In Splunk SOAR (Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response) versions below 8.5.0, an unauthenticated attacker could inject American National Standards Institute (ANSI) escape codes into SOAR application log files through specially crafted HTTP request paths, which a terminal emulator might interpret when an administrator views the logs.<br><br>The injection is possible because SOAR does not strip control characters from HTTP request paths before writing them to application logs.
History

Wed, 10 Jun 2026 18:15:00 +0000

Type Values Removed Values Added
Description In Splunk SOAR (Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response) versions below 8.5.0, an unauthenticated attacker could inject American National Standards Institute (ANSI) escape codes into SOAR application log files through specially crafted HTTP request paths, which a terminal emulator might interpret when an administrator views the logs.<br><br>The injection is possible because SOAR does not strip control characters from HTTP request paths before writing them to application logs.
Title Log Injection through HTTP Request Paths in Splunk SOAR
Weaknesses CWE-117
References
Metrics cvssV3_1

{'score': 4.3, 'vector': 'CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:R/S:U/C:N/I:L/A:N'}


cve-icon MITRE

Status: PUBLISHED

Assigner: cisco

Published:

Updated: 2026-06-10T18:23:13.215Z

Reserved: 2025-10-08T11:59:15.402Z

Link: CVE-2026-20260

cve-icon Vulnrichment

No data.

cve-icon NVD

Status : Awaiting Analysis

Published: 2026-06-10T18:16:41.643

Modified: 2026-06-10T18:36:19.463

Link: CVE-2026-20260

cve-icon Redhat

No data.

cve-icon OpenCVE Enrichment

Updated: 2026-06-10T19:30:37Z