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LDAP Injection Prevention Cheat Sheet

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Revision as of 08:12, 28 May 2015 by Vanderaj (talk | contribs) (Least Privilege)

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Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 05/28/2015

Introduction

This article is focused on providing clear, simple, actionable guidance for preventing LDAP Injection flaws in your applications. LDAP Injection attacks are somewhat common, and this is due to two factors:

  1. the lack of safer, parameterized LDAP query interfaces, and
  2. the widespread use of LDAP to authenticate users to systems.

TBA

Primary Defenses:

  • TBA

Additional Defenses:

  • TBA

Primary Defenses

Defense Option 1: TBA

TBA

Safe Java TBA Example

TBA

Safe C# .NET TBA Example

TBA

Defense Option 2: TBA

TBA

Safe Java TBA Example

TBA

Safe C# .NET TBA Example

TBA

Defense Option 3: Escaping All User Supplied Input

TBA

Additional Defenses

Beyond adopting one of the three primary defenses, we also recommend adopting all of these additional defenses in order to provide defense in depth. These additional defenses are:

  • Least Privilege
  • White List Input Validation

Least Privilege

To minimize the potential damage of a successful LDAP injection attack, you should minimize the privileges assigned to the LDAP binding account in your environment.

TBA

White List Input Validation

Input validation can be used to detect unauthorized input before it is passed to the SQL query. For more information please see the Input Validation Cheat Sheet.

Related Articles

SQL Injection Attack Cheat Sheets

The following articles describe how to exploit different kinds of SQL Injection Vulnerabilities on various platforms that this article was created to help you avoid:

Description of SQL Injection Vulnerabilities

How to Avoid SQL Injection Vulnerabilities

How to Review Code for SQL Injection Vulnerabilities

How to Test for SQL Injection Vulnerabilities

Authors and Primary Editors

Dave Wichers - dave.wichers[at]owasp.org
Jim Manico - jim[at]owasp.org
Matt Seil - mseil[at]acm.org

Other Cheatsheets