Php 5.3.10 — Exploit

However, the RCE payload is specific. Spaces are not allowed in URLs naturally, so they must be replaced with + or %20 .

Released in early 2012, PHP 5.3.10 was intended to be a security fix for a previous bug. Ironically, it shipped with a massive, easily exploitable vulnerability that allowed attackers to execute arbitrary code on millions of servers.

While modern PHP versions (8.x) are not vulnerable, countless legacy systems, old routers, IoT devices, and forgotten shared hosting environments still run this version. Today, we are going to dissect —the PHP CGI Argument Injection exploit. The Vulnerability: What went wrong? To understand the exploit, you must understand CGI (Common Gateway Interface) .

POST /?-d+allow_url_include%3don+-d+auto_prepend_file%3dphp%3a//input HTTP/1.1 Host: vulnerable.com Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded Content-Length: 25 <?php system('id'); ?> php 5.3.10 exploit

GET /?-s HTTP/1.1 Host: vulnerable.com The server tries to execute:

/usr/bin/php-cgi -s Because there is no script specified, PHP defaults to showing the source code of the standard input (the HTTP body). By sending a request with ? and -s , the attacker effectively turns the server into a file reader.

While this specific vector is mostly extinct in modern cloud infrastructure, it lives on in embedded systems and legacy internal networks. If you find this during a penetration test, you have effectively found a "Golden Ticket" to execute system commands. However, the RCE payload is specific

Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes and authorized security testing only. Exploiting systems you do not own is illegal.

The attacker sees the raw PHP source code of the application, including database passwords and API keys. The Grand Prize: Arbitrary Code Execution ( -d and -B ) Seeing source code is bad, but executing code is worse. The -d flag allows you to set php.ini directives on the fly. Combined with -B (Run code before processing input), we get RCE.

This post is written from a security researcher / educational perspective. It explains the "CGI Argument Injection" vulnerability (CVE-2012-1823), which is the most critical exploit associated with this specific version. Title: Revisiting the Ghost of PHP 5.3.10: The CGI Argument Injection Exploit (CVE-2012-1823) Ironically, it shipped with a massive, easily exploitable

/usr/bin/php-cgi /path/to/index.php The bug occurred in how PHP parsed the query string. If an attacker sent a request without a script name (e.g., http://target.com/?-s ), the PHP engine would misinterpret the query string .

When PHP is run in CGI mode (using php-cgi ), the web server passes request data to the PHP binary via command-line arguments. Normally, a request to index.php translates to:

Because PHP 5.3.10 did not properly filter the query string, an attacker could inject flags directly into the PHP binary. The most famous primitive in this exploit is the -s flag. The -s flag tells PHP to display the source code of the script in highlighted HTML (like show_source() ).