Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

This section will explain in detail how you can undestand a vulnerabilty as reported by Kiuwan.

Contents

Table of Contents

The explanation is focused on injection-related vulnerabilities, as an example of complex vulnerabilities.

We will first provide an overview of Tainted Flow Analysis (the theoretical basis behind the scenes), and then we will focus on Kiuwan vulnerability reporting.

Tainted Flow Analysis

The root cause of many security breaches is trusting unvalidated input:. This could be:

  •  Input from the user, which could be considered as tainted (possibly controlled by an adversary), i.e user is considered as an untrusted source
  • Data, assuming it is untainted (must not be controlled by an adversary), i.e. sensitive data sinks rely on trusted (untainted) data

 

Info

Source locations are those code places from where data comes in, that can be potentially controlled by the user (or the environment) and must consequently be presumably considered as tainted (it may be used to build injection attacks).

Sink locations are those code places where consumed data must not be tainted.  

 

The goal of Tainted Flow Analysis is to detect tainted data flows:

Prove, for all possible sinks, that tainted data will never be used where untainted data is expected.

 

Info

Kiuwan implements Tainted Flow Analysis by inferring flows in the source code of your application:

  • What sinks are reached by what sources
  • If any flows are illegal, i.e., whether a tainted source may flow to an untainted sink without going across a sanitizer

When inferring flows from an untainted sink to a tainted source, Kiuwan can detect if any well-known sanitizer is used, dropping those flows and thus avoiding to raise false vulnerabilities.

Kiuwan contains a built-in library of sanitizers for every supported programming language and framework.

These sanitizers are commonly used directly by programmers or by frameworks. And Kiuwan detects the their use of them.

How to understand tainted-flow vulnerabilities

 

Vulnerabilities are reported under Code Security > Vulnerabilities.

 

 

Info

All the vulnerabilities of the same type (i.e. coming from the same Kiuwan rule that checks for it) are grouped under the Kiuwan rule name, indicating how many files are affected and how many vulnerabilities were found.

Finding Vulnerabilities

 

For our explanation, we will follow an example based on Waratek – Spiracle software, focusing on SQL injection vulnerabilities.

Search for the SQL injection vulnerabilities by entering "SQL" in the Search by rule name field. 

In this image, we can see that 2 files are affected: there is a sink that is being fed tainted data. An injection point

For every file there are a numbe of vulnerabillities:

Graphical view of sources and sinks 

Every vulnerability offers the possibility to view a graph view of all the propagation paths for this item. 

Click the  icon on the right: 

The following graph will open:

Tainted data flows are represented as directed graphs from sources (at the top) to sinks (at the bottom). 

Any element may have a number that indicates in how many tainted data flows it participates.

You can see the detail of any element (source, sink or propagation node) by hovering the mouse overt it. A dialog will be displayed as in the image below:

Finding sources and sinks 

Info

Clicking on the affected file will open all its affected sinks.


In this case, there’s only one sink for every file (only one injection point), but it could be many. Kiuwan will display all the line numbers of the affected sinks.

If you want to see a graphical view of all the sources, sinks and tainted data flows for a file you can also click on the icon.

And the following graph will be displayed:

 

Clicking on a sink will display its details as well as all the sources where data is collected from an untrusted source and flows to the sink without being neutralized (or sanitized).


Detailed information of the sink

 

Info
titleSink data

The sink details include the following information:

  • Specific CWE, related vulnerability as defined by CWE (hyperlink to definition at MITRE)
  • Sink Data
    • Category (vulnerability type, e.g. sql_injection, xss, etc)
    • Resource (affected resource, e.g. database, web, etc.)
    • Container (function/method where the sink is located)
    • Injection point (tainted data, i.e. variable name)
    • Variable declaration (tainted variable declaration)
    • Source code line and text of sink
    • List of Sources
      • Full list of sources with tainted-flow paths ending in the sink 
      • Every row indicates the source file and line where data coming from an untrusted source flows to the sink without being neutralized (or sanitized).

 

 

Most commonly, every source will be a different file. But depending on the flow path, you could find same source and line many times.

Let’s see how to understand every source.

