OWASP Top 10 Web Application Vulnerabilities
- 1. Copyright © The OWASP Foundation
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the OWASP License.
#SGOWASP
The OWASP Foundation
http://www.owasp.org/
- 2. OWASP Top 10 – 2010
The Top 10 Most Critical Web
Application Security Risks
Author :Dave Wichers
COO, Aspect Security
OWASP Board Member
dave.wichers@aspectsecurity.com
dave.wichers@owasp.org
Presenter: Manuel Lopez Arredondo
manuel.lopez@owasp.org
Copyright © The OWASP Foundation
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
under the terms of the OWASP License.
The OWASP Foundation
http://www.owasp.org/
- 3. OWASP Top 10 Risk Rating Methodology
Threat Attack Weakness Weakness Business
Technical Impact
Agent Vector Prevalence Detectability Impact
1 Easy Widespread Easy Severe
? 2 Average Common Average Moderate ?
3 Difficult Uncommon Difficult Minor
1 2 2 1
Injection Example 1.66 * 1
1.66 weighted risk rating
OWASP - 2010
- 4. OWASP Top Ten (2010 Edition)
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Top_10
OWASP - 2010
- 5. A1 – Injection
Injection means…
• Tricking an application into including unintended commands in the data
sent to an interpreter
Interpreters…
• Take strings and interpret them as commands
• SQL, OS Shell, LDAP, XPath, Hibernate, etc…
SQL injection is still quite common
• Many applications still susceptible (really don’t know why)
• Even though it’s usually very simple to avoid
Typical Impact
• Usually severe. Entire database can usually be read or modified
• May also allow full database schema, or account access, or even OS level
access
OWASP - 2010
- 6. SQL Injection – Illustrated
"SELECT * FROM
Account Summary
Account:
accounts WHERE
Knowledge Mgmt
Communication
Legacy Systems
Administration
Bus. Functions
Human Resrcs
Application Layer
E-Commerce
Transactions
Web Services
SKU:
acct=‘’ OR
Directories
Accounts
Acct:5424-6066-2134-4334
Databases
Finance
HTTP
Billing
HTTP SQL DB Table Acct:4128-7574-3921-0192
response
1=1--’"
request query Acct:5424-9383-2039-4029
APPLICATION
M >
M
ATTACK
>
Acct:4128-0004-1234-0293
Custom Code
1. Application presents a form to
the attacker
2. Attacker sends an attack in the
form data
App Server
3. Application forwards attack to
Web Server
the database in a SQL query
Hardened OS
4. Database runs query containing
Network Layer
attack and sends encrypted results
back to application
Firewall
Firewall
5. Application decrypts data as
normal and sends results to the user
OWASP - 2010
- 7. A1 – Avoiding Injection Flaws
Recommendations
1. Avoid the interpreter entirely, or
2. Use an interface that supports bind variables (e.g., prepared
statements, or stored procedures),
§ Bind variables allow the interpreter to distinguish between code and
data
3. Encode all user input before passing it to the interpreter
Always perform ‘white list’ input validation on all user supplied
input
Always minimize database privileges to reduce the impact of a
flaw
References
For more details, read the new
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/SQL_Injection_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet
OWASP - 2010
- 8. A2 – Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)
Occurs any time…
• Raw data from attacker is sent to an innocent user’s browser
Raw data…
• Stored in database
• Reflected from web input (form field, hidden field, URL, etc…)
• Sent directly into rich JavaScript client
Virtually every web application has this problem
• Try this in your browser – javascript:alert(document.cookie)
Typical Impact
• Steal user’s session, steal sensitive data, rewrite web page, redirect user to
phishing or malware site
• Most Severe: Install XSS proxy which allows attacker to observe and direct
all user’s behavior on vulnerable site and force user to other sites
OWASP - 2010
- 9. Cross-Site Scripting Illustrated
1 Attacker sets the trap – update my profile
Application with
stored XSS
Attacker enters a vulnerability
malicious script into a
web page that stores the
data on the server
Knowledge Mgmt
Communication
Administration
Bus. Functions
E-Commerce
Transactions
2 Victim views page – sees attacker profile
Accounts
Finance
Custom Code
Script runs inside
victim’s browser with full
access to the DOM and
cookies
3 Script silently sends attacker Victim’s session cookie
OWASP - 2010
- 10. A2 – Avoiding XSS Flaws
Recommendations
Eliminate Flaw
§ Don’t include user supplied input in the output page
Defend Against the Flaw
§ Primary Recommendation: Output encode all user supplied input
(Use OWASP’s ESAPI to output encode:
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/ESAPI
§ Perform ‘white list’ input validation on all user input to be included in
page
§ For large chunks of user supplied HTML, use OWASP’s AntiSamy to
sanitize this HTML to make it safe
See: http://www.owasp.org/index.php/AntiSamy
References
For how to output encode properly, read the new
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/XSS_(Cross Site Scripting) Prevention Cheat Sheet (AntiSamy)
OWASP - 2010
- 11. Safe Escaping Schemes in Various HTML Execution
Contexts
#1: ( &, <, >, " ) à &entity; ( ', / ) à &#xHH;
ESAPI: encodeForHTML()
HTML Element Content
(e.g., <div> some text to display </div> ) #2: All non-alphanumeric < 256 à &#xHH
ESAPI: encodeForHTMLAttribute()
HTML Attribute Values
(e.g., <input name='person' type='TEXT'
value='defaultValue'> ) #3: All non-alphanumeric < 256 à xHH
ESAPI: encodeForJavaScript()
JavaScript Data
(e.g., <script> some javascript </script> )
#4: All non-alphanumeric < 256 à HH
ESAPI: encodeForCSS()
HTML Style Property Values
(e.g., .pdiv a:hover {color: red; text-decoration:
underline} )
#5: All non-alphanumeric < 256 à %HH
URI Attribute Values ESAPI: encodeForURL()
(e.g., <a href="javascript:toggle('lesson')" )
ALL other contexts CANNOT include Untrusted Data
Recommendation: Only allow #1 and #2 and disallow all others
See: www.owasp.org/index.php/XSS_(Cross_Site_Scripting)_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet for more
details OWASP - 2010
- 12. A3 – Broken Authentication and Session
Management
HTTP is a “stateless” protocol
• Means credentials have to go with every request
• Should use SSL for everything requiring authentication
Session management flaws
• SESSION ID used to track state since HTTP doesn’t
• and it is just as good as credentials to an attacker
• SESSION ID is typically exposed on the network, in browser, in logs, …
Beware the side-doors
• Change my password, remember my password, forgot my password, secret
question, logout, email address, etc…
Typical Impact
• User accounts compromised or user sessions hijacked
OWASP - 2010
- 13. Broken Authentication Illustrated
1 User sends credentials
Knowledge Mgmt
Communication
Administration
Bus. Functions
E-Commerce
Transactions
Accounts
Finance
www.boi.com?JSESSIONID=9FA1DB9EA...
Site uses URL rewriting 2 Custom Code
(i.e., put session in URL)
3 User clicks on a link to http://www.hacker.com
in a forum
Hacker checks referer logs on www.hacker.com
and finds user’s JSESSIONID 4
5 Hacker uses JSESSIONID
and takes over victim’s
account
OWASP - 2010
- 14. A3 – Avoiding Broken Authentication and
Session Management
Verify your architecture
Authentication should be simple, centralized, and standardized
Use the standard session id provided by your container
Be sure SSL protects both credentials and session id at all times
Verify the implementation
Forget automated analysis approaches
Check your SSL certificate
Examine all the authentication-related functions
Verify that logoff actually destroys the session
Use OWASP’s WebScarab to test the implementation
Follow the guidance from
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Authentication_Cheat_Sheet
OWASP - 2010
- 15. A4 – Insecure Direct Object References
How do you protect access to your data?
• This is part of enforcing proper “Authorization”, along with
A7 – Failure to Restrict URL Access
A common mistake …
• Only listing the ‘authorized’ objects for the current user, or
• Hiding the object references in hidden fields
• … and then not enforcing these restrictions on the server side
• This is called presentation layer access control, and doesn’t work
• Attacker simply tampers with parameter value
Typical Impact
• Users are able to access unauthorized files or data
OWASP - 2010
- 16. Insecure Direct Object References
Illustrated
Attacker notices his acct
https://www.onlinebank.com/user?acct=6065 parameter is 6065
?acct=6065
He modifies it to a
nearby number
?acct=6066
Attacker views the
victim’s account
information
OWASP - 2010
- 17. A4 – Avoiding Insecure Direct Object
References
Eliminate the direct object reference
Replace them with a temporary mapping value (e.g. 1, 2, 3)
ESAPI provides support for numeric & random mappings
§ IntegerAccessReferenceMap & RandomAccessReferenceMap
http://app?file=Report123.xls Report123.xls
Access
http://app?file=1
Reference
http://app?id=9182374 Map
Acct:9182374
http://app?id=7d3J93
Validate the direct object reference
Verify the parameter value is properly formatted
Verify the user is allowed to access the target object
§ Query constraints work great!
