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New updates and improvements at Cloudflare.

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  1. This release introduces new detections for a critical SQL injection vulnerability in Drupal installations utilizing PostgreSQL (CVE-2026-9082), alongside targeted protection for an unsafe deserialization flaw in the Mirasvit Cache Warmer extension (CVE-2026-45247). Additionally, this release includes coverage for a prototype pollution vector in Axios (CVE-2026-40175) and a new generic rule designed to identify and block sophisticated SQL Injection (SQLi) bypass attempts leveraging obfuscated boolean logic.

    Key Findings

    • CVE-2026-9082: A database abstraction vulnerability affects Drupal sites configured with a PostgreSQL backend. Remote, unauthenticated attackers can exploit this flaw via crafted inputs to inject malicious SQL commands and access or manipulate backend data.

    • CVE-2026-45247: A PHP Object Injection vulnerability exists in the Mirasvit Cache Warmer extension for Magento and Adobe Commerce. This flaw stems from unsafe deserialization of untrusted user input, enabling unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary code on the hosting server.

    • CVE-2026-40175: A prototype pollution vulnerability affects the Axios HTTP client library. Attackers can exploit this to inject malicious properties into the global JavaScript object prototype, potentially causing application crashes (Denial of Service) or executing unauthorized code depending on the application structure.

    Impact

    Successful exploitation of these vulnerabilities could allow unauthenticated attackers to execute arbitrary code, manipulate database contents, or induce application crashes, leading to severe operational disruption or complete server compromise. These newly deployed signatures intercept these advanced malicious payloads at the edge before they can interact with vulnerable software configurations.

    RulesetRule IDLegacy Rule IDDescriptionPrevious ActionNew ActionComments
    Cloudflare Managed Ruleset N/AAxios - Prototype Pollution - CVE:CVE-2026-40175LogBlock

    This is a new detection.

    Cloudflare Managed Ruleset N/ADrupal - PostgreSQL SQLi - CVE:CVE-2026-9082 - BodyLogBlock

    This is a new detection.

    Cloudflare Managed Ruleset N/ADrupal - PostgreSQL SQLi - CVE:CVE-2026-9082 - URILogBlock

    This is a new detection.

    Cloudflare Managed Ruleset N/ASQLi - Obfuscated Boolean - BodyN/ADisabled

    This is a new detection.

    Cloudflare Managed Ruleset N/ASQLi - Obfuscated Boolean - HeadersN/ADisabled

    This is a new detection.

    Cloudflare Managed Ruleset N/AMirasvit Cache Warmer - PHP Object Injection - CVE:CVE-2026-45247N/ABlock

    This is a new detection.

  1. Announcement DateRelease DateRelease BehaviorLegacy Rule IDRule IDDescriptionComments
    2026-06-092026-06-15LogN/A Ghost CMS - SQLi - CVE:CVE-2026-26980

    This is a new detection.

    2026-06-092026-06-15LogN/A SQLi - Obfuscated Boolean - URI

    This is a new detection.

  1. You can now send emails through Cloudflare Email Service using authenticated SMTP submission on smtp.mx.cloudflare.net:465. SMTP joins the REST API and the Workers binding as a third way to send transactional email — useful for existing applications that already speak SMTP and language-native SMTP libraries (Nodemailer, smtplib, PHPMailer, JavaMail).

    SettingValue
    Hostsmtp.mx.cloudflare.net
    Port465 (implicit TLS)
    AUTHPLAIN or LOGIN
    Usernameapi_token
    PasswordA Cloudflare API token (account-owned or user-owned) with Email Sending: Edit

    Submissions enter the same delivery pipeline as the REST API and Workers binding: identical limits, automatic DKIM and ARC signing, and shared dashboard logs.

    Send your first email with a single command:

    Terminal window
    curl --ssl-reqd \
    --url "smtps://smtp.mx.cloudflare.net:465" \
    --user "api_token:<API_TOKEN>" \
    --mail-from "welcome@yourdomain.com" \
    --mail-rcpt "user@example.com" \
    --upload-file mail.txt

    Refer to the SMTP reference for authentication details, response codes, and language-specific examples.

  1. R2 SQL now supports set operations (UNION, INTERSECT, EXCEPT) and SELECT DISTINCT, expanding the range of analytical queries you can run directly on Apache Iceberg tables in R2 Data Catalog.

