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- .TH libcurl-security 3 "13 Feb 2018" "libcurl" "libcurl security"
- .SH NAME
- libcurl-security \- security considerations when using libcurl
- .SH "Security"
- The libcurl project takes security seriously. The library is written with
- caution and precautions are taken to mitigate many kinds of risks encountered
- while operating with potentially malicious servers on the Internet. It is a
- powerful library, however, which allows application writers to make trade-offs
- between ease of writing and exposure to potential risky operations. If used
- the right way, you can use libcurl to transfer data pretty safely.
- Many applications are used in closed networks where users and servers can
- (possibly) be trusted, but many others are used on arbitrary servers and are
- fed input from potentially untrusted users. Following is a discussion about
- some risks in the ways in which applications commonly use libcurl and
- potential mitigations of those risks. It is by no means comprehensive, but
- shows classes of attacks that robust applications should consider. The Common
- Weakness Enumeration project at https://cwe.mitre.org/ is a good reference for
- many of these and similar types of weaknesses of which application writers
- should be aware.
- .SH "Command Lines"
- If you use a command line tool (such as curl) that uses libcurl, and you give
- options to the tool on the command line those options can very likely get read
- by other users of your system when they use 'ps' or other tools to list
- currently running processes.
- To avoid these problems, never feed sensitive things to programs using command
- line options. Write them to a protected file and use the \-K option to avoid
- this.
- .SH ".netrc"
- \&.netrc is a pretty handy file/feature that allows you to login quickly and
- automatically to frequently visited sites. The file contains passwords in
- clear text and is a real security risk. In some cases, your .netrc is also
- stored in a home directory that is NFS mounted or used on another network
- based file system, so the clear text password will fly through your network
- every time anyone reads that file!
- For applications that enable .netrc use, a user who manage to set the right
- URL might then be possible to pass on passwords.
- To avoid these problems, don't use .netrc files and never store passwords in
- plain text anywhere.
- .SH "Clear Text Passwords"
- Many of the protocols libcurl supports send name and password unencrypted as
- clear text (HTTP Basic authentication, FTP, TELNET etc). It is very easy for
- anyone on your network or a network nearby yours to just fire up a network
- analyzer tool and eavesdrop on your passwords. Don't let the fact that HTTP
- Basic uses base64 encoded passwords fool you. They may not look readable at a
- first glance, but they very easily "deciphered" by anyone within seconds.
- To avoid this problem, use an authentication mechanism or other protocol that
- doesn't let snoopers see your password: Digest, CRAM-MD5, Kerberos, SPNEGO or
- NTLM authentication. Or even better: use authenticated protocols that protect
- the entire connection and everything sent over it.
- .SH "Un-authenticated Connections"
- Protocols that don't have any form of cryptographic authentication cannot
- with any certainty know that they communicate with the right remote server.
- If your application is using a fixed scheme or fixed host name, it is not safe
- as long as the connection is un-authenticated. There can be a
- man-in-the-middle or in fact the whole server might have been replaced by an
- evil actor.
- Un-authenticated protocols are unsafe. The data that comes back to curl may
- have been injected by an attacker. The data that curl sends might be modified
- before it reaches the intended server. If it even reaches the intended server
- at all.
- Remedies:
- .IP "Restrict operations to authenticated transfers"
- Ie use authenticated protocols protected with HTTPS or SSH.
- .IP "Make sure the server's certificate etc is verified"
- Never ever switch off certificate verification.
- .SH "Redirects"
- The \fICURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION(3)\fP option automatically follows HTTP
- redirects sent by a remote server. These redirects can refer to any kind of
- URL, not just HTTP. libcurl restricts the protocols allowed to be used in
- redirects for security reasons: only HTTP, HTTPS, FTP and FTPS are
- enabled by default. Applications may opt to restrict that set further.
- A redirect to a file: URL would cause the libcurl to read (or write) arbitrary
- files from the local filesystem. If the application returns the data back to
- the user (as would happen in some kinds of CGI scripts), an attacker could
- leverage this to read otherwise forbidden data (e.g.
- file://localhost/etc/passwd).
- If authentication credentials are stored in the ~/.netrc file, or Kerberos
- is in use, any other URL type (not just file:) that requires
- authentication is also at risk. A redirect such as
- ftp://some-internal-server/private-file would then return data even when
- the server is password protected.
