6.1
CVSS V3
jsoup may not sanitize code injection XSS attempts if SafeList.preserveRelativeLinks is enabled
jsoup may incorrectly sanitize HTML including javascript:
URL expressions, which could allow cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks when a reader subsequently clicks that link. If the non-default SafeList.preserveRelativeLinks
option is enabled, HTML including javascript:
URLs that have been crafted with control characters will not be sanitized. If the site that this HTML is published on does not set a Content Security Policy, an XSS attack is then possible.
Sites that accept input HTML from users and use jsoup to sanitize that HTML, may be vulnerable to cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks, if they have enabled SafeList.preserveRelativeLinks
and do not set an appropriate Content Security Policy.
This issue is patched in jsoup 1.15.3.
Users should upgrade to this version. Additionally, as the unsanitized input may have been persisted, old content should be cleaned again using the updated version.
To remediate this issue without immediately upgrading:
SafeList.preserveRelativeLinks
, which will rewrite input URLs as absolute URLsjsoup includes a Cleaner component, which is designed to sanitize input HTML against configurable safe-lists of acceptable tags, attributes, and attribute values.
This includes removing potentially malicious attributes such as <a href="javascript:...">
, which may enable XSS attacks. It does this by validating URL attributes against allowed URL protocols (e.g. http
, https
).
However, an attacker may be able to bypass this check by embedding control characters into the href attribute value. This causes the Java URL class, which is used to resolve relative URLs to absolute URLs before checking the URL's protocol, to treat the URL as a relative URL. It is then resolved into an absolute URL with the configured base URI.
For example, java\tscript:...
would resolve to https://example.com/java\tscript:...
.
By default, when using a safe-list that allows a
tags, jsoup will rewrite any relative URLs (e.g. /foo/
) to an absolute URL (e.g. https://example.com/foo/
). Therefore, this attack attempt would be successfully mitigated. However, if the option SafeList.preserveRelativeLinks is enabled (which does not rewrite relative links to absolute), the input is left as-is.
While Java will treat a path like java\tscript:
as a relative path, as it does not match the allowed characters of a URL spec, browsers may normalize out the control characters, and subsequently evaluate it as a javascript:
spec inline expression. That disparity then leads to an XSS opportunity.
Sites defining a Content Security Policy that does not allow javascript expressions in link URLs will not be impacted, as the policy will prevent the script's execution.
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
Thanks to Jens Häderer, who reported this issue, and contributed to its resolution.