25128 : PHP Pro Publish set_inc.php Arbitrary PHP Code Execution
Printer | http://osvdb.org/25128 | Email This | Edit Vulnerability

Views This Week Views All Time Added to OSVDB Last Modified Modified (since 2008) Percent Complete
4 538 over 5 years ago over 3 years ago 0 times 85%

Timeline

Disclosure Date
2006-04-30

Keywords

EV0130

Description

PHP Pro Publish contains a flaw that may allow a malicious user to run arbitrary code. The issue is triggered due to 'set_inc.php' not properly sanitizing settings made by administrative users. That way, arbitrary PHP code may be injected, which will be executed when the file is included, resulting in a loss of integrity.

Classification

Location: Remote / Network Access
Attack Type: Input Manipulation
Impact: Loss of Integrity
OSVDB: Web Related

Technical

An attacker must supply valid administrator authentication credentials in order to exploit this vulnerability.

Solution

Currently, there are no known upgrades, patches, or workarounds available to correct this issue.

Products

DeltaScripts.com
Watch-list
PHP Pro Publish
Watch-list
2.0

References

Credit

  • Aliaksandr Hartsuyeu - alexevuln.com - eVuln

CVSSv2 Score

CVSSv2 Base Score = 5.5
Source: nvd.nist.gov | Generated: 2006-05-02 | Disagree?

Access_vector_2 Access_complexity_2 Authentication_1 Confidentiality_impact_1 Integrity_impact_1 Availability_impact_0

Blogs

This section lists the latest news and blogs found via the daylife API (and for older items, the technorati API), which mention or otherwise discuss this vulnerability.

None found at this time

Comments

No Comments.

The database information may change without any notice. Use of the information constitutes acceptance for use in an AS IS condition, and there are NO warranties, implied or otherwise, with regard to this information or its use. Any use of this information is at the user's risk. In no event shall the copyright holder or distributor (OSVDB or OSF) be held liable for any damages whatsoever arising out of or in connection with the use or spread of this information.

© Copyright 2012 Open Source Vulnerability Database (OSVDB), All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Statement - Terms of Use