Tomasz Golabek | 06e8b70 | 2019-03-26 16:36:22 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | # |
| 2 | # OWASP Enterprise Security API (ESAPI) Properties file -- PRODUCTION Version |
| 3 | # |
| 4 | # This file is part of the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) |
| 5 | # Enterprise Security API (ESAPI) project. For details, please see |
| 6 | # http://www.owasp.org/index.php/ESAPI. |
| 7 | # |
| 8 | # Copyright (c) 2008,2009 - The OWASP Foundation |
| 9 | # |
| 10 | # DISCUSS: This may cause a major backwards compatibility issue, etc. but |
| 11 | # from a name space perspective, we probably should have prefaced |
| 12 | # all the property names with ESAPI or at least OWASP. Otherwise |
| 13 | # there could be problems is someone loads this properties file into |
| 14 | # the System properties. We could also put this file into the |
| 15 | # esapi.jar file (perhaps as a ResourceBundle) and then allow an external |
| 16 | # ESAPI properties be defined that would overwrite these defaults. |
| 17 | # That keeps the application's properties relatively simple as usually |
| 18 | # they will only want to override a few properties. If looks like we |
| 19 | # already support multiple override levels of this in the |
| 20 | # DefaultSecurityConfiguration class, but I'm suggesting placing the |
| 21 | # defaults in the esapi.jar itself. That way, if the jar is signed, |
| 22 | # we could detect if those properties had been tampered with. (The |
| 23 | # code to check the jar signatures is pretty simple... maybe 70-90 LOC, |
| 24 | # but off course there is an execution penalty (similar to the way |
| 25 | # that the separate sunjce.jar used to be when a class from it was |
| 26 | # first loaded). Thoughts? |
| 27 | ############################################################################### |
| 28 | # |
| 29 | # WARNING: Operating system protection should be used to lock down the .esapi |
| 30 | # resources directory and all the files inside and all the directories all the |
| 31 | # way up to the root directory of the file system. Note that if you are using |
| 32 | # file-based implementations, that some files may need to be read-write as they |
| 33 | # get updated dynamically. |
| 34 | # |
| 35 | # Before using, be sure to update the MasterKey and MasterSalt as described below. |
| 36 | # N.B.: If you had stored data that you have previously encrypted with ESAPI 1.4, |
| 37 | # you *must* FIRST decrypt it using ESAPI 1.4 and then (if so desired) |
| 38 | # re-encrypt it with ESAPI 2.0. If you fail to do this, you will NOT be |
| 39 | # able to decrypt your data with ESAPI 2.0. |
| 40 | # |
| 41 | # YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!!! More details are in the ESAPI 2.0 Release Notes. |
| 42 | # |
| 43 | #=========================================================================== |
| 44 | # ESAPI Configuration |
| 45 | # |
| 46 | # If true, then print all the ESAPI properties set here when they are loaded. |
| 47 | # If false, they are not printed. Useful to reduce output when running JUnit tests. |
| 48 | # If you need to troubleshoot a properties related problem, turning this on may help. |
| 49 | # This is 'false' in the src/test/resources/.esapi version. It is 'true' by |
| 50 | # default for reasons of backward compatibility with earlier ESAPI versions. |
| 51 | ESAPI.printProperties=true |
| 52 | |
| 53 | # ESAPI is designed to be easily extensible. You can use the reference implementation |
| 54 | # or implement your own providers to take advantage of your enterprise's security |
| 55 | # infrastructure. The functions in ESAPI are referenced using the ESAPI locator, like: |
| 56 | # |
| 57 | # String ciphertext = |
| 58 | # ESAPI.encryptor().encrypt("Secret message"); // Deprecated in 2.0 |
| 59 | # CipherText cipherText = |
| 60 | # ESAPI.encryptor().encrypt(new PlainText("Secret message")); // Preferred |
| 61 | # |
| 62 | # Below you can specify the classname for the provider that you wish to use in your |
| 63 | # application. The only requirement is that it implement the appropriate ESAPI interface. |
