PHP Object Injection

Author(s):
 * Egidio Romano

Last revision (mm/dd/yy): //

Vulnerabilities Table of Contents

Description
PHP Object Injection is an application level vulnerability which allows an attacker to perform different kinds of malicious attacks. The vulnerability occurs when user-supplied input is not properly sanitized before being used in call to the unserialize PHP function. Since PHP allows objects serialization, attackers could pass ad-hoc serialized strings to the unserialize function, resulting in an arbitrary PHP objects injection into the application scope.

In order to successfully exploit a PHP Object Injection vulnerability two conditions must be satisfied:


 * The application must have a class which implements a PHP magic method (such as __wakeup or __destruct) that can be abused to conduct malicious attacks.
 * That exploitable class must be declared when unserialize is being called, otherwise object autoloading must be supported.

Risk Factors

 * The impact of this vulnerability could be High but the likelihood is low. So, the severity of this type of vulnerability is Medium.
 * This vulnerability can make the website vulnerable to some other types of attacks such as Path Traversal, SQL Injection or Code Injection.

Examples
The example below shows a PHP class with an exploitable __destruct method: cache_file, $this->cache_data); } }

// some PHP code...

$user_data = unserialize($_GET['data']);

?> In this example an attacker might be able to create a new PHP file with arbitrary code, requesting the following URL: http://site/vuln.php?data=O:9:"VulnCache":2:{s:10:"cache_file";s:8:"test.php";s:10:"cache_data";s:21:"";}

Related Vulnerabilities

 * Category:Input Validation Vulnerability

Related Controls

 * Input Validation
 * Static Code Analysis

Prevention
Do not use unserialize function with user-supplied input, use JSON functions instead.