CVE-2026-31908
Header injection vulnerability in Apache APISIX.
The attacker can take advantage of certain configuration in forward-auth plugin to inject malicious headers.
This issue affects Apache APISIX: from 2.12.0 through 3.15.0.
Users are recommended to upgrade to version 3.16.0, which fixes the issue.
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2026-31908
Categories
CWE-75 : Failure to Sanitize Special Elements into a Different Plane (Special Element Injection)
The product does not adequately filter user-controlled input for special elements with control implications. Programming languages and supporting technologies might be chosen which are not subject to these issues. Utilize an appropriate mix of allowlist and denylist parsing to filter special element syntax from all input.
References
af854a3a-2127-422b-91ae-364da2661108
security@apache.org
AFFECTED (from MITRE)
| Vendor |
Product |
Versions |
| Apache Software Foundation |
Apache APISIX |
- 2.12.0 ≤ 3.15.0 [affected]
|
| © 2022 The MITRE Corporation. This work is reproduced and distributed with the permission of The MITRE Corporation. |
CPE
REMEDIATION
EXPLOITS
Exploit-db.com
| id |
description |
date |
|
| No known exploits |
POC Github
Other Nist (github, ...)
CAPEC
Common Attack Pattern Enumerations and Classifications
| id |
description |
severity |
| 81 |
Web Server Logs Tampering
Web Logs Tampering attacks involve an attacker injecting, deleting or otherwise tampering with the contents of web logs typically for the purposes of masking other malicious behavior. Additionally, writing malicious data to log files may target jobs, filters, reports, and other agents that process the logs in an asynchronous attack pattern. This pattern of attack is similar to "Log Injection-Tampering-Forging" except that in this case, the attack is targeting the logs of the web server and not the application. [Determine Application Web Server Log File Format] The attacker observes the system and looks for indicators of which logging utility is being used by the web server. [Determine Injectable Content] The attacker launches various logged actions with malicious data to determine what sort of log injection is possible. [Manipulate Log Files] The attacker alters the log contents either directly through manipulation or forging or indirectly through injection of specially crafted request that the web server will receive and write into the logs. This type of attack typically follows another attack and is used to try to cover the traces of the previous attack. |
High |
| 93 |
Log Injection-Tampering-Forging
This attack targets the log files of the target host. The attacker injects, manipulates or forges malicious log entries in the log file, allowing them to mislead a log audit, cover traces of attack, or perform other malicious actions. The target host is not properly controlling log access. As a result tainted data is resulting in the log files leading to a failure in accountability, non-repudiation and incident forensics capability. [Determine Application's Log File Format] The first step is exploratory meaning the attacker observes the system. The attacker looks for action and data that are likely to be logged. The attacker may be familiar with the log format of the system. [Manipulate Log Files] The attacker alters the log contents either directly through manipulation or forging or indirectly through injection of specially crafted input that the target software will write to the logs. This type of attack typically follows another attack and is used to try to cover the traces of the previous attack. |
High |
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