Failure to Sanitize Escape, Meta, or Control Sequences
Weakness ID: 150 (Weakness Variant)Status: Incomplete
+ Description

Description Summary

Escape, meta, or control character/sequence injected into an application through input can be used to compromise a system.

Extended Description

As data is parsed, injected/absent/malformed escape, meta, or control characters/sequences may cause the process to take unexpected actions that result in an attack.

+ Time of Introduction
  • Implementation
+ Applicable Platforms

Languages

All

+ Observed Examples
ReferenceDescription
CVE-2002-0542Mail program handles special "~" escape sequence even when not in interactive mode.
CVE-2000-0703Setuid program does not filter escape sequences before calling mail program.
CVE-2002-0986Mail function does not filter control characters from arguments, allowing mail message content to be modified.
CVE-2003-0020Multi-channel issue. Terminal escape sequences not filtered from log files.
CVE-2003-0083Multi-channel issue. Terminal escape sequences not filtered from log files.
CVE-2003-0021Terminal escape sequences not filtered by terminals when displaying files.
CVE-2003-0022Terminal escape sequences not filtered by terminals when displaying files.
CVE-2003-0023Terminal escape sequences not filtered by terminals when displaying files.
CVE-2003-0063Terminal escape sequences not filtered by terminals when displaying files.
CVE-2000-0476Terminal escape sequences not filtered by terminals when displaying files.
CVE-2001-1556MFV. (multi-channel). Injection of control characters into log files that allow information hiding when using raw Unix programs to read the files.
+ Potential Mitigations

Developers should anticipate that escape, meta and control characters/sequences will be injected/removed/manipulated in the input vectors of their software system. Use an appropriate combination of black lists and white lists to ensure only valid, expected and appropriate input is processed by the system.

Phase: Architecture and Design

Assume all input is malicious. Use a standard input validation mechanism to validate all input for length, type, syntax, and business rules before accepting the data to be displayed or stored. Use an "accept known good" validation strategy.

Use and specify a strong output encoding (such as ISO 8859-1 or UTF 8).

Do not rely exclusively on blacklist validation to detect malicious input or to encode output. There are too many variants to encode a character; you're likely to miss some variants.

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

+ Relationships
NatureTypeIDNameView(s) this relationship pertains toView(s)
ChildOfWeakness ClassWeakness Class138Improper Sanitization of Special Elements
Development Concepts (primary)699
Research Concepts (primary)1000
+ Taxonomy Mappings
Mapped Taxonomy NameNode IDFitMapped Node Name
PLOVEREscape, Meta, or Control Character / Sequence
+ Related Attack Patterns
CAPEC-IDAttack Pattern Name
(CAPEC Version: 1.4)
93Log Injection-Tampering-Forging
41Using Meta-characters in E-mail Headers to SecurityDatabase\Alert\Inject Malicious Payloads
81Web Logs Tampering
+ Content History
Submissions
Submission DateSubmitterOrganizationSource
PLOVERExternally Mined
Modifications
Modification DateModifierOrganizationSource
2008-07-01Eric DalciCigitalExternal
updated Potential Mitigations, Time of Introduction
2008-09-08CWE Content TeamMITREInternal
updated Relationships, Taxonomy Mappings
2008-10-14CWE Content TeamMITREInternal
updated Description
2009-07-27CWE Content TeamMITREInternal
updated Potential Mitigations
Previous Entry Names
Change DatePrevious Entry Name
2008-01-30Escape, Meta, or Control Character / Sequence
2008-04-11Failure to Remove Escape, Meta, or Control Character / Sequence