| 64 | # This allows you to switch security implementations in the future without rewriting the |
| 65 | # entire application. |
| 66 | # |
| 67 | # ExperimentalAccessController requires ESAPI-AccessControlPolicy.xml in .esapi directory |
| 68 | ESAPI.AccessControl=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultAccessController |
| 69 | # FileBasedAuthenticator requires users.txt file in .esapi directory |
| 70 | ESAPI.Authenticator=org.owasp.esapi.reference.FileBasedAuthenticator |
| 71 | ESAPI.Encoder=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultEncoder |
| 72 | ESAPI.Encryptor=org.owasp.esapi.reference.crypto.JavaEncryptor |
| 73 | |
| 74 | ESAPI.Executor=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultExecutor |
| 75 | ESAPI.HTTPUtilities=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultHTTPUtilities |
| 76 | ESAPI.IntrusionDetector=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultIntrusionDetector |
| 77 | # Log4JFactory Requires log4j.xml or log4j.properties in classpath - http://www.laliluna.de/log4j-tutorial.html |
| 78 | ESAPI.Logger=org.owasp.esapi.reference.Log4JLogFactory |
| 79 | #ESAPI.Logger=org.owasp.esapi.reference.JavaLogFactory |
| 80 | ESAPI.Randomizer=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultRandomizer |
| 81 | ESAPI.Validator=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultValidator |
| 82 | |
| 83 | #=========================================================================== |
| 84 | # ESAPI Authenticator |
| 85 | # |
| 86 | Authenticator.AllowedLoginAttempts=3 |
| 87 | Authenticator.MaxOldPasswordHashes=13 |
| 88 | Authenticator.UsernameParameterName=username |
| 89 | Authenticator.PasswordParameterName=password |
| 90 | # RememberTokenDuration (in days) |
| 91 | Authenticator.RememberTokenDuration=14 |
| 92 | # Session Timeouts (in minutes) |
| 93 | Authenticator.IdleTimeoutDuration=20 |
| 94 | Authenticator.AbsoluteTimeoutDuration=120 |
| 95 | |
| 96 | #=========================================================================== |
| 97 | # ESAPI Encoder |
| 98 | # |
| 99 | # ESAPI canonicalizes input before validation to prevent bypassing filters with encoded attacks. |
| 100 | # Failure to canonicalize input is a very common mistake when implementing validation schemes. |
| 101 | # Canonicalization is automatic when using the ESAPI Validator, but you can also use the |
| 102 | # following code to canonicalize data. |
| 103 | # |
| 104 | # ESAPI.Encoder().canonicalize( "%22hello world"" ); |
| 105 | # |
| 106 | # Multiple encoding is when a single encoding format is applied multiple times. Allowing |
| 107 | # multiple encoding is strongly discouraged. |
| 108 | Encoder.AllowMultipleEncoding=false |
| 109 | |
| 110 | # Mixed encoding is when multiple different encoding formats are applied, or when |
| 111 | # multiple formats are nested. Allowing multiple encoding is strongly discouraged. |
| 112 | Encoder.AllowMixedEncoding=false |
| 113 | |
| 114 | # The default list of codecs to apply when canonicalizing untrusted data. The list should include the codecs |
| 115 | # for all downstream interpreters or decoders. For example, if the data is likely to end up in a URL, HTML, or |
| 116 | # inside JavaScript, then the list of codecs below is appropriate. The order of the list is not terribly important. |
| 117 | Encoder.DefaultCodecList=HTMLEntityCodec,PercentCodec,JavaScriptCodec |
| 118 | |
| 119 | |
| 120 | #=========================================================================== |
| 121 | # ESAPI Encryption |
| 122 | # |
| 123 | # The ESAPI Encryptor provides basic cryptographic functions with a simplified API. |
| 124 | # To get started, generate a new key using java -classpath esapi.jar org.owasp.esapi.reference.crypto.JavaEncryptor |
| 125 | # There is not currently any support for key rotation, so be careful when changing your key and salt as it |
| 126 | # will invalidate all signed, encrypted, and hashed data. |
| 127 | # |
| 128 | # WARNING: Not all combinations of algorithms and key lengths are supported. |
| 129 | # If you choose to use a key length greater than 128, you MUST download the |
