Impact
In the implementation of version 0.0.1
, requests from different user clients are processed using a shared httpx.AsyncClient
.
However, one oversight is that the httpx.AsyncClient
will persistently store cookies based on the set-cookie
response header sent by the target server and share these cookies across different user requests.
This results in a cookie leakage issue among all user clients sharing the same httpx.AsyncClient
.
Patches
It's fixed in 0.1.0
Workarounds
If you insist 0.0.1
:
- Do not use
ForwardHttpProxy
at all.
- Do not use
ReverseHttpProxy
or ReverseWebSocketProxy
for any servers that may potentially send a set-cookie
response.
However, it's best to upgrade to the latest version.
References
fixed in #10
Impact
In the implementation of version
0.0.1
, requests from different user clients are processed using a sharedhttpx.AsyncClient
.However, one oversight is that the
httpx.AsyncClient
will persistently store cookies based on theset-cookie
response header sent by the target server and share these cookies across different user requests.This results in a cookie leakage issue among all user clients sharing the same
httpx.AsyncClient
.Patches
It's fixed in
0.1.0
Workarounds
If you insist
0.0.1
:ForwardHttpProxy
at all.ReverseHttpProxy
orReverseWebSocketProxy
for any servers that may potentially send aset-cookie
response.However, it's best to upgrade to the latest version.
References
fixed in #10