56 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
56 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Session Identifier Acquirement
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---
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## Session Identifier Acquirement
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Session Identifier Acquirement is a vulnerability caused by an attacker being able to either guess the session identifier of a user or exploit vulnerabilities in the application itself or the user's browser to obtain a session identifier. This attack is a prerequisite to performing a session hijacking attack.
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### Example
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An attacker has a few options to perform a session identifier acquirement attack.
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* Guessing the Identifier: A short and guessable session identifier could allow an attacker to brute-force the ID of a session and get in.
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* Attacking the Browser: In the event you store your session identifier in the browser's cookies - if your website is vulnerable to cross site scripting an attacker could use the vulnerability to collect session identifier cookies and access high privilege level areas (for example an admin panel).
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* Changing the ID to the attacker's choice: In older versions of PHP you were able to set the ID of a session in the URL. It's disabled by default now, if in doubt make sure `session.use_trans_sid` is false. This is not a common issue anymore, however it can still happen, better safe than sorry.
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### Defending against Session Identifier Acquirement attacks in PHP
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To defend against Session Identifier Acquirement attacks you need to check the attempted session access against several factors to confirm whether it's a legitimate access and to avoid the user from successfully hijacking the user's session. Below is an example implementation that can help mitigate the effects of a session identifier acquirement attack. It checks the IP Address, User Agent, and if the Session Expired removing a session before it's acquired.
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```PHP
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<?php
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session_start();
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// Does IP Address match?
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if ($_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] != $_SESSION['ipaddress'])
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{
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session_unset();
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session_destroy();
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}
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// Does user agent match?
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if ($_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'] != $_SESSION['useragent'])
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{
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session_unset();
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session_destroy();
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}
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// Is the last access over an hour ago?
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if (time() > ($_SESSION['lastaccess'] + 3600))
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{
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session_unset();
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session_destroy();
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}
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else
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{
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$_SESSION['lastaccess'] = time();
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}
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```
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**Tips:**
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* Store lots of information about the current session (User Agent String, IP Address, Last Access Time, etc)
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* Check every request against information stored about the session (Does it match? If not delete the session and require the user to login again )
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* Sessions shouldn't last forever - they should expire at a certain point to maintain session security.
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* Rate limit the amount of sessions a user can try to access (did a user try to access 1000+ invalid sessions? Chances are they are guessing - prevent the IP address from trying any more sessions for a few hours).
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#### More Information:
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* <a href="https://secure.php.net/manual/en/session.security.php">php.net session security manual</a>
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