DISCLAIMER: This is not an officially supported Google product.
go-safeweb
is a collection of libraries for writing secure-by-default HTTP
servers in Go.
This project is in an early stage. We are currently not accepting any contributions.
The flexibility of Go’s net/http
package
allows users to quickly implement HTTP servers.
Responses are then written simply as slices of bytes, headers can be arbitrarily manipulated and so on. This approach offers much needed flexibility for these who really need it.
Unfortunately, this approach leaves great space for introducing security vulnerabilities and even experienced developers tend to do so.
This document aims to design an HTTP API that eliminates whole classes of bugs, like Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) or Cross-Site Request Forgery (XSRF). This can be achieved by an approach known at Google as safe coding. Learn more at Securing the Tangled Web (Chistoph Kern, 2014) or Preventing Security Bugs through Software Design (Christoph Kern, 2016).
Security mechanisms are applied by default (opt-out, not opt-in).
All opt-outs from security mechanisms are explicit. Wherever possible, they’re contained inside a package or an option that’s easy to restrict.
Enforcing new security measures is feasible through AST manipulation. Existing users can be migrated using static analysis and/or runtime monitoring. Read more here.
Whenever possible, keep existing layouts, function signatures and other API parts the same as the Go’s standard library. High compatibility enables wide adoption.
NG1: Safe API Completeness
Creating safe APIs for all the corner cases might result in a bloated codebase. Our experience shows that this isn’t necessary.
Existing open-source frameworks or the Go standard library need to support each developer scenario. This would have left us with limited options of creating safe-by-default HTTP servers.
Go Safe Web aims to help you create a secure-by-default Go HTTP server and nothing more. Features that are not security critical will not be added. Focusing solely on security allows us to maintain high compatibility with the standard library and makes adoption easier.
On a high level, we plan to address, or provide the needed infrastructure to address, following issues (not an exhaustive list):
- XSS (cross-site scripting) and XSSI (cross-site script inclusion) - e.g. by controlling how responses are generated
- XSRF (cross-site request forgery) - e.g. by using Fetch Metadata policies, supporting token-based XSRF protection
- CORS (cross-origin resource sharing) - e.g. by taking control of CORS response headers and handling CORS preflight requests
- CSP (content security policy) - e.g. by automatically adding script nonces to HTML responses, adding relevant security headers
- Transport Security - e.g. by enforcing HSTS support
- IFraming - e.g. by setting relevant HTTP headers to restrict framing or providing server-side support for origin selection
- Auth (access control) - e.g. by providing infrastructure for plugging in access control logic in an uniform, auditable way
- HTTP Request Parsing Bugs - e.g. by implementing strict and well documented parsing behavior
- Error responses - e.g. by providing infrastructure for uniform error handling (e.g. to prevent accidental leaks or XSS from error responses)
- Enforcement of other security specific HTTP headers - here
Imagine an API for configuring access control. It features three types of rules:
ALLOW(user)
- allows a givenuser
DENY(user)
- denies a givenuser
(has priority overALLOW
)REPORT(user)
- reports that it has seen a request from a givenuser
Imagine now that at some point, security standards need to be increased and
user = "frombulator"
has been determined to not meet the desired bar.
How do we, for all the services running in our company, address this?
- For existing services, we add a
LegacyFrombulatorAccess
option like so:security.AccessControl(rules, unsafe.LegacyFrombulatorAccess())
. - We change the
security.AccessControl()
call to add by default aDENY("frombulator")
rule. This rule is not added ifunsafe.LegacyFrombulatorAccess
is applied. - Instead,
unsafe.LegacyFrombulatorAccess
adds aREPORT("frombulator")
rule.
This way, we have:
- Ensured that all new callers of
security.AccessControl
use the safe setting by default. - Can monitor existing services dependence on calls from the
frombulator
. After a period of observation (let’s say, 30 days):- If the service doesn’t receive requests from the
frombulator
: prune theunsafe.LegacyFrombulatorAccess
option. - If the service does receive requests from the
frombulator
: inform the service owners and plan a fix.
- If the service doesn’t receive requests from the
Crucially, only the last case (dependence on unsafe configuration) requires engineering work per service. The rest can be automated.
This approach is possible due to careful API design. A missing DENY
or
REPORT
rule, or a single sink in the form of security.AccessControl
would
make this infeasible.
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