If a function is defined that has the same name as the default built-in email address validation scheme (php
), it will be called in default configuration as when no validation scheme is provided, the default scheme's callable php
was being called. If an attacker is able to inject such a function into the application (a much bigger issue), it will be called whenever an email address is validated, such as when calling validateAddress()
.
Low impact – exploitation requires that an attacker can already inject code into an application, but it provides a trigger pathway.
This is patched in PHPMailer 6.5.0 by denying the use of simple strings as validator function names, which is a very minor BC break.
Inject your own email validator function.
Reported by Vikrant Singh Chauhan via huntr.dev. CVE-2021-3603
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory: * Open an issue in the PHPMailer project * Email us.