| 130 | # unlimited strength policy files and install in the lib directory of your JRE/JDK. |
| 131 | # See http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp for more information. |
| 132 | # |
| 133 | # Backward compatibility with ESAPI Java 1.4 is supported by the two deprecated API |
| 134 | # methods, Encryptor.encrypt(String) and Encryptor.decrypt(String). However, whenever |
| 135 | # possible, these methods should be avoided as they use ECB cipher mode, which in almost |
| 136 | # all circumstances a poor choice because of it's weakness. CBC cipher mode is the default |
| 137 | # for the new Encryptor encrypt / decrypt methods for ESAPI Java 2.0. In general, you |
| 138 | # should only use this compatibility setting if you have persistent data encrypted with |
| 139 | # version 1.4 and even then, you should ONLY set this compatibility mode UNTIL |
| 140 | # you have decrypted all of your old encrypted data and then re-encrypted it with |
| 141 | # ESAPI 2.0 using CBC mode. If you have some reason to mix the deprecated 1.4 mode |
| 142 | # with the new 2.0 methods, make sure that you use the same cipher algorithm for both |
| 143 | # (256-bit AES was the default for 1.4; 128-bit is the default for 2.0; see below for |
| 144 | # more details.) Otherwise, you will have to use the new 2.0 encrypt / decrypt methods |
| 145 | # where you can specify a SecretKey. (Note that if you are using the 256-bit AES, |
| 146 | # that requires downloading the special jurisdiction policy files mentioned above.) |
| 147 | # |
| 148 | # ***** IMPORTANT: Do NOT forget to replace these with your own values! ***** |
| 149 | # To calculate these values, you can run: |
| 150 | # java -classpath esapi.jar org.owasp.esapi.reference.crypto.JavaEncryptor |
| 151 | # |
| 152 | Encryptor.MasterKey=tzfztf56ftv |
| 153 | Encryptor.MasterSalt=123456ztrewq |
| 154 | |
| 155 | # Provides the default JCE provider that ESAPI will "prefer" for its symmetric |
| 156 | # encryption and hashing. (That is it will look to this provider first, but it |
| 157 | # will defer to other providers if the requested algorithm is not implemented |
| 158 | # by this provider.) If left unset, ESAPI will just use your Java VM's current |
| 159 | # preferred JCE provider, which is generally set in the file |
| 160 | # "$JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/security/java.security". |
| 161 | # |
| 162 | # The main intent of this is to allow ESAPI symmetric encryption to be |
| 163 | # used with a FIPS 140-2 compliant crypto-module. For details, see the section |
| 164 | # "Using ESAPI Symmetric Encryption with FIPS 140-2 Cryptographic Modules" in |
| 165 | # the ESAPI 2.0 Symmetric Encryption User Guide, at: |
| 166 | # http://owasp-esapi-java.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/documentation/esapi4java-core-2.0-symmetric-crypto-user-guide.html |
| 167 | # However, this property also allows you to easily use an alternate JCE provider |
| 168 | # such as "Bouncy Castle" without having to make changes to "java.security". |
| 169 | # See Javadoc for SecurityProviderLoader for further details. If you wish to use |
| 170 | # a provider that is not known to SecurityProviderLoader, you may specify the |
| 171 | # fully-qualified class name of the JCE provider class that implements |
| 172 | # java.security.Provider. If the name contains a '.', this is interpreted as |
| 173 | # a fully-qualified class name that implements java.security.Provider. |
| 174 | # |
| 175 | # NOTE: Setting this property has the side-effect of changing it in your application |
| 176 | # as well, so if you are using JCE in your application directly rather than |
| 177 | # through ESAPI (you wouldn't do that, would you? ;-), it will change the |
| 178 | # preferred JCE provider there as well. |
| 179 | # |
| 180 | # Default: Keeps the JCE provider set to whatever JVM sets it to. |
| 181 | Encryptor.PreferredJCEProvider= |
| 182 | |
| 183 | # AES is the most widely used and strongest encryption algorithm. This |
| 184 | # should agree with your Encryptor.CipherTransformation property. |