- In the same way, if an unencrypted SSH private key has been configured for the
- user running the libcurl application, SCP: or SFTP: URLs could access password
- or private-key protected resources,
- e.g. sftp://user@some-internal-server/etc/passwd
- The \fICURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS(3)\fP and \fICURLOPT_NETRC(3)\fP options can be
- used to mitigate against this kind of attack.
- A redirect can also specify a location available only on the machine running
- libcurl, including servers hidden behind a firewall from the attacker.
- e.g. http://127.0.0.1/ or http://intranet/delete-stuff.cgi?delete=all or
- tftp://bootp-server/pc-config-data
- Applications can mitigate against this by disabling
- \fICURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION(3)\fP and handling redirects itself, sanitizing URLs
- as necessary. Alternately, an app could leave \fICURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION(3)\fP
- enabled but set \fICURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS(3)\fP and install a
- \fICURLOPT_OPENSOCKETFUNCTION(3)\fP callback function in which addresses are
- sanitized before use.
- .SH "Local Resources"
- A user who can control the DNS server of a domain being passed in within a URL
- can change the address of the host to a local, private address which a
- server-side libcurl-using application could then use. e.g. the innocuous URL
- http://fuzzybunnies.example.com/ could actually resolve to the IP address of a
- server behind a firewall, such as 127.0.0.1 or 10.1.2.3. Applications can
- mitigate against this by setting a \fICURLOPT_OPENSOCKETFUNCTION(3)\fP and
- checking the address before a connection.
- All the malicious scenarios regarding redirected URLs apply just as well to
- non-redirected URLs, if the user is allowed to specify an arbitrary URL that
- could point to a private resource. For example, a web app providing a
- translation service might happily translate file://localhost/etc/passwd and
- display the result. Applications can mitigate against this with the
- \fICURLOPT_PROTOCOLS(3)\fP option as well as by similar mitigation techniques
- for redirections.
- A malicious FTP server could in response to the PASV command return an IP
- address and port number for a server local to the app running libcurl but
- behind a firewall. Applications can mitigate against this by using the
- \fICURLOPT_FTP_SKIP_PASV_IP(3)\fP option or \fICURLOPT_FTPPORT(3)\fP.
- Local servers sometimes assume local access comes from friends and trusted
- users. An application that expects http://example.com/file_to_read that and
- instead gets http://192.168.0.1/my_router_config might print a file that would
- otherwise be protected by the firewall.
- Allowing your application to connect to local hosts, be it the same machine
- that runs the application or a machine on the same local network, might be
- possible to exploit by an attacker who then perhaps can "port-scan" the
- particular hosts - depending on how the application and servers acts.
- .SH "IPv6 Addresses"
- libcurl will normally handle IPv6 addresses transparently and just as easily
- as IPv4 addresses. That means that a sanitizing function that filters out
- addresses like 127.0.0.1 isn't sufficient--the equivalent IPv6 addresses ::1,
- ::, 0:00::0:1, ::127.0.0.1 and ::ffff:7f00:1 supplied somehow by an attacker
- would all bypass a naive filter and could allow access to undesired local
- resources. IPv6 also has special address blocks like link-local and
- site-local that generally shouldn't be accessed by a server-side libcurl-using
- application. A poorly-configured firewall installed in a data center,
- organization or server may also be configured to limit IPv4 connections but
- leave IPv6 connections wide open. In some cases, setting
- \fICURLOPT_IPRESOLVE(3)\fP to CURL_IPRESOLVE_V4 can be used to limit resolved
- addresses to IPv4 only and bypass these issues.
- .SH Uploads
- When uploading, a redirect can cause a local (or remote) file to be
- overwritten. Applications must not allow any unsanitized URL to be passed in
- for uploads. Also, \fICURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION(3)\fP should not be used on
- uploads. Instead, the applications should consider handling redirects itself,
- sanitizing each URL first.
- .SH Authentication
- Use of \fICURLOPT_UNRESTRICTED_AUTH(3)\fP could cause authentication
- information to be sent to an unknown second server. Applications can mitigate
- against this by disabling \fICURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION(3)\fP and handling
- redirects itself, sanitizing where necessary.
