VariantDraft
CWE-157Failure to Sanitize Paired Delimiters
Category: other
Description
The product does not properly handle the characters that are used to mark the beginning and ending of a group of entities, such as parentheses, brackets, and braces.
Common consequences· 1
- Integrity — Unexpected State
Potential mitigations· 4
- []Developers should anticipate that grouping elements will be injected/removed/manipulated in the input vectors of their product. Use an appropriate combination of denylists and allowlists to ensure only valid, expected and appropriate input is processed by the system.
- [Implementation]
- [Implementation]While it is risky to use dynamically-generated query strings, code, or commands that mix control and data together, sometimes it may be unavoidable. Properly quote arguments and escape any special characters within those arguments. The most conservative approach is to escape or filter all characters that do not pass an extremely strict allowlist (such as everything that is not alphanumeric or white space). If some special characters are still needed, such as white space, wrap each argument in quotes after the escaping/filtering step. Be careful of argument injection (CWE-88).
- [Implementation]Inputs should be decoded and canonicalized to the application's current internal representation before being validated (CWE-180). Make sure that the application does not decode the same input twice (CWE-174). Such errors could be used to bypass allowlist validation schemes by introducing dangerous inputs after they have been checked.
Related CAPEC attack patterns· 1
References
Exploits (incoming)1
| Type | Target | Confidence | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| AttackPattern | Command Delimiterscapec-15 | 100% | live |
(incoming)1
| Type | Target | Confidence | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vulnerability | CVE-2025-25286cve-2025-25286 | 0% | live |
Related by meaning· 6
Nearest entities by semantic similarity across the cs-graph corpus.