Issues (982)

Security Analysis    not enabled

This project does not seem to handle request data directly as such no vulnerable execution paths were found.

  Cross-Site Scripting
Cross-Site Scripting enables an attacker to inject code into the response of a web-request that is viewed by other users. It can for example be used to bypass access controls, or even to take over other users' accounts.
  File Exposure
File Exposure allows an attacker to gain access to local files that he should not be able to access. These files can for example include database credentials, or other configuration files.
  File Manipulation
File Manipulation enables an attacker to write custom data to files. This potentially leads to injection of arbitrary code on the server.
  Object Injection
Object Injection enables an attacker to inject an object into PHP code, and can lead to arbitrary code execution, file exposure, or file manipulation attacks.
  Code Injection
Code Injection enables an attacker to execute arbitrary code on the server.
  Response Splitting
Response Splitting can be used to send arbitrary responses.
  File Inclusion
File Inclusion enables an attacker to inject custom files into PHP's file loading mechanism, either explicitly passed to include, or for example via PHP's auto-loading mechanism.
  Command Injection
Command Injection enables an attacker to inject a shell command that is execute with the privileges of the web-server. This can be used to expose sensitive data, or gain access of your server.
  SQL Injection
SQL Injection enables an attacker to execute arbitrary SQL code on your database server gaining access to user data, or manipulating user data.
  XPath Injection
XPath Injection enables an attacker to modify the parts of XML document that are read. If that XML document is for example used for authentication, this can lead to further vulnerabilities similar to SQL Injection.
  LDAP Injection
LDAP Injection enables an attacker to inject LDAP statements potentially granting permission to run unauthorized queries, or modify content inside the LDAP tree.
  Header Injection
  Other Vulnerability
This category comprises other attack vectors such as manipulating the PHP runtime, loading custom extensions, freezing the runtime, or similar.
  Regex Injection
Regex Injection enables an attacker to execute arbitrary code in your PHP process.
  XML Injection
XML Injection enables an attacker to read files on your local filesystem including configuration files, or can be abused to freeze your web-server process.
  Variable Injection
Variable Injection enables an attacker to overwrite program variables with custom data, and can lead to further vulnerabilities.
Unfortunately, the security analysis is currently not available for your project. If you are a non-commercial open-source project, please contact support to gain access.

transliteration.php (1 issue)