    Set operations

    Combine the results of multiple SELECT statements:

    • UNION — returns all rows from both queries, removing duplicates
    • UNION ALL — returns all rows from both queries, including duplicates
    • INTERSECT — returns only rows that appear in both queries
    • EXCEPT — returns rows from the first query that do not appear in the second
    -- Find zones that had either firewall blocks OR high-risk requests
    SELECT zone_id FROM my_namespace.firewall_events WHERE action = 'block'
    UNION
    SELECT zone_id FROM my_namespace.http_requests WHERE risk_score > 0.8
    -- Find zones with both firewall blocks AND high traffic
    SELECT zone_id FROM my_namespace.firewall_events WHERE action = 'block'
    INTERSECT
    SELECT zone_id FROM my_namespace.http_requests
    GROUP BY zone_id
    HAVING COUNT(*) > 10000
    -- Find enterprise zones that have not been compacted
    SELECT zone_id FROM my_namespace.zones WHERE plan = 'enterprise'
    EXCEPT
    SELECT zone_id FROM my_namespace.compaction_history

    Select distinct

    Eliminate duplicate rows from query results:

    SELECT DISTINCT region, department
    FROM my_namespace.sales_data
    WHERE total_amount > 1000
    ORDER BY region, department
    LIMIT 100

    For large datasets where approximate results are acceptable, approx_distinct() remains a faster alternative for counting unique values.

    For the full syntax reference, refer to the SQL reference. For performance guidance, refer to Limitations and best practices.

  1. RealtimeKit lets you build products where people meet over live audio and video — such as HealthTech, EdTech, proctoring, and other real-time platforms — on Cloudflare's global WebRTC infrastructure.

    Post-meeting transcription is now Generally Available, so completed RealtimeKit meetings can automatically produce full transcript files after they end. Those transcripts can also power AI-generated summaries for meeting notes, review workflows, and follow-up tasks after the transcript is available.

    Post-meeting transcription is a managed service powered by Workers AI using Whisper Large v3 Turbo. RealtimeKit handles transcription processing and can return transcript and summary files through webhooks or the REST API, so you do not need to run your own transcription infrastructure.

    Generate transcripts and summaries

    To generate a transcript after a meeting ends, set transcribe_on_end: true when creating a meeting. To also generate an AI summary automatically after the transcript is available, set summarize_on_end: true:

    Terminal window
    curl -X POST "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/$ACCOUNT_ID/realtime/kit/$APP_ID/meetings" \
    -H "Authorization: Bearer $CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN" \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    -d '{
    "title": "Weekly product review",
    "transcribe_on_end": true,
    "summarize_on_end": true,
    "ai_config": {
    "transcription": {
    "language": "en"
    },
    "summarization": {
    "word_limit": 500,
    "text_format": "markdown",
    "summary_type": "team_meeting"
    }
    }
    }'

    Consume results

    When RealtimeKit finishes processing a meeting, it creates download URLs for the transcript and, if summarize_on_end is set, the summary. You can receive those URLs automatically with webhooks, or fetch them later for a specific session with the REST API.

    To receive results as soon as they are ready, configure the meeting.transcript and meeting.summary webhook events:

    Terminal window
    curl -X POST "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/$ACCOUNT_ID/realtime/kit/$APP_ID/webhooks" \
    -H "Authorization: Bearer $CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN" \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    -d '{
    "name": "AI results webhook",
    "url": "https://example.com/webhook",
    "events": ["meeting.transcript", "meeting.summary"],
    "enabled": true
    }'

    To fetch results later, call the transcript or summary endpoint for the session:

    Terminal window
    curl -X GET "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/$ACCOUNT_ID/realtime/kit/$APP_ID/sessions/$SESSION_ID/transcript" \
    -H "Authorization: Bearer $CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN"
    curl -X GET "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/$ACCOUNT_ID/realtime/kit/$APP_ID/sessions/$SESSION_ID/summary" \
    -H "Authorization: Bearer $CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN"

    Use the Generate summary of transcripts for the session API only if summarize_on_end was not set and you want to generate a summary manually after the transcript is available:

    Terminal window
    curl -X POST "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/$ACCOUNT_ID/realtime/kit/$APP_ID/sessions/$SESSION_ID/summary" \
    -H "Authorization: Bearer $CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN"

    Post-meeting transcription supports CSV, JSON, SRT, and VTT transcript outputs, automatic language detection and Whisper language codes. RealtimeKit also supports real-time transcription with Deepgram Nova-3 for live captions, in-meeting accessibility, and real-time note-taking.

    Learn more in the RealtimeKit transcription docs and summary docs.

  1. Workflows now supports saga-style rollbacks, allowing you to add compensating logic to each step.do() in case of downstream failures. If the instance fails, the rollback handlers will execute in reverse step-start order.

    This is useful for multi-step operations that touch external systems, such as inventory reservations, payment authorization, ticket creation, or infrastructure provisioning. Instead of writing all cleanup logic in a top-level catch, you can keep each compensating action next to the step it undoes.

