16 comments

  • basilikum 1 hour ago
    > As it turns out, bash can speak HTTP by itself.

    No, it can not. Bash lets you open TCP sockets.

    What you are doing here is trying to speak HTTP yourself, which is fine for testing and debugging, and hella cool for fun to do by hand, but you will shoot yourself in the foot if you try to use this pseudo http client unattended in reality. This toy code does not parse HTTP properly and will break.

    You could of course write a full http/1.1 client in bash, you can even do a full http server in pure bash: https://github.com/bahamas10/bash-web-server

    For less insane, non-bash shells there is always nc which is usually probably the wiser choice.

    • a-dub 1 hour ago
      it's not that insane. i've been manually typing http requests in since before http/1.1 and the mandatory host header.

      it is insane to use it for anything serious (also the opposite, implementing webservers in bash), but for quick testing it's pretty great!

      • bitmasher9 40 minutes ago
        Why wouldn’t you use curl for the quick test?
        • hnav 30 minutes ago
          Sometimes you want to do something that curl cannot express, e.g. timing, protocol oddities, etc. For example you may want to issue a CONNECT to an echo server through a proxy and observe the bytes flowing back and forth. You may want to see what happens when conflicting hop-by-hop headers are specified without worrying about the client's (curl's) interpretation of them. A simple nc -c (or openssl s_client -crlf) lets you do all of that.
        • a-dub 11 minutes ago
          because in those days there was no curl, or wget. and then when there was, there was no guarantee they'd be installed.

          telnet was always there though. it also worked for speaking all the other plaintext internet protocols. (imap, pop, smtp, etc)

    • TZubiri 23 minutes ago
      >No, you can't write 10 lines of code, you have to import a 100k LOC dependency

      Common misconception, if you want to replace a dependency on a swiss knife you don't need to implement a swiss knife, sometimes you can just implement the last helix of the corkscrew.

    • morpheuskafka 1 hour ago
      > No, it can not. Bash lets you open TCP sockets.

      I thought you had to use a program called netcat for that--if not then what is the point of that binary? And for that matter, can't you also use telnet to manually send HTTP?

    • mrshu 1 hour ago
      > No, it can not. Bash lets you open TCP sockets.

      Very fair pushback -- I did get carried away and will update the article to be more precise. Thanks for raising it!

      > For less insane, non-bash shells there is always nc which is usually probably the wiser choice.

      For completeness, `nc` or any netcat equvialent I could think of was not available in the image I was trying this with. It would certainly be a better option though.

      • bearjaws 1 hour ago
        This is the most Claude pilled comment I've seen here.
        • thih9 53 minutes ago
          This worries me. Some AI writing styles became mainstream; at first it was the em-dashes, now it’s “A, not B” patterns and excessive acknowledging. There will be more.

          Was grandparent comment written by an LLM?

          Or is this a human who copies a style they saw in a blog post, unaware that they’re copying an AI?

          Or is this a human who spent too much time talking to an AI and now they just talk like this?

          Or is this an organic human response and we’re all paranoid by now?

          I don’t know which would be worse.

        • mrshu 8 minutes ago
          It's pretty rough to learn I sound like Claude. Will need to do something about it then.

          (For what it's worth I did write the message above manually but I understand why no one would believe that now. At least I did not call netcat "load-bearing" [https://mareksuppa.com/til/load-bearing/] or something...)

        • nialv7 38 minutes ago
          what would be a non-pilled way of saying the same thing?
          • xeyownt 30 minutes ago
            Yeah. The comments saying it's AI-pilled comments are more annoying and less informative than the comments themselves.
          • WD-42 26 minutes ago
            Good point however netcat wasn’t available either.
      • throwrioawfo 33 minutes ago
        Bro really replaced the em-dash with "--"
        • mrshu 6 minutes ago
          An old habit that unfortunately makes one indistinguishable from LLMs these days...
  • simonw 1 hour ago
    Neat, works against example.com

      exec 3<>/dev/tcp/example.com/80
      printf 'GET / HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n' >&3
      cat <&3
    
    Outputs:

      HTTP/1.1 200 OK
      Date: Tue, 16 Jun 2026 17:37:45 GMT
      Content-Type: text/html
      ...
    
