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CWE-41

Improper Resolution of Path Equivalence

Base
Incomplete

Description

The product is vulnerable to file system contents disclosure through path equivalence. Path equivalence involves the use of special characters in file and directory names. The associated manipulations are intended to generate multiple names for the same object.

Path equivalence is usually employed in order to circumvent access controls expressed using an incomplete set of file name or file path representations. This is different from path traversal, wherein the manipulations are performed to generate a name for a different object.

Common Consequences

Scope

Confidentiality
Integrity
Access Control

Impact

Read Files or Directories, Modify Files or Directories, Bypass Protection Mechanism

Potential Mitigations

Implementation

Assume all input is malicious. Use an "accept known good" input validation strategy, i.e., use a list of acceptable inputs that strictly conform to specifications. Reject any input that does not strictly conform to specifications, or transform it into something that does. When performing input validation, consider all potentially relevant properties, including length, type of input, the full range of acceptable values, missing or extra inputs, syntax, consistency across related fields, and conformance to business rules. As an example of business rule logic, "boat" may be syntactically valid because it only contains alphanumeric characters, but it is not valid if the input is only expected to contain colors such as "red" or "blue." Do not rely exclusively on looking for malicious or malformed inputs. This is likely to miss at least one undesirable input, especially if the code's environment changes. This can give attackers enough room to bypass the intended validation. However, denylists can be useful for detecting potential attacks or determining which inputs are so malformed that they should be rejected outright.

Implementation

Use and specify an output encoding that can be handled by the downstream component that is reading the output. Common encodings include ISO-8859-1, UTF-7, and UTF-8. When an encoding is not specified, a downstream component may choose a different encoding, either by assuming a default encoding or automatically inferring which encoding is being used, which can be erroneous. When the encodings are inconsistent, the downstream component might treat some character or byte sequences as special, even if they are not special in the original encoding. Attackers might then be able to exploit this discrepancy and conduct injection attacks; they even might be able to bypass protection mechanisms that assume the original encoding is also being used by the downstream component.

Implementation

Inputs should be decoded and canonicalized to the application's current internal representation before being validated (CWE-180). Make sure that the application does not decode the same input twice (CWE-174). Such errors could be used to bypass allowlist validation schemes by introducing dangerous inputs after they have been checked.

CVE-2000-1114

Source code disclosure using trailing dot

CVE-2002-1986

Source code disclosure using trailing dot

CVE-2004-2213

Source code disclosure using trailing dot or trailing encoding space "%20"

CVE-2005-3293

Source code disclosure using trailing dot

CVE-2004-0061

Bypass directory access restrictions using trailing dot in URL

CVE-2000-1133

Bypass directory access restrictions using trailing dot in URL

CVE-2001-1386

Bypass check for ".lnk" extension using ".lnk."

CVE-2001-0693

Source disclosure via trailing encoded space "%20"

CVE-2001-0778

Source disclosure via trailing encoded space "%20"

CVE-2001-1248

Source disclosure via trailing encoded space "%20"

+40 more examples

Applicable Platforms

Not Language-Specific

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