| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Dataease is an open source data visualization analysis tool. Prior to version 2.10.19, DataEase uses the MD5 hash of the user’s password as the JWT signing secret. This deterministic secret derivation allows an attacker to brute-force the admin’s password by exploiting unmonitored API endpoints that verify JWT tokens. The vulnerability has been fixed in v2.10.19. No known workarounds are available. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a JDBC parameter blocklist bypass vulnerability in the MySQL datasource configuration. The Mysql class uses Lombok's @Data annotation, which auto-generates a public setter for the illegalParameters field that contains the JDBC security blocklist. When a datasource configuration is submitted as JSON, Jackson deserialization calls setIllegalParameters with an attacker-supplied empty list, replacing the blocklist before getJdbc() validation runs. This allows an authenticated attacker to include dangerous JDBC parameters such as allowLoadLocalInfile=true, and by pointing the datasource at a rogue MySQL server, exploit the LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE protocol feature to read arbitrary files from the DataEase server filesystem, including sensitive environment variables and database credentials. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the sort parameter of the /de2api/datasetData/enumValueObj endpoint. The DatasetDataManage service layer directly transfers the user-supplied sort value to the sorting metadata DTO, which is passed to Order2SQLObj where it is incorporated into the SQL ORDER BY clause without any whitelist validation, and then executed via CalciteProvider. An authenticated attacker can inject arbitrary SQL commands through the sort parameter, enabling time-based blind SQL injection. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the API datasource update process. When a new table definition is added during a datasource update via /de2api/datasource/update, the deTableName field from the user-submitted configuration is passed to DatasourceSyncManage.createEngineTable, where it is substituted into a CREATE TABLE statement template without any sanitization or identifier escaping. An authenticated attacker can inject arbitrary SQL commands by crafting a deTableName that breaks out of identifier quoting, enabling error-based SQL injection that can extract database information. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below ship the legacy velocity-1.7.jar, which pulls in commons-collections-3.2.1.jar containing the InvokerTransformer deserialization gadget chain. Quartz 2.3.2, also bundled in the application, deserializes job data BLOBs from the qrtz_job_details table using ObjectInputStream with no deserialization filter or class allowlist. An authenticated attacker who can write to the Quartz job table, such as through the previously described SQL injection in previewSql, can replace a scheduled job's JOB_DATA with a malicious CommonsCollections6 gadget chain payload. When the Quartz cron trigger fires, the payload is deserialized and executes arbitrary commands as root inside the container, achieving full remote code execution. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the API datasource saving process. The deTableName field from the Base64-encoded datasource configuration is used to construct a DDL statement via simple string replacement without any sanitization or escaping of the table name. An authenticated attacker can inject arbitrary SQL commands by crafting a deTableName that breaks out of identifier quoting, enabling error-based SQL injection that can extract database information such as the MySQL version. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the /datasource/getTableField endpoint. The getTableFiledSql method in CalciteProvider.java incorporates the tableName parameter directly into SQL query strings using String.format without parameterization or sanitization. Although DatasourceServer.java validates that the table name exists in the datasource, an attacker can bypass this by first registering an API datasource with a malicious deTableName, which is then returned by getTables and passes the validation check. An authenticated attacker can execute arbitrary SQL commands, enabling error-based extraction of sensitive database information. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the /de2api/datasetData/previewSql endpoint. The user-supplied SQL is wrapped in a subquery without validation that the input is a single SELECT statement. Combined with the JDBC blocklist bypass that allows enabling allowMultiQueries=true, an attacker can break out of the subquery and execute arbitrary stacked SQL statements, including UPDATE and other write operations, against the connected database. An authenticated attacker with access to valid datasource credentials can achieve full read and write access to the underlying database. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open source data visualization analysis tool. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the dataset export functionality. The expressionTree parameter in POST /de2api/datasetTree/exportDataset is deserialized into a filtering object and passed to WhereTree2Str.transFilterTrees for SQL translation, where user-controlled values in "like" filter terms are directly concatenated into SQL fragments without sanitization. An attacker can inject arbitrary SQL commands by escaping the string literal in the filter value, enabling blind SQL injection through techniques such as time-based extraction of database information. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| DataEase is an open-source data visualization and analytics platform. Versions 2.10.20 and below contain a SQL injection vulnerability in the orderDirection parameter used in dataset-related endpoints including /de2api/datasetData/enumValueDs and /de2api/datasetTree/exportDataset. The Order2SQLObj class directly assigns the raw user-supplied orderDirection value into the SQL query without any validation or whitelist enforcement, and the value is rendered into the ORDER BY clause via StringTemplate before being executed against the database. An authenticated attacker can inject arbitrary SQL commands through the sorting direction field, enabling time-based blind data extraction and denial of service. This issue has been fixed in version 2.10.21. |
