Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Automating REST Security Part 1: Challenges

Although REST has been a dominant choice for API design for the last decade, there is still little dedicated security research on the subject of REST APIs. The popularity of REST contrasts with a surprisingly small number of systematic approaches to REST security analysis. This contrast is also reflected in the low availability of analysis tools and best security practices that services may use to check if their API is secure.

In this blog series, we try to find reasons for this situation and what we can do about it. In particular, we will investigate why general REST security assessments seem more complicated than other API architectures. We will likewise discuss how we may still find systematic approaches for REST API analysis despite REST's challenges. Furthermore, we will present REST-Attacker, a novel analysis tool designed for automated REST API security testing. In this context, we will examine some of the practical tests provided by REST-Attacker and explore the test results for a small selection of real-world API implementations.

Author

Christoph Heine

Overview

 Understanding the Problem with REST

When evaluating network components and software security, we often rely on specifications for how things should work. For example, central authorities like the IETF standardize many popular web technologies such as HTTP, TLS or DNS. API architectures and designs can also be standardized. Examples of these technologies are SOAP and the more recent GraphQL language specification. Standardization of web standards usually influences their security. Drafting may involve a public review process before publication. This process can identify security flaws or allow the formulation of official implementation and usage best practices. Best practices are great for security research as a specification presents clear guidelines on how an implementation should behave and why.

The situation for REST is slightly different. First of all, REST is not a standard in the sense that there is no technical specification for its implementation. Instead, REST is an architecture style which is more comparable to a collection of paradigms (client-server architecture, statelessness, cacheability, uniform interface, layering, and code-on-demand). Notably, REST has no strict dependency on other web technologies. It only defines how developers should use components but not what components they should use. This paradigm makes REST very flexible as developers are not limited to any particular protocol, library, or data structure.

Furthermore, no central authority could define rules or implementation guidelines. Roy Fielding created the original definition of REST as a design template for the HTTP/1.1 standard in 2000. It is the closest document resembling a standard. However, the document merely explains the REST paradigms and does not focus on security implications.

The flexibility of the REST architecture is probably one of the primary reasons why security research can be challenging. If every implementation is potentially different, how are we supposed to create common best practices, let alone test them consistently across hundreds of APIs? Fortunately for us, not every API tries to reinvent the wheel entirely. In practice, there are a lot of similarities between implementations that may be used to our advantage.

Generalizing REST Security

The most glaring similarity between REST API implementations is that most, if not all, are based on HTTP. If you have worked with REST APIs before, this statement might sound like stating the obvious. However, remember that REST technically does not require a specific protocol. Assuming that every REST API uses HTTP, we can use it as a starting point for a generalization of REST API security. Knowing that we mainly deal with HTTP is also advantageous because HTTP - unlike REST - is standardized. Although HTTP is still complex, it gives us a general idea of what we can expect.

Another observation is that REST API implementations reuse several standardized components in HTTP for API communication. Control parameters and actions in an API request are mapped to components in a generic HTTP request. For example, a resource that an API request operates on, is specified via the HTTP URL. Actions or operations on the said resource are identified and mapped to HTTP methods defined by the HTTP standard, usually GET, POST, DELETE, PUT, and PATCH. API operations retain their intended action from HTTP, i.e., GET retrieves a resource, DELETE removes a resource, and so on. In REST API documentation, we can often find a description of available API endpoints using HTTP "language":

Since the URL and the HTTP method are sufficient to build a basic HTTP request, we can potentially create an API requests if we know a list of REST endpoints. In practice, the construction of such requests can be more complicated because the API may have additional parameter requirements for their requests, e.g., query, header, or body content. Another problem is finding valid IDs of resources can be difficult. Interestingly, we can infer each endpoint's action based on the HTTP method, even without any context-specific knowledge about the API.

We can also find components taken from the HTTP standard in the API response. The requested operation's success or failure is usually indicated using HTTP status codes. They retain their meaning when used in REST APIs. For example, a 200 status code indicates success, while a 401 status code signifies missing authorization (in the preceding API request). This behavior again can be inferred without knowing the exact purpose of the API.