Verify the requested mode of access is allowed to the target
object (e.g., read, write, delete)
OWASP - 2010
- 18. A5 – Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF)
Cross Site Request Forgery
• An attack where the victim’s browser is tricked into issuing a command to
a vulnerable web application
• Vulnerability is caused by browsers automatically including user
authentication data (session ID, IP address, Windows domain credentials,
…) with each request
Imagine…
• What if a hacker could steer your mouse and get you to click on links in
your online banking application?
• What could they make you do?
Typical Impact
• Initiate transactions (transfer funds, logout user, close account)
• Access sensitive data
• Change account details
OWASP - 2010
- 19. CSRF Vulnerability Pattern
The Problem
Web browsers automatically include most credentials with each
request
Even for requests caused by a form, script, or image on another site
All sites relying solely on automatic
credentials are vulnerable!
(almost all sites are this way)
Automatically Provided Credentials
Session cookie
Basic authentication header
IP address
Client side SSL certificates
Windows domain authentication
OWASP - 2010
- 20. CSRF Illustrated
Attacker sets the trap on some website on the internet
1 (or simply via an e-mail)
Application with CSRF
Hidden <img> tag vulnerability
contains attack against
vulnerable site
Knowledge Mgmt
Communication
Administration
Bus. Functions
E-Commerce
Transactions
Accounts
Finance
While logged into vulnerable site,
2 victim views attacker site
Custom Code
3
Vulnerable site sees
<img> tag loaded by legitimate request from
browser – sends GET victim and performs the
request (including action requested
credentials) to vulnerable
site
OWASP - 2010
- 21. A5 – Avoiding CSRF Flaws
Add a secret, not automatically submitted, token to ALL sensitive requests
This makes it impossible for the attacker to spoof the request
§ (unless there’s an XSS hole in your application)
Tokens should be cryptographically strong or random
Options
Store a single token in the session and add it to all forms and links
§ Hidden Field: <input name="token" value="687965fdfaew87agrde"
type="hidden"/>
§ Single use URL: /accounts/687965fdfaew87agrde
§ Form Token: /accounts?auth=687965fdfaew87agrde …
Beware exposing the token in a referer header
§ Hidden fields are recommended
Can have a unique token for each function
§ Use a hash of function name, session id, and a secret
Can require secondary authentication for sensitive functions (e.g., eTrade)
Don’t allow attackers to store attacks on your site
Properly encode all input on the way out
This renders all links/requests inert in most interpreters
See the new: www.owasp.org/index.php/CSRF_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet
for more details
OWASP - 2010
- 22. A6 – Security Misconfiguration
Web applications rely on a secure foundation
• Everywhere from the OS up through the App Server
• Don’t forget all the libraries you are using!!
Is your source code a secret?
• Think of all the places your source code goes
• Security should not require secret source code
CM must extend to all parts of the application
• All credentials should change in production
Typical Impact
• Install backdoor through missing OS or server patch
• XSS flaw exploits due to missing application framework patches
• Unauthorized access to default accounts, application functionality or data,
or unused but accessible functionality due to poor server configuration
OWASP - 2010
- 23. Security Misconfiguration Illustrated
Knowledge Mgmt
Communication
Administration
Bus. Functions
E-Commerce
Transactions
Accounts
Finance
Database
Custom Code
App Configuration
Development
Framework
App Server
QA Servers
Web Server
Hardened OS
Insider Test Servers
Source Control
OWASP - 2010
- 24. A6 – Avoiding Security Misconfiguration
Verify your system’s configuration management
Secure configuration “hardening” guideline
§ Automation is REALLY USEFUL here
Must cover entire platform and application
Keep up with patches for ALL components
§ This includes software libraries, not just OS and Server applications
Analyze security effects of changes
Can you “dump” the application configuration
Build reporting into your process
If you can’t verify it, it isn’t secure
Verify the implementation
Scanning finds generic configuration and missing patch problems
OWASP - 2010
- 25. A7 – Insecure Cryptographic Storage
Storing sensitive data insecurely
• Failure to identify all sensitive data
• Failure to identify all the places that this sensitive data gets stored
• Databases, files, directories, log files, backups, etc.
