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User and Security Management

User and Security Management. Security Management in Web Applications. We all know this page. Would we want all to know this page?. Problem Formulation. Want to restrict access to certain Web pages Must answer the following questions Which pages should be restricted?

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User and Security Management

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  1. User and Security Management

  2. Security Management in Web Applications

  3. We all know this page...

  4. Would we want all to know this page?

  5. Problem Formulation • Want to restrict access to certain Web pages • Must answer the following questions • Which pages should be restricted? • Who should access restricted pages? • How should users be authenticated? • Should authentication data be encrypted?

  6. Authentication Methods • Several authentication methods are used: • Declarative Security • HTTP-level mechanisms • Basic authentication scheme • Digest access authentication scheme • Server-level mechanisms • Programmatic Security

  7. HTTP Basic Mechanism • In the basic authentication scheme of HTTP, the user's name and password need to be sent with each request for a protected resource • When the server gets a request for a protected resource, it checks whether that request has the HTTP header Authorization:Basicusername:password • If the name and password are accepted by the server (i.e., are those of a user that has the privilege to get the page), then the requested page is returned

  8. HTTP Basic Mechanism • If the request does not have the authorization header or the name and password are not accepted, then the server replies with 401 (unauthorized) • An 401 response can have the header WWW-Authenticate:Basic realm="realm-name" • That is, "in order to get this resource, you will have to authenticate using the basic method" • Tell the user to supply authentication for pages in realm-name

  9. Declarative Security: BASIC GET E.xsl OK + Content Realm A /a/A.html /a/B.jsp Realm B /b/C.css E.xsl /b/D.xml F.xml

  10. Declarative Security: BASIC GET /a/B.jsp 401 + Basic realm="A" Realm A /a/A.html /a/B.jsp Realm B /b/C.css E.xsl /b/D.xml F.xml

  11. Declarative Security: BASIC GET /a/B.jsp + user:pass OK + Content Realm A /a/A.html /a/B.jsp Realm B /b/C.css E.xsl /b/D.xml F.xml

  12. Declarative Security: BASIC GET /a/A.html + user:pass OK + Content Realm A /a/A.html /a/B.jsp Realm B /b/C.css E.xsl /b/D.xml F.xml

  13. Browser Cooperation • Throughout the session, the browser stores the user-name and password and automatically sends the authorization header in either one of the following cases: • The requested resource is under the directory of the originally authenticated resource • The browser received 401 from the Web server and the WWW-Authenticate header has the same realm as the previous protected resource

  14. Digest Access Scheme • The most serious security flaw in the basic scheme is that the name and password are sent unencrypted, and hence everyone on the network path can read it • If an attacker snoops a request with basic authentication, she can access to the whole protection space of the resource • The digest access authentication scheme solves many of the flaws of the basic schemes, such as the one above

  15. Digest Operation • Like the basic, the digest scheme requires that authentication data is sent with each request for a protected resource • However, passwords are not sent in clear text • The idea is to use a one-way hash, such asMD5 • A one-way hash H is a mapping of strings that has the following properties: • It is "easy" to compute H(x), given the input x • It is "hard" to compute x, given the mapping H(x)

  16. Digest Operation (cont) • In the digest scheme, instead of sending the password x in clear text, the client sends H(y) • y is the concatenation of the user name, the password, an opaque generated by the server, the request URI, and more (why is the opaque needed?) • A server that gets digested authentication data repeats the same encryption process and compares its output with the given H(y) • More details can be found in RFC 2617

  17. Server-Level Authentication • A Web server can use its own authentication mechanisms rather than those of HTTP • Typically, server-level mechanisms act as follows • The server requires authentication by redirecting the client to a special HTML form • If authentication succeeds, then the server stores the username in the corresponding session object • Note that the browser and the HTTP headers are oblivious to server-level authentication

  18. Programmatic Security • In declarative security, a page is either accessible to a user or is not • But what if we wanted a page to include some data that will only be shown to privileged users? • E.g., the grades of the user • In programmatic security, we enhance security checks in dynamic pages (e.g., JSP) • Using this approach, an application can generate different contents for different users

  19. Declarative-Security: Pros & Cons • Advantage: Application programs (i.e., JSP and Servlets) do not have to do anything special • Advantage: Security holes due to bugs are less probable • Disadvantage: Server-specific process • Disadvantage: All or nothing security • users can or cannot see the page • sometimes, what we really want is for the page content to be dependent on the user

  20. Authentication Management in Tomcat

  21. Declarative Security in Tomcat To apply declarative security in Tomcat: • Define roles and users • A user has a username and a password • Define the restricted pages and the roles that can access them • Define the authentication method that is used in the Web application

  22. Defining Users and Roles • Create a database that stores users and roles • A table that stores usernames and passwords • A table that stores usernames and roles • Tell Tomcat how to access your tables in the file TOMCAT_BASE/conf/server.xml • Users and roles can be dynamically added to the database

  23. An Example createtableusers ( usernamevarchar(30) notnullprimarykey, pass varchar(30) not null ); createtableusers_roles ( usernamevarchar(30) not null, rolevarchar(30) not null, primarykey (username,role), foreignkey (username) references users(username) );

  24. In server.xml <Realm className="org.apache.catalina.realm.JDBCRealm" driverName="org.postgresql.Driver" connectionURL="jdbc:postgresql://dbserver/public?user=snoopy" userTable="users" userNameCol="username" userCredCol="pass" userRoleTable="users_roles" roleNameCol="role"/>

