Tuesday, September 11, 2012

SQL Injection,CSS attacks, Script attacks in Java or J2ee web applications


Preventing SQL Injection,CSS attacks, Script attacks  in Java or J2ee web applications.
====================================================================

To Prevent SQL Injection,CSS attacks, Script attackes  in Java J2ee based web applicataions we had to add filter which
will inspect each and every field that is submitted to the application.
But be careful as some times this filter may change the values of some inputs.
Eg: In our test app when we added this filter all  quotes like say for name was replacye by html equivalent.
The reason is there can be some fields like name say Ram'S (with an apostrophe).The apsotrophe here would be replaced
with its html Equivalent.So one way is not allow user to enter (by haveing validation in UI)  or
if you still need to allow then exclude that field from filter.
We had to exclude  few fields here for some hidden fields which is used by JSF to maintain state on client side.
The reason was when JSF was storing the client state it had some encrypted striung with quotes and
parenthisis. The filter would think that it was sql attack and would replace the quote with html Equivalent ,
As result JSF decoding of the client state would fail with "StreamCorruptedException".


package com.test.common;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Properties;
import javax.servlet.Filter;
import javax.servlet.FilterChain;
import javax.servlet.FilterConfig;
import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.ServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.ServletResponse;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import org.apache.log4j.LogManager;
import org.apache.log4j.Logger;

/**
 * @author reddy
 *  This class goes through the Request parameters and looks for
 *  any suspicious inputs which could be a SQL injected or some java
 *  script some user is trying to inject.
 */

public class SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter implements Filter {
 private static Logger LOGGER = LogManager.getLogger(SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter.class);
 private static Map<String,String>  excludeFieldsMap = new HashMap<String,String>();
 
 public void init(FilterConfig config) throws ServletException {
  //Looking for sql-xss-exclusion-filter.properties
  String propertiesFilePath = config.getInitParameter("properties_file");
  if (propertiesFilePath == null || propertiesFilePath.length() == 0) {
   LOGGER.warn("The properties_file parameter in web.xml for SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter is not specified.");

  } else {
    
      //If you  want to inspect every request parameter
      Properties props = new Properties();
      try {
   props.load(getClass().getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream(propertiesFilePath));

   Iterator<Object> itr = props.keySet().iterator();   

       while (itr.hasNext()) {
        String key = (String)itr.next();
        String value = (String)props.get(key);
        LOGGER.debug("Adding key="+key +" value="+value);
        excludeFieldsMap.put(key,value);
       }

       

       //Send this map to SqlInjectionAndXSSRequestWrapper. I made it static intentionally.
       SqlInjectionAndXSSRequestWrapper.excludeFieldsMap = excludeFieldsMap;
       
            } catch (IOException e) {
                LOGGER.fatal("Could not load properties file: " + propertiesFilePath, e);
                throw new ServletException("Could not load properties file: " + propertiesFilePath);
            }
  }
    }
 
 public void destroy() {



 }



 public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response,

   FilterChain chain) throws IOException, ServletException {

  chain.doFilter(new SqlInjectionAndXSSRequestWrapper((HttpServletRequest) request),

    response);

 }

 

}



sql-xss-exclusion-filter.properties
===================================
//Property file with Tokens to be excluded from our filter
//Lets Call this file as sql-xss-exclusion-filter.properties, PUT IN YOUR CLASSPATH
//The reason was when JSF was storing the client state it had some encrypted string with quotes
//and then filter would think that it was sql attack and would replace the quote which in trun would make
//jsf encoding fail with "StreamCorruptedException". As a result JSF couldnt restore client state in some cases.

# List of all fields that needs to be excluded from SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter
# Any fields thats not listed here will be inspected by the filter and if
# filter finds any thing suspicious (XSS or SQL attacks code) it will replace
# the contents.
# There are few fields like the jsf state and jsf tree which the filter should never edit
# else jsf cant restore the state and will throw streamcorrupted exceptions.
# Let the key and value be same so that we can load into map for easy operations. (I love maps for the ease of searching)

jsf_tree_64=jsf_tree_64

jsf_state_64=jsf_state_64




package com.test.common;

import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequestWrapper;
import org.apache.log4j.LogManager;
import org.apache.log4j.Logger;

/**
 * @author reddy
 * Used by the filter to remove any potential code sent as input parameter which has
 * XSS (Cross site scripting) and
 * More at :
 * http://ha.ckers.org/xss.html
 * http://www.symantec.com/connect/articles/detection-sql-injection-and-cross-site-scripting-attacks  
 *
 */

public class SqlInjectionAndXSSRequestWrapper extends HttpServletRequestWrapper {

 private static Logger logger = LogManager.getLogger(SqlInjectionAndXSSRequestWrapper.class);


 //The filter will set this map

 public static  Map<String,String>  excludeFieldsMap = new HashMap<String,String>();

 

 public SqlInjectionAndXSSRequestWrapper(HttpServletRequest servletRequest) {

  super(servletRequest);

 }



 public String[] getParameterValues(String parameter) {

  String[] values = super.getParameterValues(parameter);

  if (values == null) {

   return null;

  }

  int count = values.length;

  String[] encodedValues = new String[count];

  for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {

   encodedValues[i] = replaceXSSAndSqlInjection(values[i],parameter);

  }

  return encodedValues;

  /*

  for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {

   checkXSSAndSqlInjectionPresence(parameter,values[i]);

  }

  return values;

  */

 }



 public String getParameter(String parameter) {

  String value = super.getParameter(parameter);

  if (value == null) {

   return null;

  }

  return replaceXSSAndSqlInjection(value,parameter);

  //checkXSSAndSqlInjectionPresence(parameter,value);

  //return value;

 }



 public String getHeader(String name) {

  String value = super.getHeader(name);

  if (value == null){

   return null;

  }

  return replaceXSSAndSqlInjection(value,name);

 }

 

 /**

  * If its finds any XSS injection it will replace the values with html equivalent and
  * and for SQL injection it will replace few sql key words (insert, delete...etc)
  * @param value
  * @return
  */

 public static String replaceXSSAndSqlInjection(String value, String fieldName) {

  //The key and value will be same

  //Eg:jsf_tree_64=jsf_tree_64  - See sql-xss-exclusion-filter.properties

  //SO here we ignore any fields that we feel should not be inspeacted by this filter..

