This document was originally published at <https://wiki.php.net/security>.
For the sake of our users, we classify some of the issues found in PHP as "security issues". This document is intended to explain which issues are thus classified, how we handle those issues and how to report them.
We classify as security issues bugs that:
- allow users to execute unauthorized actions
- cross security boundaries
- access data that is not intended to be accessible
- severely impact accessibility or performance of the system
The purpose of this classification is to alert the users and the developers about the bugs that need to be prioritized in their handling.
We define three categories of security issues, by their severity, described below. Please note that this categorization is in many aspects subjective, so it ultimately relies on the judgement of the PHP developers.
These issues may allow:
- third party to compromise any, or most installations of PHP
- the execution of arbitrary code
- disabling the system completely
- access to any file a local PHP user can access.
The issue can be triggered on any, or on most typical installations, and does not require exotic and non-recommended settings to be triggered.
This category also includes issues that can be triggered in code or functions known to be frequently used (session, json, mysql, openssl, etc.) during typical usage, and that require settings or configurations that may not be strictly the best practice, but are commonly used.
This category also may include issues that require special code or code pattern if such code or pattern is present in many popular libraries.
This kind of issues usually requires a CVE report.
These issues may have the same potential to compromise an installation as a high severity issue, but may also require:
- an extension that is not commonly used
- a particular type of configuration that is used only in narrow specific circumstances
- relies on old version of a third-party library being used
- code, or patterns of code, that are known to be used infrequently
- code that is very old, or extremely uncommon (and so is used infrequently)
This kind of issues usually will have a CVE number, unless the required configuration is particularly exotic to the point it's not practically usable.
This issue allows theoretical compromise of security, but practical attack is usually impossible or extremely hard due to common practices or limitations that are virtually always present or imposed.
This also includes problems with configuration, documentation, and other non-code parts of the PHP project that may mislead users, or cause them to make their system, or their code less secure.
Issues that can trigger unauthorized actions that do not seem to be useful for any practical attack can also be categorized as low severity.
Security issues, that are present only in unstable branches, belong to this category, too. Any branch that has no stable release, is per se not intended for the production use.
Low severity issues usually do not need to have CVE and may, at the discretion of the PHP developers, be disclosed publicly before the fix is released or available.
We do not classify as a security issue any issue that:
- requires invocation of specific code, which may be valid but is obviously malicious
- requires invocation of functions with specific arguments, which may be valid but are obviously malicious
- requires specific actions to be performed on the server, which are not commonly performed, or are not commonly permissible for the user (uid) executing PHP
- requires privileges superior to that of the user (uid) executing PHP
- requires the use of debugging facilities - ex. xdebug, var_dump
- requires the use of settings not recommended for production - ex. error reporting to output
- requires the use of non-standard environment variables - ex. USE_ZEND_ALLOC
- requires the use of non-standard builds - ex. obscure embedded platform, not commonly used compiler
- requires the use of code or settings known to be insecure
- requires the use of FFI
- requires an open_basedir bypass
High and medium severity fixes are merged into a private security repository, and then merged to the main repository before the release is tagged.
Low severity fixes are merged immediately after the fix is available and handled like all regular bugs are handled consequently. However, release managers may choose to pull those fixes into the RC branch after the branch is created, and also backport them into a security-only release branch.
Please report security vulnerabilities on GitHub at: <https://github.com/php/php-src/security/advisories/new>
If for some reason you cannot use the form at GitHub, or you need to talk to somebody about a PHP security issue that might not be a bug report, please write to <[email protected]>.
Vulnerability reports remain private until published. When published, you will be credited as a contributor, and your contribution will reflect the MITRE Credit System.
Please report the issue as described above. Please communicate with the developers about when the fix will be released - usually it's the next monthly release after the bug was reported. Some issues can take longer. After the fix is released (releases usually happen on Thursdays) please feel free to disclose the issue as you see fit.
Please read the above and try to explain to us why it fits the description.
We'll have to agree to disagree.
It has nothing to do with the bug being real or its importance to you. It just means it does not fit our specific definitions for issues that we will handle in a special way. We fix a lot of non-security bugs and pull requests are always welcome.
Each bug usually has its aspects, if a short discussion does not yield agreement we'd rather do more fixing and less arguing.
PHP is a volunteer project. We have no money, thus we can't pay bounties.