You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 58 Next »

Any time an application stores a password as cleartext (unencrypted text data), its value is potentially exposed in a variety of ways. To prevent this information from being inadvertently leaked, this exposure must be limited. While a program will receive the password from the user as cleartext, this should be the last time it is in this form.

Hash functions allow programs to indirectly compare an input password to the original, without storing a cleartext or decryptable version of the password. This approach minimizes the exposure of the password without presenting any practical disadvantages.

Cryptographic Hash Functions

The value that a hash function outputs is called the hash value. Another term for hash value is message digest. Hash functions are computationally feasible functions whose inverses are computationally infeasible. This means that in practice, one can encode a password to a hash value, while they are also unable to decode it. The equality of the passwords can be tested through the equality of their hash values.

Java's MessageDigest class provides the functionality of various cryptographic hash functions. Be careful not to use any defective hash functions, such as MD5. How do I go about learning which hash functions are safe, and which are defective?

It is also important that you append a salt to the password you are hashing. A salt is a randomly generated piece of data that is stored along with the hash value. The use of a salt helps prevents dictionary attacks against the hash value, provided the salt is long enough what is long enough . Each password should have its own salt associated with it. If a single salt were used for more than one password, two users would be able to see if their passwords are the same.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example encrypts and decrypts the password stored in credentials.pw.

public final class Password {
  private void setPassword(byte[] pass) throws Exception {
    bytes[] encrypted = encrypt(pass); //arbitrary encryption scheme
    clearArray(pass);      
    saveBytes(encrypted,"credentials.pw"); //encrypted password to credentials.pw
  }

  private boolean checkPassword(byte[] pass) throws Exception {
    boolean arrays_equal;
    byte[] encrypted = loadBytes("credentials.pw"); //load the encrypted password
    byte[] decrypted = decrypt(encrypted);
    arrays_equal = Arrays.equal(decrypted, pass);
    clearArray(decrypted);
    clearArray(pass);
    return arrays_equal;
  }

  private clearArray(byte[] a) {
    //set all of the elements in a to zero
  }
}

An attacker could potentially decrypt this file to discover the password. This attacker could be someone knows or has figured out the encryption scheme being used by the program.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code examples implements the SHA-1 hash function through the MessageDigest class to compare hash values instead of cleartext strings.

import java.security.MessageDigest;
import java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException;

public final class Password {
  private String salt = "ia0942980234241sadfaewvo32"; //Randomly generated

  private void setPassword(String pass) throws Exception {
    MessageDigest sha_1 = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-1");
    byte[] hashVal = sha_1.digest((pass+salt).getBytes()); //encode the string and salt
    saveBytes(hashVal,"credentials.pw"); //save the hash value to credentials.pw
  }

  private boolean checkPassword(String pass) throws Exception {
    MessageDigest sha_1 = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-1");
    byte[] hashVal1 = sha_1.digest((pass+salt).getBytes()); //encode the string and salt
    byte[] hashVal2 = loadBytes("credentials.pw"); //load the hash value stored in credentials.pw
    return Arrays.equals(hashVal1, hashVal2);
  }
}

While this fixes the decryption problem from the previous noncompliant code example, at runtime this code may inadvertently store the passwords as cleartext. This is because the pass arguments may not be cleared from memory by the Java garbage collector. See MSC10-J. Limit the lifetime of sensitive data for more information.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution addresses the problems from the previous noncompliant examples.

import java.security.MessageDigest;
import java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException;

public final class Password {
  private byte[] salt = "ia0942980234241sadfaewvo32".getBytes(); //Randomly generated

  private void setPassword(byte[] pass) throws Exception {
    byte[] input = appendArrays(pass, salt);
    MessageDigest sha_1 = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-1");
    byte[] hashVal = sha_1.digest(input); //encode the string and salt    
    clearArray(pass);    
    clearArray(input);    
    saveBytes(hashVal,"credentials.pw"); //save the hash value to credentials.pw
  }

  private boolean checkPassword(byte[] pass) throws Exception {
    byte[] input = appendArrays(pass, salt);
    MessageDigest sha_1 = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-1");
    byte[] hashVal1 = sha_1.digest(input); //encode the string and salt
    clearArray(pass);
    clearArray(input);
    byte[] hashVal2 = loadBytes("credentials.pw"); //load the hash value stored in credentials.pw
    return Arrays.equals(hashVal1, hashVal2);
  }

  private appendArrays(byte[] a, byte[] b) {
    //Return a new array of a appended to b
  }

  private clearArray(byte[] a) {
    //set all of the elements in a to zero
  }
}

In both the setPassword() and checkPassword() methods, the cleartext representation of the password is erased as soon as it is converted into a hash value. After this happens, there is no way for an attacker to get the password as cleartext. 

Exceptions

MSC18-EX0 Application such as password managers may need to retrieve the original password in order to enter it into a third-party application. The first important difference here is that the password manager is accessed by a single user. The second important difference is that the program will always have the user's permission to store their passwords in this way. Therefore, provided the user is competent, the program's operation will be safe. 

Risk Assessment

Violations of this rule have to be manually detected because it is a consequence of the overall design of the password storing mechanism. It is pretty unlikely, since it will occur around once or twice in a program that uses passwords. As demonstrated above, almost all violations of this rule have a clear exploit associated with them.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MSC18-J

medium

likely

high

P6

L2

Bibliography

[[API 2006]] Class java.security.MessageDigest

  • No labels