Unlike perimeter control solutions like WAF, OpenRASP directly integrates its protection engine into the application server by instrumentation. It can monitor various events including database queries, file operations and network requests etc.
When an attack happens, WAF matches the malicious request with its signatures and blocks it. OpenRASP takes a different approach by hooking sensitive functions and examines/blocks the inputs fed into them. As a result, this examination is context-aware and in-place. It brings in the following benefits:
- Only successful attacks can trigger alarms, resulting in lower false positive and higher detection rate;
- Detailed stack trace is logged, which makes the forensic analysis easier;
- Insusceptible to malformed protocol.
See detailed installation instructions here
We also provide a few test cases that are corresponding to OWASP TOP 10 attacks, download here
We've fully tested OpenRASP on the following application servers for Linux platforms:
- Java
- Tomcat 6-9
- JBoss 4.X
- Jetty 7-9
- Resin 3-4
- SpringBoot 1-2
- IBM WebSphpere 8.5, 9.0
- WebLogic 10.3.6, 12.2.1
- PHP
- 5.3-5.6, 7.0-7.3
The support of other web application servers will also be soon included in the coming releases.
We ran multiple intense and long-lasting stress tests prior to release. Even in the worst-case scenario (where the hook point got continuously triggered) the server's performance was only reduced by 1~4%
OpenRASP logs alarms in JSON format, which can be easily picked up by LogStash, rsyslog or Flume.
A plugin receives a callback when an event occurs. It then determines if the current behavior is malicious or not and blocks the associated request if necessary.
Detailed plugin development instructions can be found here
Technical support:
Business inquires, comments and security reports:
- General email:
openrasp-support # baidu.com