Summary
Vulnerability: Stored DOM XSS via System Settings – Company Information (Same-Page Attribute Breakout & Persistent Payload Injection)
- Stored Cross-Site Scripting via Unsanitized Company Information Configuration Fields with Immediate Same-Page Execution
Description
The application fails to properly sanitize user-controlled input within System Settings – Company Information. Several administrative configuration fields accept attacker-controlled input that is stored server-side and later rendered without proper output encoding.
Affected fields include, but are not limited to:
- Company Name
- Slogan
- Company Phone
- Company Mobile
- Company Email
- Google Maps iframe link
- Company Logo and other media-related fields
Unlike the public-facing landing page injection vulnerability, this issue executes directly on the same settings page. The injected payload breaks out of the HTML attribute context and is immediately interpreted by the browser when rendered, resulting in same-page DOM-based stored XSS.
This represents different functionality and a separate vulnerability from public-facing rendering.
Affected Functionality
- System Settings – Company Information configuration
- Same-page rendering of user-controlled input fields
- DOM attribute injection within form inputs
- Storage and retrieval of company information values
Attack Scenario
- An attacker injects a malicious JavaScript payload into one or more Company Information fields.
- The payload breaks out of the HTML attribute context.
- The application stores and re-renders the payload without sanitization or encoding.
- The payload executes immediately on the same settings page.
- The script executes in the browser context of the authenticated user managing settings.
Impact
- Persistent Stored XSS
- Immediate Same-Page DOM XSS execution
- Execution of arbitrary JavaScript in victims’ browsers
- Administrative privilege escalation
- Full administrator account takeover
- Full account takeover across all roles
- Full compromise of the entire platform
Endpoints:
/backend/settings/ (Company Information)
Steps To Reproduce (POC)
- Navigate to System Settings -> Company Information
- Insert the following XSS payload into any Company Information field:
test"><img src=1 onerror=alert()>" class="form-control" placeholder="Name" required>
- Save the settings
- Observe that the payload breaks out of the input attribute context
- The XSS executes immediately on the same page
Remediation
-
Avoid unsafe DOM manipulation methods: Do not use .html(), innerHTML, or similar sink functions in client-side JavaScript or server-side templating (e.g., PHP). Even when user input flowing into these sinks is not immediately apparent, they can introduce Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities that an attacker may exploit.
-
Apply output encoding: Implement HTML entity encoding on all user-controlled data before rendering it in the browser. This helps neutralize potentially malicious input.
-
Implement input sanitization: Ensure that all user-supplied input is properly sanitized before processing or output. Currently, no sanitization mechanisms are in place, which should be addressed as a priority.
-
Enforce security headers and cookie attributes:
- Content Security Policy (CSP): Define and enforce a strict CSP to limit the execution of unauthorized scripts.
- HttpOnly flag: Set the
HttpOnly attribute on session cookies to prevent client-side script access.
- SameSite attribute: Configure the
SameSite cookie attribute to mitigate Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) risks.
- Secure flag: Ensure all cookies are transmitted only over HTTPS by enabling the
Secure attribute.
These measures collectively reduce the impact of XSS and help prevent escalation paths such as CSRF via XSS.
Ready Video POC:
https://mega.nz/file/qEcFUIjR#2OKX78JgPQI2x5957GE-vx1zYzJv2a9JqjyBsrRFBkk
References
Summary
Vulnerability: Stored DOM XSS via System Settings – Company Information (Same-Page Attribute Breakout & Persistent Payload Injection)
Description
The application fails to properly sanitize user-controlled input within System Settings – Company Information. Several administrative configuration fields accept attacker-controlled input that is stored server-side and later rendered without proper output encoding.
Affected fields include, but are not limited to:
Unlike the public-facing landing page injection vulnerability, this issue executes directly on the same settings page. The injected payload breaks out of the HTML attribute context and is immediately interpreted by the browser when rendered, resulting in same-page DOM-based stored XSS.
This represents different functionality and a separate vulnerability from public-facing rendering.
Affected Functionality
Attack Scenario
Impact
Endpoints:
/backend/settings/(Company Information)Steps To Reproduce (POC)
test"><img src=1 onerror=alert()>" class="form-control" placeholder="Name" required>Remediation
Avoid unsafe DOM manipulation methods: Do not use
.html(),innerHTML, or similar sink functions in client-side JavaScript or server-side templating (e.g., PHP). Even when user input flowing into these sinks is not immediately apparent, they can introduce Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities that an attacker may exploit.Apply output encoding: Implement HTML entity encoding on all user-controlled data before rendering it in the browser. This helps neutralize potentially malicious input.
Implement input sanitization: Ensure that all user-supplied input is properly sanitized before processing or output. Currently, no sanitization mechanisms are in place, which should be addressed as a priority.
Enforce security headers and cookie attributes:
HttpOnlyattribute on session cookies to prevent client-side script access.SameSitecookie attribute to mitigate Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) risks.Secureattribute.These measures collectively reduce the impact of XSS and help prevent escalation paths such as CSRF via XSS.
Ready Video POC:
https://mega.nz/file/qEcFUIjR#2OKX78JgPQI2x5957GE-vx1zYzJv2a9JqjyBsrRFBkk
References