  String fieldToExclude = excludeFieldsMap.get(fieldName);

  if((fieldToExclude != null) &&(fieldToExclude.equalsIgnoreCase(fieldName))){

   logger.debug("The field name:"+ fieldName +" should not be inspected by SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter.");

   return value;

  }

  

  String orgValue = new String(value);

  //No < and > as it could be for some sql.

  value = value.replaceAll("<", "&lt;").replaceAll(">", "&gt;");

  //No () brackets as part of data....

  value = value.replaceAll("\\(", "&#40;").replaceAll("\\)", "&#41;");

  //Handle any apostrophe.  Can a name have this ??

  value = value.replaceAll("'", "&#39;");

  //Any java script stuff.

  value = value.replaceAll("eval\\((.*)\\)", "");

  value = value.replaceAll("[\\\"\\\'][\\s]*javascript:(.*)[\\\"\\\']","\"\"");

  value = value.replaceAll("script","");



  /*

   * This signature first looks out for the = sign or its hex equivalent (%3D).
   * It then allows for zero or more non-newline characters,
   * and then it checks for the single-quote, the double-dash or the semi-colon.
   * Detect either the hex equivalent of the single-quote, the single-quote itself or
   * the presence of the double-dash. These are SQL characters for MS SQL Server and Oracle,
   * which denote the beginning of a comment, and everything that follows is ignored.
   * See more info at
   * http://www.symantec.com/connect/articles/detection-sql-injection-and-cross-site-scripting-attacks
   * Regex for detecting SQL Injection meta-characters
   */

  value = value.replaceAll("/((\\%3D)|(=))[^\\n]*((\\%27)|(\')|(\\-\\-)|(\\%3B)|(;))/i","");

  

  /*

   * Regex for detecting SQL Injection with the UNION keyword
   *
   * (\%27)|(\') - the single-quote and its hex equivalent
   union - the keyword union
   */

  value = value.replaceAll("/((\\%27)|(\'))union/ix","");

  /*

   *

   * A typical SQL injection attempt of course revolves around the use of the single quote
   * to manipulate the original query so that it always results in a true value.
   *  Most of the examples that discuss this attack use the string 1'or'1'='1.
   *  However, detection of this string can be easily evaded by supplying a value
   *  such as 1'or2>1--. Thus the only part that is constant in this is the initial
   *  alphanumeric value, followed by a single-quote, and then followed by the word 'or'.
   *  The Boolean logic that comes after this may be varied to an extent where a generic pattern
   *  is either very complex or does not cover all the variants. Thus these attacks can be detected to a fair
   *  degree of accuracy by using the next regular expression
   * 
   *  Regex for typical SQL Injection attack

   *  /\w*((\%27)|(\'))((\%6F)|o|(\%4F))((\%72)|r|(\%52))/ix

   */

  value = value.replaceAll("/\\w*((\\%27)|(\\'))((\\%6F)|o|(\\%4F))((\\%72)|r|(\\%52))/ix",""); 

  

  //checking for the keywords and a combination of quotes with conjunctions and quotes with double pipe (||)

  value = value.replaceAll("insert|update|delete|having|drop|(\'|%27).(and|or).(\'|%27)|(\'|%27).%7C{0,2}|%7C{2}","");  

  

  //Regex for "<img src" CSS attack

  value = value.replaceAll("/((\\%3C)|<)((\\%69)|i|(\\%49))((\\%6D)|m|(\\%4D))((\\%67)|g|(\\%47))[^\n]+((\\%3E)|>)/I","");

  

  if(logger.isDebugEnabled()){

   //Lets print only if debug is enable and if the values got changed.

   //Add as safety net

   if((orgValue != null) &&(value!= null) &&(!orgValue.equalsIgnoreCase(value))){

    logger.debug(" Value was changed by Filter from :"+ orgValue);

    logger.debug("          TO:"+ value);

   }

  }

  return value;

 }
}
web.xml:
=======
In your web.xml now configure the filter
<!--  Filter for preventing cross site attacks and Sql injection attacks. -->

 <filter>
  <filter-name>SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter</filter-name>
  <filter-class>com.test.common.SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter</filter-class>
  <init-param>
   <param-name>properties_file</param-name>
   <param-value>sql-xss-exclusion-filter.properties</param-value>
  </init-param>
 </filter>
<


!-- 
 Filter for preventing cross site attacks and Sql injection attacks.
 Include all file extensions. JSF, JSP
-->
  <filter-mapping>
   <filter-name>SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter</filter-name>
   <url-pattern>*.jsp</url-pattern>   
   <dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher>
  </filter-mapping>
  <filter-mapping>
   <filter-name>SqlInjectionAndXSSFilter</filter-name>
   <url-pattern>*.jsf</url-pattern>   
   <dispatcher>REQUEST</dispatcher>
  </filter-mapping>


You now try to enter some value in text fields on the UI in your application. The filter will intercept and
replace the html equivalent.So if you dont want a field to be intercepted you can add those fields
in sql-xss-exclusion-filter.properties

Hope this helps. If you have better idea or approach  or if you like this article
please leave your suggestions or comments below.