5.3

CVE-2019-18678

An issue was discovered in Squid 3.x and 4.x through 4.8. It allows attackers to smuggle HTTP requests through frontend software to a Squid instance that splits the HTTP Request pipeline differently. The resulting Response messages corrupt caches (between a client and Squid) with attacker-controlled content at arbitrary URLs. Effects are isolated to software between the attacker client and Squid. There are no effects on Squid itself, nor on any upstream servers. The issue is related to a request header containing whitespace between a header name and a colon.

Data is provided by the National Vulnerability Database (NVD)
Squid-cacheSquid Version >= 3.0 <= 3.5.28
Squid-cacheSquid Version >= 4.0 <= 4.8
CanonicalUbuntu Linux Version16.04 SwEditionlts
CanonicalUbuntu Linux Version18.04 SwEditionlts
CanonicalUbuntu Linux Version19.04
CanonicalUbuntu Linux Version19.10
DebianDebian Linux Version8.0
FedoraprojectFedora Version30
FedoraprojectFedora Version31
Zu dieser CVE wurde keine CISA KEV oder CERT.AT-Warnung gefunden.
EPSS Metriken
Type Source Score Percentile
EPSS FIRST.org 9.96% 0.927
CVSS Metriken
Source Base Score Exploit Score Impact Score Vector string
nvd@nist.gov 5.3 3.9 1.4
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:L/A:N
nvd@nist.gov 5 10 2.9
AV:N/AC:L/Au:N/C:N/I:P/A:N
CWE-444 Inconsistent Interpretation of HTTP Requests ('HTTP Request/Response Smuggling')

The product acts as an intermediary HTTP agent (such as a proxy or firewall) in the data flow between two entities such as a client and server, but it does not interpret malformed HTTP requests or responses in ways that are consistent with how the messages will be processed by those entities that are at the ultimate destination.