Security readout for executives and security teams
Plain-English summary
CVE-2022-29347 describes an arbitrary file upload issue in Web@rchiv 1.0. The public description says a crafted PHP file can lead to arbitrary command execution. That is potentially serious for any exposed installation, but the source bundle does not provide CVSS, vendor advisory, fixed version, or confirmed exploitation.
Executive priority
Prioritize assessment for any internet-facing Web@rchiv 1.0 deployment. The described impact is command execution, but public evidence is thin and no active exploitation is confirmed in the supplied sources.
Technical view
The CVE record states Web@rchiv 1.0 allows arbitrary file upload resulting in command execution through a crafted PHP file. No CWE, CVSS vector, CPE, vendor patch, or official mitigation is provided in the bundle. The only listed third-party reference is a GitHub CVE repository.
Likely exposure
Exposure appears limited to organizations running Web@rchiv 1.0, especially if reachable by untrusted users. The CVE metadata lacks vendor and CPE identifiers, so asset matching may require software-name, file-system, and application-owner checks.
Exploitation context
The bundle does not support a claim of active exploitation. CISA KEV is false, and no cited source confirms in-the-wild abuse. Public reference material exists, so defenders should treat internet-facing instances as higher priority.
Researcher notes
The record is sparse: no CVSS, CWE, CPE, vendor advisory, or remediation detail is included. Treat product identification and patch status as manual validation tasks. Avoid assuming broader Web@rchiv versions are affected without additional evidence.
Mitigation direction
Inventory for Web@rchiv 1.0 installations.
Check vendor or project guidance for fixes.
Restrict access to upload-capable interfaces.
Remove or isolate exposed instances if no fix exists.
Review uploaded files for unexpected PHP content.
Increase monitoring on affected web servers.
Validation and detection
Confirm whether Web@rchiv 1.0 is deployed.
Identify whether the application is internet-facing.
Check web roots and upload directories for PHP files.
Generated from the cited source records. This long-tail analysis has not been individually reviewed by a named human.
Potential ATT&CK relevance
Conservative CVE-to-ATT&CK context
These mappings and lookup hints may be relevant to the vulnerability behavior, CWE, affected product, or exposure path. Glexia-inferred context is not an official MITRE, ATT&CK, CWE, or CVE Program mapping.
ATT&CK lookup starting points
Use these exact CWE pages and searches to review the Glexia ATT&CK library from this CVE's weakness and description context.
description · low confidence lookup
File access behavior lookup
The CVE wording references file access or upload behavior, so file telemetry and web shell review may help. This is a Glexia inferred lookup path, not an official MITRE, ATT&CK, or CVE Program mapping.
These fields come from the CVE record and ADP containers, not from Glexia's Take. They preserve time-varying source decisions such as CISA SSVC, KEV status, CVSS metrics, and provider references.
0CVSS vectors
3Timeline events
1ADP providers
2Source links
Vulnerability timeline
Timeline events are normalized from CVE metadata, CNA source timelines, ADP timelines, and KEV metadata when present.
CVE reservedCVE Program
The CVE ID was reserved by the assigning CNA.
CVE publishedCVE Program
The CVE record was published.
May 4, 2022, 14:28 UTC (UTC+00:00)
CVE updatedCVE Program
The CVE record metadata indicates this as the latest update time.