Vulnerabilities > CVE-2023-44487 - Resource Exhaustion vulnerability in multiple products

047910
CVSS 7.5 - HIGH

Summary

The HTTP/2 protocol allows a denial of service (server resource consumption) because request cancellation can reset many streams quickly, as exploited in the wild in August through October 2023.

Vulnerable Configurations

Part Description Count
Application
Ietf
1
Application
Nghttp2
118
Application
Netty
268
Application
Envoyproxy
4
Application
Eclipse
613
Application
Caddyserver
113
Application
Golang
310
Application
F5
1288
Application
Apache
520
Application
Apple
58
Application
Grpc
332
Application
Microsoft
895
Application
Nodejs
27
Application
Dena
71
Application
Facebook
354
Application
Amazon
24
Application
Kazu-Yamamoto
59
Application
Istio
316
Application
Varnish_Cache_Project
93
Application
Traefik
390
Application
Projectcontour
69
Application
Linkerd
11
Application
Linecorp
224
Application
Redhat
62
Application
Netapp
1
Application
Akka
49
Application
Konghq
61
Application
Jenkins
1103
Application
Openresty
175
Application
Cisco
464
OS
Microsoft
1093
OS
Debian
3
OS
Redhat
3
OS
Fedoraproject
2
OS
Cisco
1990
Hardware
Cisco
155

Common Attack Pattern Enumeration and Classification (CAPEC)

  • XML Ping of the Death
    An attacker initiates a resource depletion attack where a large number of small XML messages are delivered at a sufficiently rapid rate to cause a denial of service or crash of the target. Transactions such as repetitive SOAP transactions can deplete resources faster than a simple flooding attack because of the additional resources used by the SOAP protocol and the resources necessary to process SOAP messages. The transactions used are immaterial as long as they cause resource utilization on the target. In other words, this is a normal flooding attack augmented by using messages that will require extra processing on the target.
  • XML Entity Expansion
    An attacker submits an XML document to a target application where the XML document uses nested entity expansion to produce an excessively large output XML. XML allows the definition of macro-like structures that can be used to simplify the creation of complex structures. However, this capability can be abused to create excessive demands on a processor's CPU and memory. A small number of nested expansions can result in an exponential growth in demands on memory.
  • Inducing Account Lockout
    An attacker leverages the security functionality of the system aimed at thwarting potential attacks to launch a denial of service attack against a legitimate system user. Many systems, for instance, implement a password throttling mechanism that locks an account after a certain number of incorrect log in attempts. An attacker can leverage this throttling mechanism to lock a legitimate user out of their own account. The weakness that is being leveraged by an attacker is the very security feature that has been put in place to counteract attacks.
  • Violating Implicit Assumptions Regarding XML Content (aka XML Denial of Service (XDoS))
    XML Denial of Service (XDoS) can be applied to any technology that utilizes XML data. This is, of course, most distributed systems technology including Java, .Net, databases, and so on. XDoS is most closely associated with web services, SOAP, and Rest, because remote service requesters can post malicious XML payloads to the service provider designed to exhaust the service provider's memory, CPU, and/or disk space. The main weakness in XDoS is that the service provider generally must inspect, parse, and validate the XML messages to determine routing, workflow, security considerations, and so on. It is exactly these inspection, parsing, and validation routines that XDoS targets. There are three primary attack vectors that XDoS can navigate Target CPU through recursion: attacker creates a recursive payload and sends to service provider Target memory through jumbo payloads: service provider uses DOM to parse XML. DOM creates in memory representation of XML document, but when document is very large (for example, north of 1 Gb) service provider host may exhaust memory trying to build memory objects. XML Ping of death: attack service provider with numerous small files that clog the system. All of the above attacks exploit the loosely coupled nature of web services, where the service provider has little to no control over the service requester and any messages the service requester sends.

References