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CVE-2026-34831 is a low severity vulnerability with a CVSS score of 0.0. No known exploits currently, and patches are available.
Very low probability of exploitation
EPSS predicts the probability of exploitation in the next 30 days based on real-world threat data, complementing CVSS severity scores with actual risk assessment.
Rack::Files#fail sets the Content-Length response header using String#size instead of String#bytesize. When the response body contains multibyte UTF-8 characters, the declared Content-Length is smaller than the number of bytes actually sent on the wire.
Because Rack::Files reflects the requested path in 404 responses, an attacker can trigger this mismatch by requesting a non-existent path containing percent-encoded UTF-8 characters.
This results in incorrect HTTP response framing and may cause response desynchronization in deployments that rely on the incorrect Content-Length value.
Rack::Files#fail constructs error responses using logic equivalent to:
def fail(status, body, headers = {})
body += "\n"
[
status,
{
"content-type" => "text/plain",
"content-length" => body.size.to_s,
"x-cascade" => "pass"
}.merge!(headers),
[body]
]
end
Here, body.size returns the number of characters, not the number of bytes. For multibyte UTF-8 strings, this produces an incorrect Content-Length value.
Rack::Files includes the decoded request path in 404 responses. A request containing percent-encoded UTF-8 path components therefore causes the response body to contain multibyte characters, while the Content-Length header still reflects character count rather than byte count.
As a result, the server can send more bytes than declared in the response headers.
This violates HTTP message framing requirements, which define Content-Length as the number of octets in the message body.
Applications using Rack::Files may emit incorrectly framed error responses when handling requests for non-existent paths containing multibyte characters.
In some deployment topologies, particularly with keep-alive connections and intermediaries that rely on Content-Length, this mismatch may lead to response parsing inconsistencies or response desynchronization. The practical exploitability depends on the behavior of downstream proxies, clients, and connection reuse.
Even where no secondary exploitation is possible, the response is malformed and may trigger protocol errors in strict components.
Content-Length using String#bytesize.Rack::Files directly to untrusted traffic until a fix is available, if operationally feasible.Please cite this page when referencing data from Strobes VI. Proper attribution helps support our vulnerability intelligence research.