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update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.23.0 [security] #123

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@renovate renovate bot commented Mar 5, 2023

Mend Renovate

This PR contains the following updates:

Package Change Age Adoption Passing Confidence
golang.org/x/net v0.2.0 -> v0.23.0 age adoption passing confidence

GitHub Vulnerability Alerts

CVE-2022-41723

A maliciously crafted HTTP/2 stream could cause excessive CPU consumption in the HPACK decoder, sufficient to cause a denial of service from a small number of small requests.

CVE-2023-3978

Text nodes not in the HTML namespace are incorrectly literally rendered, causing text which should be escaped to not be. This could lead to an XSS attack.

CVE-2023-39325

A malicious HTTP/2 client which rapidly creates requests and immediately resets them can cause excessive server resource consumption. While the total number of requests is bounded by the http2.Server.MaxConcurrentStreams setting, resetting an in-progress request allows the attacker to create a new request while the existing one is still executing.

With the fix applied, HTTP/2 servers now bound the number of simultaneously executing handler goroutines to the stream concurrency limit (MaxConcurrentStreams). New requests arriving when at the limit (which can only happen after the client has reset an existing, in-flight request) will be queued until a handler exits. If the request queue grows too large, the server will terminate the connection.

This issue is also fixed in golang.org/x/net/http2 for users manually configuring HTTP/2.

The default stream concurrency limit is 250 streams (requests) per HTTP/2 connection. This value may be adjusted using the golang.org/x/net/http2 package; see the Server.MaxConcurrentStreams setting and the ConfigureServer function.

CVE-2023-44487

HTTP/2 Rapid reset attack

The HTTP/2 protocol allows clients to indicate to the server that a previous stream should be canceled by sending a RST_STREAM frame. The protocol does not require the client and server to coordinate the cancellation in any way, the client may do it unilaterally. The client may also assume that the cancellation will take effect immediately when the server receives the RST_STREAM frame, before any other data from that TCP connection is processed.

Abuse of this feature is called a Rapid Reset attack because it relies on the ability for an endpoint to send a RST_STREAM frame immediately after sending a request frame, which makes the other endpoint start working and then rapidly resets the request. The request is canceled, but leaves the HTTP/2 connection open.

The HTTP/2 Rapid Reset attack built on this capability is simple: The client opens a large number of streams at once as in the standard HTTP/2 attack, but rather than waiting for a response to each request stream from the server or proxy, the client cancels each request immediately.

The ability to reset streams immediately allows each connection to have an indefinite number of requests in flight. By explicitly canceling the requests, the attacker never exceeds the limit on the number of concurrent open streams. The number of in-flight requests is no longer dependent on the round-trip time (RTT), but only on the available network bandwidth.

In a typical HTTP/2 server implementation, the server will still have to do significant amounts of work for canceled requests, such as allocating new stream data structures, parsing the query and doing header decompression, and mapping the URL to a resource. For reverse proxy implementations, the request may be proxied to the backend server before the RST_STREAM frame is processed. The client on the other hand paid almost no costs for sending the requests. This creates an exploitable cost asymmetry between the server and the client.

Multiple software artifacts implementing HTTP/2 are affected. This advisory was originally ingested from the swift-nio-http2 repo advisory and their original conent follows.

swift-nio-http2 specific advisory

swift-nio-http2 is vulnerable to a denial-of-service vulnerability in which a malicious client can create and then reset a large number of HTTP/2 streams in a short period of time. This causes swift-nio-http2 to commit to a large amount of expensive work which it then throws away, including creating entirely new Channels to serve the traffic. This can easily overwhelm an EventLoop and prevent it from making forward progress.

swift-nio-http2 1.28 contains a remediation for this issue that applies reset counter using a sliding window. This constrains the number of stream resets that may occur in a given window of time. Clients violating this limit will have their connections torn down. This allows clients to continue to cancel streams for legitimate reasons, while constraining malicious actors.

CVE-2023-45288

An attacker may cause an HTTP/2 endpoint to read arbitrary amounts of header data by sending an excessive number of CONTINUATION frames. Maintaining HPACK state requires parsing and processing all HEADERS and CONTINUATION frames on a connection. When a request's headers exceed MaxHeaderBytes, no memory is allocated to store the excess headers, but they are still parsed. This permits an attacker to cause an HTTP/2 endpoint to read arbitrary amounts of header data, all associated with a request which is going to be rejected. These headers can include Huffman-encoded data which is significantly more expensive for the receiver to decode than for an attacker to send. The fix sets a limit on the amount of excess header frames we will process before closing a connection.

CVE-2022-41717

An attacker can cause excessive memory growth in a Go server accepting HTTP/2 requests. HTTP/2 server connections contain a cache of HTTP header keys sent by the client. While the total number of entries in this cache is capped, an attacker sending very large keys can cause the server to allocate approximately 64 MiB per open connection.


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This PR has been generated by Mend Renovate. View repository job log here.

@renovate renovate bot changed the title update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.7.0 [security] update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.7.0 [security] - autoclosed Apr 5, 2023
@renovate renovate bot closed this Apr 5, 2023
@renovate renovate bot deleted the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch April 5, 2023 08:33
@renovate renovate bot changed the title update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.7.0 [security] - autoclosed update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.7.0 [security] Apr 5, 2023
@renovate renovate bot reopened this Apr 5, 2023
@renovate renovate bot restored the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch April 5, 2023 13:01
@renovate renovate bot changed the title update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.7.0 [security] update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.17.0 [security] Oct 12, 2023
@renovate renovate bot force-pushed the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch from 5e887a6 to 52510aa Compare October 12, 2023 00:39
@renovate renovate bot changed the title update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.17.0 [security] update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.17.0 [security] - autoclosed Feb 24, 2024
@renovate renovate bot closed this Feb 24, 2024
@renovate renovate bot deleted the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch February 24, 2024 00:32
@renovate renovate bot changed the title update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.17.0 [security] - autoclosed update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.17.0 [security] Feb 24, 2024
@renovate renovate bot reopened this Feb 24, 2024
@renovate renovate bot restored the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch February 24, 2024 04:32
@renovate renovate bot force-pushed the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch from 52510aa to 4ee31fb Compare February 24, 2024 04:32
@renovate renovate bot changed the title update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.17.0 [security] update: update module golang.org/x/net to v0.23.0 [security] Apr 19, 2024
@renovate renovate bot force-pushed the update/go-golang.org/x/net-vulnerability branch from 4ee31fb to 9858d50 Compare April 19, 2024 14:41
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