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Default TLS Exclusions for Palo Alto Networks Firewalls
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Hashicorp Consul services API RCE & The simplest version of exploitation
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Updated method of dumping the MSOL service account (which allows a DCSync) used by Azure AD Connect Sync
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The following describes a technique to achieve HTTP request smuggling against infrastructure behind a HAProxy server when using specific configuration around backend connection reuse. This was tested against HAProxy versions 1.7.9, 1.7.11, 1.8.19, 1.8.21, 1.9.10, and 2.0.5. Of all these tested versions, only 2.0.5 was not vulnerable out of the box, although it is when using the no option http-use-htx configuration, which reverts back to the legacy HTTP decoder. 2.1 removed the legacy decoder so it is not affected.
To actually exploit HTTP smuggling using the issue described in this writeup, the backend server(s) behind HAProxy would also have to be vulnerable in the sense they too would need to suffer from a bug, but one which parses and accepts a poorly formed Transfer-Encoding header (almost certainly violating RFC7230), and allows HTTP keep-alive.
The HAProxy bug - sending both Transfer-Encoding and Content-Length
This is how HAProxy handles a request when Transfer-Encoding and Content-Length is p
--batch # Use default config, make the injection process run automatically, without user input.
--threads 5
-r # uses the intercepted request you saved earlier like burp save the item