OWASP Java Encoder Project

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OWASP Java Encoder Project
The OWASP Java Encoder is a Java 1.5+ simple-to-use drop-in high-performance encoder class with no dependencies and little baggage. This project will help Java web developers defend against Cross Site Scripting!

Introduction
Contextual Output Encoding is a computer programming technique necessary to stop Cross Site Scripting. This project is a Java 1.5 simple-to-use drop-in high-performance encoder class with no dependencies and little baggage. It provides numerous encoding functions to help defend against XSS in a variety of different HTML, JavaScript, XML and CSS contexts.

Quick Overview
The OWASP Java Encoder library is intended for quick contextual encoding with very little overhead, either in performance or usage. To get started, simply add the encoder-1.1.1.jar, import org.owasp.encoder.Encode and start encoding.

Please look at the javadoc for Encode to see the variety of contexts for which you can encode.

If you want to try it out or see it in action, head over to "Can You XSS This? (.com)" and hit it with your best XSS attack vectors!

Happy Encoding!

Licensing
The OWASP Java Encoder is free to use under the New BSD License.


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What is this?
The OWASP Java Encoder provides:


 * Output Encoding functions to help stop XSS
 * Java 1.5+ standalone library

Code Repo
Java Encoder at Google Code

Mailing List
Java Encoder Mailing List

Project Leader
Project Leader: Jeff Ichnowski (The Encoding Grandmaster) Contributors: Jeremy Long Jim Manico

Related Projects

 * XSS (Cross Site Scripting) Prevention Cheat Sheet
 * OWASP Java HTML Sanitizer Project
 * OWASP JSON Sanitizer


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Quick Download

 * encoder-1.1.1.jar

News and Events

 * [5 Feb 2014] New Wiki
 * [4 Feb 2014] 1.1.1 Released

In Print
We will be releasing a user guide soon!

Classifications

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= Use the Java Encoder Project =

The general API pattern to utilize the Java Encoder Project is "Encode.forContextName(untrustedData)", where "ContextName" is the name of the target context and "untrustedData" in untrusted user input.

For example, to use in a JSP
" />

 <%= Encode.forHtmlContent(textValue) %>" />

Generally Encode.forHtml(...) is safe but slightly less efficient for the above two contexts (since it encodes more characters than necessary).

For JavaScript string data
');">click me 

  var msg = "<%= Encode.forJavaScriptBlock(message) %>"; alert(msg); 

Again generally Encode.forJavaScript is safe for the above two context, but slightly less efficient since it encodes more characters.

Other Contexts
Other contexts can be found in the org.owasp.Encode class methods, including CSS strings, CSS urls, XML contexts, URIs and URI components.

= Deploy the Java Encoder Project =

The OWASP Java Encoder version 1.1.1 is now available in central!

OWASP Encoder at Maven Central.

Core
Direct Download: encoder-1.1.1.jar

Maven
org.owasp.encoder encoder 1.1.1

JSP Tag Library
Direct Download: encoder-jsp-1.1.1.jar

Maven
org.owasp.encoder encoder-jsp</artifactId> 1.1.1

= Grave Accent Issue =

The following describes the Grave Accent XSS issue with unpatched versions of Internet Explorer. Thank you to Rafay Baloch for bringing this to our attention.

Introduction
The grave accent (`), ASCII 96, hex 60 (wikipedia) is subject to a critical flaw in unpatched Internet Explorer. There is no possible encoding of the character that can avoid the issue. For a more in depth presentation on the issue discussed herein, please see Mario Heidrech's presentation.

Background
In Internet Explorer, the grave accent is usable as an HTML attribute quotation character, equivalent to single and double quotes. Specifically, IE treats the following as equivalent:

<%= Encode.forHtml(textValue) %>" />

<input value="this is the value"> <input value=`this is the value`>

It is an IE extension, is not in HTML specifications (HTML4, HTML5), and is probably not well supported in other browsers.

The Issue
The following HTML snippet, demonstrates the cross-site scripting vulnerability related to grave accents on unpatched Internet Explorer:

<input value="``onmouseover=alert(1)"> b.innerHTML=a.innerHTML

When this snippet is run in Internet Explorer the following steps happen:


 * 1) Two div elements are created with id's "a" and "b"
 * 2) The script executes "a.innerHTML" which returns:

<input value=``onmouseover=alert(1)>


 * 1) The script sets "b.innerHTML" to the value from (2) and is converted to the DOM equivalent of

<input value="" onmouseover="alert(1)">

The XSS issue arises from IE returning a value from innerHTML that it does not parse back into the original DOM. Patched version of IE fix this issue by returning the XSS value as a double-quoted attribute. The issue is complicated by the fact that no possible encoding of the grave accent can avoid this issue.

When...

<input value="&#96;&#96;onmouseover=alert(1)">

...is the input, "a.innerHTML" returns the same XSS vector as it does without the encoding.

Recommend Solution
Our recommended workaround is to update any JavaScript based innerHTML read to replace the accent grave with a numeric entity encoded form: "&#96;". As an example, the following change to the XSS vulnerable code above fixes the issue:

a.innerHTML=b.innerHTML.replace(/`/g, "&#96;");

This can be done in any library code that reads the innerHTML. To follow how this addresses the issue, the innerHTML from step 2 of the issue is converted to:

<input value=&#96;&#96;onmouseover=alert(1)>

Since the browser will no longer see the grave accents as an empty attribute, it will convert the input back to a copy of its original DOM.

Other Possible Solutions
As there is no encoding option available, the following options are available to web application authors:


 * 1) Do not use innerHTML copies
 * 2) Filter out the accent grave from any user input
 * 3) Clean up grave accents when using an innerHTML copy

OWASP Java Encoder Library Related Changes
The OWASP Java Encoder Library at its core is intended to be a XSS safe _encoding_ library. The grave accent is a legitimate and frequently used character, that cannot be encoded to avoid this bug in unpatched versions of IE. With enough user feedback, we may update the library to include one of the following options: (1) alternate, drop-in build that filters grave accents, with unchanged API, (2) new filtering methods.

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