    Rollback handlers support their own retry and timeout configuration, and Workflows now exposes rollback outcomes in instance status responses. Workflows analytics also emits rollback lifecycle events, making it easier to distinguish a forward execution failure from a rollback failure when debugging production workflows.

    JavaScript
    await step.do(
    "provision resource",
    async () => {
    const resource = await provisionResource();
    return { resourceId: resource.id };
    },
    {
    rollback: async ({ output }) => {
    const { resourceId } = output;
    await deleteResource(resourceId);
    },
    rollbackConfig: {
    retries: { limit: 3, delay: "15 seconds", backoff: "linear" },
    timeout: "2 minutes",
    },
    },
    );

    Refer to rollback options to learn more.

  1. AI Gateway now supports spend limits — cost-based budgets that track cumulative dollar spend and block requests when the budget is exceeded. Unlike rate limiting, which caps the number of requests, spend limits track actual cost based on token usage and model pricing.

    You can scope limits by model, provider, or custom metadata dimensions. For example, give each user a $200/day budget, cap total gateway spend at $10,000/day, or limit a specific model to $50/day per user. Each rule uses a configurable time window with fixed or sliding enforcement.

    Spend limits work with both Unified Billing and BYOK requests for models with known pricing.

    For more details, refer to the Spend limits documentation.

  1. Radar now provides finer-grained traffic charts for longer time ranges. Previously, selecting a 1-3 month view on HTTP and NetFlows charts defaulted to weekly aggregation, which was too coarse to surface meaningful trends. Views longer than 3 months defaulted to monthly aggregation, returning as few as 7 data points for a 6-month range.

    The new defaults are:

    • 1-3 months: daily granularity (7x more data points)
    • Longer than 3 months (HTTP and NetFlows): weekly granularity (4x more data points)

    For example, a 12-week traffic view previously showed weekly data:

    Traffic trends chart with weekly granularity for a 12-week view

    The same view now shows daily data:

    Traffic trends chart with daily granularity for a 12-week view

    Similarly, a 1-year HTTP traffic view that previously showed just 12 monthly data points now provides 52 weekly data points.

    Visit Cloudflare Radar to explore the new granular views.

  1. Workers using a VPC Network binding with network_id: "cf1:network" now egress to public Internet destinations through Cloudflare Gateway. This means your existing Zero Trust traffic policies — DNS, HTTP, Network, and egress — extend to traffic that originates from your Workers, the same way they do for WARP users today.

    1. Calls env.EGRESS.fetch()

    2. VPC binding
    3. Public Internet

      Any public hostname or IP

    Gateway logs DNS HTTP Network

    What you get by default:

    • Visibility. Worker egress shows up in Gateway DNS, HTTP, and Network logs alongside your other traffic, so you can audit what your Workers are calling and when.
    • Enforcement. Any existing Gateway policy whose selectors match a Worker request will apply — including allow / block lists, DNS category filtering, and HTTP destination rules. If you have already blocked a category for your workforce, your Workers inherit that block.
    JSONC
    {
    "vpc_networks": [
    {
    "binding": "EGRESS",
    "network_id": "cf1:network",
    "remote": true,
    },
    ],
    }
    JavaScript
    // Egress to a public destination — subject to your Gateway policies and logged
    const response = await env.EGRESS.fetch("https://api.example.com/data");

    For configuration options, refer to VPC Networks. For policy authoring, refer to Cloudflare Gateway traffic policies.

  1. Cloudflare Access now supports IdP federation, which allows organizations to share a single identity provider across multiple Cloudflare accounts.

    Instead of configuring the same IdP (for example, Okta or Entra ID) separately in every account, you configure it once in a source account and share it with the other accounts in your organization. Each recipient account gets a read-only IdP connection that routes authentication back to the source account through a bridge — a hidden application in the source account that brokers the cross-account login. End users sign in with their existing IdP credentials, and each account's Access policies evaluate the resulting identity just like any other IdP login.

    Key capabilities:

    • One IdP, many accounts — Configure your IdP once and share it with all accounts in your organization.
    • Lifecycle management — As accounts join or leave your Cloudflare organization, their IdP connections are provisioned and removed automatically — no manual cleanup required.
    • Immutable recipient connections — IdP connections in recipient accounts cannot be accidentally modified or deleted.

    To get started, refer to IdP federation.

  1. Pay-as-you-go customers can now view billable usage and create budget alerts directly from the product overview pages for Workers & Pages, D1, R2, Workers KV, Queues, Vectorize, Durable Objects, and Containers. A new sidebar widget shows current-period spend and the billing cycle date range, alongside a button to create a budget alert.

