PDF Attack Filter for Java EE

Overview
This is a filter to block XSS attacks on PDF files served by Java EE applications. The details of the attack are discussed elsewhere. This filter implements a simple algorithm suggested by Amit Klein. We've placed this software in the public domain to make it easy for anyone to use for any purpose.

Approach
This attack relies on having some javascript in an anchor after the url like this: http://www.site.com/file.pdf#blah=javascript:alert(document.cookie);

So the idea is to strip off the anchor. Unfortunately for us, the browser doesn't send the anchor along with the HTTP request. So we can't just strip it off.

Therefore, we're going to use a redirect to steer the browser to a link without the anchor. Well, actually we have to rewrite the anchor with something else, so we're going to use "#a".

But there's one last problem to overcome. Since the browser doesn't send the anchor, we have no way of telling the original request from the one generated by our redirect. So we'll create an infinite loop.

So to differentiate them, we're going to add a temporary token to the URL, which we'll verify when it arrives. We don't want an attacker forging this token, so we're going to encrypt the user's source IP address along with a timestamp.

This way, only an attacker from the same IP address who can trick you into clicking a link within 10 seconds of creating it can attack you. Not perfect, but certainly raises the bar quite a bit.

Download
The source code (one file) and the compiled class file are in a single zip file.

DOWNLOAD

Setup
The first step is to add the filter to our application. All we have to do is put the PDFAttackFilter class on our application's classpath, probably by putting it in the classes folder in WEB-INF. The class file should be in a folder structure that matches the package (org -> owasp -> filters -> PDFAttackFilter). You can extract the class file from the zip file.

Then we just have to add the following to our web.xml. You should paste this in right above your servlet definitions. You'll want to change the mapping so that it only applies to URL's that serve a PDF file. You could use *.pdf, but you may have servlets that stream PDF files that down't end in .pdf.

PDFAttackFilter org.owasp.filters.PDFAttackFilter  timeoutSeconds 1   encryptionPassword password   PDFAttackTokenName</param-name> PDFAttackToken</param-value> </init-param> <filter-mapping> PDFAttackFilter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> </filter-mapping>

Source Code
This code has been only minimally tested. Please help us verify the approach and the implementation used here.

/** * Software published by the Open Web Application Security Project (http://www.owasp.org) * This software is in the public domain with no warranty. * * @author    Jeff Williams <a href="http://www.aspectsecurity.com">Aspect Security</a> * @created   January 4, 2007 */

package org.owasp.filters;

import java.io.IOException;

import javax.crypto.Cipher; import javax.crypto.SecretKey; import javax.crypto.SecretKeyFactory; import javax.crypto.spec.PBEParameterSpec; import javax.servlet.Filter; import javax.servlet.FilterChain; import javax.servlet.FilterConfig; import javax.servlet.ServletException; import javax.servlet.ServletRequest; import javax.servlet.ServletResponse; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse;

public class PDFAttackFilter implements Filter {

private static sun.misc.BASE64Decoder decoder = new sun.misc.BASE64Decoder; private static sun.misc.BASE64Encoder encoder = new sun.misc.BASE64Encoder; private static byte[] salt = { (byte) 0x23, (byte) 0x3f, (byte) 0x28, (byte) 0x00, (byte) 0x11, (byte) 0xc2, (byte) 0xd1, (byte) 0xff }; private static PBEParameterSpec ps = new PBEParameterSpec( salt, 20 ); private static SecretKey secretKey; private static int timeoutSeconds = 10; private static String tokenName = "PDFAttackToken"; public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response, FilterChain chain) throws IOException, ServletException {		HttpServletRequest req = (HttpServletRequest)request; HttpServletResponse res = (HttpServletResponse)response; String token = req.getParameter( tokenName );

try {

// IF the URL doesn't contain token, then: // calculate X=encrypt_with_key(server_time, client_IP_address) // redirect to file.pdf?token=X // add #a to the end of the url to eliminate any remaining anchors if ( token == null ) {				String etoken = createToken( req ); String base = req.getRequestURI; String querystring = req.getQueryString; if ( querystring != null ) base += "?" + req.getQueryString; String appender = base.contains( "?" ) ? "&" : "?";				String url = base + appender + tokenName + "=" + etoken + "#a"; res.sendRedirect( res.encodeRedirectURL( url ) ); return; }			// ELSE IF the URL contains token, then: // if decrypt(token_query).IP_address==client_IP_address and // decrypt(token_query).time>server_time-10sec // serve the PDF resource as an in-line resource if ( checkToken( token, req ) ) {				chain.doFilter(req, res); return; }			// ELSE IF the token doesn't match, then: // serve the PDF resource as a "save to disk" resource via a proper // choice of the Content-Type header (and/or an attachment, via			// Content-Disposition).

res.addHeader("Content-Disposition", "Attachment" ); res.setContentType( "application/octet" ); // may be overwritten chain.doFilter(req, res); }		catch( Exception e ) {			throw new ServletException( e ); }	}

public void destroy { }

public void init(FilterConfig filterConfig) throws ServletException {		try {			String tsparam = filterConfig.getInitParameter("timeoutSeconds"); timeoutSeconds = Integer.parseInt(tsparam); String epparam = filterConfig.getInitParameter("encryptionPassword"); char[] password = epparam.toCharArray; String tokenName = filterConfig.getInitParameter("PDFAttackTokenName"); SecretKeyFactory kf = SecretKeyFactory.getInstance( "PBEWithMD5AndDES" ); secretKey = kf.generateSecret( new javax.crypto.spec.PBEKeySpec( password ) ); }		catch( Exception e ) {			throw new ServletException( e ); }	}

public String createToken( HttpServletRequest request ) throws Exception {		String address = request.getRemoteAddr; String time = ""+System.currentTimeMillis; return encryptString( address + "|" + time ); }	public boolean checkToken( String etoken, HttpServletRequest request ) throws Exception {		String token = decryptString( etoken ); String currentAddress = request.getRemoteAddr; String tokenAddress = getAddressFromToken( token ); long currentTime = System.currentTimeMillis; long tokenTime = getTimeFromToken( token ); return (currentAddress.equals( tokenAddress )) && (tokenTime > currentTime - timeoutSeconds * 1000); }

public String getAddressFromToken( String token ) {		String address = token.substring( 0, token.indexOf("|") ); return address; }	public long getTimeFromToken( String token ) {		String date = token.substring( token.indexOf("|") + 1 ); Long longdate = Long.parseLong( date ); return longdate.longValue; }	public synchronized String decryptString( String str ) throws Exception {		Cipher passwordDecryptCipher = Cipher.getInstance( "PBEWithMD5AndDES/CBC/PKCS5Padding" ); passwordDecryptCipher.init( Cipher.DECRYPT_MODE, secretKey, ps ); byte[] dec = decoder.decodeBuffer( str.replace( '_', '+') ); byte[] utf8 = passwordDecryptCipher.doFinal( dec ); return new String( utf8, "UTF-8" ); }

public synchronized String encryptString( String str ) throws Exception {		Cipher passwordEncryptCipher = Cipher.getInstance( "PBEWithMD5AndDES/CBC/PKCS5Padding" ); passwordEncryptCipher.init( Cipher.ENCRYPT_MODE, secretKey, ps ); byte[] utf8 = str.getBytes( "UTF-8" ); byte[] enc = passwordEncryptCipher.doFinal( utf8 ); return encoder.encode( enc ).replace( '+', '_' ); }

}

Compile
There are not many dependencies here, just the standard Java EE environment. You can compile with:

javac -classpath j2ee.jar -d. *.java

Then just copy the 'org' folder that gets created to the WEB-INF/classes folder.