Reference material — not professional advice. Test in staging, back up first, verify against your specific version. Use your own judgment for your environment.
● High · CVSS 8.7

How to Fix CVE-2026-32145: Multipart form body parser bypasses body size limits in wisp in wisp

Other vulnerabilities in the same area that are worth patching alongside this one:

*By Sai Kiran Pandrala*

Last verified: 2026-05-25

⚡ At a glance
SeverityCVSS 8.7, High
Actively exploited?No
AffectedGleam-wisp wisp (0.2.0 < 2.2.2); Gleam-wisp wisp (d8e722e22ccb42bda9d0b6248658d37ab4e9b376 < 7a978748e12ab29db232c222254465890e1a4a90)
Fixed in2.2.2, 7a978748e12ab29db232c222254465890e1a4a90
Type (CWE)CWE-770: Allocation of Resources Without Limits or Throttling

CVE-2026-32145 is a multipart form body parser bypasses body size limits in wisp in Gleam-wisp wisp. The fix is to upgrade to 2.2.2, 7a978748e12ab29db232c222254465890e1a4a90 and apply the runnable commands below.

What is CVE-2026-32145?

Allocation of Resources Without Limits or Throttling vulnerability in gleam-wisp wisp allows a denial of service via multipart form body parsing. The multipart_body function bypasses configured max_body_size and max_files_size limits. When a multipart boundary is not present in a chunk, the parser takes the MoreRequiredForBody path, which appends the chunk to the output but passes the quota unchanged to the recursive call.

In practical terms, a successful attacker gets a denial-of-service condition that crashes or hangs the affected service. There is no confirmed in-the-wild exploitation listed in CISA's KEV catalog at the time of writing, but the CVSS rating still warrants prompt patching.

Am I affected?

You are affected if you run Gleam-wisp wisp at a version listed in the Affected row above. Probe your installed build with the commands below.


# Confirm the installed version via your package manager
dpkg -l | grep -i wisp   # Debian/Ubuntu
rpm -qa | grep -i wisp   # RHEL/CentOS/Rocky

How to fix CVE-2026-32145

The primary fix is to upgrade to the patched build listed in the Fixed in row above (2.2.2, 7a978748e12ab29db232c222254465890e1a4a90). Pick the platform that matches your install and run the commands below.

Linux (Ubuntu / Debian)


sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install --only-upgrade wisp
# Confirm the installed version meets or exceeds 2.2.2
dpkg -s wisp | grep ^Version

Linux (RHEL / CentOS / Rocky)


sudo dnf upgrade --security wisp -y
rpm -q wisp

Windows (PowerShell, admin)


winget upgrade --id 'Gleamwisp.wisp' --silent --accept-source-agreements --accept-package-agreements
# If winget doesn't know the product, download the patched installer from the vendor and:
Start-Process -FilePath "$env:TEMP\wisp-2.2.2.msi" -ArgumentList '/qn /norestart' -Wait

PowerShell script (Windows): detect, back up, upgrade, verify, log


# Run as Administrator
$ErrorActionPreference = 'Stop'
$log = "$env:ProgramData\wisp-Patch-CVE-2026-32145.log"
function Write-Log($msg) { "$(Get-Date -Format s)  $msg" | Tee-Object -FilePath $log -Append }

Write-Log "Starting CVE-2026-32145 remediation for Gleam-wisp wisp"

# 1. Detect: replace the path/version probe with one valid for your install
$installed = (Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product |
    Where-Object { $_.Name -like '*wisp*' } |
    Select-Object -First 1 -ExpandProperty Version)
Write-Log "Detected version: $installed"

if (-not $installed) {
    Write-Log "Product not installed on this host; nothing to do."
    return
}
if ([version]$installed -ge [version]'2.2.2') {
    Write-Log "Already at fixed version $installed; no action needed."
    return
}

# 2. Backup configuration to a timestamped folder
$backup = "$env:ProgramData\wisp-Backup-$(Get-Date -Format yyyyMMdd-HHmm)"
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Path $backup -Force | Out-Null
$src = "$env:ProgramFiles\Gleam-wisp\wisp"
if (Test-Path $src) { Copy-Item -Path $src -Destination $backup -Recurse -Force }
Write-Log "Backed up config to $backup"