  25. Static Users and Roles You can alternatively define a static set of users and roles in $CATALINA_BASE/conf/tomcat-users.xml <tomcat-users> <role rolename="members"/> [more roles...] <user username="snoopy" password="snoopass" roles="members"/> [more users...] </tomcat-users>

  26. Tomcat Manager • The default resource of users is the file tomcat-users • If you use database users, then you need to add a manager for Tomcat to your tables • Otherwise, you (and Eclipse) will not be able to log into the manager application • A manager is a user that belongs to the role "manager"

  27. Defining Restrictions in web.xml <security-constraint> <web-resource-collection> <web-resource-name>restricted one</web-resource-name> <url-pattern>/restricted1/*</url-pattern> </web-resource-collection> <web-resource-collection> <web-resource-name>restricted two</web-resource-name> <url-pattern>/restricted2/*</url-pattern> </web-resource-collection>

  28. Defining Restrictions in web.xml <auth-constraint> <role-name>members</role-name> </auth-constraint> </security-constraint> <login-config>...</login-config> <security-role> <role-name>members</role-name> </security-role>  

  29. BASIC Authentication in Tomcat Add to the application's web.xml the login method (BASIC) and your chosen realm name <login-config> <auth-method>BASIC</auth-method>     <realm-name>Members</realm-name> </login-config>

  30. FORM-Based Authentication in Tomcat • Tomcat provides a built-in form-based authentication • In the first request to a restricted page, the server forwards the request to a login page • Using the form in the login page, the user submits its login and password to a special URL of the server which is automatically handled by Tomcat. • If authentication is successful, the special URL stores the information in the session object and forwards the requerst the the restricted page originally requested (how does Tomcat know which page this is?) • On subsequent requests for restricted pages, the server checks the session to see if it contains suitable authentication, and if so the requested page is returned (instead of forwarding to the login page)

  31. Add to web.xml <login-config> <auth-method>FORM</auth-method> <form-login-config> <form-login-page>/admin/login.html </form-login-page> <form-error-page>/admin/login-error.html </form-error-page> </form-login-config> </login-config>

  32. Create A Login Page <html> <head><title>Log In</title></head> <body style="background-color:yellow"> <h2>Log in for accessing this resource.</h2> <formaction="j_security_check"method="post"> <p>Login: <inputtype="text"name="j_username"/></p> <p>Password: <inputtype="password" name="j_password"/></p> <p><inputtype="submit"value="Log In"/></p> </form> </body> </html> myApp/admin/login.html

  33. Create an Error Page <html> <head> <title>Login Failure</title> </head> <bodystyle="background-color:yellow"> <h1>Wrong username and password!</h1> </body> </html> myApp/admin/login-error.html

  34. SSL Connections

  35. Security on the Internet • The Internet is used to transmit sensitive data from clients to servers and vice-versa • User passwords • Credit card numbers • Private client data on remote servers (e.g., Banks) • However, data packets are read by several computers on the way from the client to the server (and vice-versa) • Routers, proxies, etc.

  36. Security on the Internet (cont) • For secure communication, the following should be provided: • Only the server can read the client requests • Only the client can read the server's responses • Only the client can send requests on behalf of itself • Only the server can send responses on behalf of itself • In short, no one should be able to interfere in the interaction, either by reading the transferred data or by impersonating one of the sides

  37. Symmetric and Asymmetric Keys • Data can be encrypted and decrypted using keys, which are simply large numbers • Symmetric keys: the same key is used for both encoding and decoding of the message • Asymmetric keys: one key is used to encode the message, and another is used to decode it • It is considered practically impossible to decode a message without knowing the decoding key

  38. The RSA Cryptography System • RSA was developed in 1977 by Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Leonard Adleman • It is the based on the asymmetric key mechanism: • Each participant has a private key and a public key • The public key is known to all and the private key is kept in secret within its owner • Asymmetric keys: the public keyis the encoding key and the private key is the decoding key

  39. Secure Connection: A Naive Approach • Consider the following protocol: • Server and Client send their public keys to each other • Data is encrypted using the public key of the receiver • What is wrong with this protocol? • Encryption methods (public keys) are known to everyone - everyone can impersonate the participants • A participant cannot tell whether its received key was indeed sent by the other participant

  40. SSL Connections • The SSL (Secure Socket Layer) protocol is used to manage security of message transmission on the Internet • Data encryption and decryption is based on symmetric and asymmetric keys • The HTTPS (HTTP over SSL) protocol is actually the HTTP protocol above SSL transportation

  41. SSL in the Network Layers Email Protocols HTTP SSL TCP/IP

  42. The SSL Handshake hello + SSL settings SSL Settings + Certificate 1. Client gets the Server's certificate Is this a good certificate? Client Server

  43. The SSL Handshake 2. Client creates a master secret and shares it with the server Client Server

  44. The SSL Handshake 3. Client and server create symmetric session keys from the master secret Client Server

  45. The SSL Handshake (Http Request) (Http Response) Data is transferred using the session keys Client Server

  46. SSL Certificates • To assure that the replier of the first request is the server, the server sends a certificate • The certificate contains both the server's name and its public key • The certificate is issued by a Certificate Authority (CA), which is known to the client in advance • For example: VeriSign, Thawte, RSA Secure Server, etc. • CA signs the certificate using a digital signature, which the client can verify using a method similar to the private-public key method

  47. The Server's Certificate Public Key Serial Number Validity Period Server's Name Issuer's Name Issuer's Digital Signature

  48. An Example: The Certificate of bankleumi.co.il

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