This write-up describes a vulnerability found in Label Studio, a popular open source data labeling tool. The vulnerability affects all versions of Label Studio prior to 1.9.2
and was tested on version 1.8.2
.
Label Studio has a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability that could be exploited when an authenticated user uploads a crafted image file for their avatar that gets rendered as a HTML file on the website.
The following code snippet in Label Studio shows that the only verification check is that the file is an image by extracting the dimensions from the file.
def hash_upload(instance, filename):
filename = str(uuid.uuid4())[0:8] + '-' + filename
return settings.AVATAR_PATH + '/' + filename <3>
def check_avatar(files):
images = list(files.items())
if not images:
return None
filename, avatar = list(files.items())[0] # get first file
w, h = get_image_dimensions(avatar) <1>
if not w or not h:
raise forms.ValidationError("Can't read image, try another one")
# validate dimensions
max_width = max_height = 1200
if w > max_width or h > max_height:
raise forms.ValidationError('Please use an image that is %s x %s pixels or smaller.'
% (max_width, max_height))
# validate content type
main, sub = avatar.content_type.split('/') <2>
if not (main == 'image' and sub.lower() in ['jpeg', 'jpg', 'gif', 'png']):
raise forms.ValidationError(u'Please use a JPEG, GIF or PNG image.')
# validate file size
max_size = 1024 * 1024
if len(avatar) > max_size:
raise forms.ValidationError('Avatar file size may not exceed ' + str(max_size/1024) + ' kb')
return avatar
1. Attempts to get image dimensions to validate the uploaded avatar file is an image.
2. Extracts the Content-Type
from the upload POST
request. A user can easily bypass this verification by changing the mimetype of the uploaded file to an allowed type (eg. image/jpeg
).
3. The file extension of the uploaded file is never validated and is saved to the filesystem.
Label Studio serves avatar images using Django's built-in serve
view, which is not secure for production use according to Django's documentation.
re_path(r'^data/' + settings.AVATAR_PATH + '/(?P<path>.*)$', serve,
kwargs={'document_root': join(settings.MEDIA_ROOT, settings.AVATAR_PATH)}),
The issue with the Django serve
view is that it determines the Content-Type
of the response by the file extension in the URL path. Therefore, an attacker can upload an image that contains malicious HTML code and name the file with a .html
extension to be rendered as a HTML page. The only file extension validation is performed on the client-side, which can be easily bypassed.
Below are the steps to reproduce this issue and execute JavaScript code in the context of the Label Studio website.
<script>alert(document.domain)</script>
. This can be done using the exiftool
command as shown below that was used to create the following image.
exiftool -Comment='<script>alert(document.domain)</script>' penguin.jpg
On Label Studio, navigate to account & settings page and intercept the upload request of the avatar image using a tool such as Burp Suite. Modify the filename in the request to have a .html
extension.
Right click the image on the avatar profile and copy the URL. Send this to a victim and it will display an alert box with the host name of the Label Studio instance as shown below.
Executing arbitrary JavaScript could result in an attacker performing malicious actions on Label Studio users if they visit the crafted avatar image. For an example, an attacker can craft a JavaScript payload that adds a new Django Super Administrator user if a Django administrator visits the image.
serve
view and implement a secure controller for viewing uploaded avatar images.{ "nvd_published_at": "2024-01-23T23:15:08Z", "cwe_ids": [ "CWE-79" ], "severity": "HIGH", "github_reviewed": true, "github_reviewed_at": "2024-01-24T14:21:29Z" }