| 185 | # By default, ESAPI Java 1.4 uses "PBEWithMD5AndDES" and which is |
| 186 | # very weak. It is essentially a password-based encryption key, hashed |
| 187 | # with MD5 around 1K times and then encrypted with the weak DES algorithm |
| 188 | # (56-bits) using ECB mode and an unspecified padding (it is |
| 189 | # JCE provider specific, but most likely "NoPadding"). However, 2.0 uses |
| 190 | # "AES/CBC/PKCSPadding". If you want to change these, change them here. |
| 191 | # Warning: This property does not control the default reference implementation for |
| 192 | # ESAPI 2.0 using JavaEncryptor. Also, this property will be dropped |
| 193 | # in the future. |
| 194 | # @deprecated |
| 195 | Encryptor.EncryptionAlgorithm=AES |
| 196 | # For ESAPI Java 2.0 - New encrypt / decrypt methods use this. |
| 197 | Encryptor.CipherTransformation=AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding |
| 198 | |
| 199 | # Applies to ESAPI 2.0 and later only! |
| 200 | # Comma-separated list of cipher modes that provide *BOTH* |
| 201 | # confidentiality *AND* message authenticity. (NIST refers to such cipher |
| 202 | # modes as "combined modes" so that's what we shall call them.) If any of these |
| 203 | # cipher modes are used then no MAC is calculated and stored |
| 204 | # in the CipherText upon encryption. Likewise, if one of these |
| 205 | # cipher modes is used with decryption, no attempt will be made |
| 206 | # to validate the MAC contained in the CipherText object regardless |
| 207 | # of whether it contains one or not. Since the expectation is that |
| 208 | # these cipher modes support support message authenticity already, |
| 209 | # injecting a MAC in the CipherText object would be at best redundant. |
| 210 | # |
| 211 | # Note that as of JDK 1.5, the SunJCE provider does not support *any* |
| 212 | # of these cipher modes. Of these listed, only GCM and CCM are currently |
| 213 | # NIST approved. YMMV for other JCE providers. E.g., Bouncy Castle supports |
| 214 | # GCM and CCM with "NoPadding" mode, but not with "PKCS5Padding" or other |
| 215 | # padding modes. |
| 216 | Encryptor.cipher_modes.combined_modes=GCM,CCM,IAPM,EAX,OCB,CWC |
| 217 | |
| 218 | # Applies to ESAPI 2.0 and later only! |
| 219 | # Additional cipher modes allowed for ESAPI 2.0 encryption. These |
| 220 | # cipher modes are in _addition_ to those specified by the property |
| 221 | # 'Encryptor.cipher_modes.combined_modes'. |
| 222 | # Note: We will add support for streaming modes like CFB & OFB once |
| 223 | # we add support for 'specified' to the property 'Encryptor.ChooseIVMethod' |
| 224 | # (probably in ESAPI 2.1). |
| 225 | # DISCUSS: Better name? |
| 226 | Encryptor.cipher_modes.additional_allowed=CBC |
| 227 | |
| 228 | # 128-bit is almost always sufficient and appears to be more resistant to |
| 229 | # related key attacks than is 256-bit AES. Use '_' to use default key size |
| 230 | # for cipher algorithms (where it makes sense because the algorithm supports |
| 231 | # a variable key size). Key length must agree to what's provided as the |
| 232 | # cipher transformation, otherwise this will be ignored after logging a |
| 233 | # warning. |
| 234 | # |
| 235 | # NOTE: This is what applies BOTH ESAPI 1.4 and 2.0. See warning above about mixing! |
| 236 | Encryptor.EncryptionKeyLength=128 |
| 237 | |
| 238 | # Because 2.0 uses CBC mode by default, it requires an initialization vector (IV). |
| 239 | # (All cipher modes except ECB require an IV.) There are two choices: we can either |
| 240 | # use a fixed IV known to both parties or allow ESAPI to choose a random IV. While |
| 241 | # the IV does not need to be hidden from adversaries, it is important that the |
| 242 | # adversary not be allowed to choose it. Also, random IVs are generally much more |
| 243 | # secure than fixed IVs. (In fact, it is essential that feed-back cipher modes |
| 244 | # such as CFB and OFB use a different IV for each encryption with a given key so |
| 245 | # in such cases, random IVs are much preferred. By default, ESAPI 2.0 uses random |
