The document discusses core security principles for developers, including the three pillars of security (confidentiality, integrity, availability), common vulnerabilities like buffer overflows and injection flaws, security mindsets and architectures, and tools for testing applications. It provides an overview of the OWASP top 10 security risks and recommends resources for further learning about secure coding practices.
23. Vulnerabilities A vulnerability is an error made in a program, causing unintended behavior of the program in a way that affects security negatively. FIRST defines a vulnerability as: “a bug, flaw, weakness, or exposure of an application, system, device, or service that could lead to a failure of confidentiality, integrity, or availability.”
30. Exploits An exploit is a specific example of triggering a vulnerability. If the vulnerability is a missile, the exploit is the warhead.
31. Exploits Examples of exploits: Morris Worm Almost everything at http://www.milw0rm.com/ http://www.example.com/displayfile.php?../../../../etc/passwd
32. Exploits Easy way to think about it: If typing “ perl –e ‘print “A” x 10000; ” makes it crash, you’ve found a vulnerability If you end up with this, you’ve got a working exploit: bash-3.00# id uid=0(root) gid=0(wheel) groups=0(wheel), 2(kmem), 3(sys), 4(tty), 5(operator), 20(staff), 31(guest), 45(utmp)
40. Finding Balance “Not all "harmless failures" lead to big trouble, but it's surprising how often a clever adversary can pile up a stack of seemingly harmless failures into a dangerous tower of trouble. Harmless failures are bad hygiene. We try to stamp them out when we can.” – Ed Felten, Freedom to Tinker http://preview.tinyurl.com/c6ewzv
41. Security Architecture The OWASP Secure Coding Principles puts it thus: “ Security architecture starts on the day the business requirements are modeled, and never finish until the last copy of your application is decommissioned. Security is a life-long process, not a one shot accident.” http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Secure_Coding_Principles
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43. If I were evil, how would I abuse this feature?
44. Is the feature required to be on by default? If so, are there limits or options that could help reduce the risk from this feature?
46. Security in the Bones Software design, as well as implementation, must consider the three pillars of information security. Otherwise, you're going to fail.
47. 10 Principles Minimize attack surface area Establish secure defaults Least privilege Defense in depth Fail securely Don’t trust services Separation of duties Avoid security through obscurity Keep security simple Fix security issues correctly The OWASP guide gives 10 principles for writing secure code:
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49. Give the attacker the absolute minimum possible to work with when trying to discover an attack. By reducing complexity of an application, the number of possible vulnerabilities is also reduced.
51. If a variable level of security is desired, have the default be high, and leave it up to the user to make the decision to lower it. This prevents “out of the box” insecurities.
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53. Any component of a system should have only as much privilege as necessary to function properly. This is best known for permissions on user accounts, but also applies to software components.
58. A system should be designed with the idea of failing securely in mind. At any point, if something goes wrong, the system should not be left in a less secure state.
60. Even if external data is coming from a trustworthy source, give it the same level of validation as any input that isn’t trusted.
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62. System roles should be considered when giving out privileges. Administrators of a system generally aren’t also users; while some super-user privileges may be needed to run the system, administrators don’t necessarily need the ability to do anything.
68. Any problem that is being fixed needs to be treated as an actual problem, and not a symptom. The fix must go through the entire security process the same as new code; a fix isn’t a real fix if it introduces new problems.
69. Fix Security Issues Correctly It was in the news again days later, when it turned out the fix wasn't a fix.
80. Don't turn off Valgrind unless you know what you're doing (o hai OpenSSL)
81. Another OWASP List! Top Ten Most Critical Web Application Security Vulnerabilities 2007 Version
82. A1 – Cross Site Scripting (XSS) XSS flaws occur whenever an application takes user supplied data and sends it to a web browser without first validating or encoding that content. XSS allows attackers to execute script in the victim’s browser which can hijack user sessions, deface web sites, possibly introduce worms, etc.
83. A1 – Cross Site Scripting (XSS) <script>window.alert("meow")</script>
85. A2 – Injection Flaws Injection flaws, particularly SQL injection, are common in web applications. Injection occurs when user-supplied data is sent to an interpreter as part of a command or query. The attacker’s hostile data tricks the interpreter into executing unintended commands or changing data.
87. A3 - Malicious File Execution Code vulnerable to remote file inclusion (RFI) allows attackers to include hostile code and data, resulting in devastating attacks, such as total server compromise. Malicious file execution attacks affect PHP, XML and any framework which accepts filenames or files from users.
88. A4 - Insecure Direct Object Reference A direct object reference occurs when a developer exposes a reference to an internal implementation object, such as a file, directory, database record, or key, as a URL or form parameter. Attackers can manipulate those references to access other objects without authorization.
89. A5 - Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF) A CSRF attack forces a logged-on victim's browser to send a pre-authenticated request to a vulnerable web application, which then forces the victim's browser to perform a hostile action to the benefit of the attacker. CSRF can be as powerful as the web application that it attacks.
90. A6 - Information Leakage and Improper Error Handling Applications can unintentionally leak information about their configuration, internal workings, or violate privacy through a variety of application problems. Attackers use this weakness to steal sensitive data, or conduct more serious attacks.
91. A6 - Information Leakage and Improper Error Handling http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_WebScarab_Project
92. A7 - Broken Authentication and Session Management Account credentials and session tokens are often not properly protected. Attackers compromise passwords, keys, or authentication tokens to assume other users' identities.
93. A8 - Insecure Cryptographic Storage Web applications rarely use cryptographic functions properly to protect data and credentials. Attackers use weakly protected data to conduct identity theft and other crimes, such as credit card fraud.
94. A9 - Insecure Communications Applications frequently fail to encrypt network traffic when it is necessary to protect sensitive communications.
96. A10 - Failure to Restrict URL Access Frequently, an application only protects sensitive functionality by preventing the display of links or URLs to unauthorized users. Attackers can use this weakness to access and perform unauthorized operations by accessing those URLs directly.
107. HackLabTO - http://hacklab.to , free workshops and classes starting this spring
108. Further Reading And just about everything on http://www.owasp.org Writing Secure Code, 2nd Edition: Michael Howard and David LeBlanc, Microsoft Press (2003) Hacking: The Art Of Exploitation, 2nd Edition: Jon Erickson, No Starch Press (2008)