Re: [OAUTH-WG] DPoP followup I: freshness and coverage of signature

Brian Campbell <bcampbell@pingidentity.com> Fri, 11 December 2020 23:58 UTC

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In-Reply-To: <EB24B092-BE32-483C-BE15-DDF2740735B5@pragmaticwebsecurity.com>
From: Brian Campbell <bcampbell@pingidentity.com>
Date: Fri, 11 Dec 2020 16:58:02 -0700
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To: Philippe De Ryck <philippe@pragmaticwebsecurity.com>
Cc: Neil Madden <neil.madden@forgerock.com>, Torsten Lodderstedt <torsten@lodderstedt.net>, oauth <oauth@ietf.org>
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Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] DPoP followup I: freshness and coverage of signature
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Any type of client could use DPoP and (presumably) benefit from
sender-constrained access tokens. So yeah, adding complexity specifically
for browser-based applications (that only mitigates one variation of the
attacks possible with XSS anyway)  has 'cost' impact to those clients as
well. And should be considered in the cost/benefit. Including the AT hash
isn't terribly complicated but it's not trivial either. I'm honestly still
unsure but am leaning towards it not being worth adding.

On Fri, Dec 11, 2020 at 2:14 AM Philippe De Ryck <
philippe@pragmaticwebsecurity.com> wrote:

