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CVE-2020-15811

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CVE-2020-15811

Published: Sep 2, 2020

Modified: Aug 4, 2024

PUBLISHED

Description

An issue was discovered in Squid before 4.13 and 5.x before 5.0.4. Due to incorrect data validation, HTTP Request Splitting attacks may succeed against HTTP and HTTPS traffic. This leads to cache poisoning. This allows any client, including browser scripts, to bypass local security and poison the browser cache and any downstream caches with content from an arbitrary source. Squid uses a string search instead of parsing the Transfer-Encoding header to find chunked encoding. This allows an attacker to hide a second request inside Transfer-Encoding: it is interpreted by Squid as chunked and split out into a second request delivered upstream. Squid will then deliver two distinct responses to the client, corrupting any downstream caches.

VendorProductVersions

n/a

n/a

affected
n/a

References

DSA-4751
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_DEBIAN
USN-4477-1
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_UBUNTU
FEDORA-2020-73af8655eb
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_FEDORA
FEDORA-2020-63f3bd656e
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_FEDORA
openSUSE-SU-2020:1346
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_SUSE
openSUSE-SU-2020:1369
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_SUSE
FEDORA-2020-6c58bff862
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_FEDORA
USN-4551-1
vendor-advisory
x_refsource_UBUNTU

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