Webscarab XSS-CRLF plugin

Overview
The XSS/CRLF plugin examines suspicious HTTP requests for cross-site scripting and CRLF injection (HTTP response splitting) vulnerabilities. Unlike other tools, the plugin doesn't crawl the site trying to discover vulnerable URLs, instead it passively analyzes all HTTP conversations passing through WebScarab. The plugin will inspect each request and response to check if:


 * Any value of the GET/POST parameters is reflected in the body of the HTTP response, which indicates a potential for a reflected XSS vulnerability;
 * Any value of the GET/POST parameters is reflected in the HTTP headers of the HTTP response, which indicates a potential for a CRLF injection vulnerability;

The table in the upper half of the plugin's window will show all suspicious HTTP requests. By clicking the "Check" button, the plugin will attempt to perform a test to check whether the test strings for XSS and CRLF injection vulnerabilities pass through successfully. If check on a particular conversation was successful (i.e. test string went through or new HTTP header was created) the conversation will appear in the table below. If none of the test were successful lower table will be empty.

NOTE: depending on vulnerability specifics and application, automated testing may not produce reliable results (e.g. less than and greater than characters are filtered, however exploitation of XSS is still possible without use of these characters, for example if XSS occurs within the 'script' tag).

For XSS, the plugin will send a user-controlled XSS test string as the value of a potentially vulnerable parameter and check the response body for the presence of the test string, if the string was discovered it may indicate that application is vulnerable to cross-site scripting vulnerability.

For CRLF injection (HTTP response splitting), the plugin will again send the user-controlled CRLF test string, which is supposed to create a new HTTP header, as a value of a potentially vulnerable parameter and check the response HTTP headers for the presence of the new HTTP header created by CRLF test string. If the header is present it may indicated that application is vulnerable to response splitting.

Limitations
Stored cross-site scripting vulnerabilities aren't supported yet.