    I always end up on example.com for this kind of thing because there are so few domains these days that don't enforce https!
  • Retr0id 4 minutes ago
    It's a fun trick, but I really don't like that bash does this. It's such an un-clean interface, and I'm not aware of any use cases beyond trying to exfiltrate data from a badly locked-down shell.
  • mrshu 2 hours ago
    I ran into this while checking connectivity between containers on an internal Docker network where the image had neither curl nor wget.

    The main surprise was that Bash has /dev/tcp which lets you do the equivalent of an HTTP request with a bit of shell magic, for instance:

      exec 3<>/dev/tcp/service/8642
      printf 'GET /health HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: service\r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n' >&3
      cat <&3
    
    
    Where `service` is just the hostname of whatever you’re talking to and 8642 is the port you are trying to talk HTTP to.

    Pretty cool!

    • sevenzero 1 hour ago
      It seems pretty cool, but I am wondering if there's any drawback on just using images that support curl? I can't think of any and to me it's kinda a must have, even on production images
      • OptionOfT 1 hour ago
        I always recommend to not have any dependencies outside of the code.

        So we start at compiling the codebase (Rust) against MUSL. That way we can run it with FROM scratch images.

        If we need more tooling available at runtime, then we look at alpine, but still using MUSL.

        If MUSL itself is proving problematic, or if some of the libraries we use need glibc then we can look at using some locked down image.

        The cool part about FROM scratch images is that you'll never have to update your base image to address CVEs. Only your software and its (compiled) dependencies.

        • xmodem 1 hour ago
          > The cool part about FROM scratch images is that you'll never have to update your base image to address CVEs. Only your software and its (compiled) dependencies.

          What's the benefit really, though? If you still need to be able to rapidly deploy a new image in response to a dependency CVE, what have you gained?

          • OptionOfT 3 minutes ago
            If the base image I use is based on Debian, it comes with more than 15 binaries that I don't use.

            But when Docker scans my image and notices that there is a CVE in one of those binaries, my image is currently out of compliance.

            FROM scratch just reduces the surface.

          • regularfry 33 minutes ago
            You've gained that happening much less frequently. The tradeoff is making every other problem harder to diagnose.
      • xmodem 1 hour ago
        More than one ~500 employee company I've worked at has had security policies either encouraging or requiring the use of "distro-less" images - images with no OS components other than the absolute minimum required to run the application. For go binaries this meant literally nothing in the container apart from the executable.

        In theory it has a couple of benefits. You don't have to re-deploy your image to patch CVE's in OS components if you don't have any OS components. And it provides some measure of defence-in-depth - one could certainly theory-craft a scenario where an attacker gains some limited control over your application and then uses some OS component to escalate.

        These days if a security engineer is proposing my team adopt distro-less containers to receive these benefits, I would point out that we need to weigh them against the very real drawbacks of not having standard debugging tools available where and when weneed them. And also to consider the relative impact of other defence-in-depth measures they could be pursuing instead - such as any sort of network policy to limit network traffic.

      • mrshu 1 hour ago
        That is indeed a solid pushback! :)

        For what its worth, this container used `python:3.12.2-slim-bookworm` and I really would not expect that sort of an image to bundle `curl` -- even if it is intended for production.

