))
Patches
Patches are available on RubyGems for all minor versions released in the last year.
If you are on main
, it has been patched since
da8f943
Workarounds
Configuring a Content Security Policy
that does not allow unsafe-inline
would effectively prevent this vulnerability from being exploited.
References
In addition to upgrading to a patched version of Phlex, we strongly
recommend configuring a Content Security Policy header that does
not allow unsafe-inline
. Here’s how you can configure a Content
Security Policy header in Rails.
https://guides.rubyonrails.org/security.html#content-security-policy-header
Cross-site Scripting (XSS) possible due to improper sanitisation of href
attributes on <a>
tags
~> 1.4.2
, ~> 1.5.3
, ~> 1.6.3
, ~> 1.7.2
, ~> 1.8.3
, ~> 1.9.2
, >= 1.10.1
Summary
There is a potential cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability that can be exploited via maliciously crafted user data.
Our filter to detect and prevent the use of the javascript:
URL scheme in the href
attribute of an <a>
tag could be bypassed with tab \t
or newline \n
characters between the characters of the protocol, e.g. java\tscript:
.
Impact
If you render an <a>
tag with an href
attribute set to a user-provided link, that link could potentially execute JavaScript when clicked by another user.
a(href: user_profile) { "Profile" }
Mitigation
The best way to mitigate this vulnerability is to update to one of the following versions:
Workarounds
Configuring a Content Security Policy that does not allow unsafe-inline
would effectively prevent this vulnerability from being exploited.
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.