    The widget pulls from the same data as the Billable Usage dashboard and aligns to your billing cycle (or the current day on Free plans), so the numbers match your invoice. Enterprise contract accounts are not yet supported.

    Billable usage widget in the Durable Objects product sidebar showing current-period spend and a breakdown by service

    Selecting Create budget alert opens the budget alert flow inline so you can set a dollar threshold in the same place you are reviewing usage. Budget alerts apply to your total account-level spend across all products, not just the product page you create them from.

    For more information, refer to the Usage-based billing documentation.

  1. The pipeline field inside the pipelines binding configuration in your Wrangler configuration file has been renamed to stream. The old field is deprecated but still accepted.

    Update your configuration to use stream to avoid the deprecation warning.

    Before (deprecated):

    JSONC
    {
    "$schema": "./node_modules/wrangler/config-schema.json",
    "pipelines": [
    {
    "binding": "MY_PIPELINE",
    "pipeline": "<STREAM_ID>"
    }
    ]
    }

    After:

    JSONC
    {
    "$schema": "./node_modules/wrangler/config-schema.json",
    "pipelines": [
    {
    "binding": "MY_PIPELINE",
    "stream": "<STREAM_ID>"
    }
    ]
    }

    No other changes are required. The binding name, TypeScript types, and runtime API (env.MY_PIPELINE.send(...)) remain the same.

    For more information on configuring pipeline bindings, refer to Writing to streams.

  1. Cloudflare Access now supports SAML assertion encryption for identity provider integrations. When turned on, your identity provider encrypts SAML assertions using a Cloudflare-managed certificate before sending them through the user's browser. Only Access can decrypt these assertions, protecting sensitive identity data even after TLS termination.

    Without encryption, SAML assertions are transmitted in plaintext and could be visible to browser extensions or client-side malware.

    SAML encryption toggle in the identity provider configuration

    SAML encryption includes built-in certificate lifecycle management:

    • Automatic certificate generation: Access generates an encryption certificate when you turn on SAML encryption for an identity provider.
    • Certificate rotation: Rotate certificates without downtime. The previous certificate remains valid until expiration, giving you time to update your IdP.
    • PEM export: Copy the certificate in PEM format for manual upload to your IdP, or point your IdP to the SAML metadata endpoint for automatic retrieval.

    To get started, refer to Encrypt SAML assertions.

  1. Today we are launching self-managed OAuth, enabling developers to build third-party applications that integrate with Cloudflare via OAuth. This provides a more secure, user-friendly, and manageable alternative to API tokens.

    OAuth lets third-party applications act on behalf of a user to access their Cloudflare account. For example, after a user grants consent, Wrangler can deploy Workers into that account.

    What is new

    Cloudflare Developers can now create and manage their own OAuth applications to integrate with Cloudflare.

    Create an application

    To create an application, go to Manage account > OAuth clients in your account on the Cloudflare dashboard.

    Go to OAuth clients

    Select limited scopes

    If you have used an API token to call Cloudflare APIs, OAuth client scopes will look familiar. Select only the scopes your application needs during application creation, and include that scope list when sending users to Cloudflare for consent.

    Users can review the requested scopes before they consent.

    Apps for both private and public use

    Applications start with private visibility. Private applications can only be used by members of the account where the application was created.

    To make an application available to any Cloudflare user, complete the prerequisites for public visibility.

    For more information, refer to client visibility.

    Client domain verification

    Before an application can be made public, you must verify the client domain. Domain verification helps users confirm that the application owner controls the domain shown on the consent page.

    After verification, users see a verified badge on the consent page.

    For more information, refer to domain verification.

    Learn more

    For more information, refer to OAuth clients.

  1. You can now create, update, or delete multiple secrets for your Worker in a single request using the bulk secrets endpoint.

    • Include a secret with a value to create or update.
    • Set a secret to null to delete.
    • Secrets not included in the request are left unchanged.

    The following example creates API_KEY, updates the already existing DB_PASSWORD, and deletes OLD_SECRET:

    {
    "secrets": {
    "API_KEY": { "type": "secret_text", "name": "API_KEY", "text": "my-api-key" },
    "DB_PASSWORD": { "type": "secret_text", "name": "DB_PASSWORD", "text": "my-db-password" },
    "OLD_SECRET": null
    }
    }

    You can do the same from the command line using wrangler secret bulk:

    Terminal window
    npx wrangler secret bulk < secrets.json

    To delete a key, set its value to null in the JSON file. Deletion is not supported with .env files.

    Each request supports up to 100 total operations (creates, updates, and deletes combined).

  1. You can now attach cron schedules directly to a Workflow binding in wrangler.jsonc. Each scheduled run creates a new Workflow instance automatically, so you do not need to define a separate Worker with a scheduled handler just to trigger your Workflow on an interval.

