Impact
RFC 9112 Section 7.1 defined the format of chunk size, chunk data and chunk extension (detailed ABNF is in Appendix section).
In summary:
- The value of Content-Length header should be a string of 0-9 digits.
- The chunk size should be a string of hex digits and should split from chunk data using CRLF.
- The chunk extension shouldn't contain any invisible character.
However, we found that Falcon has following behaviors while disobey the corresponding RFCs.
- Falcon accepts Content-Length header values that have "+" prefix.
- Falcon accepts Content-Length header values that written in hexadecimal with "0x" prefix.
- Falcon accepts "0x" and "+" prefixed chunk size.
- Falcon accepts LF in chunk extension.
This behavior can lead to desync when forwarding through multiple HTTP parsers, potentially results in HTTP request smuggling and firewall bypassing. Note that while these issues were reproduced in Falcon (the server), the issue is with protocol-http1
which implements the HTTP/1 protocol parser. We have not yet been advised of any real world exploit or practical attack.
Patches
Fixed in protocol-http1
v0.15.1+.
Workarounds
No.
References
#20
Discovered by Keran Mu and Jianjun Chen, from Tsinghua University and Zhongguancun Laboratory.
Impact
RFC 9112 Section 7.1 defined the format of chunk size, chunk data and chunk extension (detailed ABNF is in Appendix section).
In summary:
However, we found that Falcon has following behaviors while disobey the corresponding RFCs.
This behavior can lead to desync when forwarding through multiple HTTP parsers, potentially results in HTTP request smuggling and firewall bypassing. Note that while these issues were reproduced in Falcon (the server), the issue is with
protocol-http1
which implements the HTTP/1 protocol parser. We have not yet been advised of any real world exploit or practical attack.Patches
Fixed in
protocol-http1
v0.15.1+.Workarounds
No.
References
#20
Discovered by Keran Mu and Jianjun Chen, from Tsinghua University and Zhongguancun Laboratory.