GHSA-3x67-4c2c-w45m
HIGHAdmidio has a Second-Order SQL Injection via List Configuration (lsc_special_field, lsc_sort, lsc_filter)
EPSS Exploitation Probability
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Blast Radius
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Description
Summary
The MyList configuration feature in Admidio allows authenticated users to define custom list column layouts. User-supplied column names, sort directions, and filter conditions are stored in the adm_list_columns table via prepared statements (safe storage), but are later read back and interpolated directly into dynamically constructed SQL queries without sanitization or parameterization. This is a classic second-order SQL injection: safe write, unsafe read.
An attacker can inject arbitrary SQL through these stored values to read, modify, or delete any data in the database, potentially achieving full database compromise.
Details
Step 1: Storing the Payload (Safe Write)
In modules/groups-roles/mylist_function.php (lines 89-115), user-supplied POST array values for column names, sort directions, and filter conditions are accepted. The only validation on column values is a prefix check (must start with usr_ or mem_). Sort and condition values have no validation at all. These values are stored in the database via ListConfiguration::addColumn() which calls Entity::save() using prepared statements -- so the INSERT/UPDATE is safe.
Key source file references:
D:\bugcrowd\admidio\repo\modules\groups-roles\mylist_function.phplines 89-115D:\bugcrowd\admidio\repo\src\Roles\Entity\ListConfiguration.phplines 106-116
Step 2: Triggering the Payload (Unsafe Read)
When the list is viewed (via lists_show.php), ListConfiguration::getSql() reads the stored values and interpolates them directly into SQL in four locations:
Injection Point 1 -- lsc_special_field in SELECT clause:
File D:\bugcrowd\admidio\repo\src\Roles\Entity\ListConfiguration.php lines 739-770.
The lsc_special_field value is read from the database and used as a column name in the SELECT clause. Only three values (mem_duration, mem_begin, mem_end) get special handling; all others fall through to the default case where the raw value is used directly as both $dbColumnName and $sqlColumnName, then interpolated into the SQL as $dbColumnName AS $sqlColumnName.
Injection Point 2 -- lsc_sort in ORDER BY clause:
File D:\bugcrowd\admidio\repo\src\Roles\Entity\ListConfiguration.php lines 790-792.
The lsc_sort value is appended directly after the column name in the ORDER BY clause.
Injection Point 3 -- lsc_special_field in search conditions:
File D:\bugcrowd\admidio\repo\src\Roles\Entity\ListConfiguration.php lines 611-621.
The lsc_special_field value is interpolated into COALESCE() expressions used in search WHERE conditions.
Injection Point 4 -- lsc_filter via ConditionParser:
File D:\bugcrowd\admidio\repo\src\Roles\ValueObject\ConditionParser.php line 347.
The ConditionParser appends raw characters from the stored filter value to the SQL string. A single quote can break out of the SQL string context.
Root Cause
The addColumn() method and mylist_function.php accept arbitrary strings for column names, sort directions, and filter conditions. The only gate for column names is a prefix check (usr_ or mem_), which is trivially satisfied by an attacker (e.g., usr_id) UNION SELECT ...). No allowlist of valid column names exists. No server-side validation of sort values exists (should only allow ASC/DESC/empty). The frontend <select> element only offers ASC/DESC, but this is trivially bypassed by POSTing arbitrary values.
PoC
Prerequisites: Logged-in user with list edit permission (default: all logged-in users).
Step 1: Save a list config with SQL injection in lsc_special_field
curl -X POST "https://TARGET/adm_program/modules/groups-roles/mylist_function.php?mode=save_temporary" \
-H "Cookie: ADMIDIO_SESSION_ID=<session>" \
-d "adm_csrf_token=<csrf_token>" \
-d "column[]=usr_login_name" \
-d "column[]=usr_id FROM adm_users)--" \
-d "sort[]=" \
-d "sort[]=" \
-d "condition[]=" \
-d "condition[]=" \
-d "sel_roles[]=<valid_role_uuid>"
The second column value usr_id FROM adm_users)-- starts with usr_ so it passes the prefix check. When read back in getSql(), it is interpolated directly as a column expression in the SQL SELECT clause.
