sinatra 1.1.a

3 security vulnerabilities found in version 1.1.a

Sinatra vulnerable to Reflected File Download attack

high severity CVE-2022-45442
high severity CVE-2022-45442
Patched versions: ~> 2.2.3, >= 3.0.4

An issue was discovered in Sinatra 2.0 before 2.2.3 and 3.0 before 3.0.4. An application is vulnerable to a reflected file download (RFD) attack that sets the Content-Disposition header of a response when the filename is derived from user-supplied input.

sinatra does not validate expanded path matches

high severity CVE-2022-29970
high severity CVE-2022-29970
Patched versions: >= 2.2.0

Sinatra before 2.2.0 does not validate that the expanded path matches public_dir when serving static files.

Sinatra vulnerable to Reliance on Untrusted Inputs in a Security Decision

medium severity CVE-2024-21510
medium severity CVE-2024-21510

Versions of the package sinatra from 0.0.0 are vulnerable to Reliance on Untrusted Inputs in a Security Decision via the X-Forwarded-Host (XFH) header.

When making a request to a method with redirect applied, it is possible to trigger an Open Redirect Attack by inserting an arbitrary address into this header. If used for caching purposes, such as with servers like Nginx, or as a reverse proxy, without handling the X-Forwarded-Host header, attackers can potentially exploit Cache Poisoning or Routing-based SSRF.

No officially reported memory leakage issues detected.


This gem version does not have any officially reported memory leaked issues.

Author did not declare license for this gem in the gemspec.


This gem version has a MIT license in the source code, however it was not declared in the gemspec file.

This gem version is available.


This gem version has not been yanked and is still available for usage.