The Trix editor, versions prior to 2.1.4, is vulnerable to XSS when pasting malicious code. This vulnerability is a bypass of the fix put in place for GHSA-qjqp-xr96-cj99. In #1149, we added sanitation for Trix attachments with a text/html
content type. However, Trix only checks the content type on the paste event's dataTransfer
object. As long as the dataTransfer
has a content type of text/html
, Trix parses its contents and creates an Attachment
with them, even if the attachment itself doesn't have a text/html
content type. Trix then uses the attachment content to set the attachment element's innerHTML
.
Impact
An attacker could trick a user to copy and paste malicious code that would execute arbitrary JavaScript code within the context of the user's session, potentially leading to unauthorized actions being performed or sensitive information being disclosed.
Patches
Update Recommendation: Users should upgrade to Trix editor version 2.1.4 or later, which incorporates proper sanitization of input from copied content.
Workarounds
This is not really a workaround but something that should be considered in addition to upgrading to the patched version. If affected users can disallow browsers that don't support a Content Security Policy, then this would be an effective workaround for this and all XSS vulnerabilities. Set CSP policies such as script-src 'self'
to ensure that only scripts hosted on the same origin are executed, and explicitly prohibit inline scripts using script-src-elem
.
References
Credits
This vulnerability was reported by HackerOne researcher thwin_htet.
The Trix editor, versions prior to 2.1.4, is vulnerable to XSS when pasting malicious code. This vulnerability is a bypass of the fix put in place for GHSA-qjqp-xr96-cj99. In #1149, we added sanitation for Trix attachments with a
text/html
content type. However, Trix only checks the content type on the paste event'sdataTransfer
object. As long as thedataTransfer
has a content type oftext/html
, Trix parses its contents and creates anAttachment
with them, even if the attachment itself doesn't have atext/html
content type. Trix then uses the attachment content to set the attachment element'sinnerHTML
.Impact
An attacker could trick a user to copy and paste malicious code that would execute arbitrary JavaScript code within the context of the user's session, potentially leading to unauthorized actions being performed or sensitive information being disclosed.
Patches
Update Recommendation: Users should upgrade to Trix editor version 2.1.4 or later, which incorporates proper sanitization of input from copied content.
Workarounds
This is not really a workaround but something that should be considered in addition to upgrading to the patched version. If affected users can disallow browsers that don't support a Content Security Policy, then this would be an effective workaround for this and all XSS vulnerabilities. Set CSP policies such as
script-src 'self'
to ensure that only scripts hosted on the same origin are executed, and explicitly prohibit inline scripts usingscript-src-elem
.References
DataTransfer
Credits
This vulnerability was reported by HackerOne researcher thwin_htet.