CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2014/ch1a 23 ss

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Security Features in Rails 4.x

This wiki aims to highlight all the security features in a popular web application framework: Rails 4.x


Threats Against Web Applications

The threats against web applications include

Cookie Management

Cookies are used to maintain stateful sessions in HTTP. The cookies typically contain the user's session id which is used to identify the user. By stealing it, the attacker can use the application in the victim's name. Hence programmers should not store sensitive data in cookies. The fix is

Use SSL

SSL prevents the attacker from sniffing the cookie from the network. config.force_ssl = true

New Session Identifier

Configure Rails to issue a new session identifier and declare the old one invalid after a successful login. This prevents "Session Fixation".

Timeout Cookies

Set the expiry time stamp of the cookie to a small value.

Cross Site Scripting (XSS)

An attacker can inject client site executable code. When the victim renders it, it can steal the cookie, hijack the session and redirect the victim to a different page.

Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF)

This attack method works by including malicious code or a link in a page that accesses a web application that the user is believed to have authenticated. If the session for that web application has not timed out, an attacker may execute unauthorized commands.

Security Token

All non GET request should use a security token.

Redirection

File Upload

Trojan horse

Security Enhancements

CSRF via Leaky #match Routes

Regular Expression Anchors in Format Validations

Clickjacking

User-Readable Sessions

Unresolved Issues

Verbose Servers Headers

Binding to 0.0.0.0

Versioned Secret Tokens

Logging Values in SQL statements

Offsite Redirects

Reference

http://blog.codeclimate.com/blog/2013/03/27/rails-insecure-defaults/

http://guides.rubyonrails.org/security.html