A Cross-Site Scripting vulnerability was found in the WP-Filebase Download Manager WordPress Plugin. This issue allows an attacker to perform a wide variety of actions, such as stealing Administrators' session tokens, or performing arbitrary actions on their behalf. In order to exploit this issue, the attacker has to lure/force a logged on WordPress Administrator into opening a malicious website.
For feedback or questions about this advisory mail us at sumofpwn at securify.nl
This issue has been found during the Summer of Pwnage hacker event, running from July 1-29. A community summer event in which a large group of security bughunters (worldwide) collaborate in a month of security research on Open Source Software (WordPress this time). For fun. The event is hosted by Securify in Amsterdam.
OVE-20160712-0019
This issue was successfully tested on WP-Filebase Download Manager WordPress Plugin version 3.4.4.
There is currently no fix available.
The WP-Filebase Download Manager WordPress Plugin adds a powerful download manager including file categories, downloads counter, widgets, sorted file lists and more to your WordPress blog. A Cross-Site Scripting vulnerability was found in the WP-Filebase Download Manager WordPress Plugin. This issue allows an attacker to perform a wide variety of actions, such as stealing Administrators' session tokens, or performing arbitrary actions on their behalf. In order to exploit this issue, the attacker has to lure/force a logged on WordPress Administrator into opening a malicious website.
The issue exists in the file AdminGuiFiles.php and is caused by the lack of output encoding on the page request parameter. The vulnerable code is listed below.
<form id="posts-filter" action="" method="post">
<input type="hidden" name="page" value="<?php echo $_REQUEST['page'] ?>" />
<?php $file_table->display() ?>
</form>
Normally, the page URL parameter is validated by WordPress, which prevents Cross-Site Scripting. However in this case the value of page is obtained from $_REQUEST, not from $_GET. This allows for parameter pollution where the attacker puts a benign page value in the URL and simultaneously submits a malicious page value as POST parameter.
<html>
<body>
<form action="http://<target>/wp-admin/admin.php?page=wpfilebase_files" method="POST">
<input type="hidden" name="page" value=""<script>alert(document.cookie);</script>" />
<input type="submit" value="Submit request" />
</form>
</body>
</html>