CVE-2026-7790 PUBLISHED

Unbounded chunk-size hex digits in cowlib cause quadratic CPU and memory DoS

Assigner: EEF
Reserved: 04.05.2026 Published: 11.05.2026 Updated: 12.05.2026

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption vulnerability in ninenines cowlib (cow_http_te module) allows Excessive Allocation.

The chunked transfer-encoding parser in cow_http_te accepts an unbounded number of hex digits in the chunk-size field. Each digit causes a bignum multiplication (Len * 16 + digit), so parsing N hex digits requires O(N²) CPU work and O(N) memory. Additionally, when input is drip-fed, the parser discards the accumulated length on each partial read and restarts from zero on resumption, raising the cost to O(N³). An unauthenticated remote attacker can exploit this by sending an HTTP/1.1 request with Transfer-Encoding: chunked and a very long chunk-size hex string to cause denial of service through CPU exhaustion and memory amplification.

This vulnerability is associated with program file src/cow_http_te.erl and program routines cow_http_te:stream_chunked/2, cow_http_te:chunked_len/4.

This issue affects cowlib: from 0.6.0 before 2.16.1.

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 cowlib
Versions Default: unaffected
  • affected from 0.6.0 to 2.16.1 (excl.)
Vendor ninenines
Product cowlib
Versions Default: unaffected
  • affected from 8c0e428b012c59f553a264f285ed89d36f791e3e to a4b8039ce8c93ab00867ef6b7e888822c09f4369 (excl.)

Workarounds

In Cowboy, setting initial_stream_flow_size to a much lower value limits the amount of chunked body data that cowlib will parse in a single read, reducing the window of data an attacker can use to trigger the quadratic work. This does not fully eliminate the vulnerability but can significantly reduce its impact for some applications.

Credits

  • Peter Ullrich finder
  • Loïc Hoguin remediation developer

References

Problem Types

  • CWE-400 Uncontrolled Resource Consumption CWE

Impacts

  • CAPEC-130 Excessive Allocation