| 246 | # IVs. If you wish to use 'fixed' IVs, set 'Encryptor.ChooseIVMethod=fixed' and |
| 247 | # uncomment the Encryptor.fixedIV. |
| 248 | # |
| 249 | # Valid values: random|fixed|specified 'specified' not yet implemented; planned for 2.1 |
| 250 | Encryptor.ChooseIVMethod=random |
| 251 | # If you choose to use a fixed IV, then you must place a fixed IV here that |
| 252 | # is known to all others who are sharing your secret key. The format should |
| 253 | # be a hex string that is the same length as the cipher block size for the |
| 254 | # cipher algorithm that you are using. The following is an *example* for AES |
| 255 | # from an AES test vector for AES-128/CBC as described in: |
| 256 | # NIST Special Publication 800-38A (2001 Edition) |
| 257 | # "Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation". |
| 258 | # (Note that the block size for AES is 16 bytes == 128 bits.) |
| 259 | # |
| 260 | Encryptor.fixedIV=0x000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f |
| 261 | |
| 262 | # Whether or not CipherText should use a message authentication code (MAC) with it. |
| 263 | # This prevents an adversary from altering the IV as well as allowing a more |
| 264 | # fool-proof way of determining the decryption failed because of an incorrect |
| 265 | # key being supplied. This refers to the "separate" MAC calculated and stored |
| 266 | # in CipherText, not part of any MAC that is calculated as a result of a |
| 267 | # "combined mode" cipher mode. |
| 268 | # |
| 269 | # If you are using ESAPI with a FIPS 140-2 cryptographic module, you *must* also |
| 270 | # set this property to false. |
| 271 | Encryptor.CipherText.useMAC=true |
| 272 | |
| 273 | # Whether or not the PlainText object may be overwritten and then marked |
| 274 | # eligible for garbage collection. If not set, this is still treated as 'true'. |
| 275 | Encryptor.PlainText.overwrite=true |
| 276 | |
| 277 | # Do not use DES except in a legacy situations. 56-bit is way too small key size. |
| 278 | #Encryptor.EncryptionKeyLength=56 |
| 279 | #Encryptor.EncryptionAlgorithm=DES |
| 280 | |
| 281 | # TripleDES is considered strong enough for most purposes. |
| 282 | # Note: There is also a 112-bit version of DESede. Using the 168-bit version |
| 283 | # requires downloading the special jurisdiction policy from Sun. |
| 284 | #Encryptor.EncryptionKeyLength=168 |
| 285 | #Encryptor.EncryptionAlgorithm=DESede |
| 286 | |
| 287 | Encryptor.HashAlgorithm=SHA-512 |
| 288 | Encryptor.HashIterations=1024 |
| 289 | Encryptor.DigitalSignatureAlgorithm=SHA1withDSA |
| 290 | Encryptor.DigitalSignatureKeyLength=1024 |
| 291 | Encryptor.RandomAlgorithm=SHA1PRNG |
| 292 | Encryptor.CharacterEncoding=UTF-8 |
| 293 | |
| 294 | # This is the Pseudo Random Function (PRF) that ESAPI's Key Derivation Function |
| 295 | # (KDF) normally uses. Note this is *only* the PRF used for ESAPI's KDF and |
| 296 | # *not* what is used for ESAPI's MAC. (Currently, HmacSHA1 is always used for |
| 297 | # the MAC, mostly to keep the overall size at a minimum.) |
| 298 | # |
| 299 | # Currently supported choices for JDK 1.5 and 1.6 are: |
| 300 | # HmacSHA1 (160 bits), HmacSHA256 (256 bits), HmacSHA384 (384 bits), and |
| 301 | # HmacSHA512 (512 bits). |
| 302 | # Note that HmacMD5 is *not* supported for the PRF used by the KDF even though |
| 303 | # the JDKs support it. See the ESAPI 2.0 Symmetric Encryption User Guide |
| 304 | # further details. |
| 305 | Encryptor.KDF.PRF=HmacSHA256 |
| 306 | #=========================================================================== |
| 307 | # ESAPI HttpUtilties |
| 308 | # |
| 309 | # The HttpUtilities provide basic protections to HTTP requests and responses. Primarily these methods |
| 310 | # protect against malicious data from attackers, such as unprintable characters, escaped characters, |
| 311 | # and other simple attacks. The HttpUtilities also provides utility methods for dealing with cookies, |
| 312 | # headers, and CSRF tokens. |
| 313 | # |
| 314 | # Default file upload location (remember to escape backslashes with \\) |
| 315 | HttpUtilities.UploadDir=C:\\ESAPI\\testUpload |
