A malicious HTTP sender can use chunk extensions to cause a receiver reading from a request or response body to read many more bytes from the network than are in the body. A malicious HTTP client can further exploit this to cause a server to automatically read a large amount of data (up to about 1GiB) when a handler fails to read the entire body of a request. Chunk extensions are a little-used HTTP feature which permit including additional metadata in a request or response body sent using the chunked encoding. The net/http chunked encoding reader discards this metadata. A sender can exploit this by inserting a large metadata segment with each byte transferred. The chunk reader now produces an error if the ratio of real body to encoded bytes grows too small.
1.20.3-1ubuntu0.1~20.041.20.3-1ubuntu0.1~20.04.11.20.3-1ubuntu0.1~22.041.20.3-1ubuntu0.1~22.04.11.21.1-1~ubuntu20.04.11.21.1-1~ubuntu20.04.21.21.1-1~ubuntu22.04.11.21.1-1~ubuntu22.04.21.21.1-11.21.3-11.21.4-11.21.5-1Exploitability
AV:NAC:LPR:NUI:NScope
S:UImpact
C:LI:NA:NCVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:L/I:N/A:N