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Difference between revisions of "CRLF Injection"

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Availability Vulnerability
 
Availability Vulnerability
 
 
Authorization Vulnerability
 
Authorization Vulnerability
 
 
Authentication Vulnerability
 
Authentication Vulnerability
 
 
Concurrency Vulnerability
 
Concurrency Vulnerability
 
 
Configuration Vulnerability
 
Configuration Vulnerability
 
 
Cryptographic Vulnerability
 
Cryptographic Vulnerability
 
 
Encoding Vulnerability
 
Encoding Vulnerability
 
 
Error Handling Vulnerability
 
Error Handling Vulnerability
 
 
Input Validation Vulnerability
 
Input Validation Vulnerability
 
 
Logging and Auditing Vulnerability
 
Logging and Auditing Vulnerability
 
 
Session Management Vulnerability]]
 
Session Management Vulnerability]]
  
 
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[[Category:Implementation]]

Latest revision as of 16:50, 14 March 2018

This is a Vulnerability. To view all vulnerabilities, please see the Vulnerability Category page.


Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 03/14/2018

Vulnerabilities Table of Contents

Description

The term CRLF refers to Carriage Return (ASCII 13, \r) Line Feed (ASCII 10, \n). They're used to note the termination of a line, however, dealt with differently in today’s popular Operating Systems. For example: in Windows both a CR and LF are required to note the end of a line, whereas in Linux/UNIX a LF is only required. In the HTTP protocol, the CR-LF sequence is always used to terminate a line.

A CRLF Injection attack occurs when a user manages to submit a CRLF into an application. This is most commonly done by modifying an HTTP parameter or URL.

Risk Factors

TBD


Examples

Depending on how the application is developed, this can be a minor problem or a fairly serious security flaw. Let's look at the latter because this is after all a security related post.

Let's assume a file is used at some point to read/write data to a log of some sort. If an attacker managed to place a CRLF then can then inject some sort of read programmatic method to the file. This could result in the contents being written to screen on the next attempt to use this file.

Another example is the "response splitting" attacks, where CRLFs are injected into an application and included in the response. The extra CRLFs are interpreted by proxies, caches, and maybe browsers as the end of a packet, causing mayhem.

Related Attacks


Related Vulnerabilities


Related Controls


Related Technical Impacts


References

TBD