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Static Analysis for Security A Case Study in the Automation of Code Auditing

Static Analysis for Security A Case Study in the Automation of Code Auditing. Omer Tripp November 9 th , 2009. Agenda. Motivation Solution space Security violations Taint analysis Demo Conclusion. Some Statistics. Average number of bugs per KLOC is 15 [1]

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Static Analysis for Security A Case Study in the Automation of Code Auditing

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  1. Static Analysis for SecurityA Case Study in the Automation of Code Auditing Omer Tripp November 9th, 2009

  2. Agenda • Motivation • Solution space • Security violations • Taint analysis • Demo • Conclusion

  3. Some Statistics • Average number of bugs per KLOC is 15 [1] • Developers find 6 defects per hour in code reviews [2]

  4. Some Math • There are 30 MLOC in e-Bay’s codebase • ~45K bugs • ~7.5K hours to find • There are 50 MLOC in Windows Server 2003 • ~75K bugs • ~12.5K hours for find

  5. Some More Statistics • Heavy-weight static-analysis techniques process ~1K LOC per second • Light-weight static-analysis techniques process ~5K LOC per second • Human reviewers can only (effectively) digest 300 LOC per hour = 0.2 LOC per second [3]

  6. Bottom Line • Manual auditing is problematic: • Too costly! • Doesn’t fit into SDLC • Results influenced by subjective considerations • Sometimes it’s also impossible: • 3rd-party component packaged as binary • Human auditing leaks IP • No in-house experts

  7. What Can Automation Do? • Wide range of applications, including: • Run-time errors (e.g., NPE, unhandled exceptions, etc…) • Security analysis • Performance analysis • Liveness properties • Synchronization problems • Quality issues • Refactoring • …

  8. Static-analysis Tools

  9. Dynamic-analysis Tools

  10. Software Security • Integrity • Untrusted inputs flowing into security-sensitive areas • Confidentiality • Private information flowing into public areas • DoS • Overwhelming the system • Causing crashes

  11. Exemplary Integrity Violations • Cross-site Scripting • SQL injection (SQLi)

  12. Exemplary Confidentiality Violations • Error leakage • Insufficient anonymity

  13. Denial of Service • Classic DoS/DDoS • Through an integrity problem

  14. Code Examples public partial class Customize : System.Web.UI.Page { … protected void Page_Load(object sender, System.EventArgs e) { … string langParam = Request.QueryString["lang"]; … if (langParam != ""){lang = langParam;} … langLabel.Text = lang; … } … } XSS public partial class Transfer : System.Web.UI.Page { … protected void Page_Load(object sender, System.EventArgs e) { … string thisUser = Request.Cookies["amUserId"].Value; GetAccounts(thisUser); … } … private void GetAccounts(string userId) { … string query ="SELECT accountid, acct_type From accounts WHERE userid = " + userId; … myAccount = new OleDbDataAdapter(query , myConnection); … } … } SQLi

  15. Taint Analysis • The problem of finding flows from unchecked/poorly checked inputs to security-sensitive operations • Can be solved as graph-reachability problem • Captures vast majority of integrity/confidentiality problems

  16. Bird’s-eye View • Build index of all relevant entities (type hierarchy, methods, etc…) • Represent the program as a call graph • Track control and data flow on top of the call graph • Solve a reachability problem on top of the propagation graph (modulo some enhancements)

  17. Taint Analysis Based on Program Slicing [4,5] • Run the following algorithm: • Use statements defining untrusted inputs as slicing criterion • Find the set S of all statements that are (control-) and data-flow dependent on the slicing criterion • For each s in S such that s is a security-sensitive operation, report all flows from statements in the slicing criterion to s

  18. Taint Analysis Based on a Storeless Abstraction X x = req.getParameter(); Y y = new Y(); y.f = x; Z z = y.f; resp.getWriter().write(z); { x } { x } { x, y.f } { x, y.f, z }

  19. Challenges • The infamous precision-scalability tradeoff • External resources • Configuration files • Framework-specific configurations • Beyond graph reachability… • SDLC-induced use cases

  20. Precision versus Scalability • Modular analysis • Demand-driven strategies

  21. External Resources • Synthetic models • Sometimes ignorance is a bliss…

  22. Beyond Graph Reachability • PQL [6] • String analysis [7]

  23. SDLC-induced Use Cases • Incremental analysis • Parallelization on multi-core build servers

  24. DEMO

  25. The Remaining 8 Yards • Instead of killing n birds with 1 stone, use n stones to kill 1 bird (like humans) • How do we catch up with changes in technology? • How to tailor the analysis to the needs of different users? • Useful heuristics often resilient to formal definition

  26. References • [1] S. McConnell.Code Complete: A Practical Handbook of Software Construction • [2] W. S. Humphrey.Acquiring Quality Software in CrossTalk,18-12 • [3] Code Review at Cisco Systems • [4] O. Tripp et al..TAJ: Effective Taint Analysis of Web Applications • [5] C. Hammer and G. Snelting.Flow-sensitive, Context-sensitive, and Object-sensitive Information-flow Control Based on Program Dependence Graphs • [6] B. Livshits and M. Lam. Finding Application Errors and Security Flaws Using PQL: a Program Query Language • [7] M. Christodorescu et al..String Analysis for X86 Binaries

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