Open WebUI: Stale Admin Role in Socket.IO Session Pool Enables Post-Demotion Cross-User Note Access

Description

Stale Admin Role in Socket.IO Session Pool Enables Post-Demotion Cross-User Note Access

Affected Component

Socket.IO session state and role-check callsites:
- backend/open_webui/socket/main.py (lines 330-351, connect handler — role snapshotted into SESSION_POOL)
- backend/open_webui/socket/main.py (lines 393-398, heartbeat handler — does not refresh role)
- backend/open_webui/socket/main.py (line 538, ydoc:document:join — uses cached role for admin check)
- backend/open_webui/socket/main.py (line 611, document_save_handler — uses cached role for admin check)
- backend/open_webui/routers/users.py (lines 557-633, role update — does not invalidate SESSION_POOL)
- backend/open_webui/routers/users.py (line 641, user delete — does not invalidate SESSION_POOL)

Affected Versions

Current main branch (commit 6fdd19bf1) and likely all versions with the collaborative document (Yjs) Socket.IO handlers.

Description

When a user connects via Socket.IO, the connect handler authenticates them via JWT and stores their user record (including role) in the in-memory SESSION_POOL dictionary keyed by session ID. The heartbeat handler keeps the session alive indefinitely but only refreshes the last_seen_at timestamp — never the role.

Role checks in the Yjs collaborative document handlers (ydoc:document:join, document_save_handler) consult the cached SESSION_POOL role rather than the database. Meanwhile, administrative role changes and user deletions do not iterate SESSION_POOL to disconnect affected sessions. As a result, a user whose admin role has been revoked retains admin privileges within their existing Socket.IO session for as long as they keep the connection alive (via automatic heartbeats).

HTTP endpoints are not affected — get_current_user at utils/auth.py refetches the user record from the database on every request. The gap is exclusive to the Socket.IO session cache.

# socket/main.py:330-351 — role snapshotted at connect time
async def connect(sid, environ, auth):
    user = None
    if auth and 'token' in auth:
        data = decode_token(auth['token'])
        if data is not None and 'id' in data:
            user = Users.get_user_by_id(data['id'])
        if user:
            SESSION_POOL[sid] = {
                'id': user.id,
                'role': user.role,   # ← snapshotted, never refreshed
                ...
            }

# socket/main.py:393-398 — heartbeat refreshes last_seen_at only
async def heartbeat(sid, data):
    user = SESSION_POOL.get(sid)
    if user:
        SESSION_POOL[sid] = {**user, 'last_seen_at': int(time.time())}
        # role is carried forward unchanged

# socket/main.py:538 — admin check against cached role
if user.get('role') != 'admin' and not has_access(user_id, 'note', note_id, 'read', db=db):
    return

Attack Scenario

  1. User B is an admin and has an active browser session with a live Socket.IO connection. SESSION_POOL[sid] records role='admin'.
  2. Admin A demotes User B to a regular user via POST /api/v1/users/{B_id}/update. The DB user.role becomes 'user'.
  3. No Socket.IO disconnect, no SESSION_POOL update, no token revocation event is triggered by the role change.
  4. User B's client continues sending heartbeat events every few seconds; these are accepted and only refresh last_seen_at.
  5. User B emits ydoc:document:join with document_id = 'note:<victim_note_id>' for any note they do not own.
  6. The handler at line 538 evaluates user.get('role') != 'admin' — returns False because SESSION_POOL still holds the stale admin role. Access check is bypassed, User B joins the document room, receives full document state and live updates.
  7. User B emits ydoc:document:update for the same note. The handler at line 611 performs the same cached-admin check, bypasses authorization, and persists attacker-controlled content to the victim's note via Notes.update_note_by_id.

The same bypass occurs if the user is deleted entirely (delete_user_by_id) — the deleted user retains admin privileges on their live socket until disconnection.

Impact

  • Read access to any user's notes after admin privileges have been revoked
  • Write access (content injection, overwrite) to any user's notes under the same conditions
  • The stale privilege is bounded only by the attacker's willingness to keep the Socket.IO connection alive; heartbeats extend the session indefinitely
  • Official admin demotion or user deletion gives a false sense of security — HTTP access is correctly revoked, but real-time collaborative access silently continues

Preconditions

  • Attacker must have an active Socket.IO connection established while they held admin role
  • Attacker must retain the Socket.IO session after demotion/deletion (trivial — just don't close the browser)

Basic information

Type
reviewed
Severity
high
Advisory on GitHub
Open advisory ↗
Repository advisory
Open repository advisory ↗
Source code
Browse source ↗
Published (advisory)
2026-05-08 19:43:49 UTC
Updated
2026-05-15 23:52:24 UTC
GitHub reviewed
2026-05-08 19:43:49 UTC
NVD published
2026-05-15 20:16:46 UTC

EPSS Score

Score Percentile
0.03% 8.21%

CVSS Scores

Base score Version Severity Vector
8.1 3.1
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:N Click to expand
Attack vector (AV:N)
Could be attacked over the internet or any normal routed network—not just someone sitting at the machine.
Attack complexity (AC:L)
Once they can reach the bug, pulling it off is straightforward—no weird race conditions or rare setup.
Privileges required (PR:L)
A normal user session is enough; they don’t have to be admin.
User interaction (UI:N)
Nobody has to click “OK” or open a trap file; it can work without a victim helping.
Scope (S:U)
Damage stays in the same “trust bubble” as the broken component—no big spill into unrelated systems.
Confidentiality (C:H)
Serious risk that confidential data gets exposed in a big way.
Integrity (I:H)
They could widely tamper with or forge data—trust in the data is badly hurt.
Availability (A:N)
Service keeps running; no real outage angle.

Identifiers

CWEs

CWE id Name
CWE-384 Session Fixation
CWE-613 Insufficient Session Expiration
CWE-863 Incorrect Authorization

Credits

  • Classic298 (reporter)

Affected packages (1)

Vulnerable version ranges and first patched releases as published by GitHub.

Ecosystem Package Vulnerable range First patched Vulnerable functions
pip open-webui <= 0.8.12 0.9.0

References

cvelogic Threat Intelligence