Summary
A potential XSS vulnerability exists in Svelte for versions prior to 4.2.19.
Details
Svelte improperly escapes HTML on server-side rendering. It converts strings according to the following rules:
- If the string is an attribute value:
"
-> "
&
-> &
- Other characters -> No conversion
- Otherwise:
<
-> <
&
-> &
- Other characters -> No conversion
The assumption is that attributes will always stay as such, but in some situation the final DOM tree rendered on browsers is different from what Svelte expects on server-side rendering. This may be leveraged to perform XSS attacks. More specifically, this can occur when injecting malicious content into an attribute within a <noscript>
tag.
PoC
A vulnerable page (+page.svelte
):
<script>
import { page } from "$app/stores"
// user input
let href = $page.url.searchParams.get("href") ?? "https://example.com";
</script>
<noscript>
<a href={href}>test</a>
</noscript>
If a user accesses the following URL,
http://localhost:4173/?href=</noscript><script>alert(123)</script>
then, alert(123)
will be executed.
Impact
XSS, when using an attribute within a noscript tag
References
Summary
A potential XSS vulnerability exists in Svelte for versions prior to 4.2.19.
Details
Svelte improperly escapes HTML on server-side rendering. It converts strings according to the following rules:
"
->"
&
->&
<
-><
&
->&
The assumption is that attributes will always stay as such, but in some situation the final DOM tree rendered on browsers is different from what Svelte expects on server-side rendering. This may be leveraged to perform XSS attacks. More specifically, this can occur when injecting malicious content into an attribute within a
<noscript>
tag.PoC
A vulnerable page (
+page.svelte
):If a user accesses the following URL,
then,
alert(123)
will be executed.Impact
XSS, when using an attribute within a noscript tag
References