aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/srcs/phpmyadmin/doc/html/_sources/security.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'srcs/phpmyadmin/doc/html/_sources/security.txt')
-rw-r--r--srcs/phpmyadmin/doc/html/_sources/security.txt113
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 113 deletions
diff --git a/srcs/phpmyadmin/doc/html/_sources/security.txt b/srcs/phpmyadmin/doc/html/_sources/security.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index d6d93ec..0000000
--- a/srcs/phpmyadmin/doc/html/_sources/security.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,113 +0,0 @@
-Security policy
-===============
-
-The phpMyAdmin developer team is putting lot of effort to make phpMyAdmin as
-secure as possible. But still web application like phpMyAdmin can be vulnerable
-to a number of attacks and new ways to exploit are still being explored.
-
-For every reported vulnerability we issue a phpMyAdmin Security Announcement
-(PMASA) and it get's assigne CVE ID as well. We might group similar
-vulnerabilities to one PMASA (eg. multiple XSS vulnerabilities can be announced
-under one PMASA).
-
-If you think you've found a vulnerability, please see :ref:`reporting-security`.
-
-Typical vulnerabilities
------------------------
-
-In this secion, we will describe typical vulnerabilities, which can appear in
-our code base. This list is by no means complete, it is intended to show
-typical attack surface.
-
-Cross-site scripting (XSS)
-++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
-When phpMyAdmin shows a piece of user data, e.g. something inside a user's
-database, all html special chars have to be escaped. When this escaping is
-missing somewhere a malicious user might fill a database with specially crafted
-content to trick an other user of that database into executing something. This
-could for example be a piece of JavaScript code that would do any number of
-nasty things.
-
-phpMyAdmin tries to escape all userdata before it is rendered into html for the
-browser.
-
-.. seealso::
-
- `Cross-site scripting on Wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting>`_
-
-Cross-site request forgery (CSRF)
-+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
-An attacker would trick a phpMyAdmin user into clicking on a link to provoke
-some action in phpMyAdmin. This link could either be sent via email or some
-random website. If successful this the attacker would be able to perform some
-action with the users privileges.
-
-To mitigate this phpMyAdmin requires a token to be sent on sensitive requests.
-The idea is that an attacker does not poses the currently valid token to
-include in the presented link.
-
-The token is regenerated for every login, so it's generally valid only for
-limited time, what makes it harder for attacker to obtain valid one.
-
-.. seealso::
-
- `Cross-site request forgery on Wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery>`_
-
-SQL injection
-+++++++++++++
-
-As the whole purpose of phpMyAdmin is to preform sql queries, this is not our
-first concern. SQL injection is sensitive to us though when it concerns the
-mysql control connection. This controlconnection can have additional privileges
-which the logged in user does not poses. E.g. access the :ref:`linked-tables`.
-
-User data that is included in (administrative) queries should always be run
-through DatabaseInterface::escapeSring().
-
-.. seealso::
-
- `SQL injection on Wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_injection>`_
-
-Brute force attack
-++++++++++++++++++
-
-phpMyAdmin on its own does not rate limit authentication attempts in any way.
-This is caused by need to work in stateless environment, where there is no way
-to protect against such kind of things.
-
-To mitigate this, you can use Captcha or utilize external tools such as
-fail2ban, this is more details described in :ref:`securing`.
-
-.. seealso::
-
- `Brute force attack on Wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brute-force_attack>`_
-
-.. _reporting-security:
-
-Reporting security issues
--------------------------
-
-Should you find a security issue in the phpMyAdmin programming code, please
-contact the `phpMyAdmin security team <mailto:security@phpmyadmin.net>`_ in
-advance before publishing it. This way we can prepare a fix and release the fix together with your
-announcement. You will be also given credit in our security announcement.
-You can optionally encrypt your report with PGP key ID
-``DA68AB39218AB947`` with following fingerprint:
-
-.. code-block:: console
-
- pub 4096R/DA68AB39218AB947 2016-08-02
- Key fingerprint = 5BAD 38CF B980 50B9 4BD7 FB5B DA68 AB39 218A B947
- uid phpMyAdmin Security Team &lt;security@phpmyadmin.net&gt;
- sub 4096R/5E4176FB497A31F7 2016-08-02
-
-The key can be either obtained from the keyserver or is available in
-`phpMyAdmin keyring <https://files.phpmyadmin.net/phpmyadmin.keyring>`_
-available on our download server or using `Keybase <https://keybase.io/phpmyadmin_sec>`_.
-
-Should you have suggestion on improving phpMyAdmin to make it more secure, please
-report that to our `issue tracker <https://github.com/phpmyadmin/phpmyadmin/issues>`_.
-Existing improvement suggestions can be found by
-`hardening label <https://github.com/phpmyadmin/phpmyadmin/labels/hardening>`_.