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Banned APIs and Sin Within!

Banned APIs and Sin Within!. Michael Howard mikehow@microsoft.com. Who Is This Guy?. mikehow@microsoft.com Christian (imperfect in every possible way!) Microsoft employee for 20 years Always in security Worked on the Microsoft SDL since inception. Goals and Non-Goals.

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Banned APIs and Sin Within!

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  1. Banned APIs and Sin Within! Michael Howard mikehow@microsoft.com

  2. Who Is This Guy? • mikehow@microsoft.com • Christian (imperfect in every possible way!) • Microsoft employee for 20 years • Always in security • Worked on the Microsoft SDL since inception

  3. Goals and Non-Goals • I am not one for drawing analogies • “Security Analogies are usually Wrong” http://blogs.msdn.com/b/michael_howard/archive/2006/03/09/547575.aspx • I use quotes from the Bible to compare/contrast software security • “The Bible is correct, your code is not.” :-)

  4. If cars operated in an environment like the Internet, they would… • Be driven by people with little regard for safe automobile operation. • Have their windshields shot out every 60 secs. • Once you have bullet-proof glass, the bad guys place nails at freeway off-ramps next to signs like, “free coffee this way” • and someone is always trying to steal your keys • and pull out your sparkplugs • and siphon your gas • Talking of gas, you fill up at a Shell station, only to realize the gas really isn’t gas, it’s vegetable oil and sand • Oh, that gas station isn’t a Shell station, it certainly looked like one, but they took your credit card details anyway • As this all goes on, you can’t see the adversary • And the adversaries are sharing new weapons with each other

  5. The SDL • A set of process changes that help improve software security • Over 100 requirements and recommendations • About 30 deal with memory corruption • Removing banned APIs is one such requirement

  6. What Are The Banned APIs? • Mostly memory corruption APIs • strcpy … • strcat … • strncpy … • strncat … • sprintf … • gets …

  7. Banned APIs • strcpy, strcpyA, strcpyW, wcscpy, _tcscpy, _mbscpy, StrCpy, StrCpyA, StrCpyW, lstrcpy, lstrcpyA, lstrcpyW, _tccpy, _mbccpy • strcat, strcatA, strcatW, wcscat, _tcscat, _mbscat, StrCat, StrCatA, StrCatW, lstrcat, lstrcatA, lstrcatW, StrCatBuff, StrCatBuffA, StrCatBuffW, StrCatChainW, _tccat, _mbccat • strncpy, wcsncpy, _tcsncpy, _mbsncpy, _mbsnbcpy, StrCpyN, StrCpyNA, StrCpyNW, StrNCpy, strcpynA, StrNCpyA, StrNCpyW, lstrcpyn, lstrcpynA, lstrcpynW • strncat, wcsncat, _tcsncat, _mbsncat, _mbsnbcat, StrCatN, StrCatNA, StrCatNW, StrNCat, StrNCatA, StrNCatW, lstrncat, lstrcatnA, lstrcatnW, lstrcatn • CharToOem, CharToOemA, CharToOemW, OemToChar, OemToCharA, OemToCharW, CharToOemBuffA, CharToOemBuffW • wnsprintf, wnsprintfA, wnsprintfW, sprintfW, sprintfA, wsprintf, wsprintfW, wsprintfA, sprintf, swprintf, _stprintf, _snwprintf, _snprintf, _sntprintf, wvsprintf, wvsprintfA, wvsprintfW, vsprintf, _vstprintf, vswprintf, _vsnprintf, _vsnwprintf, _vsntprintf, wvnsprintf, wvnsprintfA, wvnsprintfW • strtok, _tcstok, wcstok, _mbstok • makepath, _tmakepath, _makepath, _wmakepath, _splitpath, _tsplitpath, _wsplitpath • scanf, wscanf, _tscanf, sscanf, swscanf, _stscanf, snscanf, snwscanf, _sntscanf • _itoa, _itow, _i64toa, _i64tow, _ui64toa, _ui64tot, _ui64tow, _ultoa, _ultot, _ultow • gets, _getts, _gettws • IsBadWritePtr, IsBadHugeWritePtr, IsBadReadPtr, IsBadHugeReadPtr, IsBadCodePtr, IsBadStringPtr • memcpy

  8. PnP MS05-039 Zotob CONFIGRET ResDesToNtResource( IN PCVOID ResourceData, IN RESOURCEID ResourceType, IN ULONG ResourceLen, IN PCM_PARTIAL_RESOURCE_DESCRIPTOR pResDes, IN ULONG ulTag ) { case ResType_ClassSpecific: { PCS_RESOURCE pCsData = (PCS_RESOURCE)ResourceData; LPBYTE ptr = NULL; ptr = (LPBYTE)((LPBYTE)pResDes + sizeof(CM_PARTIAL_RESOURCE_DESCRIPTOR)); memcpy(ptr, pCsData->CS_Header.CSD_Signature + pCsData->CS_Header.CSD_LegacyDataOffset, pCsData->CS_Header.CSD_LegacyDataSize);