 

 

 

Source's detailed information

Clicking on a source will open a frame with information about the source.

 

Info
titleSource data

Source detail includes following information:

  • Category (source type, e.g. user_input, , etc)
  • Resource (resource where the data is gathered, e.g. web, etc.)
  • Container (function/method where the source is located)
  • Source code line and text of sink
  • Propagation path (data-flow between the source and sink)

 

Propagation Path

 

Info
titlePropagation Path

Important: You  You should not understand the propagation path as a typical stack of method calls. It’s not that.

You should understand it as a data-flow path.

 

Let’s see with look at the following example.:

 

Image Modified

 

You can also view it in grahical graphical mode:

 

Image Modified

 

Info

Any propagation path is composed of a source node, a sink node and as many propagation nodes as different methods are involved in the propagation path.

 

In the example, we can see the next propagation path (flowing from source to sink) :

  • Source The source node indicates that the file ParameterNullFix.java line 32 (within sanitizeNull method) gets the value from a request parameter. 
    • This is marked a source because HttpServletRequest.getParameter(..) is considered as an untrusted input source (i.e. is directly manipulated by the user) and no neutralization routine has been found.
  • First The first propagation node indicates that Delete_User.java line 68 receives back the above tainted data.
  • Second The second propagation node indicates that Delete_User.java line 75 sends the tainted data (via method parameter) to another object through UpdateUtil.executeUpdate(…)  method call. 
    • Looking at the source code, you could see that the tainted data is directly appended to a sql string without any neutralization, allowing this way to directly insert user code into the sql sentence.
  • Sink The sink node indicates that the file UpdateUtil.java line 61 (within executeUpdate(…) method) injects tainted data (sql sentence) to a PreparedStatement that finally is executed against the database.

Once explained a concrete source-sink propagation path, let’s Let’s go back to the initial sink information.

 

Image Modified

Image Modified

 

As said above, for every sink there will appear the list of sources that are “feeding” that sink.

But you might be wondering why are there 5 are 5 sources with the same file name and line.

We’ve selected this specific example because it shows to show something that would be possible to could happen in your own code. Let’s go in detail exploring the 2nd source.explore the second source into detail. 

 

 

In the 2nd source you can see that the propagation nodes are different from the previous one.

While in the 1st the propagation it was through Delete_User.java, in the 2nd, it goes through a different file: Insert_Raw_Text.java

Remainder sources for the same sink shows show that there are still other different propagation paths between the same source and the sink.

This example is a special case where the call sequence consists of 5 servlets calling a utility (ParameterNullFix.sanitizeNull(..)) to recover some request parameters, building a an SQL sentence with those this tainted data and sending the sql SQL sentence to another utility (UpdateUtil.executeUpdate(…) ) to execute the database update.

This is the reason Kiuwan shows one sink with 5 different sinks. That difference is because the propagation paths are through the different servlets.  In In this case, the easiest fix would be to sanitize the user data at the source, therefore remediating 5 found defects with only one fix.

 

Info

As a summary, you can understand any injection vulnerability as a unique propagation path from source to sink, regardless of whether source and sink be are the same.

Configuration (parametersAsSources)

 

Info

Some injection rules provide the ability to behave differently depending on a configuration a configuration parameterparametersAsSources

This parameter makes the rule to consider the function/method parameters where the sink is contained as "sources". And sources are always being considered as "tainted".

 

If parametersAsSources=true, the rule performs a tainting path analysis to check if the parameters are neutralized since being received by the function/method until are consumed by the sink. If no neutralization is found, an injection vulnerability is raised. By default, parametersAsSources=false.


Why should you change it to true ?

If your software being analyzed by Kiuwan is a complete application (i.e. it contains presentation plus logic and ddbb layers), you should let it be as false. This In this way, Kiuwan will make a full tanting path analysis over the whole application code.

But, if your software is a "library", i.e. a software component that will be used by 3rd parties to build their own applications, you should configure this property to truemaking Kiuwan to perform that local tainting path analysis, thus guaranteeing that your library is protected against injection vulnerabilities regardless the usage by third parties.

As you can guess, setting to true and analyzing a complete application will result in a number of false positives.