# 3. Apply the patched installer
$installer = "$env:TEMP\wisp-2.2.2.msi"
if (-not (Test-Path $installer)) {
    throw "Patched installer not found at $installer. Stage it from your software repo first."
}
Start-Process msiexec.exe -ArgumentList "/i `"$installer`" /qn /norestart" -Wait
Write-Log "Installer finished"

# 4. Verify
$verify = (Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Product |
    Where-Object { $_.Name -like '*wisp*' } |
    Select-Object -First 1 -ExpandProperty Version)
if ([version]$verify -ge [version]'2.2.2') {
    Write-Log "SUCCESS: now at $verify (>= 2.2.2)"
} else {
    Write-Log "FAILURE: still at $verify after install"
    exit 1
}

Bash script (Linux): detect, back up, upgrade, verify, log


#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -euo pipefail
LOG=/var/log/wisp-patch-cve-2026-32145.log
log()  { echo "$(date -Iseconds)  $*" | tee -a "$LOG"; }

log "Starting CVE-2026-32145 remediation for Gleam-wisp wisp"

# 1. Detect installed version (works for deb and rpm packages)
if command -v dpkg >/dev/null && dpkg -s wisp >/dev/null 2>&1; then
    CURRENT=$(dpkg-query -W -f='${Version}' wisp)
    PKG_MGR=apt
elif command -v rpm >/dev/null && rpm -q wisp >/dev/null 2>&1; then
    CURRENT=$(rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' wisp)
    PKG_MGR=dnf
else
    log "wisp not installed via apt or rpm; check your package manager or vendor instructions."
    exit 0
fi
log "Detected: wisp=$CURRENT (manager=$PKG_MGR)"

# 2. Backup config
BACKUP=/var/backups/wisp-$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M)
mkdir -p "$BACKUP"
for d in /etc/wisp /etc/${pkg%%-*} ; do
    [ -d "$d" ] && cp -a "$d" "$BACKUP/" && log "Backed up $d to $BACKUP"
done

# 3. Upgrade
if [ "$PKG_MGR" = apt ]; then
    sudo apt-get update -y
    sudo apt-get install --only-upgrade -y wisp
else
    sudo dnf upgrade --security -y wisp
fi

# 4. Verify
if [ "$PKG_MGR" = apt ]; then
    NEW=$(dpkg-query -W -f='${Version}' wisp)
else
    NEW=$(rpm -q --queryformat '%{VERSION}' wisp)
fi
log "After upgrade: $NEW"
log "Done. Compare $NEW against 2.2.2 and restart the affected service if needed."

If you cannot patch immediately

These are runnable hardening commands. They reduce blast radius but they are not a replacement for the vendor patch.

Rate-limit and watchdog the affected service


sudo iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m conntrack --ctstate NEW -m limit --limit 50/s -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m conntrack --ctstate NEW -j DROP

How to verify the fix worked

Run the version probe again and confirm the running build matches the Fixed in row above.


dpkg -l | grep -i "wisp"   # Debian/Ubuntu
rpm -qa | grep -i "wisp"   # RHEL/CentOS/Rocky

Expected output: the package version should meet or exceed 2.2.2.

Re-run any vulnerability scanner you used previously and confirm the finding for CVE-2026-32145 has cleared. Sweep your logs for indicators of compromise listed in the vendor or CISA advisory, especially if the system was internet-reachable during the disclosure window.

Frequently asked questions

Is CVE-2026-32145 being actively exploited?

Not at the time of writing. It is not listed in CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog. That status can change, so monitor the vendor advisory and the KEV catalog if the system is exposed.

How severe is CVE-2026-32145?

CVSS rates it 8.7 (High). Use that score to set your patch priority alongside the other items in your queue.

Do I have to take wisp offline to apply the patch?

It depends on the deployment. High-availability or clustered installs can usually patch one node at a time with no full outage. Standalone installs typically need a short restart. Always follow the vendor's documented upgrade steps.

What if my vulnerability scanner still flags CVE-2026-32145 after I patch?

Re-run the scan after a service restart, then confirm the scanner's plugin set is up to date. Some scanners detect by banner version only and lag the official fix metadata by a release.

References


*Written by Sai Kiran Pandrala. Last verified 2026-05-25. Sourced from the official vendor advisory, the NVD record, and the CISA KEV listing. Always confirm against the vendor advisory before applying changes in production.*