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  5. GHSA-262p-vjx5-45xh

GHSA-262p-vjx5-45xh: Duplicate Advisory: HTTP Request Smuggling via HTTP/1.0 and Transfer-Encoding Misparsing

March 5, 2026

Duplicate Advisory

This advisory has been withdrawn because it is a duplicate of GHSA-hj7x-879w-vrp7. This link is maintained to preserve external references.

Original Description

An HTTP Request Smuggling vulnerability (CWE-444) has been found in Pingora’s parsing of HTTP/1.0 and Transfer-Encoding requests. The issue occurs due to improperly allowing HTTP/1.0 request bodies to be close-delimited and incorrect handling of multiple Transfer-Encoding values, allowing attackers to send HTTP/1.0 requests in a way that would desync Pingora’s request framing from backend servers’.

Impact

This vulnerability primarily affects standalone Pingora deployments in front of certain backends that accept HTTP/1.0 requests. An attacker could craft a malicious payload following this request that Pingora forwards to the backend in order to:

  • Bypass proxy-level ACL controls and WAF logic

  • Poison caches and upstream connections, causing subsequent requests from legitimate users to receive responses intended for smuggled requests

  • Perform cross-user attacks by hijacking sessions or smuggling requests that appear to originate from the trusted proxy IP

Cloudflare’s CDN infrastructure was not affected by this vulnerability, as its ingress proxy layers forwarded HTTP/1.1 requests only, rejected ambiguous framing such as invalid Content-Length values, and forwarded a single Transfer-Encoding: chunked header for chunked requests.

Mitigation:

Pingora users should upgrade to Pingora v0.8.0 or higher that fixes this issue by correctly parsing message length headers per RFC 9112 and strictly adhering to more RFC guidelines, including that HTTP request bodies are never close-delimited.

As a workaround, users can reject certain requests with an error in the request filter logic in order to stop processing bytes on the connection and disable downstream connection reuse. The user should reject any non-HTTP/1.1 request, or a request that has invalid Content-Length, multiple Transfer-Encoding headers, or Transfer-Encoding header that is not an exact “chunked” string match.

References

  • github.com/advisories/GHSA-262p-vjx5-45xh
  • github.com/cloudflare/pingora
  • nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2026-2835
  • rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2026-0034.html

Code Behaviors & Features

Detect and mitigate GHSA-262p-vjx5-45xh with GitLab Dependency Scanning

Secure your software supply chain by verifying that all open source dependencies used in your projects contain no disclosed vulnerabilities. Learn more about Dependency Scanning →

Affected versions

All versions before 0.8.0

Fixed versions

  • 0.8.0

Solution

Upgrade to version 0.8.0 or above.

Impact 10 CRITICAL

CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:C/C:H/I:H/A:N

Learn more about CVSS

Weakness

  • CWE-444: Inconsistent Interpretation of HTTP Requests ('HTTP Request/Response Smuggling')

Source file

cargo/pingora-core/GHSA-262p-vjx5-45xh.yml

Spotted a mistake? Edit the file on GitLab.

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