| Dataease is an open source data visualization analysis tool. In DataEase 2.10.19 and earlier, the static resource upload interface allows SVG uploads. However, backend validation only checks whether the XML is parseable and whether the root node is svg. It does not sanitize active content such as onload/onerror event handlers or script-capable attributes. As a result, an attacker can upload a malicious SVG and then trigger script execution in a browser by visiting the exposed static resource URL, forming a full stored XSS exploitation chain. This vulnerability is fixed in 2.10.20. |
| DataEase is an open source data visualization analysis tool. Versions 2.10.19 and below have inconsistent Locale handling between the JDBC URL validation logic and the H2 JDBC engine's internal parsing. DataEase uses String.toUpperCase() without specifying an explicit Locale, causing its security checks to rely on the JVM's default runtime locale, while H2 JDBC always normalizes URLs using Locale.ENGLISH. In Turkish locale environments (tr_TR), Java converts the lowercase letter i to İ (dotted capital I) instead of the standard I, so a malicious parameter like iNIT becomes İNIT in DataEase's filter (bypassing its blacklist) while H2 still correctly interprets it as INIT. This discrepancy allows attackers to smuggle dangerous JDBC parameters past DataEase's security validation, and the issue has been confirmed as exploitable in real DataEase deployment scenarios running under affected regional settings. The issue has been fixed in version 2.10.20. |
| Dataease is an open source data visualization analysis tool. Prior to 2.10.20, The table parameter for /de2api/datasource/previewData is directly concatenated into the SQL statement without any filtering or parameterization. Since tableName is a user-controllable string, attackers can inject malicious SQL statements by constructing malicious table names. This vulnerability is fixed in 2.10.20. |
| Dataease is an open source data visualization analysis tool. Prior to 2.10.20, By controlling the IniFile parameter, an attacker can force the JDBC driver to load an attacker-controlled configuration file. This configuration file can inject dangerous JDBC properties, leading to remote code execution. The Redshift JDBC driver execution flow reaches a method named getJdbcIniFile. The getJdbcIniFile method implements an aggressive automatic configuration file discovery mechanism. If not explicitly restricted, it searches for a file named rsjdbc.ini. In a JDBC URL context, users can explicitly specify the configuration file via URL parameters, which allows arbitrary files on the server to be loaded as JDBC configuration files. Within the Redshift JDBC driver properties, the parameter IniFile is explicitly supported and used to load an external configuration file. This vulnerability is fixed in 2.10.20. |
| Dataease is an open source data visualization analysis tool. Versions prior to 2.10.17 are vulnerable to JNDI injection. A blacklist was added in the patch for version 2.10.14. However, JNDI injection remains possible via the iiop, corbaname, and iiopname schemes. The vulnerability has been fixed in version 2.10.17. |
| Dataease is an open source data visualization analysis tool. In versions 2.10.14 and below, DataEase did not properly filter when establishing JDBC connections to Oracle, resulting in a risk of JNDI injection (Java Naming and Directory Interface injection). This issue is fixed in version 2.10.15. |
| DataEase is an open source data visualization analysis tool. In versions 2.10.14 and below, the vendor added a blacklist to filter ldap:// and ldaps://. However, omission of protection for the dns:// protocol results in an SSRF vulnerability. This issue is fixed in version 2.10.15. |
| DataEase is a data visualization and analytics platform. In DataEase versions through 2.10.13, a JDBC URL injection vulnerability exists in the DB2 and MongoDB data source configuration handlers. In the DB2 data source handler, when the extraParams field is empty, the HOSTNAME, PORT, and DATABASE values are directly concatenated into the JDBC URL without filtering illegal parameters. This allows an attacker to inject a malicious JDBC string into the HOSTNAME field to bypass previously patched vulnerabilities CVE-2025-57773 and CVE-2025-58045. The vulnerability is fixed in version 2.10.14. No known workarounds exist. |
| DataEase is a data visualization and analytics platform. In DataEase versions through 2.10.13, a JDBC driver bypass vulnerability exists in the H2 database connection handler. The getJdbc function in H2.java checks if the jdbcUrl starts with jdbc:h2 but returns a separate jdbc field as the actual connection URL. An attacker can provide a jdbcUrl that starts with jdbc:h2 while supplying a different jdbc field with an arbitrary JDBC driver and connection string. This allows an authenticated attacker to trigger arbitrary JDBC connections with malicious drivers, potentially leading to remote code execution. The vulnerability is fixed in version 2.10.14. No known workarounds exist. |
| DataEase is an open source data visualization and analytics platform. In versions 2.10.13 and earlier, the /de2api/datasetData/tableField interface is vulnerable to SQL injection. An attacker can construct a malicious tableName parameter to execute arbitrary SQL commands. This issue is fixed in version 2.10.14. No known workarounds exist. |