Summary
YesWiki's archived-revision view reflects the time GET parameter into a hidden HTML input in handlers/page/show.php without escaping. Because MySQL coerces malformed DATETIME strings, an attacker can append HTML or JavaScript to a valid archived revision timestamp, still load that archived revision, and execute arbitrary JavaScript in the victim's browser.
The vulnerable form is only rendered when the victim can both read and edit the target page. In restricted deployments this requires a victim with read and write access to that page. On a default doryphore 4.6.5 install, public pages such as PagePrincipale were editable anonymously during validation, so the issue can also affect unauthenticated visitors in that configuration.
Details
The request routing path uses the user-controlled time parameter to load a specific page revision. In includes/YesWiki.php around Run() line 1223, the request is routed through:
$this->SetPage($this->LoadPage($tag, isset($_REQUEST['time']) ? $_REQUEST['time'] : ''));
LoadPage() delegates to PageManager::getOne() in includes/services/PageManager.php around line 75, which builds a SQL predicate directly from the supplied revision time:
$timeQuery = $time ? "time = '{$this->dbService->escape($time)}'" : "latest = 'Y'";
If the loaded page is an archived revision (latest == 'N') and the current user has write access, handlers/page/show.php around lines 43-49 renders an edit form for that archived revision and copies $_GET['time'] into a hidden input without htmlspecialchars():
$time = isset($_GET['time']) ? $_GET['time'] : '';
echo $this->FormOpen(testUrlInIframe() ? 'editiframe' : 'edit', '', 'get');
<input type="hidden" name="time" value="<?php echo $time; ?>" />
That sink is reachable only when all of the following are true:
- The target page has at least one archived revision.
- The victim can
read the target page.
- The victim can
write the target page, because the archived revision edit form is rendered only inside the if ($this->HasAccess('write')) branch.
In practice, the payload must begin with a real archived revision timestamp. A completely invalid time value does not reach the archived branch because YesWiki only updates the current page object when the revision lookup returns a non-empty row.
During local validation on the official doryphore 4.6.5 package, the exploit worked because MySQL accepted a malformed timestamp string as matching an existing archived revision row. For example, the following expression was coerced to the stored revision time:
CAST(CONCAT('2026-05-24 04:30:00', CHAR(34), CHAR(62), CHAR(60), 'script', CHAR(62), 'alert(1)', CHAR(60), '/script', CHAR(62)) AS DATETIME)
and the corresponding query predicate still matched the archived row:
WHERE time = '2026-05-24 04:30:00"><script>alert(1)</script>'
This means a payload can begin with a valid archived revision timestamp, still resolve to the archived revision, and then be reflected unescaped into the hidden HTML field.
For comparison, tools/bazar/handlers/page/show__.php around lines 13-14 escapes the same time value with htmlspecialchars(), which shows that the core handler's behavior is inconsistent and unsafe.
This issue maps to CWE-79: Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting').
PoC
- Set up a vulnerable YesWiki instance. This was validated locally on the official
doryphore 4.6.5 release.
- Use a target page that has at least one archived revision. Any page with revision history is sufficient.
- Confirm the victim has the rights needed to reach the vulnerable sink:
- The victim must have
read access to the page.
- The victim must have
write access to the page.
- On the default validation install, these rights were available anonymously on public pages such as
PagePrincipale, so no login was required in that configuration.
- Identify the timestamp of an archived revision. In the validated setup, an archived
PagePrincipale revision existed at 2026-05-24 04:30:00.
- Send the victim a crafted URL that starts with that valid archived revision timestamp and then appends an attribute-breaking payload:
http://127.0.0.1:8085/PagePrincipale?time=2026-05-24%2004:30:00%22%3E%3Cscript%3Ealert(1)%3C/script%3E%3Cinput%20value=%22
- Open the URL in a browser as a victim who has the required
read and write rights.
- Observe that YesWiki still loads the archived revision view and displays the archived-revision warning block, proving the malformed
time value matched the stored archived revision.
- Inspect the returned HTML. The response contains the injected payload inside the hidden form field:
<input type="hidden" name="time" value="2026-05-24 04:30:00"><script>alert(1)</script><input value="" />
- The browser executes the injected JavaScript in the YesWiki origin. A simple payload such as
alert(1) demonstrates code execution; a real payload could read browser-accessible data or perform actions in the victim's session.

Impact
This is a reflected XSS vulnerability in the archived-revision workflow.
The practical access model is:
- The attacker only needs to send a crafted link.
- The victim must have
read and write access to the target page.
- The target page must have at least one archived revision.
- On deployments where anonymous visitors can edit public pages, the issue can be exploited against unauthenticated visitors as well.
An attacker may be able to:
- Execute arbitrary JavaScript in the victim's browser.
- Steal browser-accessible sensitive data.
- Perform actions as the victim inside YesWiki.
- Abuse the trusted YesWiki origin for phishing, UI redressing, or follow-on attacks.
References
Summary
YesWiki's archived-revision view reflects the
timeGETparameter into a hidden HTML input inhandlers/page/show.phpwithout escaping. Because MySQL coerces malformedDATETIMEstrings, an attacker can append HTML or JavaScript to a valid archived revision timestamp, still load that archived revision, and execute arbitrary JavaScript in the victim's browser.The vulnerable form is only rendered when the victim can both read and edit the target page. In restricted deployments this requires a victim with
readandwriteaccess to that page. On a defaultdoryphore 4.6.5install, public pages such asPagePrincipalewere editable anonymously during validation, so the issue can also affect unauthenticated visitors in that configuration.Details
The request routing path uses the user-controlled
timeparameter to load a specific page revision. Inincludes/YesWiki.phparoundRun()line1223, the request is routed through:LoadPage()delegates toPageManager::getOne()inincludes/services/PageManager.phparound line75, which builds a SQL predicate directly from the supplied revision time:If the loaded page is an archived revision (
latest == 'N') and the current user haswriteaccess,handlers/page/show.phparound lines43-49renders an edit form for that archived revision and copies$_GET['time']into a hidden input withouthtmlspecialchars():That sink is reachable only when all of the following are true:
readthe target page.writethe target page, because the archived revision edit form is rendered only inside theif ($this->HasAccess('write'))branch.In practice, the payload must begin with a real archived revision timestamp. A completely invalid
timevalue does not reach the archived branch because YesWiki only updates the current page object when the revision lookup returns a non-empty row.During local validation on the official
doryphore 4.6.5package, the exploit worked because MySQL accepted a malformed timestamp string as matching an existing archived revision row. For example, the following expression was coerced to the stored revision time:and the corresponding query predicate still matched the archived row:
This means a payload can begin with a valid archived revision timestamp, still resolve to the archived revision, and then be reflected unescaped into the hidden HTML field.
For comparison,
tools/bazar/handlers/page/show__.phparound lines13-14escapes the sametimevalue withhtmlspecialchars(), which shows that the core handler's behavior is inconsistent and unsafe.This issue maps to CWE-79: Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting').
PoC
doryphore 4.6.5release.readaccess to the page.writeaccess to the page.PagePrincipale, so no login was required in that configuration.PagePrincipalerevision existed at2026-05-24 04:30:00.readandwriterights.timevalue matched the stored archived revision.alert(1)demonstrates code execution; a real payload could read browser-accessible data or perform actions in the victim's session.Impact
This is a reflected XSS vulnerability in the archived-revision workflow.
The practical access model is:
readandwriteaccess to the target page.An attacker may be able to:
References