16 Security - Reference Documentation
Authors: Graeme Rocher, Peter Ledbrook, Marc Palmer, Jeff Brown, Luke Daley, Burt Beckwith, Lari Hotari
Version: 2.5.6
Table of Contents
16 Security
Grails is no more or less secure than Java Servlets. However, Java servlets (and hence Grails) are extremely secure and largely immune to common buffer overrun and malformed URL exploits due to the nature of the Java Virtual Machine underpinning the code.Web security problems typically occur due to developer naivety or mistakes, and there is a little Grails can do to avoid common mistakes and make writing secure applications easier to write.What Grails Automatically Does
Grails has a few built in safety mechanisms by default.- All standard database access via GORM domain objects is automatically SQL escaped to prevent SQL injection attacks
- The default scaffolding templates HTML escape all data fields when displayed
- Grails link creating tags (link, form, createLink, createLinkTo and others) all use appropriate escaping mechanisms to prevent code injection
- Grails provides codecs to let you trivially escape data when rendered as HTML, JavaScript and URLs to prevent injection attacks here.
16.1 Securing Against Attacks
SQL injection
Hibernate, which is the technology underlying GORM domain classes, automatically escapes data when committing to database so this is not an issue. However it is still possible to write bad dynamic HQL code that uses unchecked request parameters. For example doing the following is vulnerable to HQL injection attacks:def vulnerable() { def books = Book.find("from Book as b where b.title ='" + params.title + "'") }
def vulnerable() {
def books = Book.find("from Book as b where b.title ='${params.title}'")
}
def safe() {
def books = Book.find("from Book as b where b.title = ?",
[params.title])
}
def safe() {
def books = Book.find("from Book as b where b.title = :title",
[title: params.title])
}
Phishing
This really a public relations issue in terms of avoiding hijacking of your branding and a declared communication policy with your customers. Customers need to know how to identify valid emails.XSS - cross-site scripting injection
It is important that your application verifies as much as possible that incoming requests were originated from your application and not from another site. It is also important to ensure that all data values rendered into views are escaped correctly. For example when rendering to HTML or XHTML you must ensure that people cannot maliciously inject JavaScript or other HTML into data or tags viewed by others.Grails 2.3 and above include special support for automatically encoded data placed into GSP pages. See the documentation on Cross Site Scripting (XSS) prevention for further information.You must also avoid the use of request parameters or data fields for determining the next URL to redirect the user to. If you use asuccessURL
parameter for example to determine where to redirect a user to after a successful login, attackers can imitate your login procedure using your own site, and then redirect the user back to their own site once logged in, potentially allowing JavaScript code to then exploit the logged-in account on the site.Cross-site request forgery
CSRF involves unauthorized commands being transmitted from a user that a website trusts. A typical example would be another website embedding a link to perform an action on your website if the user is still authenticated.The best way to decrease risk against these types of attacks is to use theuseToken
attribute on your forms. See Handling Duplicate Form Submissions for more information on how to use it. An additional measure would be to not use remember-me cookies.HTML/URL injection
This is where bad data is supplied such that when it is later used to create a link in a page, clicking it will not cause the expected behaviour, and may redirect to another site or alter request parameters.HTML/URL injection is easily handled with the codecs supplied by Grails, and the tag libraries supplied by Grails all use encodeAsURL where appropriate. If you create your own tags that generate URLs you will need to be mindful of doing this too.Denial of service
Load balancers and other appliances are more likely to be useful here, but there are also issues relating to excessive queries for example where a link is created by an attacker to set the maximum value of a result set so that a query could exceed the memory limits of the server or slow the system down. The solution here is to always sanitize request parameters before passing them to dynamic finders or other GORM query methods:int limit = 100 def safeMax = Math.min(params.max?.toInteger() ?: limit, limit) // limit to 100 results return Book.list(max:safeMax)
Guessable IDs
Many applications use the last part of the URL as an "id" of some object to retrieve from GORM or elsewhere. Especially in the case of GORM these are easily guessable as they are typically sequential integers.Therefore you must assert that the requesting user is allowed to view the object with the requested id before returning the response to the user.Not doing this is "security through obscurity" which is inevitably breached, just like having a default password of "letmein" and so on.You must assume that every unprotected URL is publicly accessible one way or another.16.2 Cross Site Scripting (XSS) Prevention