    For example, you can configure hourly, every-15-minute, or weekday schedules on the same Workflow:

    JSONC
    {
    "workflows": [
    {
    "name": "my-scheduled-workflow",
    "binding": "MY_WORKFLOW",
    "class_name": "MyScheduledWorkflow",
    "schedules": ["0 * * * *", "*/15 * * * *", "0 9 * * MON-FRI"],
    },
    ],
    }

    Cron workloads get all the same benefits of Workflows with built-in retries, multi-step durable execution, and configurable timeouts of Workflows.

    TypeScript
    import {
    WorkflowEntrypoint,
    WorkflowEvent,
    WorkflowStep,
    } from "cloudflare:workers";
    // Runs automatically on each cron schedule defined for the MY_WORKFLOW binding in wrangler.jsonc.
    export class MyScheduledWorkflow extends WorkflowEntrypoint<Env> {
    async run(event: WorkflowEvent, step: WorkflowStep) {
    const data = await step.do("fetch source data", async () => {
    return await fetchSourceData();
    });
    // If this step fails, only this step is retried with the custom logic below
    await step.do(
    "process and store results",
    {
    retries: { limit: 5, delay: "30 seconds", backoff: "exponential" },
    timeout: "10 minutes",
    },
    async () => {
    await processAndStore(data);
    },
    );
    }
    }

    This makes it easier to build recurring, scheduled jobs such as database backups, invoice generation, report aggregation, and cleanup tasks without wiring up a separate Cron Trigger entrypoint.

    For more information, refer to Trigger Workflows.

  1. The latest release of the Agents SDK adds four new ways to build with @cloudflare/think: on-demand Agent Skills, chat messengers (starting with Telegram), declarative scheduled tasks, and durable reasoning steps inside Workflows. This release also significantly hardens durable chat recovery, so turns reliably ride through deploys, evictions, and stalled model streams in production.

    Agent Skills (experimental)

    Give an agent a catalog of on-demand instructions, resources, and scripts. A skill source adds a catalog to the system prompt, and the model activates a skill only when a task matches — so a large library of capabilities does not bloat every prompt.

    JavaScript
    import { Think, skills } from "@cloudflare/think";
    import bundledSkills from "agents:skills";
    export class SkillsAgent extends Think {
    getSkills() {
    return [
    bundledSkills,
    skills.r2(this.env.SKILLS_BUCKET, { prefix: "skills/" }),
    ];
    }
    }

    The agents:skills import bundles a local ./skills directory through the Agents Vite plugin (one directory per skill, each with a SKILL.md). Skills can also load from R2 or a manifest. When skills are available, Think exposes activate_skill, read_skill_resource, and an optional run_skill_script tool. Skill loading is resilient: a duplicate or failing source is skipped with a warning instead of breaking the agent.

    Agent Skills are experimental, and script execution in particular is early. The API may change in a future release. We would love your feedback — tell us what you are building and what is missing in the Agents repository.

    Messengers

    Connect a Think agent directly to a chat platform. Think owns the webhook route, conversation routing, durable reply fiber, and streamed delivery back to the provider. Telegram ships as the first provider.

    JavaScript
    import { Think } from "@cloudflare/think";
    import {
    defineMessengers,
    ThinkMessengerStateAgent,
    } from "@cloudflare/think/messengers";
    import telegramMessenger from "@cloudflare/think/messengers/telegram";
    export { ThinkMessengerStateAgent };
    export class SupportAgent extends Think {
    getMessengers() {
    return defineMessengers({
    telegram: telegramMessenger({
    token: this.env.TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN,
    userName: "support_bot",
    secretToken: this.env.TELEGRAM_WEBHOOK_SECRET_TOKEN,
    }),
    });
    }
    }

    Each Chat SDK thread maps to its own Think sub-agent by default, so group chats and direct messages do not share memory. Multiple bots, custom conversation routing, and custom providers are all supported.

    Scheduled tasks

    Declare recurring, timezone-aware prompts and handlers with a typed domain-specific language (DSL). Think reconciles the declarations on startup and re-arms the next occurrence after each run, backed by durable idempotent submissions.

    JavaScript
    import { Think, defineScheduledTasks } from "@cloudflare/think";
    export class DigestAgent extends Think {
    getScheduledTasks() {
    return defineScheduledTasks({
    weeklyCommitReport: {
    schedule: "every week on monday at 09:00",
    prompt:
    "Compile my GitHub commits for the last week and summarize them.",
    },
    workout: {
    schedule: "every day at 08:00 in Europe/London",
    prompt: "Start my workout.",
    },
    });
    }
    }

    Think Workflows

    Run a model-driven reasoning step inside a Cloudflare Workflow with ThinkWorkflow and step.prompt(), with durable typed structured output, long waits, and approval gates.

