Cross-client data leak via two distinct issues: (1) reusing a single StreamableHTTPServerTransport across multiple client requests, and (2) reusing a single McpServer/Server instance across multiple transports. Both are most common in stateless deployments.
This advisory covers two related but distinct vulnerabilities. A deployment may be affected by one or both.
What happens: When a single StreamableHTTPServerTransport instance handles multiple client requests, JSON-RPC message ID collisions cause responses to be routed to the wrong client's HTTP connection. The transport maintains an internal requestId → stream mapping, and since MCP client SDKs generate message IDs using an incrementing counter starting at 0, two clients produce identical IDs. The second client's request overwrites the first client's mapping entry, routing the response to the wrong HTTP stream.
What is affected: All request types — tools/call, resources/read, prompts/get, etc. No server-initiated features are required to trigger this.
Conditions:
- A single StreamableHTTPServerTransport instance is reused across multiple client requests (most common in stateless mode without sessionIdGenerator)
- Two or more clients send requests concurrently
- Clients generate overlapping JSON-RPC message IDs (the SDK's default client uses an incrementing counter starting at 0)
What happens: When a single McpServer (or Server) instance is connect()ed to multiple transports (one per client), the Protocol's internal this._transport reference is silently overwritten. The final response to a request is routed correctly (the Protocol captures the transport reference at request time), but any server-to-client messages sent during request handling use the shared this._transport reference, which may point to a different client's transport.
What is affected: This depends on what features your server uses:
sendNotification: Affected. These are dispatched through this._transport. When the transport has been overwritten and message IDs collide on the new transport, notifications are routed to the wrong client's HTTP stream.createMessage) and elicitation requests sent during tool execution via sendRequest: Affected. Same mechanism — the request is sent to the wrong client.Conditions:
- A single McpServer/Server instance is connect()ed to multiple transports across requests or sessions
- Two or more clients connect concurrently
- For in-request notifications/requests: message ID collision on the other transport is required for silent data leaking (the SDK's default client uses an incrementing counter starting at 0). Without collision, the transport will throw an error rather than misroute.
- For spontaneous notifications: no collision needed, messages are always sent to the last-connected client's transport
sessionIdGenerator (stateful mode) with a new McpServer per session → not affected by either issue. Each session has its own transport and server instance.sessionIdGenerator but share a single McpServer across sessions → not affected by Issue 1 (transport re-use), but affected by Issue 2 (server re-use) if your tools send progress notifications, sampling, or elicitation during execution.The fix (v1.26.0) adds runtime guards that turn silent data misrouting into immediate, actionable errors:
Protocol.connect() now throws if the protocol is already connected to a transport, preventing silent transport overwriting (addresses Issue 2)StreamableHTTPServerTransport.handleRequest() now throws if called more than once, enforcing one-request-per-transport in stateless mode (addresses Issue 1)close(), and sendNotification/sendRequest in handler extras check the abort signal before sending, preventing messages from leaking after a transport is replacedServers that were incorrectly reusing instances will now receive a clear error message directing them to create separate instances per connection.
If you cannot upgrade immediately, ensure your server creates fresh McpServer and transport instances for each request (stateless) or session (stateful):
// Stateless mode: create new server + transport per request
app.post('/mcp', async (req, res) => {
const server = new McpServer({ name: 'my-server', version: '1.0.0' });
// ... register tools, resources, etc.
const transport = new StreamableHTTPServerTransport({ sessionIdGenerator: undefined });
await server.connect(transport);
await transport.handleRequest(req, res);
});
// Stateful mode: create new server + transport per session
const sessions = new Map();
app.post('/mcp', async (req, res) => {
const sessionId = req.headers['mcp-session-id'];
if (sessions.has(sessionId)) {
await sessions.get(sessionId).transport.handleRequest(req, res);
} else {
const server = new McpServer({ name: 'my-server', version: '1.0.0' });
// ... register tools, resources, etc.
const transport = new StreamableHTTPServerTransport({
sessionIdGenerator: () => randomUUID()
});
await server.connect(transport);
sessions.set(transport.sessionId, { server, transport });
await transport.handleRequest(req, res);
}
});
{
"nvd_published_at": "2026-02-04T22:15:59Z",
"github_reviewed_at": "2026-02-04T20:04:16Z",
"github_reviewed": true,
"severity": "HIGH",
"cwe_ids": [
"CWE-362"
]
}