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

Improper Data Validation

From OWASP
Revision as of 00:58, 18 February 2009 by KirstenS (talk | contribs) (Struts: Form Field Without Validator)

Jump to: navigation, search

This is a Vulnerability. To view all vulnerabilities, please see the Vulnerability Category page.

This article includes content generously donated to OWASP by MicroFocus Logo.png

ASDR Table of Contents


Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 02/18/2009


Description

Struts: Duplicate Validation Forms

Multiple validation forms with the same name indicate that validation logic is not up-to-date.

If two validation forms have the same name, the Struts Validator arbitrarily chooses one of the forms to use for input validation and discards the other. This decision might not correspond to the programmer's expectations. Moreover, it indicates that the validation logic is not being maintained, and can indicate that other, more subtle, validation errors are present.

Example

Two validation forms with the same name.

	<form-validation>
		<formset>
			<form name="ProjectForm">
			...
			</form>
			<form name="ProjectForm">
			...
			</form>
		</formset>
	</form-validation>

It is critically important that validation logic be maintained and kept in sync with the rest of the application. Unchecked input is the root cause of some of today's worst and most common software security problems. Cross-site scripting, SQL injection, and process control vulnerabilities all stem from incomplete or absent input validation. Although J2EE applications are not generally susceptible to memory corruption attacks, if a J2EE application interfaces with native code that does not perform array bounds checking, an attacker may be able to use an input validation mistake in the J2EE application to launch a buffer overflow attack.

Struts: Erroneous validate() Method

The validator form defines a validate() method but fails to call super.validate().

The Struts Validator uses a form's code>validate() method to check the contents of the form properties against the constraints specified in the associated validation form. That means the following classes have a validate() method that is part of the validation framework:

	ValidatorForm
	ValidatorActionForm
	DynaValidatorForm
	DynaValidatorActionForm

If you create a class that extends one of these classes and if your class implements custom validation logic by overriding the validate() method, you must call super.validate() in your validate() implementation. If you do not, the Validation Framework cannot check the contents of the form against a validation form. In other words, the validation framework will be disabled for the given form.

Disabling the validation framework for a form exposes the application to numerous types of attacks. Unchecked input is the root cause of vulnerabilities like cross-site scripting, process control, and SQL injection. Although J2EE applications are not generally susceptible to memory corruption attacks, if a J2EE application interfaces with native code that does not perform array bounds checking, an attacker may be able to use an input validation mistake in the J2EE application to launch a buffer overflow attack.

Struts: Form Does Not Extend Validation Class

All Struts forms should extend a Validator class.

In order to use the Struts Validator, a form must extend one of the following:

	ValidatorForm
	ValidatorActionForm
	DynaValidatorActionForm
	DynaValidatorForm.

You must extend one of these classes because the Struts Validator ties in to your application by implementing the validate() method in these classes.

Forms derived from the following classes cannot use the Struts Validator:

	ActionForm
	DynaActionForm

Bypassing the validation framework for a form exposes the application to numerous types of attacks. Unchecked input is the root cause of vulnerabilities like cross-site scripting, process control, and SQL injection. Although J2EE applications are not generally susceptible to memory corruption attacks, if a J2EE application interfaces with native code that does not perform array bounds checking, an attacker may be able to use an input validation mistake in the J2EE application to launch a buffer overflow attack.

Struts: Form Field Without Validator

Every field in a form should be validated in the corresponding validation form.

Omitting validation for even a single input field may allow attackers the leeway they need.

Unchecked input is the root cause of some of today's worst and most common software security problems. Cross-site scripting, SQL injection, and process control vulnerabilities all stem from incomplete or absent input validation. Although J2EE applications are not generally susceptible to memory corruption attacks, if a J2EE application interfaces with native code that does not perform array bounds checking, an attacker may be able to use an input validation mistake in the J2EE application to launch a buffer overflow attack.

Some applications use the same ActionForm for more than one purpose. In situations like this, some fields may go unused under some action mappings. It is critical that unused fields be validated too. Preferably, unused fields should be constrained so that they can only be empty or undefined. If unused fields are not validated, shared business logic in an action may allow attackers to bypass the validation checks that are performed for other uses of the form.

Struts: Plug-in Framework Not In Use

Use the Struts Validator to prevent vulnerabilities that result from unchecked input.

Unchecked input is the leading cause of vulnerabilities in J2EE applications. Unchecked input leads to cross-site scripting, process control, and SQL injection vulnerabilities, among others. Although J2EE applications are not generally susceptible to memory corruption attacks, if a J2EE application interfaces with native code that does not perform array bounds checking, an attacker may be able to use an input validation mistake in the J2EE application to launch a buffer overflow attack.

To prevent such attacks, use the Struts Validator to check all program input before it is processed by the application.

Example uses of the validator include checking to ensure that:

  • Phone number fields contain only valid characters in phone numbers
  • Boolean values are only "T" or "F"
  • Free-form strings are of a reasonable length and composition

Risk Factors

TBD


Examples

Related Attacks


Related Vulnerabilities

Related Controls


Related Technical Impacts


References

TBD