| 316 | HttpUtilities.UploadTempDir=C:\\temp |
| 317 | # Force flags on cookies, if you use HttpUtilities to set cookies |
| 318 | HttpUtilities.ForceHttpOnlySession=false |
| 319 | HttpUtilities.ForceSecureSession=false |
| 320 | HttpUtilities.ForceHttpOnlyCookies=true |
| 321 | HttpUtilities.ForceSecureCookies=true |
| 322 | # Maximum size of HTTP headers |
| 323 | HttpUtilities.MaxHeaderSize=4096 |
| 324 | # File upload configuration |
| 325 | HttpUtilities.ApprovedUploadExtensions=.zip,.pdf,.doc,.docx,.ppt,.pptx,.tar,.gz,.tgz,.rar,.war,.jar,.ear,.xls,.rtf,.properties,.java,.class,.txt,.xml,.jsp,.jsf,.exe,.dll |
| 326 | HttpUtilities.MaxUploadFileBytes=500000000 |
| 327 | # Using UTF-8 throughout your stack is highly recommended. That includes your database driver, |
| 328 | # container, and any other technologies you may be using. Failure to do this may expose you |
| 329 | # to Unicode transcoding injection attacks. Use of UTF-8 does not hinder internationalization. |
| 330 | HttpUtilities.ResponseContentType=text/html; charset=UTF-8 |
| 331 | # This is the name of the cookie used to represent the HTTP session |
| 332 | # Typically this will be the default "JSESSIONID" |
| 333 | HttpUtilities.HttpSessionIdName=JSESSIONID |
| 334 | |
| 335 | |
| 336 | |
| 337 | #=========================================================================== |
| 338 | # ESAPI Executor |
| 339 | # CHECKME - Not sure what this is used for, but surely it should be made OS independent. |
| 340 | Executor.WorkingDirectory=C:\\Windows\\Temp |
| 341 | Executor.ApprovedExecutables=C:\\Windows\\System32\\cmd.exe,C:\\Windows\\System32\\runas.exe |
| 342 | |
| 343 | |
| 344 | #=========================================================================== |
| 345 | # ESAPI Logging |
| 346 | # Set the application name if these logs are combined with other applications |
| 347 | Logger.ApplicationName=ExampleApplication |
| 348 | # If you use an HTML log viewer that does not properly HTML escape log data, you can set LogEncodingRequired to true |
| 349 | Logger.LogEncodingRequired=false |
| 350 | # Determines whether ESAPI should log the application name. This might be clutter in some single-server/single-app environments. |
| 351 | Logger.LogApplicationName=true |
| 352 | # Determines whether ESAPI should log the server IP and port. This might be clutter in some single-server environments. |
| 353 | Logger.LogServerIP=true |
| 354 | # LogFileName, the name of the logging file. Provide a full directory path (e.g., C:\\ESAPI\\ESAPI_logging_file) if you |
| 355 | # want to place it in a specific directory. |
| 356 | Logger.LogFileName=ESAPI_logging_file |
| 357 | # MaxLogFileSize, the max size (in bytes) of a single log file before it cuts over to a new one (default is 10,000,000) |
| 358 | Logger.MaxLogFileSize=10000000 |
| 359 | |
| 360 | |
| 361 | #=========================================================================== |
| 362 | # ESAPI Intrusion Detection |
| 363 | # |
| 364 | # Each event has a base to which .count, .interval, and .action are added |
| 365 | # The IntrusionException will fire if we receive "count" events within "interval" seconds |
| 366 | # The IntrusionDetector is configurable to take the following actions: log, logout, and disable |
| 367 | # (multiple actions separated by commas are allowed e.g. event.test.actions=log,disable |
| 368 | # |
| 369 | # Custom Events |
| 370 | # Names must start with "event." as the base |
| 371 | # Use IntrusionDetector.addEvent( "test" ) in your code to trigger "event.test" here |
| 372 | # You can also disable intrusion detection completely by changing |
| 373 | # the following parameter to true |
| 374 | # |
| 375 | IntrusionDetector.Disable=false |
| 376 | # |
| 377 | IntrusionDetector.event.test.count=2 |
| 378 | IntrusionDetector.event.test.interval=10 |
| 379 | IntrusionDetector.event.test.actions=disable,log |
| 380 | |
| 381 | # Exception Events |
| 382 | # All EnterpriseSecurityExceptions are registered automatically |
| 383 | # Call IntrusionDetector.getInstance().addException(e) for Exceptions that do not extend EnterpriseSecurityException |
