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Bug #73500 parse_url behaviour changed between 7.0.12 and 7.0.13 when pw begins with #
Submitted: 2016-11-11 15:08 UTC Modified: 2016-11-13 16:07 UTC
Votes:2
Avg. Score:5.0 ± 0.0
Reproduced:2 of 2 (100.0%)
Same Version:1 (50.0%)
Same OS:1 (50.0%)
From: max at substrakt dot com Assigned:
Status: Wont fix Package: URL related
PHP Version: 7.0.13 OS: Ubuntu Linux
Private report: No CVE-ID: None
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 [2016-11-11 15:08 UTC] max at substrakt dot com
Description:
------------
When running the following code on PHP 7.0.12 and 7.0.13, a different result is returned.

In the later version, the user and pass attributes are missing. This _only_ occurs when the first character of the password is # (hash/pound). Strong passwords can often include the # symbol so this is unexpected behaviour.

I've not raised a bug in PHP before, please let me know if you need further information to resolve this!

Test script:
---------------
<?php
    $url = "mysql://user:#fhdsjfghjdf@host.eu-west-1.rds.amazonaws.com:3306/database_name";
    var_dump(parse_url($url));


Expected result:
----------------
array(6) {
  ["scheme"]=>
  string(5) "mysql"
  ["host"]=>
  string(32) "host.eu-west-1.rds.amazonaws.com"
  ["port"]=>
  int(3306)
  ["user"]=>
  string(4) "user"
  ["pass"]=>
  string(12) "#fhdsjfghjdf"
  ["path"]=>
  string(14) "/database_name"
}

Actual result:
--------------
array(3) {
  ["scheme"]=>
  string(5) "mysql"
  ["host"]=>
  string(4) "user"
  ["fragment"]=>
  string(63) "fhdsjfghjdf@host.eu-west-1.rds.amazonaws.com:3306/database_name"
}

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 [2016-11-11 15:22 UTC] nikic@php.net
Just like for other parts of a URI, it is necessary to URL-encode passwords (for example, using the urlencode() function). The "#" in your password should be "%23" instead.

As bug #73192, which resulted in this change, is classified as a security bug, I don't think we'll take further action here.
 [2016-11-13 16:07 UTC] ab@php.net
-Status: Open +Status: Wont fix
 
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