CVE-2026-43973 PUBLISHED

gun HTTP/1.1 response buffer has no size limit allowing server-controlled memory exhaustion

Assigner: EEF
Reserved: 04.05.2026 Published: 08.06.2026 Updated: 08.06.2026

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption vulnerability in ninenines gun (gun_http module) allows a malicious server to exhaust client memory via unbounded HTTP/1.1 response buffering.

In gun_http:handle/5, three clauses accumulate incoming TCP data into the connection's buffer field using binary concatenation with no upper-bound check: the head clause appends data until the \r\n\r\n header terminator is found; the body_chunked clause appends data whenever cow_http_te:stream_chunked/2 returns a more result indicating an incomplete chunk boundary; and the body_trailer clause appends data until the trailing \r\n\r\n is found. In each case, when the expected terminator never arrives, the enlarged binary is stored back into state and the process waits for more data, with no configurable or hard-coded ceiling on buffer size.

A malicious or compromised server can exploit this by sending a partial response that never completes. For example, a response may begin with HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nX-Pad: followed by an unbounded stream of arbitrary bytes, never sending the header terminator. The gun connection process will continuously append the incoming data to its buffer, causing unbounded heap growth. Because BEAM imposes no per-process heap limit by default, a single malicious connection can exhaust all available memory on the node, causing a node-wide out-of-memory crash.

This issue affects gun: from 1.0.0 before 2.4.0.

Metrics

CVSS Vector: CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:N/VC:N/VI:N/VA:H/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N
CVSS Score: 8.7

Product Status

Vendor ninenines
Product gun
Versions Default: unaffected
  • affected from 1.0.0 to 2.4.0 (excl.)
Vendor ninenines
Product gun
Versions Default: unaffected
  • affected from 11dfe71f4b9aedaaedea2ad3b2f32fd006a8480f to f3e7e0568b3c4cf9fa4bea79d5116e67ce76ad25 (excl.)

Credits

  • Peter Ullrich finder
  • Loïc Hoguin remediation developer

References

Problem Types

  • CWE-770 Allocation of Resources Without Limits or Throttling CWE

Impacts

  • CAPEC-130 Excessive Allocation