Another factor that influences REST's complexity is its statelessness paradigm. Essentially, statelessness requires that the server does not keep a session between individual requests. As a result, every client request must be self-contained, so multi-message operations are out of the picture. It also effectively limits interaction with the API to two HTTP messages: client request and server response. Not only does this make API communication easier to comprehend, but it also makes testing more manageable since we don't have to worry as much about side effects or keeping track of an operations state.

Implementing access control mechanisms can be more complicated, but we can still find general similarities. While REST does not require any particular authentication or authorization methods, the variety of approaches found in practice is small. REST API implementations usually implement a selection of these methods:

  • HTTP Basic Authentication (user authentication)
  • API keys (client authentication)
  • OAuth2 (authorization)

Two of these methods, OAuth2 and HTTP Basic Authentication, are standardized, while API keys are relatively simple to handle. Therefore, we can generalize access control to some degree. However, access control can be one of the trickier parts of API communication as there may be a lot of API-specific configurations. For example, OAuth2 authorization allows the API to define multiple access levels that may be required to access different resources or operations. How access control data is delivered in the HTTP message may also depend on the API, e.g., by requiring encoding of credentials or passing them in a specified location of the HTTP message (e.g. header, query, or body).

Finding a Systematic Approach for REST API Analysis

So far, we've only discussed theoretical approaches scatching a generic REST API analysis. For implementing an automated analysis tool, we need to adopt the hints that we used for our theoretical API analyses to the tool. For example, the tool would need to know which API endpoints exist to create API requests on its own.

The OpenAPI specification is a popular REST API description format that can be used for such purpose. An OpenAPI file contains a machine-readable definition (as JSON or YAML) of an API's interface. Basic descriptions include the definition of the API endpoints, but can optionally contain much more content and other types of useful information. For example, an endpoint definition may include a list of required parameters for requests, possible response codes and content schemas of API responses. The OpenAPI can even describe security requirements that define what types of access control methods are used.

{     "openapi": "3.1.0",     "info": {         "title": "Example API",         "version": "1.0"     },     "servers": [         {             "url": "http://api.example.com"         }     ],     "paths": {         "/user/info": {             "get": {                 "description": "Returns information about a user.",                 "parameters": [                     {                     "name": "id",                     "in": "query",                     "description": "User ID",                     "required": true                     }                 ],                 "responses": {                     "200": {                         "description": "User information.",                         "content": {                             "application/json": {                                 "schema": {                                     "type": "object",                                     "items": {                                         "$ref": "#/components/schemas/user_info"                                     }                                 }                             }                         }                     }                 }             }         }     },     "security": [         {             "api_key": []         }     ] } 

As you can see from the example above, OpenAPI files allow tools to both understand the API and use the available information to create valid API requests. Furthermore, the definition can give insight into the expected behavior of the API, e.g., by checking the response definitions. These properties make the OpenAPI format another standard on which we can rely. Essentially, a tool that can parse and understand OpenAPI can understand any generic API. With the help of OpenAPI, tools can create and execute tests for APIs automatically. Of course, the ability of tools to derive tests still depends on how much information an OpenAPI file provides. However, wherever possible, automation can potentially eliminate a lot of manual work in the testing process.

Conclusion

When we consider the similarities between REST APIs and OpenAPI descriptions, we can see that there is potential for analyzing REST security with tools. Our next blog post discusses how such an implementation would look like. We will discuss REST-Attacker, our tool for analyzing REST APIs.

Further Reading

The feasibility of tool-based REST analysis has also been discussed in scientific papers. If you want to know more about the topic, you can start here:

  • Atlidakis et al., Checking Security Properties of Cloud Service REST APIs (DOI Link)
  • Lo et al., On the Need for a General REST-Security Framework (DOI Link)
  • Nguyen et al., On the Security Expressiveness of REST-Based API Definition Languages (DOI Link)

Acknowledgement

The REST-Attacker project was developed as part of a master's thesis at the Chair of Network & Data Security of the Ruhr University Bochum. I would like to thank my supervisors Louis Jannett, Christian Mainka, Vladislav Mladenov, and Jörg Schwenk for their continued support during the development and review of the project.

