This project might be open to known security vulnerabilities, which can be prevented by tightening the version range of affected dependencies. Find detailed information at the bottom.

Crate async-mesos

Dependencies

(9 total, 4 outdated, 2 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 bytes^0.41.10.1out of date
 failure^0.10.1.8up to date
 futures^0.10.3.31out of date
 hyper ⚠️^0.111.6.0out of date
 lazy_static^1.01.5.0up to date
 log^0.40.4.26up to date
 mime^0.30.3.17up to date
 protobuf ⚠️^1.43.7.2out of date
 tokio-core^0.10.1.18up to date

Dev dependencies

(3 total, 2 outdated)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 simple_logger^0.55.0.0out of date
 spectral^0.60.6.0up to date
 users^0.60.11.0out of date

Security Vulnerabilities

hyper: Flaw in hyper allows request smuggling by sending a body in GET requests

RUSTSEC-2020-0008

Vulnerable versions of hyper allow GET requests to have bodies, even if there is no Transfer-Encoding or Content-Length header. As per the HTTP 1.1 specification, such requests do not have bodies, so the body will be interpreted as a separate HTTP request.

This allows an attacker who can control the body and method of an HTTP request made by hyper to inject a request with headers that would not otherwise be allowed, as demonstrated by sending a malformed HTTP request from a Substrate runtime. This allows bypassing CORS restrictions. In combination with other vulnerabilities, such as an exploitable web server listening on loopback, it may allow remote code execution.

The flaw was corrected in hyper version 0.12.34.

hyper: Lenient `hyper` header parsing of `Content-Length` could allow request smuggling

RUSTSEC-2021-0078

hyper's HTTP header parser accepted, according to RFC 7230, illegal contents inside Content-Length headers. Due to this, upstream HTTP proxies that ignore the header may still forward them along if it chooses to ignore the error.

To be vulnerable, hyper must be used as an HTTP/1 server and using an HTTP proxy upstream that ignores the header's contents but still forwards it. Due to all the factors that must line up, an attack exploiting this vulnerability is unlikely.

hyper: Integer overflow in `hyper`'s parsing of the `Transfer-Encoding` header leads to data loss

RUSTSEC-2021-0079

When decoding chunk sizes that are too large, hyper's code would encounter an integer overflow. Depending on the situation, this could lead to data loss from an incorrect total size, or in rarer cases, a request smuggling attack.

To be vulnerable, you must be using hyper for any HTTP/1 purpose, including as a client or server, and consumers must send requests or responses that specify a chunk size greater than 18 exabytes. For a possible request smuggling attack to be possible, any upstream proxies must accept a chunk size greater than 64 bits.

protobuf: Crash due to uncontrolled recursion in protobuf crate

RUSTSEC-2024-0437

Affected version of this crate did not properly parse unknown fields when parsing a user-supplied input.

This allows an attacker to cause a stack overflow when parsing the mssage on untrusted data.