Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Remove Trailing Slashes from Hostname #1254

Merged
merged 1 commit into from
Jun 28, 2022
Merged

Conversation

jkjk822
Copy link
Contributor

@jkjk822 jkjk822 commented Jun 28, 2022

Hostnames can be passed in with trailing slashes. Since we blindly concat a path with a leading slash, paths like http://hostname//$rpc/path (note the double slash before $rpc) are possible. The duplicated slash can cause issues down the line, especially if the path is separated from the host in requests.

Browsers/servers generally allow double slashes, and while they are valid syntactically under the RFC spec, there is no specified semantic meaning. So a server could interpret a path like http://hostname//$rpc/path as equivalent to http://hostname/$rpc/path (most common), as a separate path with an empty path component before /$rpc, or as something else. The problem is several interpretations are equally valid under the spec and it's implementation-dependent which is used.

Additionally, the path can be separate from the host in a request depending on whether it's in origin form versus absolute form (see https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7230#section-5.3). In absolute form (GET http://hostname//$rpc/path), the path and host are clear. In origin form (GET //$rpc/path, Host: hostname), it is still clear to us looking at it, but may not be clear to a server. For example the server may think the //$rpc/path is in absolute form due to the double slash, and thus parse it as host: $rpc, path: /path. This is especially problematic as https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7230#section-5.4 says:

"When a proxy receives a request with an absolute-form of request-target, the proxy MUST ignore the received Host header field (if any) and instead replace it with the host information of the request-target. A proxy that forwards such a request MUST generate a new Host field-value based on the received request-target rather than forward the received Host field-value."

Which means a proxy would corrupt the request when in this format by overwriting the old host value with $rpc

This parsing concern is not idle speculation either. Java's main URI class (https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/net/URI.html), parses a URI of the form //$rpc/path as having host/authority $rpc and path /path. Real bugs are observed from usage of this in commonly used libraries such as Netty, and various proxies.

Basically, this doesn't cause issues in the most common cases, but is a bug waiting to happen in many other edge cases, and affects widely used infrastructure.

Hostnames can be passed in with trailing slashes. Since we blindly concat a path with a leading slash, paths like http://hostname//$rpc/path (note the double slash before $rpc) are possible. The duplicated slash can cause issues down the line, especially if the path is separated from the host in requests.

Browsers/servers generally allow double slashes, and while they are valid syntactically under the RFC spec, there is no specified semantic meaning. So a server could interpret a path like http://hostname//$rpc/path as equivalent to http://hostname/$rpc/path (most common), as a separate path with an empty path component before /$rpc, or as something else. The problem is several interpretations are equally valid under the spec and it's implementation-dependent which is used.

Additionally, the path can be separate from the host in a request depending on whether it's in origin form versus absolute form (see https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7230#section-5.3). In absolute form (GET http://hostname//$rpc/path), the path and host are clear. In origin form (GET //$rpc/path, Host: hostname), it is still clear to us looking at it, but may not be clear to a server. For example the server may think the //$rpc/path is in absolute form due to the double slash, and thus parse it as host: $rpc, path: /path. This is especially problematic as https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7230#section-5.4 says:

"When a proxy receives a request with an absolute-form of request-target, the proxy MUST ignore the received Host header field (if any) and instead replace it with the host information of the request-target. A proxy that forwards such a request MUST generate a new Host field-value based on the received request-target rather than forward the received Host field-value."

Which means a proxy would corrupt the request when in this format by overwriting the old host value with $rpc

This parsing concern is not idle speculation either. Java's main URI class (https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/net/URI.html), parses a URI of the form //$rpc/path as having host/authority $rpc and path /path. Real bugs are observed from usage of this in commonly used libraries such as Netty, and various proxies.

Basically, this doesn't cause issues in the most common cases, but is a bug waiting to happen in many other edge cases, and affects widely used infrastructure.
@linux-foundation-easycla
Copy link

linux-foundation-easycla bot commented Jun 28, 2022

CLA Signed

The committers listed above are authorized under a signed CLA.

  • ✅ login: jkjk822 / name: River (f609e4d)

Copy link
Collaborator

@sampajano sampajano left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

thanks a lot for the fix and push for better standards! :)

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

None yet

3 participants