Insufficient Protection against HTTP Request Smuggling in mitmproxy
Critical severity
GitHub Reviewed
Published
Mar 19, 2022
in
mitmproxy/mitmproxy
•
Updated Oct 1, 2024
Description
Published by the National Vulnerability Database
Mar 21, 2022
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database
Mar 22, 2022
Reviewed
Mar 22, 2022
Last updated
Oct 1, 2024
Impact
In mitmproxy 7.0.4 and below, a malicious client or server is able to perform HTTP request smuggling attacks through mitmproxy. This means that a malicious client/server could smuggle a request/response through mitmproxy as part of another request/response's HTTP message body. While mitmproxy would only see one request, the target server would see multiple requests. A smuggled request is still captured as part of another request's body, but it does not appear in the request list and does not go through the usual mitmproxy event hooks, where users may have implemented custom access control checks or input sanitization.
Unless you use mitmproxy to protect an HTTP/1 service, no action is required.
Patches
The vulnerability has been fixed in mitmproxy 8.0.0 and above.
Acknowledgements
We thank Zeyu Zhang (@zeyu2001) for responsibly disclosing this vulnerability to the mitmproxy team.
Timeline
References