[drupal-devel] [feature] Avoid session hijacking
Carl McDade
drupal-devel at drupal.org
Sun Apr 3 11:48:42 UTC 2005
Issue status update for http://drupal.org/node/19845
Project: Drupal
Version: cvs
Component: base system
Category: feature requests
Priority: critical
Assigned to: chx
Reported by: chx
Updated by: Carl McDade
Status: patch
It is a good idea. but wouldn't it be easier and more accomadating to
use a an md5 key (base it on something hidden like the email address) ?
Say set a key into the session id and set a cookie with the key in it
and compare them on page load?
Carl McDade
Previous comments:
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April 2, 2005 - 00:50 : chx
Attachment: http://drupal.org/files/issues/bindip.patch (896 bytes)
This would make session hijacking more than a bit harder.
The code can be compacted even more, but I did not dare.
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April 2, 2005 - 01:51 : danielc
IP's can change during a session. So, this isn't a good idea.
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April 2, 2005 - 02:23 : chx
I read a Zope coders' thread [1] on this, and they proposed it as
optional, but on as default. So, admin/settings? Or -- and I'd prefer
this one -- settings.php?
[1] http://mail.zope.org/pipermail/zope-coders/2004-October/005239.html
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April 2, 2005 - 03:18 : vauxia
The concern over transient IPs is only going to get worse as time goes
by.
You've got your load-balanced proxy servers, dropped-and-restored
dial-up connections (yes, people still do use dial-up!). plus there
are all those laptops and handheld devices accessing various wireless
and wired networks throughout the day.
On an average day, my laptop accesses the internet from no less than
3-4 different IP addresses, and I would get right feisty if I kept
losing my Drupal session every time. I work with a lot of people who
administer Drupal sites but aren't that technically adept. If they had
a problem with feisty laptop owners I would want them to be able to
change the settings easily, which means that the settings should be in
admin.
Many ISPs and most corporations use some kind of NAT, which means that
binding to IP addresses isn't that effective anyway. True, you limit
the number of clients that can use a session by restricting to IP - but
I'm more concerned about my coworker impersonating me than I am about a
random stranger lucking out with my session_id. So restricting by IP
causes problems without really fixing any real ones.
One thought is to bind the session to USER_AGENT. It is still
guessable and spoofable, and certainly not perfect. But it does not
change for at least as long as the user keeps their browser open and
can vary quite significantly (browser, plug-ins, revision/build, OS,
etc.). It has many benefits over using the IP, with the only real
trade-off being that it is easier to spoof.
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April 2, 2005 - 15:57 : kbahey
I agree that this should not be included as a standard features.
Entire ISPs and even countries are behind proxies that could change the
IP address within the same session. This would cause havoc for those
behind such proxies. They would not be able to have a meaningful Drupal
session at all.
-1 for that reason.
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April 2, 2005 - 16:33 : chx
Attachment: http://drupal.org/files/issues/session.inc_3.patch (686 bytes)
So be it.
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April 2, 2005 - 16:33 : chx
Forgot to change the title.
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April 2, 2005 - 16:43 : kbahey
That is more like it.
I can't think of a case where the user agent would change between
sessions.
I think some corporations mask the referer as a security/privacy
measure, and perhaps the user agent too. But even if they do so, they
would not change it mid session.
+1 on this feature/patch.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 2, 2005 - 19:41 : chx
Attachment: http://drupal.org/files/issues/session.inc_4.patch (1.14 KB)
For logged in users, SID is changing on every page load. Hijack this.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 2, 2005 - 20:09 : kbahey
The idea is good.
However, this introduces two extra SQL queries per page load per logged
in user.
One is an INSERT and the other is a SELECT.
Is this overhead acceptable for large sites? How would it impact
performance?
Needs to be quantified/benchmarked.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 2, 2005 - 20:41 : chx
Attachment: http://drupal.org/files/issues/session.inc_5.patch (1.91 KB)
You mean, a DELETE and an INSERT? Well, let's see this version... still
a DELETE plus for regged user, but for new anon sessions we have only
one INSERT instead of an INSERT and an UPDATE. In sess_write, UPDATE
happens only for anonymous users who had a session before. For those
without a session, and this includes new anon sessions and every logged
in user, an INSERT happens. This made the INSERT in sess_read
unnecessary.
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