HTTP 400 Bad Request when client sends invalid HTTP:Host header value
In this scenario, HTTP requests were being sent from a non-Windows machine and were being responded to with a “Bad Request – Invalid Hostname” error by the IIS server. Beginning in IIS 6.0, “Bad Request” errors are almost always returned by HTTP.sys, so the next step was to look in the httperr.log file for further evidence of the failure condition. There was an associated log entry that corresponded to the error message the user saw:
[time+date] [clientip+port] [serverip+port] HTTP/1.0 POST /vdir/page.asp 400 - Hostname –
The problem was easily reproducible, so a network trace was captured of the client’s HTTP request and the server’s response. The network trace showed that the client was sending invalid data in its HTTP:Host header field. Here is what the client’s request looked like:
10:57:56.424 001C0F71134B 005056B5682F HTTP POST Request from Client
HTTP: POST Request from Client
HTTP: Request Method =POST
HTTP: Uniform Resource Identifier =/vdir/page.asp
HTTP: Protocol Version =HTTP/1.0
HTTP: Accept = text/html
HTTP: User-Agent =e.RPG
HTTP: Host =https://ip_address/vdir
HTTP: Content-Length =664
The problem here is that the HTTP:Host header contained forward slashes. After the client was configured to not send https:// nor /vdir in the Host header, the HTTP requests were successful. The valid HTTP requests now looked like this:
10:59:21.400 001C0F71134B 005056B5682F HTTP POST Request from Client
HTTP: POST Request from Client
HTTP: Request Method =POST
HTTP: Uniform Resource Identifier =/vdir/page.asp
HTTP: Protocol Version =HTTP/1.0
HTTP: Accept = text/html
HTTP: User-Agent =e.RPG
HTTP: Host =ip_address
HTTP: Content-Length =664
Comments
- Anonymous
February 17, 2009
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