This only affects ColdFusion versions 5 and below. It does not affect CFMX. This is similar to previously reported XSS issues with CF, but not identical to any that I have seen reported. Cold Fusion has a "feature" that allows a developer to add validation to HTML forms by using specially named form fields. For example:
....
Notice the magic "_required" tacked onto the end of that second input. If the form is submitted with the "foo" parameter missing or empty, then the value of foo_required ("You must enter something") will be displayed back to the user. Note that this is an automatic feature of the server; it does not involve any code being written in "x.cfm" to do any validation. This only happens with POST requests, not GET. The error messages displayed are vulnerable to XSS. Any HTML or javascript provided will be echoed directly back to the client, as-is. Any website can create a form that points to the target website, and embeds harmful script, and then use some method to get legitimate users to submit the form. ColdFusion allows a custom template to be provided by the developer for these types of errors. For instance: Unfortunately, the error handler template cannot contain any CFML code that could be used to sanitize the error messages. It can only contain static HTML, presumably for branding purposes, and a very basic subset of CFML variables for telling the engine where in the HTML to display the error messages. The workaround is to create an error template that does not attempt to display the client-supplied error messages in any way, but truly contains only static HTML. This effectively renders the validation "feature" of ColdFusion useless, but it is of questionable value anyway.