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CVE: CVE-2017-7233 CWE: 183 ipc: note: The feature was involving URL's, which would be web communication, but not inter-process communication. answer: false question: | Did the feature that this vulnerability affected use inter-process communication? IPC includes OS signals, pipes, stdin/stdout, message passing, and clipboard. Writing to files that another program in this software system reads is another form of IPC. Answer should be boolean. CVSS: AV:N/AC:M/Au:N/C:P/I:P/A:N bugs: [] i18n: note: The django project website directly mentions that this feature includes internationalization. answer: true question: | Was the feature impacted by this vulnerability about internationalization (i18n)? An internationalization feature is one that enables people from all over the world to use the system. This includes translations, locales, typography, unicode, or various other features. Answer should be boolean. Write a note about how you came to the conclusions you did. repo: vccs: - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 552f03869ea7f3072b3fa19ffb6cb2d957fd8447 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 011a54315e46acdf288003566b8570440f5ac985 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: a2f2a399566dd68ce7e312fff5a5ba857066797d - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: ada7a4aefb9bec4c34667b511022be6057102f98 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: c5544d289233f501917e25970c03ed444abbd4f0 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 255449c1ee61c14778658caae8c430fa4d76afd6 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 92053acbb9160862c3e743a99ed8ccff8d4f8fd6 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 9c195d45a64b0d2baee218e617ca3a762efc0bf5 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 78f48300567b816b3c8177c33bef1a3ea6b36987 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: fc6d147a63f89795dbcdecb0559256470fff4380 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: beb392b85e71fdd41209d323126181d74090fecb - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: a8b70d251d238b4e6cfc7bb4296da15494f8dff3 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 770427c2896a078925abfca2317486b284d22f04 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 953badbea5a04159adbfa970f5805c0232b6a401 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 28bed24f552aa01e5b69902493f5ee2e06514522 - note: This VCC was discovered automatically via archeogit. commit: 382ab137312961ad62feb8109d70a5a581fe8350 fixes: - note: commit: f824655bc2c50b19d2f202d7640785caabc82787 - note: commit: 254326cb3682389f55f886804d2c43f7b9f23e4f - note: commit: 8339277518c7d8ec280070a780915304654e3b66 bounty: amt: url: announced: lessons: yagni: note: applies: false question: | Are there any common lessons we have learned from class that apply to this vulnerability? In other words, could this vulnerability serve as an example of one of those lessons? Leave "applies" blank or put false if you did not see that lesson (you do not need to put a reason). Put "true" if you feel the lesson applies and put a quick explanation of how it applies. Don't feel the need to claim that ALL of these apply, but it's pretty likely that one or two of them apply. If you think of another lesson we covered in class that applies here, feel free to give it a small name and add one in the same format as these. serial_killer: note: applies: false complex_inputs: note: The complex input in the form of URL's should have been tested better. applies: true distrust_input: note: Better input sanitization would have prevented this vulnerability. applies: true least_privilege: note: applies: false native_wrappers: note: applies: false defense_in_depth: note: applies: false secure_by_default: note: applies: false environment_variables: note: applies: false security_by_obscurity: note: applies: false frameworks_are_optional: note: applies: false reviews: [] sandbox: upvotes: 3 CWE_note: mistakes: answer: "I believe that this mistake was a coding mistake because it was a specific edge case of input that was untested and thus led to the vulnerability. \nThis is evident in the mitigation as the developer fixed the edge case and updated the test case to test for the previous vulnerable input.\n" question: | In your opinion, after all of this research, what mistakes were made that led to this vulnerability? Coding mistakes? Design mistakes? Maintainability? Requirements? Miscommunications? Look at the CWE entry for this vulnerability and examine the mitigations they have written there. Are they doing those? Does the fix look proper? Use those questions to inspire your answer. Don't feel obligated to answer every one. Write a thoughtful entry here that those ing the software engineering industry would find interesting. nickname: Unsafe-URLS's subsystem: name: utils answer: The is_safe_url() function is in the package of django.utils.http. question: | What subsystems was the mistake in? Most systems don't have a formal list of their subsystems, but you can usually infer them from path names, bug report tags, or other key words used. A single source file is not what we mean by a subsystem. In Django, the "Component" field on the bug report is useful. But there may be other subsystems involved. Your subsystem name(s) should not have