Multiple RCE vectors were found in Grav CMS. Three are critical, two are high.
1. Unsafe unserialize() in JobQueue — direct RCE gadget (Critical)
system/src/Grav/Common/Scheduler/JobQueue.php:465 calls unserialize(base64_decode(...)) without restricting allowed_classes. The Job class has call_user_func_array($this->command, $this->args) in its execution path, which is a direct gadget chain — inject a serialized Job with command = 'system' and args = ['whoami'].
The same codebase actually has a Serializable trait that correctly restricts classes, so this inconsistency stands out.
2. Unsafe unserialize() in FileCache — arbitrary class instantiation (Critical)
system/src/Grav/Framework/Cache/Adapter/FileCache.php:75 does unserialize($value, ['allowed_classes' => true]). That true allows instantiation of any class. If an attacker can write to the cache directory (via any file write primitive), they get object injection → RCE.
3. Unsafe unserialize() in Session (High)
system/src/Grav/Common/Session.php:116 — same allowed_classes => true pattern on session data. Lower severity since session storage is typically more restricted.
4. Command injection in git clone (Critical)
system/src/Grav/Console/Cli/InstallCommand.php:150 — only $this->destination uses escapeshellarg(). The $data['branch'], $data['url'], and $data['path'] variables go directly into the shell command without escaping. Admin-accessible via plugin/theme installation.
5. SSTI blocklist bypass (High)
system/src/Grav/Common/Security.php:267-286 — cleanDangerousTwig() blocks twig_array_map and twig_array_filter but not twig_array_reduce. Also missing file_get_contents and fwrite from the dangerous function blocklist. An attacker who can inject Twig templates can bypass the security filter.
All five are independently exploitable. The unserialize issues are the most concerning since they don't require admin access if there's any file write primitive.
— ProScan AppSec | proscan.one
Maintainer note — fix applied (2026-04-24)
Fixed in Grav core on the 2.0 branch: commit c66dfeb5f (items #1, #2, #3, #4) and commit 38685ac25 + c66dfeb5f (item #5) — ships in 2.0.0-beta.2.
All five vectors addressed:
-
Scheduler\JobQueue unsafe unserialize — serialized_job now carries a sibling serialized_job_hmac signed with Security::getNonceKey(). reconstructJob refuses to unserialize an item whose HMAC is missing/mismatched and falls through to the safe structured-fields rebuild. A tampered queue file can no longer smuggle a forged Job for direct RCE via Job::exec → call_user_func_array.
→ system/src/Grav/Common/Scheduler/JobQueue.php
-
FileCache unsafe unserialize — same HMAC-integrity approach; see separate GHSA-gwfr-jfjf-92vv.
→ system/src/Grav/Framework/Cache/Adapter/FileCache.php
-
Session::getFlashObject unsafe unserialize — payload now wrapped in a v2|<hmac>|<serialized> envelope; legacy/forged envelopes return null instead of triggering unserialize.
→ system/src/Grav/Common/Session.php
-
InstallCommand git clone shell injection — branch, url, and path values read from user/.dependencies are now passed through escapeshellarg, with a -- separator before url/path to block option-injection (e.g. --upload-pack=evil).
→ system/src/Grav/Console/Cli/InstallCommand.php
-
SSTI blocklist bypass — twig_array_reduce (the specific name called out) plus twig_array_some and twig_array_every added to cleanDangerousTwig's CALLABLE_DANGEROUS_NAMES alongside the existing twig_array_map/filter. More importantly, the new Twig content sandbox in 2.0.0-beta.2 blocks this class of attack at a different layer — see the sandbox work in 38685ac25.
→ system/src/Grav/Common/Security.php
Tests:
References
Multiple RCE vectors were found in Grav CMS. Three are critical, two are high.
1. Unsafe unserialize() in JobQueue — direct RCE gadget (Critical)
system/src/Grav/Common/Scheduler/JobQueue.php:465callsunserialize(base64_decode(...))without restrictingallowed_classes. TheJobclass hascall_user_func_array($this->command, $this->args)in its execution path, which is a direct gadget chain — inject a serializedJobwithcommand = 'system'andargs = ['whoami'].The same codebase actually has a
Serializabletrait that correctly restricts classes, so this inconsistency stands out.2. Unsafe unserialize() in FileCache — arbitrary class instantiation (Critical)
system/src/Grav/Framework/Cache/Adapter/FileCache.php:75doesunserialize($value, ['allowed_classes' => true]). Thattrueallows instantiation of any class. If an attacker can write to the cache directory (via any file write primitive), they get object injection → RCE.3. Unsafe unserialize() in Session (High)
system/src/Grav/Common/Session.php:116— sameallowed_classes => truepattern on session data. Lower severity since session storage is typically more restricted.4. Command injection in git clone (Critical)
system/src/Grav/Console/Cli/InstallCommand.php:150— only$this->destinationusesescapeshellarg(). The$data['branch'],$data['url'], and$data['path']variables go directly into the shell command without escaping. Admin-accessible via plugin/theme installation.5. SSTI blocklist bypass (High)
system/src/Grav/Common/Security.php:267-286—cleanDangerousTwig()blockstwig_array_mapandtwig_array_filterbut nottwig_array_reduce. Also missingfile_get_contentsandfwritefrom the dangerous function blocklist. An attacker who can inject Twig templates can bypass the security filter.All five are independently exploitable. The unserialize issues are the most concerning since they don't require admin access if there's any file write primitive.
— ProScan AppSec | proscan.one
Maintainer note — fix applied (2026-04-24)
Fixed in Grav core on the
2.0branch: commitc66dfeb5f(items #1, #2, #3, #4) and commit38685ac25+c66dfeb5f(item #5) — ships in 2.0.0-beta.2.All five vectors addressed:
Scheduler\JobQueue unsafe unserialize —
serialized_jobnow carries a siblingserialized_job_hmacsigned withSecurity::getNonceKey().reconstructJobrefuses to unserialize an item whose HMAC is missing/mismatched and falls through to the safe structured-fields rebuild. A tampered queue file can no longer smuggle a forgedJobfor direct RCE viaJob::exec → call_user_func_array.→
system/src/Grav/Common/Scheduler/JobQueue.phpFileCache unsafe unserialize — same HMAC-integrity approach; see separate GHSA-gwfr-jfjf-92vv.
→
system/src/Grav/Framework/Cache/Adapter/FileCache.phpSession::getFlashObject unsafe unserialize — payload now wrapped in a
v2|<hmac>|<serialized>envelope; legacy/forged envelopes return null instead of triggeringunserialize.→
system/src/Grav/Common/Session.phpInstallCommand
git cloneshell injection —branch,url, andpathvalues read fromuser/.dependenciesare now passed throughescapeshellarg, with a--separator before url/path to block option-injection (e.g.--upload-pack=evil).→
system/src/Grav/Console/Cli/InstallCommand.phpSSTI blocklist bypass —
twig_array_reduce(the specific name called out) plustwig_array_someandtwig_array_everyadded tocleanDangerousTwig'sCALLABLE_DANGEROUS_NAMESalongside the existingtwig_array_map/filter. More importantly, the new Twig content sandbox in 2.0.0-beta.2 blocks this class of attack at a different layer — see the sandbox work in38685ac25.→
system/src/Grav/Common/Security.phpTests:
tests/unit/Grav/Common/Security/UnserializeIntegritySecurityTest.php— 8 cases covering JobQueue + Session HMAC integrity.tests/unit/Grav/Common/Security/FileCacheSecurityTest.php.tests/unit/Grav/Common/Security/CleanDangerousTwigTest.php— newtwig_array_*entries inproviderCallbackFunctions.References