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GHSA-mqpq-2p68-46fv: pyload Unauthenticated Flask Configuration Leakage vulnerability

Summary

Any unauthenticated user can browse to a specific URL to expose the Flask config, including the SECRET_KEY variable.

Details

Any unauthenticated user can browse to a specific URL to expose the Flask config, including the SECRET_KEY variable.

PoC

Run pyload in the default configuration by running the following command

pyload

Now browse to http://localhost:8000/render/info.html. Notice how the Flask configuration gets displayed. PoC

I was quite amused by this finding. I think it’s a very interesting coming together of things that is so unlikely to happen. Below I will detail my process a bit more.

I was looking through the code to see how the authorization mechanism is implemented when I spotted this route, which can be accessed by any unauthenticated actor

  • https://github.com/pyload/pyload/blob/57d81930edb59177c60830ad8ac36a91d0ec4c4e/src/pyload/webui/app/blueprints/app_blueprint.py#L33C1-L37C51
@bp.route("/render/<path:filename>", endpoint="render")
def render(filename):
    mimetype = mimetypes.guess_type(filename)[0] or "text/html"
    data = render_template(filename)
    return flask.Response(data, mimetype=mimetype)

This route allows me to load in any of the predefined templates. However, these templates will be lacking any form of context, and as such it doesn’t seem too useful. That is until I loaded the info.html template and scrolled down, revealing the Flask config. This was purely accidental, and I did not understand why it happened, until I looked at the template

  • https://github.com/pyload/pyload/blob/57d81930edb59177c60830ad8ac36a91d0ec4c4e/src/pyload/webui/app/templates/info.html#L64C1-L67C10
    <tr>
        <td>{{ _("Config folder:") }}</td>
        <td>{{ config }}</td>
    </tr>

In Flask, every template always gets the Flask config passed to it as the config variable. In the normal execution of this template, this value gets overwritten in the function below, but since we’re calling it and bypassing this function altogether, it doesn’t get overwritten. Would this variable not be named config and named configuration or Config instead, then this exploit wouldn’t work. The likelihood of this occurring is so small, but it seems to have happened here.

  • https://github.com/pyload/pyload/blob/57d81930edb59177c60830ad8ac36a91d0ec4c4e/src/pyload/webui/app/blueprints/app_blueprint.py#L450C1-L461C51
    context = {
        "python": sys.version,
        "os": " ".join((os.name, sys.platform) + extra),
        "version": api.get_server_version(),
        "folder": PKGDIR,
        "config": api.get_userdir(),
        "download": conf["general"]["storage_folder"]["value"],
        "freespace": format.size(api.free_space()),
        "webif": conf["webui"]["port"]["value"],
        "language": conf["general"]["language"]["value"],
    }
    return render_template("info.html", **context)

Impact

Depending on the how the Flask config data is used, it could have detrimental consequences for the security. It’s crucial to keep the SECRET_KEY secret and never expose it in your code or configuration files.

ghsa
#vulnerability#web#git#auth

Summary

Any unauthenticated user can browse to a specific URL to expose the Flask config, including the SECRET_KEY variable.

Details

Any unauthenticated user can browse to a specific URL to expose the Flask config, including the SECRET_KEY variable.

PoC

Run pyload in the default configuration by running the following command

pyload

Now browse to http://localhost:8000/render/info.html. Notice how the Flask configuration gets displayed.

I was quite amused by this finding. I think it’s a very interesting coming together of things that is so unlikely to happen. Below I will detail my process a bit more.

I was looking through the code to see how the authorization mechanism is implemented when I spotted this route, which can be accessed by any unauthenticated actor

  • https://github.com/pyload/pyload/blob/57d81930edb59177c60830ad8ac36a91d0ec4c4e/src/pyload/webui/app/blueprints/app_blueprint.py#L33C1-L37C51

@bp.route(“/render/<path:filename>", endpoint="render”) def render(filename): mimetype = mimetypes.guess_type(filename)[0] or “text/html” data = render_template(filename) return flask.Response(data, mimetype=mimetype)

This route allows me to load in any of the predefined templates. However, these templates will be lacking any form of context, and as such it doesn’t seem too useful. That is until I loaded the info.html template and scrolled down, revealing the Flask config. This was purely accidental, and I did not understand why it happened, until I looked at the template

  • https://github.com/pyload/pyload/blob/57d81930edb59177c60830ad8ac36a91d0ec4c4e/src/pyload/webui/app/templates/info.html#L64C1-L67C10

    <tr> <td>{{ _(“Config folder:”) }}</td> <td>{{ config }}</td> </tr>

In Flask, every template always gets the Flask config passed to it as the config variable. In the normal execution of this template, this value gets overwritten in the function below, but since we’re calling it and bypassing this function altogether, it doesn’t get overwritten. Would this variable not be named config and named configuration or Config instead, then this exploit wouldn’t work. The likelihood of this occurring is so small, but it seems to have happened here.

  • https://github.com/pyload/pyload/blob/57d81930edb59177c60830ad8ac36a91d0ec4c4e/src/pyload/webui/app/blueprints/app_blueprint.py#L450C1-L461C51

    context = { "python": sys.version, "os": " ".join((os.name, sys.platform) + extra), "version": api.get_server_version(), "folder": PKGDIR, "config": api.get_userdir(), "download": conf[“general”][“storage_folder”][“value”], "freespace": format.size(api.free_space()), "webif": conf[“webui”][“port”][“value”], "language": conf[“general”][“language”][“value”], } return render_template("info.html", **context)

Impact

Depending on the how the Flask config data is used, it could have detrimental consequences for the security. It’s crucial to keep the SECRET_KEY secret and never expose it in your code or configuration files.

References

  • GHSA-mqpq-2p68-46fv
  • https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2024-21644
  • pyload/pyload@bb22063

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