Security Advisories (2)
CVE-2024-58134 (2025-05-03)

Mojolicious versions from 0.999922 for Perl uses a hard coded string, or the application's class name, as a HMAC session secret by default. These predictable default secrets can be exploited to forge session cookies. An attacker who knows or guesses the secret could compute valid HMAC signatures for the session cookie, allowing them to tamper with or hijack another user's session.

CVE-2024-58135 (2025-05-03)

Mojolicious versions from 7.28 for Perl may generate weak HMAC session secrets. When creating a default app with the "mojo generate app" tool, a weak secret is written to the application's configuration file using the insecure rand() function, and used for authenticating and protecting the integrity of the application's sessions. This may allow an attacker to brute force the application's session keys.

NAME

Mojo::Cookie::Request - HTTP request cookie

SYNOPSIS

use Mojo::Cookie::Request;

my $cookie = Mojo::Cookie::Request->new;
$cookie->name('foo');
$cookie->value('bar');
say "$cookie";

DESCRIPTION

Mojo::Cookie::Request is a container for HTTP request cookies, based on RFC 6265.

ATTRIBUTES

Mojo::Cookie::Request inherits all attributes from Mojo::Cookie.

METHODS

Mojo::Cookie::Request inherits all methods from Mojo::Cookie and implements the following new ones.

parse

my $cookies = Mojo::Cookie::Request->parse('f=b; g=a');

Parse cookies.

to_string

my $str = $cookie->to_string;

Render cookie.

SEE ALSO

Mojolicious, Mojolicious::Guides, https://mojolicious.org.