> The scenario you describe here is realistic in browser-based apps with XSS
> vulnerabilities, but it is pretty complex. Since there are worse problems
> when XSS happens, it’s hard to say whether DPoP should mitigate this.
>
> I’m wondering what other types of clients would benefit from using DPoP
> for access tokens? Mobile apps? Clients using a Client Credentials grant?
>
> How are they impacted by any change made specifically for browser-based
> applications?
>
> Philippe
>
>
> On 9 Dec 2020, at 23:57, Brian Campbell <bcampbell@pingidentity.com>
> wrote:
>
> Thanks Philippe, I very much concur with your line of reasoning and the
> important considerations. The scenario I was thinking of is: browser based
> client where XSS is used to exfiltrate the refresh token along with
> pre-computed proofs that would allow for the RT to be exchanged for new
> access tokens and also pre-computed proofs that would work with those
> access tokens for resource access. With the pre-computed proofs that would
> allow prolonged (as long as the RT is valid) access to protected resources
> even when the victim is offline. Is that a concrete attack scenario? I
> mean, kind of. It's pretty convoluted/complex. And while an access token
> hash would reign it in somewhat (ATs obtained from the stolen RT wouldn't
> be usable) it's hard to say if the cost is worth the benefit.
>
>
>
> On Tue, Dec 8, 2020 at 11:47 PM Philippe De Ryck <
> philippe@pragmaticwebsecurity.com> wrote:
>
>> Yeah, browser-based apps are pure fun, aren’t they? :)
>>
>> The reason I covered a couple of (pessimistic) XSS scenarios is that the
>> discussion started with an assumption that the attacker already
>> successfully exploited an XSS vulnerability. I pointed out how, at that
>> point, finetuning DPoP proof contents will have little to no effect to stop
>> an attack. I believe it is important to make this very clear, to avoid
>> people turning to DPoP as a security mechanism for browser-based
>> applications.
>>
>>
>> Specifically to your question on including the hash in the proof, I think
>> these considerations are important:
>>
>> 1. Does the inclusion of the AT hash stop a concrete attack scenario?
>> 2. Is the “cost” (implementation, getting it right, …) worth the benefits?
>>
>>
>> Here’s my view on these considerations (*specifically for browser-based
>> apps, not for other types of applications*):
>>
>> 1. The proof precomputation attack is already quite complex, and short
>> access token lifetimes already reduce the window of attack. If the attacker
>> can steal a future AT, they could also precompute new proofs then.
>> 2. For browser-based apps, it seems that doing this complicates the
>> implementation, without adding much benefit. Of course, libraries could
>> handle this, which significantly reduces the cost.
>>
>>
>> Note that these comments are specifically to complicating the spec and
>> implementation. DPoP’s capabilities of using sender-constrained access
>> tokens are still useful to counter various other scenarios (e.g.,
>> middleboxes or APIs abusing access tokens). If other applications would
>> significantly benefit from having the hash in the proof, I’m all for it.
>>
>> On a final note, I would be happy to help clear up the details on
>> web-based threats and defenses if necessary.
>>
>> —
>> *Pragmatic Web Security*
>> *Security for developers*
>> https://pragmaticwebsecurity.com/
>>
>>
>> On 8 Dec 2020, at 22:47, Brian Campbell <bcampbell@pingidentity.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> Danial recently added some text to the working copy of the draft with
>> https://github.com/danielfett/draft-dpop/commit/f4b42058 that I think
>> aims to better convey the "nutshell: XSS = Game over" sentiment and maybe
>> dissuade folks from looking to DPoP as a cure-all for browser based
>> applications. Admittedly a lot of the initial impetus behind producing the
>> draft in the first place was born out of discussions around browser based
>> apps. But it's neither specific to browser based apps nor a panacea for
>> them. I hope the language in the document and how it's recently been
>> presented is reflective of that reality.
>>
>> The more specific discussions/recommendations around in-browser apps are
>> valuable (if somewhat over my head) but might be more appropriate in the OAuth
>> 2.0 for Browser-Based Apps
>> <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-oauth-browser-based-apps/>
>> draft.
>>
>> With respect to the contents of the DPoP draft, I am still keen to try
>> and flush out some consensus around the question posed in the start of this
>> thread, which is effectively whether or not to include a hash of the access
>> token in the proof.  Acknowledging that "XSS = Game over" does sort of
>> evoke a tendency to not even bother with such incremental protections (what
>> I've tried to humorously coin as "XSS Nihilism" with no success). And as
>> such, I do think that leaving it how it is (no AT hash in the proof) is not
>> unreasonable. But, as Filip previously articulated, including the AT hash
>> in the proof would prevent potentially prolonged access to protected
>> resources even when the victim is offline. And that seems maybe worthwhile
>> to have in the protocol, given that it's not a huge change to the spec. But
>> it's a trade-off either way and I'm personally on the fence about it.
>>
>> Including an RT hash in the proof seems more niche. Best I can tell, it
>> would guard against prolonged offline access to protected resources when
>> access tokens are bearer and the RT was DPoP-bound and also gets rotated.
>> The trade-off there seems less worth it (I think an RT hash would be more
>> awkward in the protocol too).
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Dec 4, 2020 at 5:40 AM Philippe De Ryck <
>> philippe@pragmaticwebsecurity.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> The suggestion to use a web worker to ensure that proofs cannot be
>>> pre-computed is a good one I think. (You could also use a sandboxed iframe
>>> for a separate sub/sibling-domain - dpop.example.com).
>>>
>>>
>>> An iframe with a different origin would also work (not really
>>> sandboxing, as that implies the use of the sandbox attribute to enforce
>>> behavioral restrictions). The downside of an iframe is the need to host
>>> additional HTML, vs a script file for the worker, but the effect is indeed
>>> the same.
>>>
>>> For scenario 4, I think this only works if the attacker can trick/spoof
>>> the AS into using their redirect_uri? Otherwise the AC will go to the
>>> legitimate app which will reject it due to mismatched state/PKCE. Or are
>>> you thinking of XSS on the redirect_uri itself? I think probably a good
>>> practice is that the target of a redirect_uri should be a very minimal and
>>> locked down page to avoid this kind of possibility. (Again, using a
>>> separate sub-domain to handle tokens and DPoP seems like a good idea).
>>>
>>>
>>> My original thought was to use a silent flow with Web Messaging. The
>>> scenario would go as follows:
>>>
>>> 1. Setup a Web Messaging listener to receive the incoming code
>>> 2. Create a hidden iframe with the DOM APIs
>>> 3. Create an authorization request such as “*/authorize?response_type=code&client_id=...&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%example.com
>>> <http://example.com/>&state=...&code_challenge=7-ffnU1EzHtMfxOAdlkp_WixnAM_z9tMh3JxgjazXAk&code_challenge_method=S256&prompt=none&response_mode=web_message*
>>> ”
>>> 4. Load this URL in the iframe, and wait for the result
>>> 5. Retrieve code in the listener, and use PKCE (+ DPoP if needed) to
>>> exchange it for tokens
>>>
>>> This puts the attacker in full control over every aspect of the flow, so
>>> no need to manipulate any of the parameters.
>>>
>>>
>>> After your comment, I also believe an attacker can run the same scenario
>>> without the “*response_mode=web_message*”. This would go as follows:
>>>
>>> 1. Create a hidden iframe with the DOM APIs
>>> 2. Setup polling to read the URL (this will be possible for same-origin
>>> pages, not for cross-origin pages)
>>> 3. Create an authorization request such as “*/authorize?response_type=code&client_id=...&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%example.com
>>> <http://example.com/>&state=...&code_challenge=7-ffnU1EzHtMfxOAdlkp_WixnAM_z9tMh3JxgjazXAk&code_challenge_method=S256*
>>> ”
>>> 4. Load this URL in the iframe, and keep polling
>>> 5. Detect the redirect back to the application with the code in the URL,
>>> retrieve code, and use PKCE (+ DPoP if needed) to exchange it for tokens
>>>
>>> In step 5, the application is likely to also try to exchange the code.
>>> This will fail due to a mismatching PKCE verifier. While noisy, I don’t
>>> think it affects the scenario.
>>>
>>>
>>> IMO, the online attack scenario (i.e., proxying malicious requests
>>> through the victim’s browser) is quite appealing to an attacker, despite
>>> the apparent inconvenience:
>>>
>>>  - the victim’s browser may be inside a corporate firewall or VPN,
>>> allowing the attacker to effectively bypass these restrictions
>>>  - the attacker’s traffic is mixed in with the user’s own requests,
>>> making them harder to distinguish or to block
>>>
>>> Overall, DPoP can only protect against XSS to the same level as HttpOnly
>>> cookies. This is not nothing, but it means it only prevents relatively
>>> naive attacks. Given the association of public key signatures with strong
>>> authentication, people may have overinflated expectations if DPoP is
>>> pitched as an XSS defence.
>>>
>>>
>>> Yes, in the cookie world this is known as “Session Riding”. Having the
>>> worker for token isolation would make it possible to enforce a
>>> coarse-grained policy on outgoing requests to prevent total abuse of the AT.
>>>
>>> My main concern here is the effort of doing DPoP in a browser versus the
>>> limited gains. It may also give a false sense of security.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> With all this said, I believe that the AS can lock down its
>>> configuration to reduce these attack vectors. A few initial ideas:
>>>
>>> 1. Disable silent flows for SPAs using RT rotation
>>> 2. Use the sec-fetch headers to detect and reject non-silent
>>> iframe-based flows
>>>
>>> For example,  an OAuth 2.0 flow in an iframe in Brave/Chrome carries
>>> these headers:
>>> *sec-fetch-dest: iframesec-fetch-mode: navigatesec-fetch-site:
>>> cross-sitesec-fetch-user: ?1*
>>>
>>>
>>> Philippe
>>>
>>>
>>>
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