• Failure to properly protect this data in every location
Typical Impact
• Attackers access or modify confidential or private information
• e.g, credit cards, health care records, financial data (yours or your
customers)
• Attackers extract secrets to use in additional attacks
• Company embarrassment, customer dissatisfaction, and loss of trust
• Expense of cleaning up the incident, such as forensics, sending apology
letters, reissuing thousands of credit cards, providing identity theft
insurance
• Business gets sued and/or fined
OWASP - 2010
- 26. Insecure Cryptographic Storage Illustrated
Victim enters credit
1 card number in form
Communication
Administration
Bus. Functions
E-Commerce
Transactions
Knowledge
Accounts
Finance
Mgmt
Custom Code
Malicious insider Log files
4
steals 4 million credit Error handler logs CC 2
card numbers details because merchant
gateway is unavailable
Logs are accessible to all 3
members of IT staff for
debugging purposes
OWASP - 2010
- 27. A7 – Avoiding Insecure Cryptographic
Storage
Verify your architecture
Identify all sensitive data
Identify all the places that data is stored
Ensure threat model accounts for possible attacks
Use encryption to counter the threats, don’t just ‘encrypt’ the data
Protect with appropriate mechanisms
File encryption, database encryption, data element encryption
Use the mechanisms correctly
Use standard strong algorithms
Generate, distribute, and protect keys properly
Be prepared for key change
Verify the implementation
A standard strong algorithm is used, and it’s the proper algorithm for this situation
All keys, certificates, and passwords are properly stored and protected
Safe key distribution and an effective plan for key change are in place
Analyze encryption code for common flaws
OWASP - 2010
- 28. A8 – Failure to Restrict URL Access
How do you protect access to URLs (pages)?
• This is part of enforcing proper “authorization”, along with
A4 – Insecure Direct Object References
A common mistake …
• Displaying only authorized links and menu choices
• This is called presentation layer access control, and doesn’t work
• Attacker simply forges direct access to ‘unauthorized’ pages
Typical Impact
• Attackers invoke functions and services they’re not authorized for
• Access other user’s accounts and data
• Perform privileged actions
OWASP - 2010
- 29. Failure to Restrict URL Access Illustrated
Attacker notices the URL
https://www.onlinebank.com/user/getAccounts
indicates his role
/user/getAccounts
He modifies it to another
directory (role)
/admin/getAccounts, or
/manager/getAccounts
Attacker views more
accounts than just their
own
OWASP - 2010
- 30. A8 – Avoiding URL Access Control Flaws
For each URL, a site needs to do 3 things
Restrict access to authenticated users (if not public)
Enforce any user or role based permissions (if private)
Completely disallow requests to unauthorized page types (e.g., config files, log
files, source files, etc.)
Verify your architecture
Use a simple, positive model at every layer
Be sure you actually have a mechanism at every layer
Verify the implementation
Forget automated analysis approaches
Verify that each URL in your application is protected by either
§ An external filter, like Java EE web.xml or a commercial product
§ Or internal checks in YOUR code – Use ESAPI’s isAuthorizedForURL() method
Verify the server configuration disallows requests to unauthorized file types
Use WebScarab or your browser to forge unauthorized requests
OWASP - 2010
- 31. A9 – Insufficient Transport Layer Protection
Transmitting sensitive data insecurely
• Failure to identify all sensitive data
• Failure to identify all the places that this sensitive data is sent
• On the web, to backend databases, to business partners, internal
communications
• Failure to properly protect this data in every location
Typical Impact
• Attackers access or modify confidential or private information
• e.g, credit cards, health care records, financial data (yours or your
customers)
• Attackers extract secrets to use in additional attacks
• Company embarrassment, customer dissatisfaction, and loss of trust
• Expense of cleaning up the incident
• Business gets sued and/or fined
OWASP - 2010
- 32. Insufficient Transport Layer Protection
Illustrated
Business Partners
External Victim
Custom Code Backend Systems
Employees
1 2
External attacker Internal attacker
steals credentials steals credentials
and data off and data from
network internal network
External Attacker Internal Attacker
OWASP - 2010
- 33. A9 – Avoiding Insufficient Transport Layer
Protection
Protect with appropriate mechanisms
Use TLS on all connections with sensitive data
Individually encrypt messages before transmission
§ E.g., XML-Encryption
Sign messages before transmission
§ E.g., XML-Signature
Use the mechanisms correctly
Use standard strong algorithms (disable old SSL algorithms)
Manage keys/certificates properly
Verify SSL certificates before using them
Use proven mechanisms when sufficient
§ E.g., SSL vs. XML-Encryption
See: http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Transport_Layer_Protection_Cheat
_Sheet for more details
OWASP - 2010
- 34. A10 – Unvalidated Redirects and Forwards
Web application redirects are very common
• And frequently include user supplied parameters in the destination URL
• If they aren’t validated, attacker can send victim to a site of their
choice
Forwards (aka Transfer in .NET) are common too
• They internally send the request to a new page in the same application
• Sometimes parameters define the target page
• If not validated, attacker may be able to use unvalidated forward to
bypass authentication or authorization checks
Typical Impact
• Redirect victim to phishing or malware site
• Attacker’s request is forwarded past security checks, allowing
unauthorized function or data access
OWASP - 2010
- 35. Unvalidated Redirect Illustrated
1 Attacker sends attack to victim via email or webpage
From: Internal Revenue Service
Subject: Your Unclaimed Tax Refund
Our records show you have an 3 Application redirects
unclaimed federal tax refund. Please victim to attacker’s site
click here to initiate your claim.
