Oh, I Found a Security Issue Oh, I Found a Security Issue Oh, I Found a Security Issue

Oh, I Found a Security Issue

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Django’s Security Process

When you’ve used Django and follow one of our email lists you will likely have seen an announcement of a Django security release much like this one from April 4th this year:

Date: Tue, 4 Apr 2017 08:31:25 -0700 (PDT)
From: Tim Graham <…..@gmail.com>
To: django-announce <django-announce@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [django-announce] Django security releases issued: 1.10.7, 1.9.13, and 1.8.18

Today the Django team issued 1.10.7, 1.9.13, and 1.8.18 as part of our security process. These releases address two security issues, and we encourage all users to upgrade as soon as possible: https://www.djangoproject.com/weblog/2017/apr/04/security-releases/

As a reminder, we ask that potential security issues be reported via private email to security@djangoproject.com and not via Django’s Trac instance or the django-developers list. Please see https://www.djangoproject.com/security for further information.

This post is how we, the Django team, get to the state where we are able to send out such an announcement.

Reporting the issue

The process usually starts with somebody reporting a security issue to the security team. The preferred way to contact us is security@djangoproject.com.

While we can’t give a guaranteed response time you can expect an acknowledgment within 24 hours. Please do not hesitate to send a follow-up email if you do not get a response within 2-3 days. Depending on the severity of the issue maybe even earlier.

Apart from that, do not under any circumstances, communicate your findings to anybody else. The Django security team will take care of the public announcement later.

Assessing the reported issue

Once the security team got your email, it will assess the issue. You can expect to be included in the discussion. This allows you to make sure your reported issue is addressed and that the security team is not missing the point.

Fixing the issue

The security team will also ask you if you want to supply a patch or if it should fix the issue itself.

Fixing the issue is often not hard. We are allowed to sacrifice backward compatibility in case of security issues. On top of that, history has shown that many patches are only a few lines of code checking just ONE MORE THING

Confirming the fix

At some point, there is a patch available.

If you wrote the patch the security team will review it.

If somebody from the security team wrote the patch, we kindly ask you to review the patch to ensure it actually fixes the issue you reported and we don’t miss something.

This is a very important part of the process, even with multiple people confirming that the patch works, there is still the possibility of missing something.

Pre-notification

Once the patch is “ready”, to be committed to the release branches, we send out pre-notification emails to some people and organizations. We will not make this list public. It mostly consists of distributors and organizations with lots of personal data.

Aside from the detailed, private notification, we announce the upcoming security release on the django-announce mailing list with a time frame during which the release will be made available.

Release & Announcement

About a week after the pre-notification there’s the security release.

At that point, we will commit the security patches publicly. From that point on we consider the security issue to be disclosed publicly.

After that, somebody from the release team will cut the corresponding Django releases.

We will then publish a blog post with some details on the security issue. We will not publish exploits.

We will publish Common Vulnerability and Exposure numbers — or CVEs — so that you can check against your downstream vendor’s CVE database to see if they patched the vulnerability.

Furthermore, we will announce the releases to the django-announce and oss- security OpenWall mailing list.

Implementing these steps yourself

As you can see, there’s a lot of process on handling security issues properly. At least we think we handle them properly.

How can you apply this to your library and make it more secure?

Setup reporting channel

First and foremost, communicate a way people can securely reach out to you to report a security issue.

A sentence like “If you think you found a security issue please get in touch via FOO” goes a long way. And PLEASE, including the actual email address there goes a long way.

Don’t let somebody who wants to help you find a communication channel themselves. Tell them that even a suspicion of a security issue is worth reporting privately. Even if it turns out to not be an issue.

Monitor reporting channel

I hope it goes without saying that you have to monitor whatever communication channel you choose.

If you don’t have the time to monitor 24/7, which I believe nobody in the room has, add something like “you should receive an acknowledgment within 7 days” or whatever is reasonable FOR YOU! This gives the reporter the information that they may need to wait for a short time.

Just because YOU develop an open source library in your free time doesn’t mean that you need to be around fixing it 24/7. Have a life besides it, please.

Fix the issue

Find a way to fix the bug. Communicate with the reporter. Once you think you are good with you have, ask the reporter to confirm your patch. BEFORE you make it public!

Release & Announce

Commit and release a new version of your library or program. Inform people about the release. Communicate where you are going to release such information at a prominent place so people can subscribe to updates.

My suggestion is to generally report to the oss-security OpenWall list.

Learn from it

For your own sake, accept the fact that you had a security issue in your software and don’t stress out over it. We’re all humans. We all make mistakes! Learn from it and try to not make this mistake again.

For what it’s worth, Django received over 60 CVEs since its release. And there’s a whole bunch of people reviewing code.

OWASP Top 10

One thing I want to mention here is the Open Web Application Security Project or OWASP. They provide a Top 10 of security issue classifications that people should care about. It’s often considered a “standard” but there are some loud voices that claim OWASP is not focusing on the real issues but tries to tackle them from a higher or business level. Have a look at it and decide for yourself.

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