Impact
Since version 2.11.1, Scrapy drops the Authorization
header when a request is redirected to a different domain. However, it keeps the header if the domain remains the same but the scheme (http/https) or the port change, all scenarios where the header should also be dropped.
In the context of a man-in-the-middle attack, this could be used to get access to the value of that Authorization
header
Patches
Upgrade to Scrapy 2.11.2.
Workarounds
There is no easy workaround for unpatched versions of Scrapy. You can replace the built-in redirect middlewares with custom ones patched for this issue, but you have to patch them yourself, manually.
References
This security issue was reported and fixed by @Szarny at https://huntr.com/bounties/27f6a021-a891-446a-ada5-0226d619dd1a/.
References
Impact
Since version 2.11.1, Scrapy drops the
Authorization
header when a request is redirected to a different domain. However, it keeps the header if the domain remains the same but the scheme (http/https) or the port change, all scenarios where the header should also be dropped.In the context of a man-in-the-middle attack, this could be used to get access to the value of that
Authorization
headerPatches
Upgrade to Scrapy 2.11.2.
Workarounds
There is no easy workaround for unpatched versions of Scrapy. You can replace the built-in redirect middlewares with custom ones patched for this issue, but you have to patch them yourself, manually.
References
This security issue was reported and fixed by @Szarny at https://huntr.com/bounties/27f6a021-a891-446a-ada5-0226d619dd1a/.
References