User enumeration In shopware/core

Description

Shopware has user enumeration via distinct error codes on Store API login endpoint

Summary

The Store API login endpoint (POST /store-api/account/login) returns different error codes depending on whether the submitted email address belongs to a registered customer (CHECKOUT__CUSTOMER_AUTH_BAD_CREDENTIALS) or is unknown (CHECKOUT__CUSTOMER_NOT_FOUND). The "not found" response also echoes the probed email address. This allows an unauthenticated attacker to enumerate valid customer accounts. The storefront login controller correctly unifies both error paths, but the Store API does not — indicating an inconsistent defense.

CWE

    CWE-204: Observable Response Discrepancy

Description

Distinct error codes leak account existence

The login flow in AccountService::getCustomerByLogin() calls getCustomerByEmail() first, which throws CustomerNotFoundException if the email is not found. If the email IS found but the password is wrong, a separate BadCredentialsException is thrown:

// src/Core/Checkout/Customer/SalesChannel/AccountService.php:116-145
public function getCustomerByLogin(string $email, string $password, SalesChannelContext $context): CustomerEntity
{
    if ($this->isPasswordTooLong($password)) {
        throw CustomerException::badCredentials();
    }

    $customer = $this->getCustomerByEmail($email, $context);...

The two exception types produce clearly distinguishable API responses:

Email not registered:

{
  "errors": [{
    "status": "401",
    "code": "CHECKOUT__CUSTOMER_NOT_FOUND",
    "detail": "No matching customer for the email \"[email protected]\" was found.",
    "meta": { "parameters": { "email": "[email protected]" } }
  }]
}...

Email registered, wrong password:

{
  "errors": [{
    "status": "401",
    "code": "CHECKOUT__CUSTOMER_AUTH_BAD_CREDENTIALS",
    "detail": "Invalid username and/or password."
  }]
}

Storefront is protected — Store API is not

The storefront login controller demonstrates that Shopware's developers are aware of this risk class. AuthController::login() catches both exceptions together and returns a generic error:

// src/Storefront/Controller/AuthController.php:203
} catch (BadCredentialsException|CustomerNotFoundException) {
    // Unified handling — no distinction exposed to the user
}

The Store API LoginRoute::login() does NOT catch these exceptions. They propagate to the global ErrorResponseFactory, which serializes the distinct error codes into the JSON response:

// src/Core/Checkout/Customer/SalesChannel/LoginRoute.php:54-58
$token = $this->accountService->loginByCredentials(
    $email,
    (string) $data->get('password'),
    $context
);
// No try/catch — exceptions propagate with distinct codes

This inconsistency confirms the Store API exposure is an oversight, not a design decision.

Rate limiting is present but insufficient for enumeration

The login route has rate limiting (LoginRoute.php:47-51) keyed on strtolower($email) . '-' . $clientIp. This slows bulk enumeration but does not prevent it because:

    The attacker only needs one request per email to determine existence

    The rate limit key includes the IP, so rotating IPs resets the counter

    The rate limiter is designed to prevent brute-force password guessing, not single-probe enumeration

Impact

    Customer email enumeration: An attacker can confirm whether specific email addresses are registered as customers, enabling targeted attacks

    Phishing enablement: Confirmed customer emails can be targeted with store-specific phishing campaigns (e.g., fake order confirmations, password reset lures)

    Credential stuffing optimization: Attackers with breached credential databases can first filter for valid emails before attempting password guesses, improving efficiency against rate limits

    Privacy violation: Confirms an individual's association with a specific store, which may be sensitive depending on the store's nature (e.g., medical supplies, adult products)

    Email reflection: The CHECKOUT__CUSTOMER_NOT_FOUND response echoes the probed email in the detail and meta.parameters.email fields, which could be leveraged in reflected content attacks

Recommended Remediation

Option 1: Catch both exceptions in LoginRoute and throw a unified error (Preferred)

Apply the same pattern already used in the storefront controller:

// src/Core/Checkout/Customer/SalesChannel/LoginRoute.php
public function login(#[\SensitiveParameter] RequestDataBag $data, SalesChannelContext $context): ContextTokenResponse
{
    EmailIdnConverter::encodeDataBag($data);
    $email = (string) $data->get('email', $data->get('username'));

    if ($this->requestStack->getMainRequest() !== null) {
        $cacheKey = strtolower($email) . '-' . $this->requestStack->getMainRequest()->getClientIp();...

This ensures both "not found" and "bad credentials" return the same CHECKOUT__CUSTOMER_AUTH_BAD_CREDENTIALS code and generic message.

Option 2: Unify at the AccountService layer

For defense in depth, change AccountService::getCustomerByLogin() to throw BadCredentialsException instead of letting CustomerNotFoundException propagate:

// src/Core/Checkout/Customer/SalesChannel/AccountService.php
public function getCustomerByLogin(string $email, string $password, SalesChannelContext $context): CustomerEntity
{
    if ($this->isPasswordTooLong($password)) {
        throw CustomerException::badCredentials();
    }

    try {...

This protects all callers of getCustomerByLogin() regardless of how they handle exceptions. Note: getCustomerByEmail() is also called independently (e.g., password recovery), so that method should continue to throw CustomerNotFoundException for internal use — the normalization should happen at the login boundary.

Additional: Fix registration endpoint

The registration endpoint (POST /store-api/account/register) also leaks email existence via CUSTOMER_EMAIL_NOT_UNIQUE. For complete remediation, consider returning a generic success response and sending a notification email to the existing address instead.

Credit

This vulnerability was discovered and reported by bugbunny.ai.

Mitigation

Update Impact

Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.

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Affected version
Patched versions