A security researcher has disclosed a possible XSS vulnerability in the Blade templating engine.
Given the following two Blade templates:
resources/views/parent.blade.php:
@section('content')
<input value="{{ $value }}">
@show
resources/views/child.blade.php:
@extends('parent')
@section('content')
<input value="{{ $value }}">
@endsection
And a route like the following:
Route::get('/example', function() {
$value = '//localhost/###parent-placeholder-040f06fd774092478d450774f5ba30c5da78acc8## onclick=location.assign(this.value);//';
return view('child', ['value' => $value]);
});
The broken HTML element may be clicked and the user is taken to another location in their browser due to XSS. This is due to the user being able to guess the parent placeholder SHA-1 hash by trying common names of sections. If the parent template contains an exploitable HTML structure an XSS vulnerability can be exposed.
This vulnerability has been patched by determining the parent placeholder at runtime and using a random hash that is unique to each request.
A security researcher has disclosed a possible XSS vulnerability in the Blade templating engine.
Given the following two Blade templates:
resources/views/parent.blade.php:
resources/views/child.blade.php:
And a route like the following:
The broken HTML element may be clicked and the user is taken to another location in their browser due to XSS. This is due to the user being able to guess the parent placeholder SHA-1 hash by trying common names of sections. If the parent template contains an exploitable HTML structure an XSS vulnerability can be exposed.
This vulnerability has been patched by determining the parent placeholder at runtime and using a random hash that is unique to each request.