    JavaScript
    import { z } from "zod";
    import { ThinkWorkflow } from "@cloudflare/think/workflows";
    const draftSchema = z.object({
    title: z.string(),
    summary: z.string(),
    labels: z.array(z.string()),
    });
    export class TriageWorkflow extends ThinkWorkflow {
    async run(event, step) {
    const draft = await step.prompt("triage-issue", {
    prompt: `Triage issue #${event.payload.issueNumber}`,
    output: draftSchema,
    timeout: "3 days",
    });
    await step.do("apply-labels", async () => {
    await this.agent.applyLabels(draft.labels);
    });
    }
    }

    Production hardening for durable chat recovery

    Durable chat turns have always been designed to survive a mid-turn deploy or Durable Object eviction. This release is a major hardening pass on that machinery for production.

    • Better recovery during deploys. Turns now ride through continuous deploys and evictions without losing completed work or re-running tools that already ran.
    • A live "recovering…" signal. useAgentChat exposes a new isRecovering flag, so a recovering turn shows progress instead of looking frozen. Most UIs render isStreaming || isRecovering as "busy".
    • Stalled streams recover. Set chatStreamStallTimeoutMs to route a hung provider stream into the same recovery path instead of leaving an infinite spinner.
    • Sub-agents re-attach. On parent recovery, an in-flight agentTool() child is re-attached to its result rather than abandoned and re-run, so long-running children no longer lose work under deploys.

    MCP transport improvements

    • Resumable streams — In-flight tool calls over Server-Sent Events (SSE) survive a dropped connection. Clients reconnect with Last-Event-ID and replay anything they missed.
    • Readable server IDsaddMcpServer accepts an optional id, so tools surface as readable keys (for example tool_github_create_pull_request) instead of opaque connection IDs.
    • Better handling of concurrent requests — Overlapping JSON-RPC requests are now correctly correlated to their responses across the HTTP and RPC transports.

    Other improvements

    • Compaction — A Session's tokenCounter now also drives the compaction boundary decision ("what to compress"), not just the fire/no-fire trigger.
    • @cloudflare/worker-bundler — Adds a virtualModules option to createWorker to provide in-memory module source during bundling.
    • Client-tool continuations — Parallel tool results now coalesce into a single continuation, immediate resume requests attach to the pending continuation, and server-side needsApproval continuations resume reliably after approval.

    Upgrade

    To update to the latest version:

    npm i agents@latest @cloudflare/think@latest @cloudflare/ai-chat@latest

    Refer to the Agents API reference and Chat agents documentation for more information.

  1. The Cisco IOS XE third-party integration guide for Cloudflare WAN has been updated to include:

    • Post Quantum Cryptography (PQC)
    • Policy-Based Routing (PBR)
    • IP Service Level Agreement (IP SLA)

    This link will take you directly to the updated Cisco IOS XE guide.

  1. Cloudflare has updated Logpush datasets:

    New datasets

    • Turnstile Events: A new dataset with fields including ASN, Action, BrowserMajor, BrowserName, ClientIP, CountryCode, EventType, Hostname, OSMajor, OSName, Sitekey, Timestamp, and UserAgent.

    For the complete field definitions for each dataset, refer to Logpush datasets.

  1. A new Beta release for the macOS Cloudflare One Client is now available on the beta releases downloads page.

    This release introduces the new Cloudflare One Client UI for macOS! You can expect a cleaner and more intuitive design as well as easier access to common actions and information. Here are some of the many things we have found our users appreciate:

    • Right click context menu to access the most common client actions quickly
    • Built-in captive portal login experience

