Impact
Prior to puma
version 5.5.0, using puma
with a proxy which forwards LF characters as line endings could allow HTTP request smuggling. A client could smuggle a request through a proxy, causing the proxy to send a response back to another unknown client.
This behavior (forwarding LF characters as line endings) is very uncommon amongst proxy servers, so we have graded the impact here as "low". Puma is only aware of a single proxy server which has this behavior.
If the proxy uses persistent connections and the client adds another request in via HTTP pipelining, the proxy may mistake it as the first request's body. Puma, however, would see it as two requests, and when processing the second request, send back a response that the proxy does not expect. If the proxy has reused the persistent connection to Puma to send another request for a different client, the second response from the first client will be sent to the second client.
Patches
This vulnerability was patched in Puma 5.5.1 and 4.3.9.
Workarounds
This vulnerability only affects Puma installations without any proxy in front.
Use a proxy which does not forward LF characters as line endings.
Proxies which do not forward LF characters as line endings:
- Nginx
- Apache (>2.4.25)
- Haproxy
- Caddy
- Traefik
Possible Breakage
If you are dealing with legacy clients that want to send LF
as a line ending in an HTTP header, this will cause those clients to receive a 400
error.
References
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
References
Impact
Prior to
puma
version 5.5.0, usingpuma
with a proxy which forwards LF characters as line endings could allow HTTP request smuggling. A client could smuggle a request through a proxy, causing the proxy to send a response back to another unknown client.This behavior (forwarding LF characters as line endings) is very uncommon amongst proxy servers, so we have graded the impact here as "low". Puma is only aware of a single proxy server which has this behavior.
If the proxy uses persistent connections and the client adds another request in via HTTP pipelining, the proxy may mistake it as the first request's body. Puma, however, would see it as two requests, and when processing the second request, send back a response that the proxy does not expect. If the proxy has reused the persistent connection to Puma to send another request for a different client, the second response from the first client will be sent to the second client.
Patches
This vulnerability was patched in Puma 5.5.1 and 4.3.9.
Workarounds
This vulnerability only affects Puma installations without any proxy in front.
Use a proxy which does not forward LF characters as line endings.
Proxies which do not forward LF characters as line endings:
Possible Breakage
If you are dealing with legacy clients that want to send
LF
as a line ending in an HTTP header, this will cause those clients to receive a400
error.References
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
References