| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| An Unrestricted File Upload vulnerability in Redeight CMS version 1.0 allows authenticated attackers to achieve Remote Code Execution via the POST "/admin/index.php?module=pages&mode=FileAdd" endpoint. The application fails to validate file extensions and MIME types, permitting the upload of arbitrary PHP scripts to the publicly accessible "/uploads/files/" directory where they can be executed directly by the web server. |
| Subscriber Arbitrary File Upload in Travel Booking <= 2.2.5 versions. |
| The DMP-5000 file service exposes authenticated arbitrary file upload functionality. There are exposed endpoints which allows authenticated users to upload files of any type without validation. No file extension filtering or content inspection is enforced which allows executable binaries and scripts to be accepted and written directly to the server. |
| A vulnerability exists in H.View IP cameras certificate-related upload interfaces allow authenticated users to store arbitrary file content to fixed, persistent filesystem locations without validating file type, structure, or size. This design omission enables the placement of unexpected or malformed data in locations intended for trusted certificate material, which could affect system integrity or behavior even after reboot. |
| SzafirHost verifies the downloaded native library archive with one JarFile parser (reading the Central Directory) but extracts native libraries with JarInputStream parser (reading sequentially from local file headers). An attacker who controls the served archive can insert a malicious DLL/SO/DYLIB as a local-file-header entry between the last legitimate entry and the Central Directory, without adding it to the Central Directory. The signature verifier never sees the injected entry and accepts the archive as validly signed; the extractor reads it sequentially and writes the attacker library to the native temp directory with no hash check), while the archive-size check still passes. This can lead to remote code execution.
This issue was fixed in version 1.2.2. |
| fast-uri versions 2.3.1 through 3.1.2 and 4.0.0 fail to canonicalize Unicode (IDN) hostnames for HTTP-family URLs. The IDN conversion path calls a helper that does not exist on the global URL constructor, silently leaving the host in its original Unicode form while normalize() and equal() still return values that differ from a WHATWG-compatible URL parser. Applications that use fast-uri to enforce host-based policy (denylists, loopback filtering, redirect validation, outbound proxy routing) before passing the same URL to Node's URL or fetch can be bypassed when the two implementations resolve the same input to different hosts. Patches: upgrade to fast-uri 3.1.3 for the 3.x line or 4.0.1 for the 4.x line. Workarounds: enforce host policy using the same URL parser used for the actual request, or reject non-ASCII hosts before policy checks. |
| Unrestricted Upload of File with Dangerous Type vulnerability in Daan.Dev OMGF Pro allows Using Malicious Files.
This issue affects OMGF Pro: from n/a through 5.2.6. |
| A vulnerability was determined in Hanwang e-Face General Management Platform 6.3.5.4. This issue affects some unknown processing of the file /manage/resourceUpload/upload.do. Executing a manipulation of the argument File can lead to unrestricted upload. The attack may be launched remotely. The exploit has been publicly disclosed and may be utilized. |
| A flaw has been found in itsourcecode Online Hotel Management System 1.0. Affected is an unknown function of the file /admin/mod_amenities/controller.php?action=add. Executing a manipulation of the argument image can lead to unrestricted upload. It is possible to launch the attack remotely. The exploit has been published and may be used. |
| The K2 article gallery upload path accepts a zip/tar archive, extracts it under `/media/k2/galleries/<id>/`, and only renames image files (gif/jpg/jpeg/png/webp) to safe names — non-image files (including `.php`) are extracted as-is and remain executable via direct HTTP access. |
| The K2 frontend article-attachment upload path accepts files whose extension is `.php`, and Apache's standard mod_php matches `\.php$` and executes them under the K2 web user. A K2 Author can upload a `shell.php`, then fetch `/media/k2/attachments/shell.php` and execute arbitrary PHP code in the web server's context. |
| Administrator Arbitrary File Upload in TemplateSpare <= 4.2.0 versions. |
| Subscriber Arbitrary File Upload in Quform <= 2.23.0 versions. |
| Customer Arbitrary File Upload in Booster for WooCommerce <= 8.0.1 versions. |
| An arbitrary file upload vulnerability in the attachment handling component of flatnotes v5.5.4 allows attackers to execute arbitrary code via uploading a crafted HTML or SVG file. |
| Subscriber Arbitrary File Upload in WishList Member X <= 3.29.0 versions. |
| Unrestricted Upload of File with Dangerous Type vulnerability in Kodezen LLC Academy LMS Pro allows Upload a Web Shell to a Web Server.
This issue affects Academy LMS Pro: from n/a before 3.5.2. |
| Ghost is a Node.js content management system. From 6.19.4 until 6.21.1, insufficient validation of the client-supplied Content-Type on Ghost's Admin API file upload endpoint allowed uploaded files to be served from the site with an attacker-chosen content type on S3/GCS storage backends. On installations that serve uploaded files from the same origin as the site, this could have been used to facilitate stored cross-site scripting against site visitors or staff. This vulnerability is fixed in 6.21.1. |
| The MagicForm WordPress plugin through 0.1.3 does not properly validate the type of files uploaded through an unauthenticated AJAX action when a form's per-field extension allowlist is left empty, allowing unauthenticated attackers to upload PHP files and execute arbitrary code on the server. |
| node-tar is a full-featured Tar for Node.js. Prior to 7.5.16, tar (node-tar) applies a PAX extended header's size= record (and other PAX overrides) to the next header entry of any type, including intermediary metadata headers such as a GNU long-name (L) or long-link (K) entry. Per POSIX pax, a PAX extended header (x) describes the next file entry, not the intermediary extension headers that may sit between the x header and the file it annotates. Because node-tar lets the PAX size override the byte length of an intervening L/K/x header, an attacker can desynchronize node-tar's stream cursor relative to every other mainstream tar implementation (GNU tar, libarchive/bsdtar, Python tarfile, and the now-fixed tar-rs / astral-tokio-tar). The result is a tar parser interpretation differential (CWE-436): a single crafted archive yields a different set of members under node-tar than under the reference tar tools. An attacker can use this to hide a member from one parser while it is visible to another, which defeats security tooling whose scanner and extractor disagree on archive contents (e.g. a malware/secret scanner that lists entries with one library while a downstream step extracts with another) This vulnerability is fixed in 7.5.16. |