| 384 | # Use the fully qualified classname of the exception as the base |
| 385 | |
| 386 | # any intrusion is an attack |
| 387 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntrusionException.count=1 |
| 388 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntrusionException.interval=1 |
| 389 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntrusionException.actions=log,disable,logout |
| 390 | |
| 391 | # for test purposes |
| 392 | # CHECKME: Shouldn't there be something in the property name itself that designates |
| 393 | # that these are for testing??? |
| 394 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntegrityException.count=10 |
| 395 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntegrityException.interval=5 |
| 396 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntegrityException.actions=log,disable,logout |
| 397 | |
| 398 | # rapid validation errors indicate scans or attacks in progress |
| 399 | # org.owasp.esapi.errors.ValidationException.count=10 |
| 400 | # org.owasp.esapi.errors.ValidationException.interval=10 |
| 401 | # org.owasp.esapi.errors.ValidationException.actions=log,logout |
| 402 | |
| 403 | # sessions jumping between hosts indicates session hijacking |
| 404 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.AuthenticationHostException.count=2 |
| 405 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.AuthenticationHostException.interval=10 |
| 406 | IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.AuthenticationHostException.actions=log,logout |
| 407 | |
| 408 | |
| 409 | #=========================================================================== |
| 410 | # ESAPI Validation |
| 411 | # |
| 412 | # The ESAPI Validator works on regular expressions with defined names. You can define names |
| 413 | # either here, or you may define application specific patterns in a separate file defined below. |
| 414 | # This allows enterprises to specify both organizational standards as well as application specific |
| 415 | # validation rules. |
| 416 | # |
| 417 | Validator.ConfigurationFile=validation.properties |
| 418 | |
| 419 | # Validators used by ESAPI |
| 420 | Validator.AccountName=^[a-zA-Z0-9]{3,20}$ |
| 421 | Validator.SystemCommand=^[a-zA-Z\\-\\/]{1,64}$ |
| 422 | Validator.RoleName=^[a-z]{1,20}$ |
| 423 | |
| 424 | #the word TEST below should be changed to your application |
| 425 | #name - only relative URL's are supported |
| 426 | Validator.Redirect=^\\/test.*$ |
| 427 | |
| 428 | # Global HTTP Validation Rules |
| 429 | # Values with Base64 encoded data (e.g. encrypted state) will need at least [a-zA-Z0-9\/+=] |
| 430 | Validator.HTTPScheme=^(http|https)$ |
| 431 | Validator.HTTPServerName=^[a-zA-Z0-9_.\\-]*$ |
| 432 | Validator.HTTPParameterName=^[a-zA-Z0-9_]{1,32}$ |
| 433 | Validator.HTTPParameterValue=^[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-\\/+=@_ ]*$ |
| 434 | Validator.HTTPCookieName=^[a-zA-Z0-9\\-_]{1,32}$ |
| 435 | Validator.HTTPCookieValue=^[a-zA-Z0-9\\-\\/+=_ ]*$ |
| 436 | Validator.HTTPHeaderName=^[a-zA-Z0-9\\-_]{1,32}$ |
| 437 | Validator.HTTPHeaderValue=^[a-zA-Z0-9()\\-=\\*\\.\\?;,+\\/:&_ ]*$ |
| 438 | Validator.HTTPContextPath=^\\/?[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-\\/_]*$ |
| 439 | Validator.HTTPServletPath=^[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-\\/_]*$ |
| 440 | Validator.HTTPPath=^[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-_]*$ |
| 441 | Validator.HTTPQueryString=^[a-zA-Z0-9()\\-=\\*\\.\\?;,+\\/:&_ %]*$ |
| 442 | Validator.HTTPURI=^[a-zA-Z0-9()\\-=\\*\\.\\?;,+\\/:&_ ]*$ |
| 443 | Validator.HTTPURL=^.*$ |
| 444 | Validator.HTTPJSESSIONID=^[A-Z0-9]{10,30}$ |
| 445 | |
| 446 | # Validation of file related input |
| 447 | Validator.FileName=^[a-zA-Z0-9!@#$%^&{}\\[\\]()_+\\-=,.~'` ]{1,255}$ |
| 448 | Validator.DirectoryName=^[a-zA-Z0-9:/\\\\!@#$%^&{}\\[\\]()_+\\-=,.~'` ]{1,255}$ |
| 449 | |
| 450 | # Validation of dates. Controls whether or not 'lenient' dates are accepted. |
| 451 | # See DataFormat.setLenient(boolean flag) for further details. |
| 452 | Validator.AcceptLenientDates=false |