Cross Site Scripting (XSS) attacks are a common attack vector for web applications. They typically involve submitting HTML or Javascript code in a form such that when that code is displayed, the browser does something nasty. It could be as simple as popping up an alert box, or it could be much worse. The solution is to escape all untrusted user input when it is displayed in a page. For example,<script>alert('Got ya!');</script>
<script>alert('Got ya!');</script>
${}
expressions in GSPs. All the standard GSP tags are also safe by default, escaping any relevant attribute values.So what happens when you want to stop Grails from escaping some content? There are valid use cases for putting HTML into the database and rendering it as-is, as long as that content is trusted. In such cases, you can tell Grails that the content is safe as should be rendered raw, i.e. without any escaping:<section>${raw(page.content)}</section>
raw()
method you see here is available from controllers, tag libraries and GSP pages.XSS prevention is hard and requires a lot of developer attentionAlthough Grails plays it safe by default, that is no guarantee that your application will be invulnerable to an XSS-style attack. Such an attack is less likely to succeed than would otherwise be the case, but developers should always be conscious of potential attack vectors and attempt to uncover vulnerabilities in the application during testing. It's also easy to switch to an unsafe default, thereby increasing the risk of a vulnerability being introduced.There are more details about the XSS in OWASP - XSS prevention rules and OWASP - Types of Cross-Site Scripting. Types of XSS are: Stored XSS, Reflected XSS and DOM based XSS. DOM based XSS prevention is coming more important because of the popularity of Javascript client side templating and Single Page Apps.Grails codecs are mainly for preventing stored and reflected XSS type of attacks. Grails 2.4 includes HTMLJS codec that assists in preventing some DOM based XSS attacks.It's difficult to make a solution that works for everyone, and so Grails provides a lot of flexibility with regard to fine-tuning how escaping works, allowing you to keep most of your application safe while switching off default escaping or changing the codec used for pages, tags, page fragments, and more.
Configuration
It is recommended that you review the configuration of a newly created Grails application to garner an understanding of XSS prevention works in Grails.GSP features the ability to automatically HTML encode GSP expressions, and as of Grails 2.3 this is the default configuration. The default configuration (found inConfig.groovy
) for a newly created Grails application can be seen below:grails { views { gsp { encoding = 'UTF-8' htmlcodec = 'xml' // use xml escaping instead of HTML4 escaping codecs { expression = 'html' // escapes values inside ${} scriptlet = 'html' // escapes output from scriptlets in GSPs taglib = 'none' // escapes output from taglibs staticparts = 'none' // escapes output from static template parts } } // escapes all not-encoded output at final stage of outputting // filteringCodecForContentType.'text/html' = 'html' } } }
codecs
block and are described below:
expression
- The expression codec is used to encode any code found within ${..} expressions. The default for newly created application ishtml
encoding.scriptlet
- Used for output from GSP scriplets (<% %>, <%= %> blocks). The default for newly created applications ishtml
encodingtaglib
- Used to encode output from GSP tag libraries. The default isnone
for new applications, as typically it is the responsibility of the tag author to define the encoding of a given tag and by specifyingnone
Grails remains backwards compatible with older tag libraries.staticparts
- Used to encode the raw markup output by a GSP page. The default isnone
.
Double Encoding Prevention
Versions of Grails prior to 2.3, included the ability to set the default codec tohtml
, however enabling this setting sometimes proved problematic when using existing plugins due to encoding being applied twice (once by the html
codec and then again if the plugin manually called encodeAsHTML
).Grails 2.3 includes double encoding prevention so that when an expression is evaluated, it will not encode if the data has already been encoded (Example ${foo.encodeAsHTML()}
).Raw Output
If you are 100% sure that the value you wish to present on the page has not been received from user input, and you do not wish the value to be encoded then you can use theraw
method:${raw(book.title)}
Per Plugin Encoding
Grails also features the ability to control the codecs used on a per plugin basis. For example if you have a plugin namedfoo
installed, then placing the following configuration in your application's Config.groovy
will disable encoding for only the foo
pluginfoo.grails.views.gsp.codecs.expression = "none"
Per Page Encoding
You can also control the various codecs used to render a GSP page on a per page basis, using a page directive:<%@page expressionCodec="none" %>
Per Tag Library Encoding
Each tag library created has the opportunity to specify a default codec used to encode output from the tag library using the "defaultEncodeAs" property:static defaultEncodeAs = 'html'
static encodeAsForTags = [tagName: 'raw']
Context Sensitive Encoding Switching
Certain tags require certain encodings and Grails features the ability to enable a codec only a certain part of a tag's execution using the "withCodec" method. Consider for example the "<g:javascript>"" tag which allows you to embed JavaScript code in the page. This tag requires JavaScript encoding, not HTML coding for the execution of the body of the tag (but not for the markup that is output):out.println '<script type="text/javascript">' withCodec("JavaScript") { out << body() } out.println() out.println '</script>'
