OVERVIEW ========== WPML is the industry standard for creating multi-lingual WordPress sites. Three vulnerabilities were found in the plug-in. The most serious of them, an SQL injection problem, allows anyone to read the contents of the WordPress database, including user details and password hashes, without authentication. System administrators should update to version 3.1.9.1 released earlier this week to resolve the issues. DETAILS ======== 1. SQL injection When WPML processed a HTTP POST request containing the parameter ”action=wp-link-ajax”, the current language is determined by parsing the HTTP referer. The parsed language code is not checked for validity, nor SQL-escaped. The user doesn’t need to be logged in. By sending a carefully crafted referer value with the mentioned POST request parameter, an attacker can perform SQL queries on arbitrary tables and retrieve their results. In addition to the standard WordPress database and tables, the attacker may query all other databases and tables accessible to the web backend. The following HTML snippet demonstrates the vulnerability:
The results of the SQL query will be shown in the comments feed XML-formatted. 2. Page/post/menu deletion WPML contains a ”menu sync” function which helps site administrators to keep WordPress menus consistent across different languages. This functionality lacked any access control, allowing anyone to delete practically all content of the website - posts, pages, and menus. Example:
Submitting the above form would delete the row with the ID 12345 in the wp_posts database. Several items be deleted with the same request. 3. Reflected XSS The ”reminder popup” code intended for administrators in WPML didn’t check for login status or nonce. An attacker can direct target users to an URL like: https://YOUR.WORDPRESS.BLOG/?icl_action=reminder_popup&target=javascript%3Aalert%28%2Fhello+world%2f%29%3b%2f%2f to execute JavaScript in their browser. This example bypasses the Chrome XSS Auditor. In the case of WordPress, XSS triggered by an administrator can lead to server-side compromise via the plugin and theme editors. CREDITS ======== The vulnerabilities were found by Jouko Pynnonen of Klikki Oy while researching WordPress plugins falling in the scope of the Facebook bug bounty program. The vendor was notified on March 02, 2015 and the patch was released on March 10. Vendor advisory: http://wpml.org/2015/03/wpml-security-update-bug-and-fix/ An up-to-date version of this document can be found on our website http://klikki.fi . -- Jouko Pynnönen Klikki Oy - http://klikki.fi