Server side cross-site scripting In getgrav/grav

Description

Grav Vulnerable to XSS via Taxonomy Field Values in Admin Panel

Summary

A Stored Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability exists in the Grav CMS Form plugin's select field template. Taxonomy tag and category values are rendered with the Twig |raw filter in the admin panel, bypassing the global autoescape protection. An editor-level user can inject arbitrary JavaScript that executes in any administrator's browser session when they view or edit any page in the admin panel.

Additionally, Grav's built-in XSS detection (Security::detectXss()) can be bypassed by using payloads that close the <option>/<select> context and use unquoted event handlers - the on_events regex fails to match event handlers without quotes or trailing spaces before >.

Important

    The vulnerability is in the Form plugin (select.html.twig), which is installed by default with Grav

    The XSS is cross-page: a malicious taxonomy value on one page executes when an admin edits any page, because taxonomy options are rendered from a shared global pool

    An editor can exploit this without any other vulnerability - taxonomy fields are not in the server-side restricted fields list

    The HttpOnly flag on session cookies prevents direct session theft, but the XSS can steal the admin nonce and perform privileged actions via JavaScript

Permissions Needed

    Editor: can create or edit pages and set taxonomy tag/category values

Details

The Form plugin's select field template renders option values using the |raw Twig filter, which outputs content without HTML escaping:

File: user/plugins/form/templates/forms/fields/select/select.html.twig

{# Line 55 #}
 avalue|raw 

{# Line 65 #}
 suboption|t|raw 

{# Line 72 #}
 item_value|t|raw ...

The taxonomy field in the page editor uses this select template. When a page has taxonomy values (tags, categories), these values are populated as <option> elements in the select dropdown. The value attribute is properly escaped by the browser's attribute encoding, but the display text between <option> tags is rendered raw:

<option value="&lt;script&gt;alert(1)&lt;/script&gt;"><script>alert(1)</script></option>

Since taxonomy options are collected globally across all pages (to provide autocomplete/selection), a malicious taxonomy value on any page will appear in the taxonomy dropdown of every page editor - making this a cross-page stored XSS.

The server-side field restriction in the flex-objects plugin only blocks ['form', 'forms', 'process', 'twig'] for non-super users. Taxonomy fields are not restricted, so editors can freely set arbitrary taxonomy values.

XSS Detection Bypass

Grav's Security::detectXss() checks for dangerous_tags (e.g., <script>, <iframe>), on_events (event handlers), and invalid_protocols (e.g., javascript:). However, the on_events regex:

'on_events' => '#(<[^>]+[a-z\x00-\x20"\'\/)(?:on[a-z]+)\s*=[\s|\'"'].*[\s|\'"']>#iUu'

requires either quotes around the handler value or a trailing space before >. An unquoted handler like onerror=alert(1)> (no space before >) bypasses this check entirely.

Combined with </option></select> to break out of the select context (neither tag is in dangerous_tags), the full payload evades all three detection layers and triggers no XSS warning in the admin panel.

PoC

Step 1: Login as Editor

Navigate to http://TARGET/admin/ and authenticate with editor credentials.

Step 2: Create a Page with Malicious Taxonomy

    Go to Pages → Add → Add Page

    Title: XSS via editor

    Go to Options Tap

    On Taxonomies, Add tag:

</option></select><img src=x onerror=alert('XSS-via-editor')>

This payload:

    Closes </option></select> to break out of the select dropdown context

    Injects an <img> tag with an unquoted onerror handler (bypasses on_events regex)

    Is not in the dangerous_tags list (no <script>, <iframe>, etc.)

    Triggers no XSS warning in the admin panel

image

Step 3: Trigger the XSS

When any administrator navigates to the page editor of any page (not just the malicious one), the JavaScript executes immediately.

image

The XSS fires because taxonomy tag options are collected globally across all pages and rendered with |raw in the select dropdown template. The payload breaks out of the <option> context, and the browser renders the <img> tag as a regular DOM element.

Impact

    Session hijacking: While HttpOnly prevents direct cookie theft, the XSS can steal the admin nonce token and perform any admin action via AJAX requests

    Privilege escalation: An editor can perform admin-only actions (create users, modify system configuration, install plugins) through the hijacked admin session

    Cross-page impact: A single malicious taxonomy value affects the entire admin panel - every page editor view is compromised


Maintainer note — fix applied (2026-04-24)

Fixed across two repos:

    grav-plugin-form 9.0.1 (commit 6bffb4c) — the primary fix. All four |raw filters in templates/forms/fields/select/select.html.twig (placeholder, avalue, suboption, item_value) have been removed. Option labels — including taxonomy values that propagate cross-page through the admin's shared selection pool — now go through Twig's default escaper, so a lower-privileged editor can no longer inject script that runs in an admin's browser when they open any page editor.

    Grav core on the 2.0 branch (commit 5a12f9be8, ships in 2.0.0-beta.2) — closes the detection-bypass half of the report. The on_events regex in Security::detectXss() is tightened so unquoted handlers like onerror=alert(1)> are flagged (see separate GHSA-9695-8fr9-hw5q), and option/select have been added to default security.xss_dangerous_tags so </option></select>… tripwires the detector (see separate GHSA-w8cg-7jcj-4vv2).

Sites running admin2 on Grav 2.0.0-beta.2 get the 9.0.1 form plugin automatically via its existing dependency graph.

Files:

Mitigation

Update Impact

Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.

Ecosystem
Package
Affected version
Patched versions
FLAT-HPOES – Vulnerability | Fluid Attacks Database