puma 6.1.1

3 security vulnerabilities found in version 6.1.1

Puma's header normalization allows for client to clobber proxy set headers

medium severity CVE-2024-45614
medium severity CVE-2024-45614
Patched versions: ~> 5.6.9, >= 6.4.3

Impact

Clients could clobber values set by intermediate proxies (such as X-Forwarded-For) by providing a underscore version of the same header (X-Forwarded_For).

Any users trusting headers set by their proxy may be affected. Attackers may be able to downgrade connections to HTTP (non-SSL) or redirect responses, which could cause confidentiality leaks if combined with a separate MITM attack.

Patches

v6.4.3/v5.6.9 now discards any headers using underscores if the non-underscore version also exists. Effectively, allowing the proxy defined headers to always win.

Workarounds

Nginx has a underscores_in_headers configuration variable to discard these headers at the proxy level.

Any users that are implicitly trusting the proxy defined headers for security or availability should immediately cease doing so until upgraded to the fixed versions.

Puma HTTP Request/Response Smuggling vulnerability

medium severity CVE-2024-21647
medium severity CVE-2024-21647
Patched versions: ~> 5.6.8, >= 6.4.2

Impact

Prior to versions 6.4.2 and 5.6.8, puma exhibited incorrect behavior when parsing chunked transfer encoding bodies in a way that allowed HTTP request smuggling.

Fixed versions limit the size of chunk extensions. Without this limit, an attacker could cause unbounded resource (CPU, network bandwidth) consumption.

Patches

The vulnerability has been fixed in 6.4.2 and 5.6.8.

Workarounds

No known workarounds.

References

Inconsistent Interpretation of HTTP Requests ('HTTP Request/Response Smuggling') in puma

medium severity CVE-2023-40175
medium severity CVE-2023-40175
Patched versions: ~> 5.6.7, >= 6.3.1

Impact

Prior to version 6.3.1, puma exhibited incorrect behavior when parsing chunked transfer encoding bodies and zero-length Content-Length headers in a way that allowed HTTP request smuggling.

The following vulnerabilities are addressed by this advisory:

  • Incorrect parsing of trailing fields in chunked transfer encoding bodies
  • Parsing of blank/zero-length Content-Length headers\r\n

Patches

The vulnerability has been fixed in 6.3.1 and 5.6.7.

Workarounds

No known workarounds.

References

HTTP Request Smuggling

No officially reported memory leakage issues detected.


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