This site is the archived OWASP Foundation Wiki and is no longer accepting Account Requests.
To view the new OWASP Foundation website, please visit https://owasp.org

OWASP iGoat Tool Project

From OWASP
Revision as of 09:27, 29 March 2017 by Swaroopyermalkar (talk | contribs) (updated roadmap)

Jump to: navigation, search
OWASP Project Header.jpg

OWASP iGoat Tool Project

iGoat is a learning tool for iOS developers (iPhone, iPad, etc.). It was inspired by the WebGoat project, and has a similar conceptual flow to it.

As such, iGoat is a safe environment where iOS developers can learn about the major security pitfalls they face as well as how to avoid them. It is made up of a series of lessons that each teach a single (but vital) security lesson.

The lessons are laid out in the following steps:

  1. Brief introduction to the problem.
  2. Verify the problem by exploiting it.
  3. Brief description of available remediations to the problem.
  4. Fix the problem by correcting and rebuilding the iGoat program.

Step 4 is optional, but highly recommended for all iOS developers. Assistance is available within iGoat if you don't know how to fix a specific problem.

iGoat can be downloaded here: https://github.com/owasp/igoat

Description

iGoat has been designed and built to be a foundation on which to build a series of iOS security lessons. The initial iGoat release will include a handful of lessons to work through, but one of the aims of the project is to build a community of developers to help build out additional lessons over time -- much as WebGoat has before it.

Licensing

iGoat is free software, released under the GPLv3 license.

Project Resources

Installation Package

Source Code

What's New (Revision History)

Documentation

Wiki Home Page

Issue Tracker

Slide Presentation

Video

Project Leader

Swaroop Yermalkar

Related Projects

Classifications

Project Type Files TOOL.jpg
Incubator Project Owasp-builders-small.png
Owasp-defenders-small.png
Affero General Public License 3.0

News and Events

  • TBD

How can I participate in your project?

All you have to do is make the Project Leader's aware of your available time to contribute to the project. It is also important to let the Leader's know how you would like to contribute and pitch in to help the project meet it's goals and milestones. There are many different ways you can contribute to an OWASP Project, but communication with the leads is key.

If I am not a programmer can I participate in your project?

Yes, you can certainly participate in the project if you are not a programmer or technical. The project needs different skills and expertise and different times during its development. Currently, we are looking for researchers, writers, graphic designers, and a project administrator.

Contributors

The success of OWASP is due to a community of enthusiasts and contributors that work to make our projects great. This is also true for the success of your project. Be sure to give credit where credit is due, no matter how small! This should be a brief list of the most amazing people involved in your project. Be sure to provide a link to a complete list of all the amazing people in your project's community as well.

The OWASP Tool Project Template is developed by a worldwide team of volunteers. A live update of project contributors is found here.

The first contributors to the project were:

  • Colin Watson who created the OWASP Cornucopia project that the template was derived from
  • Chuck Cooper who edited the template to convert it from a documentation project to a Tool Project Template
  • YOUR NAME BELONGS HERE AND YOU SHOULD REMOVE THE PRIOR 3 NAMES

Version Releases:

  • OWASP iGoat v1.0 - Jun 15, 2011
  • OWASP iGoat v1.0.1 - Jun 24, 2011
  • OWASP iGoat v1.1 - Aug 23, 2011
  • OWASP iGoat v1.2 - Mar 29, 2012
  • OWASP iGoat v2.0 - Feb 27, 2013
  • OWASP iGoat v2.4 - Feb 22, 2017

Vulnerabilities included:

  • Data Protection (Transit)
  • Authentication
  • Reverse Engineering
  • Data Protection (Rest)
  • Tampering
  • Injection Flaws

Getting Involved

Involvement in the development and promotion of Tool Project Template is actively encouraged! You do not have to be a security expert or a programmer to contribute. Some of the ways you can help are as follows:

Coding

We could implement some of the later items on the roadmap sooner if someone wanted to help out with unit or automated regression tests

Localization

Are you fluent in another language? Can you help translate the text strings in the Tool Project Template into that language?

Testing

Do you have a flair for finding bugs in software? We want to product a high quality product, so any help with Quality Assurance would be greatly appreciated. Let us know if you can offer your help.

Feedback

Please use the Tool Project Template project mailing list for feedback about:

  • What do like?
  • What don't you like?
  • What features would you like to see prioritized on the roadmap?

This page is where you should indicate what is the minimum set of functionality that is required to make this a useful product that addresses your core security concern. Defining this information helps the project leader to think about what is the critical functionality that a user needs for this project to be useful, thereby helping determine what the priorities should be on the roadmap. And it also helps reviewers who are evaluating the project to determine if the functionality sufficiently provides the critical functionality to determine if the project should be promoted to the next project category.

The Tool Project Template must specify the minimum set of tabs a project should have, provide some an example layout on each tab, provide instructional text on how a project leader should modify the tab, and give some example text that illustrates how to create an actual project.

It would also be ideal if the sample text was translated into different languages.

Addtional Instructions for making changes:

The About 'tab' on that page is done with a MediaWiki template. If you log into the wiki page for your project and click the "Edit" button/link/tab in the top-right between 'Read' and 'View History', you'll see the edit page for the main body of your project page.

If you scroll down below the form to edit that page (below the "Save page", "Show preview", "Show changes" buttons, you'll see some text with a triangle in front of it reading "Templates used on this page:" A list will expand if you click on the triangle/text to show the templates that make up this page. The one you want is the "Projects/OWASP Example Project About Page" - click the (edit) next to this to edit that template. The direct link is: https://www.owasp.org/index.php?title=Projects/OWASP_Example_Project_About_Page&action=edit

The template takes 'input' that are key/value pairs where you'll need to edit the stuff after the equals (=) like: project_name =Place your project name here.

You'd edit the bold bit.

This page is where you need to place your legacy project template page if your project was created before October 2013. To edit this page you will need to edit your project information template. You can typically find this page by following this address and substituting your project name where it says "OWASP_Example_Project". When in doubt, ask the OWASP Projects Manager. Example template page: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Projects/OWASP_Example_Project


PROJECT INFO
What does this OWASP project offer you?
RELEASE(S) INFO
What releases are available for this project?
what is this project?
Name: N/A
Purpose: N/A
License: N/A
who is working on this project?
Project Leader(s): N/A
how can you learn more?
Project Pamphlet: Not Yet Created
Project Presentation:
Mailing list: N/A
Project Roadmap: Not Yet Created
Key Contacts
  • Contact the GPC to contribute to this project
  • Contact the GPC to review or sponsor this project
current release
pending
last reviewed release
pending


other releases