- Use of the CURLAUTH_ANY option to \fICURLOPT_HTTPAUTH(3)\fP could result in
- user name and password being sent in clear text to an HTTP server. Instead,
- use CURLAUTH_ANYSAFE which ensures that the password is encrypted over the
- network, or else fail the request.
- Use of the CURLUSESSL_TRY option to \fICURLOPT_USE_SSL(3)\fP could result in
- user name and password being sent in clear text to an FTP server. Instead,
- use CURLUSESSL_CONTROL to ensure that an encrypted connection is used or else
- fail the request.
- .SH Cookies
- If cookies are enabled and cached, then a user could craft a URL which
- performs some malicious action to a site whose authentication is already
- stored in a cookie. e.g. http://mail.example.com/delete-stuff.cgi?delete=all
- Applications can mitigate against this by disabling cookies or clearing them
- between requests.
- .SH "Dangerous SCP URLs"
- SCP URLs can contain raw commands within the scp: URL, which is a side effect
- of how the SCP protocol is designed. e.g.
- scp://user:pass@host/a;date >/tmp/test;
- Applications must not allow unsanitized SCP: URLs to be passed in for
- downloads.
- .SH "file://"
- By default curl and libcurl support file:// URLs. Such a URL is always an
- access, or attempted access, to a local resource. If your application wants to
- avoid that, keep control of what URLs to use and/or prevent curl/libcurl from
- using the protocol.
- By default, libcurl prohibits redirects to file:// URLs.
- .SH "Warning: file:// on Windows"
- The Windows operating system will automatically, and without any way for
- applications to disable it, try to establish a connection to another host over
- the network and access it (over SMB or other protocols), if only the correct
- file path is accessed.
- When first realizing this, the curl team tried to filter out such attempts in
- order to protect applications for inadvertent probes of for example internal
- networks etc. This resulted in CVE-2019-15601 and the associated security fix.
- However, we've since been made aware of the fact that the previous fix was far
- from adequate as there are several other ways to accomplish more or less the
- same thing: accessing a remote host over the network instead of the local file
- system.
- The conclusion we have come to is that this is a weakness or feature in the
- Windows operating system itself, that we as an application cannot safely
- protect users against. It would just be a whack-a-mole race we don't want to
- participate in. There are too many ways to do it and there's no knob we can
- use to turn off the practice.
- If you use curl or libcurl on Windows (any version), disable the use of the
- FILE protocol in curl or be prepared that accesses to a range of "magic paths"
- will potentially make your system try to access other hosts on your
- network. curl cannot protect you against this.
- .SH "What if the user can set the URL"
- Applications may find it tempting to let users set the URL that it can work
- on. That's probably fine, but opens up for mischief and trickery that you as
- an application author may want to address or take precautions against.
- If your curl-using script allow a custom URL do you also, perhaps
- unintentionally, allow the user to pass other options to the curl command line
- if creative use of special characters are applied?
- If the user can set the URL, the user can also specify the scheme part to
- other protocols that you didn't intend for users to use and perhaps didn't
- consider. curl supports over 20 different URL schemes. "http://" might be what
- you thought, "ftp://" or "imap://" might be what the user gives your
- application. Also, cross-protocol operations might be done by using a
- particular scheme in the URL but point to a server doing a different protocol
- on a non-standard port.
- Remedies:
- .IP "Use --proto"
- curl command lines can use \fI--proto\fP to limit what URL schemes it accepts
- .IP "Use CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS"
- libcurl programs can use \fICURLOPT_PROTOCOLS(3)\fP to limit what URL schemes it accepts
- .IP "consider not allowing the user to set the full URL"
- Maybe just let the user provide data for parts of it? Or maybe filter input to
- only allow specific choices?
- .SH "RFC 3986 vs WHATWG URL"
- curl supports URLs mostly according to how they are defined in RFC 3986, and
- has done so since the beginning.
- Web browsers mostly adhere to the WHATWG URL Specification.
- This deviance makes some URLs copied between browsers (or returned over HTTP
- for redirection) and curl not work the same way. This can mislead users into
- getting the wrong thing, connecting to the wrong host or otherwise not work
- identically.