  9. PCT SChannel MS04-011 #define SSL2_MAX_CHALLENGE_LEN 32 typedef struct _Ssl2_Client_Hello { DWORD dwVer; DWORD cCipherSpecs; DWORD cbSessionID; DWORD cbChallenge; UCHAR SessionID[SSL3_SESSION_ID_LEN]; UCHAR Challenge[SSL2_MAX_CHALLENGE_LEN]; Ssl2_Cipher_Kind CipherSpecs[MAX_UNI_CIPHERS]; } Ssl2_Client_Hello, * PSsl2_Client_Hello; SP_STATUS Pct1SrvHandleUniHello(..., PSsl2_Client_Hello pHello,...) { Pct1_Client_Hello ClientHello; ... CopyMemory( ClientHello.Challenge,pHello->Challenge, pHello->cbChallenge);

  10. NNTP MS05-030 HRESULT CNewsStore::OnResponse(LPNNTPRESPONSE pResponse) { ... if (pResponse->state == NS_LIST) hr = _HandleListResponse(pResponse, FALSE) ... } HRESULT CNewsStore::_HandleListResponse(LPNNTPRESPONSE pResp, BOOL fNew) { LPSTR psz, pszCount; intnSize; char szGroupName[CCHMAX_FOLDER_NAME]; LPNNTPLIST pnl = &pResp->rList; for (DWORD i = 0; i < pnl->cLines; i++, m_op.dwProgress++) { psz = pnl->rgszLines[i]; while (*psz && !IsSpace(psz)) psz = CharNext(psz); nSize = (int)(psz-pnl->rgszLines[i]); if (nSize >= CCHMAX_FOLDER_NAME) nSize = CCHMAX_FOLDER_NAME - 1; CopyMemory(szGroupName, pnl->rgszLines[i], nSize); Last Updated 20060103

  11. LSASS MS04-011 Sasser VOID DsRolepDebugDumpRoutine( IN DWORD DebugFlag, IN LPWSTR Format, va_list arglist ) { #define DsRolepDebugDumpRoutine_BUFFERSIZE 1024 WCHAR OutputBuffer[DsRolepDebugDumpRoutine_BUFFERSIZE]; ... length += (ULONG) wvsprintfW(&OutputBuffer[length], Format, arglist); ... }

  12. How Do you Find Them? • #include <banned.h> • C4996 warnings

  13. The Replacements • Don’t use C++ as a glorified C! • Use std::string • Use strsafe.h • Use strcpy_setc

  14. Auto-replacement of Banned Functions • If the compiler knows the destination buffer size at compile time, it can automatically generate secure code • Add the following to auto-migrate functions to safe functions • #define _CRT_SECURE_CPP_OVERLOAD_STANDARD_NAMES (1) char buf[32]; strcpy(buf,src); char buf[32]; strcpy_s(buf,src,32);

  15. But Isn’t C dead? http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html

  16. The Leap of Faith • What about regressions? • In ten years, I have seen only one regression at Microsoft

  17. Effectiveness? • Over 25% of MSRC memory corruption vulns did not affect newer products simply because we banned the API(s) in question and replaced them with a more secure version • That’s low cost engineering at its best!

  18. Pop Quiz • What’s in an 8oz glass of wine? • What’s in an 8oz glass of poison? • What’s in an 8oz glass of wine with a drop of poison?

  19. Sin and Insecure Code Righteous Man + One Sin Sinful Man Well-Written Code + One Vulnerability Insecure System

  20. All Sin is the Same … • There is no “good” or “bad” sin, it’s all sin in God’s eyes. • There is no “Security Bulletin” scale for sin Critical: Adultery, Murder Important: Bearing False Witness Moderate: Stealing Low: Coveting

  21. … but insecure Code is not the Same • An anonymously accessible remote code execution vulnerability that gives you root is *way* worse than a local information disclosure vuln accessibly only by admins Critical: Remote code execution Important: Server DoS Moderate: Temporary Server DoS Low: Client DoS

  22. Banned APIs • We have banned over 120 APIs at Microsoft • They are great examples of “One-line” Sins

  23. Removing Sin • How do you remove Sin? • By replacing Sin with something not Sinful! • Easy to say, very hard to do. • How do you remove banned APIs? • By replacing them with something less dangerous! • Easy to say, easy to do. And I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature. I want to do what is right, but I can't. Romans 7:18

  24. Removal takes a Leap of Faith • Trust that God forgives your Sins • Trust that the banned API replacements don’t introduce regressions! Praise the Lord, … who forgives all your sins. Psalm 103:3

  25. How Do you Remove Banned APIs? • Admit you have banned APIs (admit you sin!) • Do something about it (admit the Lord into your heart) • Don’t repeat!

  26. Banned APIs and the Sin WithinSummary • Admit you sin • In life and in code • Do something about it • Study Romans • Remove Banned APIs • Put steps in place to help prevent Sin and banned APIs • Think!! • Use banned.h in all your C/C++ code

  27. Questions!?

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