Forced Encoding for Tags
If a tag specifies a default encoding that differs from your requirements you can force the encoding for any tag by passing the optional 'encodeAs' attribute:<g:message code="foo.bar" encodeAs="JavaScript" />
Default Encoding for All Output
The default configuration for new applications is fine for most use cases, and backwards compatible with existing plugins and tag libraries. However, you can also make your application even more secure by configuring Grails to always encode all output at the end of a response. This is done using thefilteringCodecForContentType
configuration in Config.groovy
:grails.views.gsp.filteringCodecForContentType.'text/html' = 'html'
staticparts
codec typically needs to be set to raw
so that static markup is not encoded:codecs {
expression = 'html' // escapes values inside ${}
scriptlet = 'html' // escapes output from scriptlets in GSPs
taglib = 'none' // escapes output from taglibs
staticparts = 'raw' // escapes output from static template parts
}
16.3 Encoding and Decoding Objects
Grails supports the concept of dynamic encode/decode methods. A set of standard codecs are bundled with Grails. Grails also supports a simple mechanism for developers to contribute their own codecs that will be recognized at runtime.Codec Classes
A Grails codec class is one that may contain an encode closure, a decode closure or both. When a Grails application starts up the Grails framework dynamically loads codecs from thegrails-app/utils/
directory.The framework looks under grails-app/utils/
for class names that end with the convention Codec
. For example one of the standard codecs that ships with Grails is HTMLCodec
.If a codec contains an encode
closure Grails will create a dynamic encode
method and add that method to the Object
class with a name representing the codec that defined the encode closure. For example, the HTMLCodec
class defines an encode
closure, so Grails attaches it with the name encodeAsHTML
.The HTMLCodec
and URLCodec
classes also define a decode
closure, so Grails attaches those with the names decodeHTML
and decodeURL
respectively. Dynamic codec methods may be invoked from anywhere in a Grails application. For example, consider a case where a report contains a property called 'description' which may contain special characters that must be escaped to be presented in an HTML document. One way to deal with that in a GSP is to encode the description property using the dynamic encode method as shown below:${report.description.encodeAsHTML()}
value.decodeHTML()
syntax.Encoder and Decoder interfaces for staticly compiled code
A preferred way to use codecs is to use the codecLookup bean to get hold ofEncoder
and Decoder
instances .package org.codehaus.groovy.grails.support.encoding;public interface CodecLookup { public Encoder lookupEncoder(String codecName); public Decoder lookupDecoder(String codecName); }
CodecLookup
and Encoder
interface
import org.codehaus.groovy.grails.support.encoding.CodecLookupclass CustomTagLib {
CodecLookup codecLookup def myTag = { Map attrs, body ->
out << codecLookup.lookupEncoder('HTML').encode(attrs.something)
}
}
Standard Codecs
HTMLCodecThis codec performs HTML escaping and unescaping, so that values can be rendered safely in an HTML page without creating any HTML tags or damaging the page layout. For example, given a value "Don't you know that 2 > 1?" you wouldn't be able to show this safely within an HTML page because the > will look like it closes a tag, which is especially bad if you render this data within an attribute, such as the value attribute of an input field.Example of usage:<input name="comment.message" value="${comment.message.encodeAsHTML()}"/>
Note that the HTML encoding does not re-encode apostrophe/single quote so you must use double quotes on attribute values to avoid text with apostrophes affecting your page.HTMLCodec defaults to HTML4 style escaping (legacy HTMLCodec implementation in Grails versions before 2.3.0) which escapes non-ascii characters.You can use plain XML escaping instead of HTML4 escaping by setting this config property in Config.groovy:
grails.views.gsp.htmlcodec = 'xml'
<a href="/mycontroller/find?searchKey=${lastSearch.encodeAsURL()}">
Repeat last search
</a>
Your registration code is: ${user.registrationCode.encodeAsBase64()}
Element.update('${elementId}',
'${render(template: "/common/message").encodeAsJavaScript()}')
Selected colour: #${[255,127,255].encodeAsHex()}
Your API Key: ${user.uniqueID.encodeAsMD5()}
byte[] passwordHash = params.password.encodeAsMD5Bytes()
Your API Key: ${user.uniqueID.encodeAsSHA1()}
byte[] passwordHash = params.password.encodeAsSHA1Bytes()
Your API Key: ${user.uniqueID.encodeAsSHA256()}
byte[] passwordHash = params.password.encodeAsSHA256Bytes()
Custom Codecs
Applications may define their own codecs and Grails will load them along with the standard codecs. A custom codec class must be defined in thegrails-app/utils/
directory and the class name must end with Codec
. The codec may contain a static
encode
closure, a static
decode
closure or both. The closure must accept a single argument which will be the object that the dynamic method was invoked on. For Example:class PigLatinCodec { static encode = { str -> // convert the string to pig latin and return the result } }
${lastName.encodeAsPigLatin()}
16.4 Authentication
