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

Difference between revisions of "Missing Error Handling"

From OWASP
Jump to: navigation, search
(Description)
Line 50: Line 50:
 
TBD
 
TBD
  
[[Category:FIXME|add links
 
  
In addition, one should classify vulnerability based on the following subcategories: Ex:<nowiki>[[Category:Error Handling Vulnerability]]</nowiki>
 
 
Availability Vulnerability
 
 
Authorization Vulnerability
 
 
Authentication Vulnerability
 
 
Concurrency Vulnerability
 
 
Configuration Vulnerability
 
 
Cryptographic Vulnerability
 
 
Encoding Vulnerability
 
 
Error Handling Vulnerability
 
 
Input Validation Vulnerability
 
 
Logging and Auditing Vulnerability
 
 
Session Management Vulnerability]]
 
  
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__

Revision as of 14:58, 26 February 2009

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

Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 02/26/2009

Vulnerabilities Table of Contents

Description

A web application must define a default error page for 404 errors, 500 errors and to catch java.lang. Throwable exceptions to prevent attackers from mining information from the application container's built-in error response.

When an attacker explores a web site looking for vulnerabilities, the amount of information that the site provides is crucial to the eventual success or failure of any attempted attacks. If the application shows the attacker a stack trace, it relinquishes information that makes the attacker's job significantly easier. For example, a stack trace might show the attacker a malformed SQL query string, the type of database being used, and the version of the application container. This information enables the attacker to target known vulnerabilities in these components.

The application configuration should specify a default error page in order to guarantee that the application will never leak error messages to an attacker. Handling standard HTTP error codes is useful and user-friendly in addition to being a good security practice, and a good configuration will also define a last-chance error handler that catches any exception that could possibly be thrown by the application.

Risk Factors

TBD

Examples

A "HTTP 404 - File not found" error tells an attacker that the requested file doesn't exist rather than that he doesn't have access to the file. This can help attacker to decide his next step.


Related Attacks


Related Vulnerabilities


Related Controls

Related Technical Impacts


References

TBD