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PHP Security

PHP Security. Ryan Dunn Jason Pack. Outline. PHP Overview Common Security Issues Advanced Security Issues Easiest Ways to Secure PHP? Examples. PHP Overview. Originally designed as a small set of Perl scripts by Rasmus Lerdorf in 1994

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PHP Security

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  1. PHP Security Ryan Dunn Jason Pack

  2. Outline • PHP Overview • Common Security Issues • Advanced Security Issues • Easiest Ways to Secure PHP? • Examples

  3. PHP Overview • Originally designed as a small set of Perl scripts by Rasmus Lerdorf in 1994 • PHP is now a server-side, HTML-embedded, cross-platform scripting language • The most deployed server-side scripting language, running on around 9 of the 37 million domains in a April 2002 Netcraft survey. • PHP's own figures show PHP usage (measured on a per-domain basis) growing at around 5% per month.

  4. PHP Popularity

  5. PHP Security Overview • PHP interpreter has potential to access the entire host • By default, PHP makes all variables globally accessible by name, including session variables and cookies

  6. Common Security Issues • GET vs. POST • Buffer Overflows • SQL Injections • Disabling PHP Error Messages • Validating the Session • Included Files Extension • Comments in HTML Source

  7. GET vs. POST (1) • GET – data is passed by appending the variable/value pair to the URL • Truncated after 8,192 characters • Even SSL will not encrypt data • Raw HTTP Transmission: GET /process.php?yourname=fred+smith&email=fred@nowhere.com HTTP/1.0Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, */*Accept-Language: en-usUser-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; Q312461)Host: www.fluffygerbils.comConnection: keep-alive

  8. GET vs. POST (2) • POST – variables sent in body of URL request • No size limit • SSL will encrypt the data

  9. GET vs. POST (3) • POST Raw HTTP Transmission: POST /process.php HTTP/1.0Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, */*Accept-Language: en-usContent-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencodedUser-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; Q312461)Host: www.fluffygerbils.comContent-Length: 94Pragma: no-cacheConnection: keep-aliveyourname=fred+smithemail=fred@nowhere.comcomment=I+have+no+comment

  10. Buffer Overflows • No runtime memory allocation • No pointers • Thus, no buffer overflows created by PHP code • Overflows limited to PHP interpreter and its extensions • Stay on top of PHP updates to avoid issues

  11. SQL Injections • PHP programmers often take user input directly to construct SQL queries • Malicious users can exploit this by entering “; malicious SQL code” in the $username field mysql_db_query ($DB, "SELECT something FROM table WHERE name=$username");

  12. Disabling PHP Error Messages • By default, PHP will dump error messages to the client’s browser • Error messages can contain sensitive information

  13. Validating the Session • Store status variables as session variable or a cookie • Session variables are less likely to be compromised since they are stored on the server

  14. Included Files Extension • A common PHP practice is to name included files with the ‘.inc’ extension • Malicious users can access the entire file’s content through a direct reference in the URL • Apache does not know to encode ‘.inc’ files even though they are PHP scripts, so it displays it in plain text

  15. Comments in HTML Source • Commenting code is important, but beginning PHP programmers may put sensitive information in their comments for debugging purposes • If placed improperly these comments could be output in HTML source code

  16. Advanced Security Issues • Superglobals • Encrypted Scripting • Safe Mode

  17. Superglobals (1) • Superglobals are pre-defined arrays that store variable/value pairs • There are 9 different arrays • $_GET[…] $_SERVER[…] • $_POST[…] $_FILES[…] • $_COOKIE[…] $_ENV[…] • $_REQUEST[…] $_SESSION[…] • $_GLOBAL[…]

  18. Superglobals (2) • Superglobals are useful because you know the value in the variable was obtained from a specific source • For Example: • $_POST[username] • vs. • $username

  19. Encrypted Scripting • It is possible to sniff the packets exchanged between the browser and the server • PHP provides no method to encrypt the transmission of the data (but the data itself can be encrypted) • Installing SSL on Apache allows your transmission to be encrypted

  20. Safe Mode • PHP safe mode makes it so that it can only execute scripts in a restricted environment • Execution of scripts is restricted to defined directories • Scripts cannot call programs outside defined directories • Provides “damage control” if application is compromised

  21. Easiest Ways to Secure PHP? • Never trust user input! • Look beyond application’s intended use • Stay current on PHP updates/syntax • Be aware of PHP’s scope • NEVER TRUST USER INPUT!!!

  22. References • http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/phppr/chapter/php_pkt.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Php • http://www.faqs.org/docs/gazette/superglobals.html • http://www.sklar.com/page/article/owasp-top-ten • http://www.developer.com/lang/print.php/918141 & /922871 • http://www.onlamp.com/lpt/a/4045 • http://www.devshed.com/c/a/PHP/PHP-Security-Mistakes/

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