Grails has no default mechanism for authentication as it is possible to implement authentication in many different ways. It is however, easy to implement a simple authentication mechanism using either interceptors or filters. This is sufficient for simple use cases but it's highly preferable to use an established security framework, for example by using the Spring Security or the Shiro plugin.Filters let you apply authentication across all controllers or across a URI space. For example you can create a new set of filters in a class calledgrails-app/conf/SecurityFilters.groovy
by running:grails create-filters security
class SecurityFilters { def filters = { loginCheck(controller: '*', action: '*') { before = { if (!session.user && actionName != "login") { redirect(controller: "user", action: "login") return false } } } } }
loginCheck
filter intercepts execution before all actions except login
are executed, and if there is no user in the session then redirect to the login
action.The login
action itself is simple too:def login() { if (request.get) { return // render the login view } def u = User.findByLogin(params.login) if (u) { if (u.password == params.password) { session.user = u redirect(action: "home") } else { render(view: "login", model: [message: "Password incorrect"]) } } else { render(view: "login", model: [message: "User not found"]) } }
16.5 SSL in Development
You can configure the embedded Tomcat server to use SSL in development mode. Typically with Tomcat you would edit theserver.xml
file to define these properties. However in Grails you need to hook into Tomcat by configuring grails-app/scripts/_Events.groovy
. In the example below I am using environment variables to pass in the values of the keystore and truststore. Notice also that we must add the keystore/truststore properties twice. UsingSystem.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.keyStore", "$keystorepath")
grails-app/scripts/_Events.groovy
:import org.apache.catalina.connector.* import grails.util.Environment eventConfigureTomcat = { org.apache.catalina.startup.Tomcat tomcat -> if (Environment.getCurrent() == Environment.DEVELOPMENT) { String keystorepass = System.getenv("KEY_STORE_PASS") String keystorepath = System.getenv("KEY_STORE_PATH") String truststorepass = System.getenv("TRUST_STORE_PASS") String truststorepath = System.getenv("TRUST_STORE_PATH") System.setProperty("javax.net.debug", "ssl") //use this to confirm grails adds proper keystore/truststore settings System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.keyStoreType", "jks") System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.keyStore", "$keystorepath") System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.keyStorePassword", "$keystorepass") System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStoreType", "jks") System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStore", "$truststorepath") System.setProperty("javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword", "$truststorepass") def connector = new org.apache.catalina.connector.Connector() connector.port = 8443 connector.protocol = 8443 connector.scheme = "https" connector.setProperty("maxThreads", "150") connector.setProperty("SSLEnabled", "true") connector.setProperty("secure", "true") connector.setProperty("clientAuth", "true") connector.setProperty("sslProtocol", "TLS") connector.setProperty("keystoreType", "JKS") connector.setProperty("keystoreFile", "$keystorepath") connector.setProperty("keystorePass", "$keystorepass") connector.setProperty("truststoreType", "JKS") connector.setProperty("truststoreFile", "$truststorepath") connector.setProperty("truststorePass", "$truststorepass") tomcat.service.addConnector connector println "SSL configuration complete" } }
16.6 Security Plugins
If you need more advanced functionality beyond simple authentication such as authorization, roles etc. then you should consider using one of the available security plugins.16.6.1 Spring Security
The Spring Security plugins are built on the Spring Security project which provides a flexible, extensible framework for building all sorts of authentication and authorization schemes. The plugins are modular so you can install just the functionality that you need for your application. The Spring Security plugins are the official security plugins for Grails and are actively maintained and supported.There is a Core plugin which supports form-based authentication, encrypted/salted passwords, HTTP Basic authentication, etc. and secondary dependent plugins provide alternate functionality such as OpenID authentication, ACL support, single sign-on with Jasig CAS, LDAP authentication, Kerberos authentication, and a plugin providing user interface extensions and security workflows.See the Core plugin page for basic information and the user guide for detailed information.16.6.2 Shiro
Shiro is a Java POJO-oriented security framework that provides a default domain model that models realms, users, roles and permissions. With Shiro you extend a controller base class calledJsecAuthBase
in each controller you want secured and then provide an accessControl
block to setup the roles. An example below:class ExampleController extends JsecAuthBase { static accessControl = { // All actions require the 'Observer' role. role(name: 'Observer') // The 'edit' action requires the 'Administrator' role. role(name: 'Administrator', action: 'edit') // Alternatively, several actions can be specified. role(name: 'Administrator', only: [ 'create', 'edit', 'save', 'update' ]) } … }