Linkai Zheng (Tsinghua University), Xiang Li (Tsinghua University), Chuhan Wang (Tsinghua University), Run Guo (Tsinghua University), Haixin Duan (Tsinghua University; Quancheng Laboratory), Jianjun Chen (Tsinghua University; Zhongguancun Laboratory), Chao Zhang (Tsinghua University; Zhongguancun Laboratory), Kaiwen Shen (Tsinghua University)

Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) are ubiquitous middleboxes designed to enhance the performance of hosted websites and shield them from various attacks. Numerous notable studies show that CDNs modify a client's request when forwarding it to the original server. Multiple inconsistencies in this forwarding operation have been found to potentially result in security vulnerabilities like DoS attacks. Nonetheless, existing research lacks a systematic approach to studying CDN forwarding request inconsistencies.

In this work, we present ReqsMiner, an innovative fuzzing framework developed to discover previously unexamined inconsistencies in CDN forwarding requests. The framework uses techniques derived from reinforcement learning to generate valid test cases, even with minimal feedback, and incorporates real field values into the grammar-based fuzzer. With the help of ReqsMiner, we comprehensively test 22 major CDN providers and uncover a wealth of hitherto unstudied CDN forwarding request inconsistencies. Moreover, the application of specialized analyzers enables ReqsMiner to extend its capabilities, evolving into a framework capable of detecting specific types of attacks. By extension, our work further identifies three novel types of HTTP amplification DoS attacks and uncovers 74 new potential DoS vulnerabilities with an amplification factor that can reach up to 2,000 generally, and even 1,920,000 under specific conditions. The vulnerabilities detected were responsibly disclosed to the affected CDN vendors, and mitigation suggestions were proposed. Our work contributes to fortifying CDN security, thereby enhancing their resilience against malicious attacks and preventing misuse.

View More Papers

Beyond the Surface: Uncovering the Unprotected Components of Android...

Hao Zhou (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University), Shuohan Wu (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University), Chenxiong Qian (University of Hong Kong), Xiapu Luo (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University), Haipeng Cai (Washington State University), Chao Zhang (Tsinghua University)

Read More

WIP: A Trust Assessment Method for In-Vehicular Networks using...

Artur Hermann, Natasa Trkulja (Ulm University - Institute of Distributed Systems), Anderson Ramon Ferraz de Lucena, Alexander Kiening (DENSO AUTOMOTIVE Deutschland GmbH), Ana Petrovska (Huawei Technologies), Frank Kargl (Ulm University - Institute of Distributed Systems)

Read More

SigmaDiff: Semantics-Aware Deep Graph Matching for Pseudocode Diffing

Lian Gao (University of California Riverside), Yu Qu (University of California Riverside), Sheng Yu (University of California, Riverside & Deepbits Technology Inc.), Yue Duan (Singapore Management University), Heng Yin (University of California, Riverside & Deepbits Technology Inc.)

Read More

The Dark Side of E-Commerce: Dropshipping Abuse as a...

Arjun Arunasalam (Purdue University), Andrew Chu (University of Chicago), Muslum Ozgur Ozmen (Purdue University), Habiba Farrukh (University of California, Irvine), Z. Berkay Celik (Purdue University)

Read More