All 2.2.X, 2.3.X, 2.4.X, and 2.5.X versions of the Symfony HttpKernel component are affected by this security issue. Your application is vulnerable only if the ESI feature is enabled and there is a proxy in front of the web application.
This issue has been fixed in Symfony 2.3.19, 2.4.9, and 2.5.4. Note that no fixes are provided for Symfony 2.2 as it is not maintained anymore.
When you enable the ESI feature and when you are using a proxy like Varnish that you configured as a trusted proxy, the FragmentHandler
considered requests to render fragments as coming from a trusted source, even if the client was requesting them directly. Symfony can not distinguish between ESI requests done on behalf of the client by Varnish and faked fragment requests coming directly from the client.
To mitigate this issue, and for not-supported Symfony versions, you can use the following workaround in your Varnish configuration (/_fragment
being the URL path prefix configured under the fragment
setting of the framework bundle configuration):
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sub vcl_recv {
if (req.restarts == 0 && req.url ~ "^/_fragment") {
error 400;
}
}
We do not rely on trusted IPs anymore when validating a fragment request as all fragment URLs are now signed.
The patch for this issue is available here: <https://github.com/symfony/symfony/pull/11831>
I would like to thank CΓ©dric Nirousset, Trent Steel, and Christophe Coevoet for reporting this security issue, Christophe Coevoet for providing the patch, and David Buchmann for helping writing this blog post.
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Published in #Security Advisories