        • TZubiri 17 minutes ago
          You can also use the sockets lib in that case, you depend on POSIX instead of Linux
        • sevenzero 1 hour ago
          Ah I see so it was basically a minimal image that bundles just python? I can see why it wouldn't bundle curl! Thought it was a custom Image for some reason, hence my original comment
          • mrshu 1 hour ago
            Yes, a very minimal image indeed. Had it been a custom image, curl would be one of the first things I would make sure it contains :)
      • figmert 1 hour ago
        This of course only supports http, not https. It's great for health checks e.g. in a docker environment. To do https, you'd have to use something like socat, but of course that doesn't use bash only.
        • TZubiri 16 minutes ago
          Https is almost always terminated separately from the application code.
      • giobox 1 hour ago
        It's also a two line Dockerfile to add wget or curl to almost any pre-existing container image. This is a fun idea though.
  • sam_lowry_ 58 minutes ago
    A few years ago I had to do this for a SpringBoot health check from a Docker container:

    FROM openjdk:11-jre-slim HEALTHCHECK --start-period=10s --timeout=3s --retries=5 \ CMD perl -e "use IO::Socket; $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto => 'tcp', PeerAddr => 'localhost', PeerPort => '8888') or die $@; $sock->autoflush(1); print $sock 'GET /actuator/health HTTP/1.1' . chr(0x0a) . chr(0x0d) . 'Host: localhost:8888' . chr(0x0a) . chr(0x0d) . 'Connection: close' . chr(0x0a) . chr(0x0d) . chr(0x0a) . chr(0x0d); while (my $line = $sock->getline ) { if ($line =~ /UP/) {exit;} }; close $sock; exit 1;"

    • hn92726819 48 minutes ago
      Note that this is not what the article is about. Bash has a fake /dev/tcp path that opens sockets. What you have there is just perl opening a socket normally. Great solution, but the interesting bit is that fake path.
  • m3047 7 minutes ago
    At least on my systems there's also /dev/udp...
  • dchest 34 minutes ago
    It's interesting that most of the comments here are about using this feature to bypass security restrictions (whether valid or not). It says a lot about the attack surface of GNU utilities caused by featuritis.
  • AndrewStephens 1 hour ago
    This is pretty neat if all you need is to ping a local server but please use curl (or something equivalent) for contacting remote services. HTTP1.1 seems like such a simple protocol but in the real world you need to deal with proxies, different encodings, and redirects. Curl takes care of that (and a host of other annoying stuff) for you.
    • mrshu 1 hour ago
      Totally!

      I was really just trying to see if intra-container connectivity works, and this ended up being a very quick way of doing so. (The alternative being building and deploying a new image, which would likely take significantly longer.)

      • KomoD 1 hour ago
        > The alternative being building and deploying a new image, which would likely take significantly longer

        You said the image was Python, though? Using that is way easier and faster. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48558763

        If all you need to know is that it can connect:

        python3 -c 'import socket as s;s.create_connection(("8.8.8.8",53))'

        or http:

        python3 -c 'from urllib.request import*;print(urlopen("http://example.com").status)'

        • mrshu 0 minutes ago
          You are right, I am not sure why I did not realize Python is the whole point of the image. This is indeed much faster and easier.
  • geoctl 1 hour ago
    I discovered this bash trick by chance when I was once trying to healthCheck the Envoy's official OCI image container which didn't include curl or wget while forcing the envoy admin interface to listen on localhost which breaks the traditional k8s httpGet checks.
  • orthogonal_cube 1 hour ago
    It was fun exploring this to make a native-shell-only peer-to-peer file transfer utility at work for some automation scripts. At least, it was until trying to replicate it in Powershell was somehow triggering Crowdstrike and the corporate Cybersecurity team thought I was writing malware.
  • devsda 1 hour ago
    Yes, it used to be my goto few times when some devices tried to lockdown everything with bare minimum core utils and no network capable tools like curl etc.
  • alienbaby 57 minutes ago
    Reminds me of telnetting to port 80 to make a get request years and years ago
  • sc68cal 1 hour ago
    That's pretty neat, thanks for sharing
  • Steeeve 38 minutes ago
    brb. recompiling bash in all my base images.
  • alienbaby 41 minutes ago
    Reminds me of using telnet to port 80 to make get requests aeons ago
  • phantasmat 53 minutes ago
    [flagged]