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1
<?php
2
3
/**
4
 * @file
5
 * Transliteration processing functions.
6
 */
7
8
/**
9
 * Transliterates UTF-8 encoded text to US-ASCII.
10
 *
11
 * Based on Mediawiki's UtfNormal::quickIsNFCVerify().
12
 * Based on Drupal 7 transliteration module.
13
 *
14
 * @param $string
15
 *   UTF-8 encoded text input.
16
 * @param $unknown
17
 *   Replacement string for characters that do not have a suitable ASCII
18
 *   equivalent.
19
 * @param $source_langcode
20
 *   Optional ISO 639 language code that denotes the language of the input and
21
 *   is used to apply language-specific variations. If the source language is
22
 *   not known at the time of transliteration, it is recommended to set this
23
 *   argument to the site default language to produce consistent results.
24
 *   Otherwise the current display language will be used.
25
 * @return
26
 *   Transliterated text.
27
 */
28
function _transliteration_process($string, $unknown = '?', $source_langcode = NULL) {
29
  // ASCII is always valid NFC! If we're only ever given plain ASCII, we can
30
  // avoid the overhead of initializing the decomposition tables by skipping
31
  // out early.
32 8
  if (!preg_match('/[\x80-\xff]/', $string)) {
33 7
    return $string;
34
  }
35
36 8
  static $tail_bytes;
37
38 8
  if (!isset($tail_bytes)) {
39
    // Each UTF-8 head byte is followed by a certain number of tail bytes.
40 1
    $tail_bytes = array();
41 1
    for ($n = 0; $n < 256; $n++) {
42 1
      if ($n < 0xc0) {
43 1
        $remaining = 0;
44 1
      }
45 1
      elseif ($n < 0xe0) {
46 1
        $remaining = 1;
47 1
      }
48 1
      elseif ($n < 0xf0) {
49 1
        $remaining = 2;
50 1
      }
51 1
      elseif ($n < 0xf8) {
52 1
        $remaining = 3;
53 1
      }
54 1
      elseif ($n < 0xfc) {
55 1
        $remaining = 4;
56 1
      }
57 1
      elseif ($n < 0xfe) {
58 1
        $remaining = 5;
59 1
      }
60
      else {
61 1
        $remaining = 0;
62
      }
63 1
      $tail_bytes[chr($n)] = $remaining;
64 1
    }
65 1
  }
66
67
  // Chop the text into pure-ASCII and non-ASCII areas; large ASCII parts can
68
  // be handled much more quickly. Don't chop up Unicode areas for punctuation,
69
  // though, that wastes energy.
70 8
  preg_match_all('/[\x00-\x7f]+|[\x80-\xff][\x00-\x40\x5b-\x5f\x7b-\xff]*/', $string, $matches);
71
72 8
  $result = '';
73 8
  foreach ($matches[0] as $str) {
74 8
    if ($str[0] < "\x80") {
75
      // ASCII chunk: guaranteed to be valid UTF-8 and in normal form C, so
76
      // skip over it.
77 7
      $result .= $str;
78 7
      continue;
79
    }
80
81
    // We'll have to examine the chunk byte by byte to ensure that it consists
82
    // of valid UTF-8 sequences, and to see if any of them might not be
83
    // normalized.
84
    //
85
    // Since PHP is not the fastest language on earth, some of this code is a
86
    // little ugly with inner loop optimizations.
87
88 8
    $head = '';
89 8
    $chunk = strlen($str);
90
    // Counting down is faster. I'm *so* sorry.
91 8
    $len = $chunk + 1;
92
93 8
    for ($i = -1; --$len; ) {
94 8
      $c = $str[++$i];
95 8
      if ($remaining = $tail_bytes[$c]) {
96
        // UTF-8 head byte!
97 8
        $sequence = $head = $c;
98
        do {
99
          // Look for the defined number of tail bytes...
100 8
          if (--$len && ($c = $str[++$i]) >= "\x80" && $c < "\xc0") {
101
            // Legal tail bytes are nice.
102 8
            $sequence .= $c;
103 8
          }
104
          else {
105
            if ($len == 0) {
106
              // Premature end of string! Drop a replacement character into
107
              // output to represent the invalid UTF-8 sequence.
108
              $result .= $unknown;
109
              break 2;
110
            }
111
            else {
112
              // Illegal tail byte; abandon the sequence.
113
              $result .= $unknown;
114
              // Back up and reprocess this byte; it may itself be a legal
115
              // ASCII or UTF-8 sequence head.
116
              --$i;
117
              ++$len;
118
              continue 2;
119
            }
120
          }
121 8
        } while (--$remaining);
122
123 8
        $n = ord($head);
124 8
        if ($n <= 0xdf) {
125 8
          $ord = ($n - 192) * 64 + (ord($sequence[1]) - 128);
126 8
        }
127
        elseif ($n <= 0xef) {
128
          $ord = ($n - 224) * 4096 + (ord($sequence[1]) - 128) * 64 + (ord($sequence[2]) - 128);
129
        }
130
        elseif ($n <= 0xf7) {
131
          $ord = ($n - 240) * 262144 + (ord($sequence[1]) - 128) * 4096 + (ord($sequence[2]) - 128) * 64 + (ord($sequence[3]) - 128);
132
        }
133
        elseif ($n <= 0xfb) {
134
          $ord = ($n - 248) * 16777216 + (ord($sequence[1]) - 128) * 262144 + (ord($sequence[2]) - 128) * 4096 + (ord($sequence[3]) - 128) * 64 + (ord($sequence[4]) - 128);
135
        }
136
        elseif ($n <= 0xfd) {
137
          $ord = ($n - 252) * 1073741824 + (ord($sequence[1]) - 128) * 16777216 + (ord($sequence[2]) - 128) * 262144 + (ord($sequence[3]) - 128) * 4096 + (ord($sequence[4]) - 128) * 64 + (ord($sequence[5]) - 128);
138
        } else {
139
          $ord = $n;
140
        }
141 8
        $result .= _transliteration_replace($ord, $unknown, $source_langcode);
142 8
        $head = '';
143 8
      } elseif ($c < "\x80") {
144
        // ASCII byte.
145
        $result .= $c;
146
        $head = '';
147
      } elseif ($c < "\xc0") {
148
        // Illegal tail bytes.
149
        if ($head == '') {
150
          $result .= $unknown;
151
        }
152
      } else {
153
        // Miscellaneous freaks.
154
        $result .= $unknown;
155
        $head = '';
156
      }
157 8
    }
158 8
  }
159 8
  return $result;
160
}
161
162
/**
163
 * Replaces a Unicode character using the transliteration database.
164
 *
165
 * @param $ord
166
 *   An ordinal Unicode character code.
167
 * @param $unknown
168
 *   Replacement string for characters that do not have a suitable ASCII
169
 *   equivalent.
170
 * @param $langcode
171
 *   Optional ISO 639 language code that denotes the language of the input and
172
 *   is used to apply language-specific variations.  Defaults to the current
173
 *   display language.
174
 * @return
175
 *   ASCII replacement character.
176
 */
177
function _transliteration_replace($ord, $unknown = '?', $langcode = NULL) {
178 8
  static $map = array();
179
180
  //GL: set language later
181
  /*
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
61% of this comment could be valid code. Did you maybe forget this after debugging?

Sometimes obsolete code just ends up commented out instead of removed. In this case it is better to remove the code once you have checked you do not need it.

The code might also have been commented out for debugging purposes. In this case it is vital that someone uncomments it again or your project may behave in very unexpected ways in production.

This check looks for comments that seem to be mostly valid code and reports them.

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182
  if (!isset($langcode)) {
183
    global $language;
184
    $langcode = $language->language;
185
  }
186
  */
187
188 8
  $bank = $ord >> 8;
189
190 8
  if (!isset($map[$bank][$langcode])) {
191 1
    $file = './resources/transliteration-data/' . sprintf('x%02x', $bank) . '.php';  
192 1
    if (file_exists($file)) {
193 1
      $base = array();
194 1
      $variant = array();
195 1
      include $file;
196 1
      if ($langcode != 'en' && isset($variant[$langcode])) {
197
        // Merge in language specific mappings.
198
        $map[$bank][$langcode] = $variant[$langcode] + $base;
199
      }
200
      else {
201 1
        $map[$bank][$langcode] = $base;
202
      }
203 1
    }
204
    else {
205
      $map[$bank][$langcode] = array();
206
    }
207 1
  }
208
209 8
  $ord = $ord & 255;
210
211 8
  return isset($map[$bank][$langcode][$ord]) ? $map[$bank][$langcode][$ord] : $unknown;
212
}
213