Jenkins, the widely-used open-source automation server, issued a high-priority security advisory on March 5, 2025, disclosing four medium-severity vulnerabilities affecting its core platform.
The flaws—tracked as CVE-2025-27622 through CVE-2025-27625—impact secrets management, cross-site request forgery (CSRF) protections, and URL validation.
Immediate upgrades to Jenkins 2.500 (weekly) or 2.492.2 (LTS) are recommended to mitigate risks.
Two vulnerabilities (CVE-2025-27622 and CVE-2025-27623) stemmed from improper redaction of encrypted secrets in agent and view configurations.
Attackers with Agent/Extended Read or View/Read permissions could exploit unpatched systems to access sensitive data stored in config.xml
files via REST API or CLI endpoints.
Jenkins 2.499 and earlier, along with LTS 2.492.1 and earlier, failed to mask encrypted values—a regression from the 2016 SECURITY-266 fix.
The resolved versions now enforce role-based access controls, restricting decrypted secret visibility to users with Configure permissions.
A CSRF flaw (CVE-2025-27624) allowed unauthorized toggling of side panel widgets (e.g., Build Queue) via malicious HTTP requests.
Attackers could inject arbitrary panel IDs into user profiles, enabling persistent UI manipulation.
Concurrently, an open redirect issue (CVE-2025-27625) permitted phishing attacks by interpreting backslash-based URLs (e.g., \example.com
) as valid redirects.
Browsers resolved these as scheme-relative paths, bypassing Jenkins’ URL safelist.
Patches enforce POST requests for sidepanel endpoints and reject backslash-initial redirects, aligning with OWASP CSRF prevention guidelines and RFC 3986 URI normalization standards.
Affected versions include Jenkins weekly ≤2.499 and LTS ≤2.492.1. The fixes—rolled out in 2.500 (weekly) and 2.492.2 (LTS)—introduce:
Administrators should prioritize upgrades and audit user permissions, particularly for roles with Read-only access.
For environments requiring delayed patches, temporary mitigations include revoking unnecessary permissions and implementing reverse proxy rules to block malicious redirect patterns.
Jenkins emphasized these updates as part of its quarterly security hardening cycle, underscoring the importance of continuous dependency scanning in CI/CD pipelines.
With CVSS scores averaging 6.5, proactive remediation is critical to prevent credential exfiltration and session hijacking in DevOps workflows.
Collect Threat Intelligence on the Latest Malware and Phishing Attacks with ANY.RUN TI Lookup -> Try for free
Penetration testing companies play a vital role in strengthening the cybersecurity defenses of organizations by…
Cybersecurity researchers continue to track sophisticated "Click Fix" style distribution campaigns that deliver the notorious…
In a novel and concerning development, multiple U.S. organizations have reported receiving suspicious physical letters…
The cybersecurity landscape has recently been impacted by the emergence of the Strela Stealer malware,…
A recent discovery by the Socket Research Team has unveiled a malicious PyPI package named…
A recent cybersecurity threat has emerged where unknown attackers are exploiting a critical remote code…