Related posts
  1. Hacker Security Tools
  2. Pentest Tools Apk
  3. Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
  4. Hacker Hardware Tools
  5. Hacking Apps
  6. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  7. Hacker Tools Hardware
  8. Nsa Hack Tools
  9. Underground Hacker Sites
  10. Hacker Tools For Windows
  11. Termux Hacking Tools 2019
  12. Hacker Tools Apk
  13. Hacker Tools Windows
  14. Hacker Tools Software
  15. What Is Hacking Tools
  16. Hack Tools For Mac
  17. Pentest Tools Tcp Port Scanner
  18. Pentest Tools Alternative
  19. Hacking Tools Mac
  20. Hacker Tools Free
  21. Hacking Tools For Windows
  22. Physical Pentest Tools
  23. Hacker Tools For Pc
  24. Pentest Tools Website
  25. How To Hack
  26. Pentest Tools Android
  27. Hacking Tools Kit
  28. Hack And Tools
  29. Hack Tools Pc
  30. Underground Hacker Sites
  31. Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
  32. Hacker Security Tools
  33. Pentest Recon Tools
  34. Hacking Tools Mac
  35. Hack Tools Pc
  36. Hacking Tools Usb
  37. Nsa Hacker Tools
  38. Hacking Tools Free Download
  39. Hacking Tools For Pc
  40. Pentest Tools Framework
  41. Hacker Tools For Ios
  42. Hacking Tools For Beginners
  43. Pentest Box Tools Download
  44. Hacking Apps
  45. Nsa Hacker Tools
  46. Hacker Tools Software
  47. New Hack Tools
  48. Blackhat Hacker Tools
  49. Hacker Tools Free
  50. Hacking Tools For Windows Free Download
  51. Hacking App
  52. Hacker Security Tools
  53. Kik Hack Tools
  54. Pentest Tools Apk
  55. Hacking Tools Download
  56. What Is Hacking Tools
  57. Pentest Tools Kali Linux
  58. Hacker Tools Software
  59. What Is Hacking Tools
  60. Easy Hack Tools
  61. Hacker Tools Hardware
  62. Pentest Tools
  63. Hack Website Online Tool
  64. Hack Tools For Games
  65. Hacks And Tools
  66. Hacking Tools For Kali Linux
  67. Pentest Tools Tcp Port Scanner
  68. Tools For Hacker
  69. Hacker Security Tools
  70. Hack And Tools
  71. Hacker Tools Online
  72. Hacker Tools Windows
  73. Hacking Tools Online
  74. Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
  75. Tools 4 Hack
  76. Tools 4 Hack
  77. Hack Tools Mac
  78. How To Make Hacking Tools
  79. Hacking Tools Mac
  80. Underground Hacker Sites
  81. Underground Hacker Sites
  82. Hack Tools Mac
  83. Hacking Tools For Windows
  84. Hacker Tools For Ios
  85. Hacker Tool Kit
  86. Pentest Tools Alternative
  87. Hacking Tools Online
  88. Hacker Tools For Ios
  89. Easy Hack Tools
  90. Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
  91. Hacker Tools Mac
  92. Pentest Recon Tools
  93. Top Pentest Tools
  94. Hacking Tools Online
  95. Pentest Tools Windows
  96. Pentest Tools Free
  97. Free Pentest Tools For Windows
  98. What Is Hacking Tools
  99. Hacker Tool Kit
  100. Hacking Tools Online
  101. Pentest Tools Tcp Port Scanner
  102. Pentest Tools Framework
  103. Easy Hack Tools
  104. Hack Tools For Ubuntu
  105. Android Hack Tools Github
  106. World No 1 Hacker Software
  107. Hacker Tools Apk Download
  108. Hack Tools
  109. Pentest Automation Tools
  110. Pentest Tools For Mac
  111. Hack Apps
  112. Install Pentest Tools Ubuntu
  113. Hacking Tools 2020
  114. Pentest Tools Find Subdomains
  115. Pentest Automation Tools
  116. Pentest Tools Free
  117. Hacking Tools 2020
  118. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  119. Hacker Tools Online
  120. Hacking Tools 2019
  121. Pentest Tools Framework
  122. Hacking Tools 2020
  123. Black Hat Hacker Tools
  124. Hacker Tools For Pc
  125. Hack Tools For Pc
  126. Hacking Tools 2019
  127. Pentest Tools Android
  128. Hacks And Tools
  129. Hak5 Tools
  130. Hacking Tools Usb
  131. Hacker Tools Online
  132. Hack Tools For Windows

No comments: