SSL Best Practices

Status
Draft

What is SSL
SSL is the abbreviation of Secured Socket Layer. It is a protocol enabling to settle a secured communication between two hosts. The origin host is viewed as an SSL client and the destination host as an SSL server.

SSL has also been normalised as the TLS (Transport Layer Security) protocol.

SSL is used on top of a transport level protocol like HTTP or FTP in order to secure it.

SSL enables :
 * authentication of the destination host for the origin host or mutual authentication of both the origin and the destination hosts
 * data confidentiality through encryption
 * data integrity checking through hashing.

SSL relies on two types of encryption :
 * public key encryption in the initiation phase, where authentication takes place
 * secret key encryption when a session has been established and data is sent between two peers which trust each other.

SSL only secures the communication between two endpoints : in the origin and destination points, data is in clear text, unless it is encrypted by another means, at the application level.

Secure Login Pages
There are several major considerations for securely designing a login page. The following text will address the considerations with regards to SSL.

This is pretty obvious. The username and password must be posted over an SSL connection. If you look at the action element of the form it should be https. The actual page where the user fills out the form must be an HTTPS page. If its not, an attacker could modify the page as it is sent to the user and change the form submission location or insert JavaScript which steals the username/password as it is typed. The presence of any SSL warning message is a failure. Some of these error messages are legitimate security concerns; others desensitize the users against real security concerns since they blindly click accept. The presence of any SSL error message is unacceptable - even domain name mismatch for the www. If a user attempts to connect to the HTTP version of the login page the connection should be denied. One strategy is to automatically redirect HTTP connections to HTTPS connections. While this does get the user to the secure page there is one lingering risk. An attacker performing a man in the middle attack could intercept the HTTP redirect response and send the user to an alternate page.
 * Logins Most Post to an SSL Page
 * Login Landing Page Must Use SSL
 * There must be no SSL Error or Warning Messages
 * HTTP connections should be dropped

Examples with Jetty
See How to configure SSL for Jetty