    Additional Changes and improvements

    • The client now applies DNS search suffixes configured in your device profile / network policy. Administrators can push a list of DNS search domains that the client appends to single-label queries, alongside any system-configured suffixes. See DNS search suffixes for details.
    • Administrators can now control which virtual networks (VNETs) are available to which users via WARP device profile settings in the Zero Trust dashboard. Previously, every VNET in the organization was visible to every device; you can now scope the VNET picker per profile so users only see the networks relevant to them. See VNET availability for details.
    • Added a local-file signal source for Emergency Disconnect. In addition to the existing HTTPS polling mechanism, administrators can now configure WARP to monitor for a file on disk; the presence of the file triggers an emergency disconnect even if both Cloudflare and your own infrastructure are unreachable. Either signal being asserted triggers disconnect; both must be cleared for normal operation to resume.
    • Added new warp-cli debug commands for interactive connection diagnosis. See Extra debug logging for details.
    • The local DNS proxy now supports DNSSEC passthrough. DNSSEC-signed responses are forwarded to the application intact (including DO/AD bits and RRSIG records), so applications that validate DNSSEC locally — including resolvers and the dig/drill tooling — work correctly through the client.
    • Added a new MDM format for organization-wide settings, including a cleaner way to configure the compliance environment (e.g. FedRAMP). The previous per-configuration approach still works, but the new format is now recommended. See the updated Cloudflare One MDM documentation for details.
    • Client Certificate device-posture checks now support template variables (e.g. ${serial_number}, ${device_uuid}) in the Subject Alternative Name field, matching what the documentation has always claimed. Previously only the Common Name field accepted variables, which broke posture rules that pinned identity to a SAN entry.
    • Fixed the in-client captive-portal browser rendering a blank "Success" page on some airline Wi-Fi networks (United inflight Wi-Fi was the reported case). The browser now reliably loads the airline's real portal page so users can complete sign-in from inside the client instead of having to open a separate browser.
    • Fixed an issue in proxy mode where hostnames containing underscores (e.g. ai_app.com) were rejected, breaking apps that depend on such hostnames (notably ChatGPT sandbox apps). The local proxy now accepts underscore-containing hostnames in CONNECT requests.

    Known issues

    • Registration may hang at "Checking your organization configuration" due to IPC errors. A system reboot should resolve the error, allowing registration to proceed.
    • Split tunnel list configuration is not available in the new UI. Management of split tunnel entries is currently only possible via warp-cli tunnel ip and warp-cli tunnel host. UI support will be added in a future release.
  1. A new Beta release for the Windows Cloudflare One Client is now available on the beta releases downloads page.

    This release introduces the new Cloudflare One Client UI for Windows! You can expect a cleaner and more intuitive design as well as easier access to common actions and information. Here are some of the many things we have found our users appreciate:

    • Right click context menu to access the most common client actions quickly
    • Built-in captive portal login experience

    Additional Changes and improvements

    • The client now applies DNS search suffixes configured in your device profile / network policy. Administrators can push a list of DNS search domains that the client appends to single-label queries, alongside any system-configured suffixes. See DNS search suffixes for details.
    • Administrators can now control which virtual networks (VNETs) are available to which users via WARP device profile settings in the Zero Trust dashboard. Previously, every VNET in the organization was visible to every device; you can now scope the VNET picker per profile so users only see the networks relevant to them. See VNET availability for details.
    • Added mandatory authentication. When enabled via MDM, the Cloudflare One Client blocks all Internet traffic from the moment the machine boots until the user authenticates, closing the visibility gap on newly deployed devices and during re-authentication. See the announcement blog and documentation for details.
    • Added a local-file signal source for Emergency Disconnect. In addition to the existing HTTPS polling mechanism, administrators can now configure WARP to monitor for a file on disk; the presence of the file triggers an emergency disconnect even if both Cloudflare and your own infrastructure are unreachable. Either signal being asserted triggers disconnect; both must be cleared for normal operation to resume.
    • Added new warp-cli debug commands for interactive connection diagnosis. See Extra debug logging for details.
    • The local DNS proxy now supports DNSSEC passthrough. DNSSEC-signed responses are forwarded to the application intact (including DO/AD bits and RRSIG records), so applications that validate DNSSEC locally — including resolvers and the dig/drill tooling — work correctly through the client.
    • Added a new MDM format for organization-wide settings, including a cleaner way to configure the compliance environment (e.g. FedRAMP). The previous per-configuration approach still works, but the new format is now recommended. See the updated Cloudflare One MDM documentation for details.
    • Client Certificate device-posture checks now support template variables (e.g. ${serial_number}, ${device_uuid}) in the Subject Alternative Name field, matching what the documentation has always claimed. Previously only the Common Name field accepted variables, which broke posture rules that pinned identity to a SAN entry.
    • The UseWebView2 registry value (HKLM\SOFTWARE\Cloudflare\CloudflareWARP\UseWebView2 = y) is once again honored by the new GUI for authentication, so administrators who prefer the embedded WebView2 browser for sign-in can opt back in. This setting was effectively ignored in the previous release; the default browser was always used. This key is now also honored for re-authentications.
    • Fixed a crash in the authentication browser when navigating to a site that prompts for browser permissions (microphone, camera, notifications, etc.). The same fix had previously landed for the captive-portal browser; this extends it to the auth browser.
    • Fixed an issue in proxy mode where hostnames containing underscores (e.g. ai_app.com) were rejected, breaking apps that depend on such hostnames (notably ChatGPT sandbox apps). The local proxy now accepts underscore-containing hostnames in CONNECT requests.