Knowledge Mgmt
Communication
Administration
Bus. Functions
E-Commerce
Transactions
Accounts
Finance
Victim clicks link containing unvalidated
2 parameter
Custom Code
Request sent to vulnerable
site, including attacker’s
destination site as parameter.
Redirect sends victim to
attacker site Evil Site
4 Evil site installs malware on
http://www.irs.gov/taxrefund/claim.jsp? victim, or phish’s for private
year=2006& … &dest=www.evilsite.com information
OWASP - 2010
- 36. Unvalidated Forward Illustrated
1 Attacker sends attack to vulnerable page they have access to
Request sent to
vulnerable page which
user does have access to.
public void
Redirect sends user sensitiveMethod( HttpServletRequest
request, HttpServletResponse
directly to private page, response) {
try {
bypassing access control. // Do sensitive stuff here.
...
}
catch ( ...
2 Application authorizes
request, which continues Filter
to vulnerable page 3 Forwarding page fails to validate
parameter, sending attacker to
unauthorized page, bypassing access
public void doPost( HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse response) { control
try {
String target = request.getParameter( "dest" ) );
...
request.getRequestDispatcher( target ).forward(req
uest, response);
}
catch ( ...
OWASP - 2010
- 37. A10 – Avoiding Unvalidated Redirects and
Forwards
There are a number of options
1. Avoid using redirects and forwards as much as you can
2. If used, don’t involve user parameters in defining the target URL
3. If you ‘must’ involve user parameters, then either
a) Validate each parameter to ensure its valid and authorized for the current user, or
b) (preferred) – Use server side mapping to translate choice provided to user with actual
target page
Defense in depth: For redirects, validate the target URL after it is calculated to
make sure it goes to an authorized external site
ESAPI can do this for you!!
§ See: SecurityWrapperResponse.sendRedirect( URL )
§ http://owasp-esapi-java.googlecode.com/svn/trunk_doc/org/owasp/esapi/filters/
SecurityWrapperResponse.html#sendRedirect(java.lang.String)
Some thoughts about protecting Forwards
Ideally, you’d call the access controller to make sure the user is authorized
before you perform the forward (with ESAPI, this is easy)
With an external filter, like Siteminder, this is not very practical
Next best is to make sure that users who can access the original page are ALL
authorized to access the target page.
OWASP - 2010
- 38. Summary: How do you address these
problems?
Develop Secure Code
Follow the best practices in OWASP’s Guide to Building Secure Web
Applications
§ http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Guide
Use OWASP’s Application Security Verification Standard as a guide to
what an application needs to be secure
§ http://www.owasp.org/index.php/ASVS
Use standard security components that are a fit for your organization
§ Use OWASP’s ESAPI as a basis for your standard components
§ http://www.owasp.org/index.php/ESAPI
Review Your Applications
Have an expert team review your applications
Review your applications yourselves following OWASP Guidelines
§ OWASP Code Review Guide:
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Code_Review_Guide
§ OWASP Testing Guide:
http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Testing_Guide
OWASP - 2010
- 39. OWASP (ESAPI)
Custom Enterprise Web Application
OWASP Enterprise Security API
SecurityConfiguration
AccessReferenceMap
EncryptedProperties
Exception Handling
IntrusionDetector
AccessController
Authenticator
HTTPUtilities
Randomizer
Encryptor
Validator
Encoder
Logger
User
Your Existing Enterprise Services or Libraries
ESAPI Homepage: http://www.owasp.org/index.php/ESAPI
OWASP - 2010
- 40. Acknowledgements
We’d like to thank the Primary Project Contributors
Aspect Security for sponsoring the project
Jeff Williams (Author who conceived of and launched Top 10 in 2003)
Dave Wichers (Author and current project lead)
Organizations that contributed vulnerability statistics
Aspect Security
MITRE
Softtek
WhiteHat Security
A host of reviewers and contributors, including:
Mike Boberski, Juan Carlos Calderon, Michael Coates, Jeremiah
Grossman, Jim Manico, Paul Petefish, Eric Sheridan, Neil Smithline,
Andrew van der Stock, Colin Watson, OWASP Denmark and Sweden
Chapters
OWASP - 2010