CWE-838: Inappropriate Encoding for Output Context
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Edit Custom FilterThe product uses or specifies an encoding when generating output to a downstream component, but the specified encoding is not the same as the encoding that is expected by the downstream component.
This weakness can cause the downstream component to use a decoding method that produces different data than what the product intended to send. When the wrong encoding is used - even if closely related - the downstream component could decode the data incorrectly. This can have security consequences when the provided boundaries between control and data are inadvertently broken, because the resulting data could introduce control characters or special elements that were not sent by the product. The resulting data could then be used to bypass protection mechanisms such as input validation, and enable injection attacks. While using output encoding is essential for ensuring that communications between components are accurate, the use of the wrong encoding - even if closely related - could cause the downstream component to misinterpret the output. For example, HTML entity encoding is used for elements in the HTML body of a web page. However, a programmer might use entity encoding when generating output for that is used within an attribute of an HTML tag, which could contain functional Javascript that is not affected by the HTML encoding. While web applications have received the most attention for this problem, this weakness could potentially apply to any type of product that uses a communications stream that could support multiple encodings. ![]()
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Example 1 This code dynamically builds an HTML page using POST data: (bad code)
Example Language: PHP
$username = $_POST['username'];
$picSource = $_POST['picsource']; $picAltText = $_POST['picalttext']; ... echo "<title>Welcome, " . htmlentities($username) ."</title>"; echo "<img src='". htmlentities($picSource) ." ' alt='". htmlentities($picAltText) . '" />'; ... The programmer attempts to avoid XSS exploits (CWE-79) by encoding the POST values so they will not be interpreted as valid HTML. However, the htmlentities() encoding is not appropriate when the data are used as HTML attributes, allowing more attributes to be injected. For example, an attacker can set picAltText to: (attack code)
"altTextHere' onload='alert(document.cookie)"
This will result in the generated HTML image tag: (result)
Example Language: HTML
<img src='pic.jpg' alt='altTextHere' onload='alert(document.cookie)' />
The attacker can inject arbitrary javascript into the tag due to this incorrect encoding. Note: this is a curated list of examples for users to understand the variety of ways in which this weakness can be introduced. It is not a complete list of all CVEs that are related to this CWE entry.
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