Step 2: Sort-based injection (simpler, no prefix check needed)
curl -X POST "https://TARGET/adm_program/modules/groups-roles/mylist_function.php?mode=save_temporary" \
-H "Cookie: ADMIDIO_SESSION_ID=<session>" \
-d "adm_csrf_token=<csrf_token>" \
-d "column[]=usr_login_name" \
-d "sort[]=ASC,(SELECT+CASE+WHEN+(1=1)+THEN+1+ELSE+1/0+END)" \
-d "condition[]=" \
-d "sel_roles[]=<valid_role_uuid>"
This injects into the ORDER BY clause. The sort value has zero server-side validation.
Step 3: The save_temporary mode automatically redirects to lists_show.php which calls ListConfiguration::getSql(), executing the injected SQL.
Impact
- Data Exfiltration: An attacker can extract any data from the database including password hashes, email addresses, personal data of all members, and application configuration.
- Data Modification: With stacked queries (supported by MySQL with PDO), the attacker can modify or delete data.
- Privilege Escalation: Password hashes can be extracted and cracked, or admin accounts can be directly modified.
- Full Database Compromise: The entire database is accessible through this vulnerability.
The attack requires authentication and CSRF token, but:
- Any logged-in user has this permission by default (when
groups_roles_edit_lists = 1). - The CSRF token is available in the same session.
- The injected payload persists in the database and triggers every time anyone views the list.
Recommended Fix
Fix 1: Allowlist for lsc_special_field
Add a strict allowlist of valid special field names before calling addColumn() in mylist_function.php. The list should match exactly the field names supported in getSql() and the JavaScript on mylist.php.
Fix 2: Validate lsc_sort values
In ListConfiguration::addColumn(), validate that the sort parameter is one of ASC, DESC, or empty string before storing it.
Fix 3: Defense-in-depth validation in ListConfiguration::getSql()
Also validate the lsc_special_field value against an allowlist in getSql() before interpolating it into the SQL string. This protects against payloads already stored in the database.
Fix 4: Escape filter values in ConditionParser
Use parameterized queries or at minimum escape single quotes in ConditionParser::makeSqlStatement().
Affected Packages
| Ecosystem | Package | Vulnerable range | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🐘Packagist | admidio/admidio | all versions | 5.0.7 |
Detection & mitigation playbook
Open-source dependencyDetect
Scan your dependency tree (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, requirements.txt, go.sum, etc.) for admidio/admidio. O3's reachability analysis confirms whether the vulnerable code path is actually invoked in your application, so you act on real exposure instead of every transitive match.
Fix
Update admidio/admidio to 5.0.7 or later, then make sure no transitive (indirect) dependency still pins the vulnerable range — O3 confirms GHSA-3x67-4c2c-w45m is resolved across your whole dependency graph.
Workarounds
If you can't upgrade right away: gate or disable the affected feature, validate untrusted input at the boundary, and avoid passing attacker-controlled data into the vulnerable path. O3's runtime protection blocks exploitation in production as an interim safeguard until the upgrade lands.
How O3 protects you
O3 pinpoints whether GHSA-3x67-4c2c-w45m is reachable in your code and exactly where to fix it, then blocks exploitation in production at runtime until the patched version is deployed.
Tailored to GHSA-3x67-4c2c-w45m. Runtime protection reduces exposure until a permanent patch is applied and verified — it complements patching, it doesn't replace it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is GHSA-3x67-4c2c-w45m in your dependencies?
O3 detects GHSA-3x67-4c2c-w45m across Packagist dependencies and uses function-level reachability to confirm whether the vulnerable code path is actually reachable — not just present. No false positives.