    Known issues

    • An error indicating that Microsoft Edge can't read and write to its data directory may be displayed during captive portal login; this error is benign and can be dismissed.
    • Registration may hang at "Checking your organization configuration" due to IPC errors. A system reboot should resolve the error, allowing registration to proceed.
    • Split tunnel list configuration is not available in the new UI. Management of Split Tunnel entries is currently only possible via warp-cli tunnel ip and warp-cli tunnel host. UI support will be added in a future release.
    • Windows ARM may prompt the user to close running applications while trying to install this version. Simply click “Ok” with the default highlighted option.
    • DNS resolution may be broken when the following conditions are all true:
      • The client is in Secure Web Gateway without DNS filtering (tunnel-only) mode.
      • A custom DNS server address is configured on the primary network adapter.
      • The custom DNS server address on the primary network adapter is changed while the client is connected.
        To work around this issue, please reconnect the client by selecting "disconnect" and then "connect" in the client user interface.
  1. Sandboxes can expose a service running inside the container on a public preview URL through the sandbox.tunnels namespace. The SDK uses cloudflared inside the sandbox so you can share a running service without configuring exposePort() or a custom domain.

    By default, sandbox.tunnels.get(port) creates a quick tunnel on a zero-config *.trycloudflare.com URL — no Cloudflare account, DNS record, or custom domain required. This is perfect for quick development and for .workers.dev deployments.

    JavaScript
    import { getSandbox } from "@cloudflare/sandbox";
    const sandbox = getSandbox(env.Sandbox, "my-sandbox");
    await sandbox.startProcess("python -m http.server 8080");
    const tunnel = await sandbox.tunnels.get(8080);
    console.log(tunnel.url); // → https://random-words-here.trycloudflare.com

    Named tunnels

    For more control you can create a named tunnel through sandbox.tunnels.get(port, { name }). A named tunnel binds a hostname (<name>.<your-zone>) backed by a Cloudflare Tunnel and a CNAME record on your zone resulting in something like https://my-app-preview.example.com.

    Unlike quick tunnels, which generate a new random URL each time, a named tunnel produces a persistent URL that survives container restarts. This makes named tunnels suitable for production use cases where you want control over the tunnel and it's origin.

    JavaScript
    const tunnel = await sandbox.tunnels.get(8080, { name: "my-app-preview" });
    console.log(tunnel.url); // → https://my-app-preview.example.com

    Calling sandbox.destroy() tears down the Cloudflare Tunnel and the associated DNS record alongside the container, so you do not leave dangling tunnels or records behind.

    Upgrade

    To update to the latest version:

    npm i @cloudflare/sandbox@latest

    For full API details, refer to the Sandbox tunnels reference.

  1. You can now point wrangler d1 migrations apply at a nested migrations layout — such as the one produced by Drizzle (migrations/0001_init/migration.sql) — using the new migrations_pattern D1 binding config:

    JSONC
    {
    "d1_databases": [
    {
    "binding": "DB",
    "database_name": "my-database",
    "database_id": "<UUID>",
    "migrations_dir": "migrations",
    "migrations_pattern": "migrations/*/migration.sql",
    },
    ],
    }

    migrations_pattern is a glob (relative to your Wrangler config file) used to discover migration files. It defaults to ${migrations_dir}/*.sql, so existing projects keep working unchanged. Each migration's name is recorded in the migrations table as a path relative to migrations_dir.

    To learn more, visit D1's migrations documentation.

  1. Cloudflare has updated Logpush datasets:

    Updated fields in existing datasets

    • DEX Device State Events (added): DeviceRegistrationProfileID.
    • Gateway HTTP (added): AddedHeaders, DeletedHeaders, and SetHeaders.
    • HTTP requests (added): MatchedRules.

    For the complete field definitions for each dataset, refer to Logpush datasets.

  1. The Radar post-quantum TLS support checker now also reports TLS bugs detected during the handshake test. When a scanned host exhibits compatibility issues, the results include details on the specific bugs detected, along with guidance on how to investigate and remediate each issue. The bugs section only appears for hosts where issues are found.

    The following TLS bugs are detected:

    • Split ClientHello — The connection fails with a fragmented post-quantum ClientHello but succeeds with classical handshakes. Typically caused by middleboxes or firewalls that cannot reassemble split TLS messages.
    • HRR Failure — The server sends a HelloRetryRequest but fails to complete the handshake afterward.
    • Unknown Keyshare — The server cannot handle unknown key exchange algorithms and fails instead of responding with a HelloRetryRequest as required by the TLS 1.3 specification.
    TLS bug detection results in the Radar post-quantum checker

    Bug detection data is available through the existing /post_quantum/tls/support endpoint.

    Visit the Post-Quantum Encryption page to test a host.