- .SH "FTP uses two connections"
- When performing an FTP transfer, two TCP connections are used: one for setting
- up the transfer and one for the actual data.
- FTP is not only un-authenticated, but the setting up of the second transfer is
- also a weak spot. The second connection to use for data, is either setup with
- the PORT/EPRT command that makes the server connect back to the client on the
- given IP+PORT, or with PASV/EPSV that makes the server setup a port to listen
- to and tells the client to connect to a given IP+PORT.
- Again, un-authenticated means that the connection might be meddled with by a
- man-in-the-middle or that there's a malicious server pretending to be the
- right one.
- A malicious FTP server can respond to PASV commands with the IP+PORT of a
- totally different machine. Perhaps even a third party host, and when there are
- many clients trying to connect to that third party, it could create a
- Distributed Denial-Of-Service attack out of it! If the client makes an upload
- operation, it can make the client send the data to another site. If the
- attacker can affect what data the client uploads, it can be made to work as a
- HTTP request and then the client could be made to issue HTTP requests to third
- party hosts.
- An attacker that manages to control curl's command line options can tell curl
- to send an FTP PORT command to ask the server to connect to a third party host
- instead of back to curl.
- The fact that FTP uses two connections makes it vulnerable in a way that is
- hard to avoid.
- .SH "Denial of Service"
- A malicious server could cause libcurl to effectively hang by sending data
- very slowly, or even no data at all but just keeping the TCP connection open.
- This could effectively result in a denial-of-service attack. The
- \fICURLOPT_TIMEOUT(3)\fP and/or \fICURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT(3)\fP options can
- be used to mitigate against this.
- A malicious server could cause libcurl to download an infinite amount of data,
- potentially causing all of memory or disk to be filled. Setting the
- \fICURLOPT_MAXFILESIZE_LARGE(3)\fP option is not sufficient to guard against
- this. Instead, applications should monitor the amount of data received within
- the write or progress callback and abort once the limit is reached.
- A malicious HTTP server could cause an infinite redirection loop, causing a
- denial-of-service. This can be mitigated by using the
- \fICURLOPT_MAXREDIRS(3)\fP option.
- .SH "Arbitrary Headers"
- User-supplied data must be sanitized when used in options like
- \fICURLOPT_USERAGENT(3)\fP, \fICURLOPT_HTTPHEADER(3)\fP,
- \fICURLOPT_POSTFIELDS(3)\fP and others that are used to generate structured
- data. Characters like embedded carriage returns or ampersands could allow the
- user to create additional headers or fields that could cause malicious
- transactions.
- .SH "Server-supplied Names"
- A server can supply data which the application may, in some cases, use as a
- file name. The curl command-line tool does this with
- \fI--remote-header-name\fP, using the Content-disposition: header to generate
- a file name. An application could also use \fICURLINFO_EFFECTIVE_URL(3)\fP to
- generate a file name from a server-supplied redirect URL. Special care must be
- taken to sanitize such names to avoid the possibility of a malicious server
- supplying one like "/etc/passwd", "\\autoexec.bat", "prn:" or even ".bashrc".
- .SH "Server Certificates"
- A secure application should never use the \fICURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER(3)\fP
- option to disable certificate validation. There are numerous attacks that are
- enabled by applications that fail to properly validate server TLS/SSL
- certificates, thus enabling a malicious server to spoof a legitimate
- one. HTTPS without validated certificates is potentially as insecure as a
- plain HTTP connection.
- .SH "Report Security Problems"
- Should you detect or just suspect a security problem in libcurl or curl,
- contact the project curl security team immediately. See
- https://curl.haxx.se/dev/secprocess.html for details.
- .SH "Showing What You Do"
- Relatedly, be aware that in situations when you have problems with libcurl and
- ask someone for help, everything you reveal in order to get best possible help
- might also impose certain security related risks. Host names, user names,
- paths, operating system specifics, etc. (not to mention passwords of course)
- may in fact be used by intruders to gain additional information of a potential
- target.
- Be sure to limit access to application logs if they could hold private or
- security-related data. Besides the obvious candidates like user names and
- passwords, things like URLs, cookies or even file names could also hold
- sensitive data.
- To avoid this problem, you must of course use your common sense. Often, you
- can just edit out the sensitive data or just search/replace your true
- information with faked data.
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