any dots or slashes in them. Only alphanumerics, whitespace, _, - and @.Feel free to add multiple using a YAML array. In the answer field, explain where you saw these words. In the name field, a subsystem name (or an array of names) e.g. clipboard, model, view, controller, mod_dav, ui, authentication discovered: answer: This vulnerability was internally discovered and then fixed by Tim Graham. contest: false question: | How was this vulnerability discovered? Go to the bug report and read the conversation to find out how this was originally found. Answer in longform below in "answer", fill in the date in YYYY-MM-DD, and then determine if the vulnerability was found by a Google employee (you can tell from their email address). If it's clear that the vulenrability was discovered by a contest, fill in the name there. The automated, contest, and developer flags can be true, false, or nil. If there is no evidence as to how this vulnerability was found, then please explain where you looked. automated: false developer: true description: | Django relies on user input in some cases, such as authentication users and internationalization, to redirect the user to another web page. The security check for these redirects (namely django.utils.http.is_safe_url()) considered some numeric URLs (e.g. http:999999999) "safe" when they should not have been considered safe. If a developer relies on is_safe_url() to provide safe redirect targets and puts such a URL into a link, they could suffer from an XSS attack. unit_tested: fix: true code: true question: | Were automated unit tests involved in this vulnerability? Was the original code unit tested, or not unit tested? Did the fix involve improving the automated tests? For code: and fix: - your answer should be boolean. For the code_answer below, look not only at the fix but the surrounding code near the fix in related directories and determine if and was there were unit tests involved for this subsystem. The code For the fix_answer below, check if the fix for the vulnerability involves adding or improving an automated test to ensure this doesn't happen again. fix_answer: The original test case was ammended with additional code to test for the vulnerability. code_answer: The original test case already did exist to test this function, however, it did not contain code to test the specific entries that were the vulnerability. discoverable: reported_date: specification: answer: false answer_note: I did not see any mention that there was a violation of any specification. instructions: | Is there mention of a violation of a specification? For example, an RFC specification, a protocol specification, or a requirements specification. Be sure to check all artifacts for this: bug report, security advisory, commit message, etc. The answer field should be boolean. In answer_note, please explain why you come to that conclusion. announced_date: 2017-04-04T17:59Z curation_level: 1 published_date: '2017-04-04' CWE_instructions: | Please go to http://cwe.mitre.org and find the most specific, appropriate CWE entry that describes your vulnerability. We recommend going to https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/699.html for the Software Development view of the vulnerabilities. We also recommend the tool http://www.cwevis.org/viz to help see how the classifications work. If you have anything to note about why you classified it this way, write something in CWE_note. This field is optional. Just the number here is fine. No need for name or CWE prefix. If more than one apply here, then choose the best one and mention the others in CWE_note. yaml_instructions: | ===YAML Primer=== This is a dictionary data structure, akin to JSON. Everything before a colon is a key, and the values here are usually strings For one-line strings, you can just use quotes after the colon For multi-line strings, as we do for our instructions, you put a | and then indent by two spaces For readability, we hard-wrap multi-line strings at 80 characters. This is not absolutely required, but appreciated. bounty_instructions: | If you came across any indications that a bounty was paid out for this vulnerability, fill it out here. Or correct it if the information already here was wrong. Otherwise, leave it blank. interesting_commits: commits: - note: This commit fixes a security vulnerability of similar type to the vulnerability in this CVE. The commit is updating the is_safe_url() function to reject URL's starting with control characters, which is also an input sanitization problem. commit: 770427c2896a078925abfca2317486b284d22f04 question: | Are there any interesting commits between your VCC(s) and fix(es)? Write a brief (under 100 words) description of why you think this commit was interesting in light of the lessons learned from this vulnerability. Any emerging themes? curated_instructions: | If you are manually editing this file, then you are "curating" it. Set the version number that you were given in your instructions. This will enable additional editorial checks on this file to make sure you fill everything out properly. If you are a student, we cannot accept your work as finished unless curated is properly updated. upvotes_instructions: | For the first round, ignore this upvotes number. For the second round of reviewing, you will be giving a certain amount of upvotes to each vulnerability you see. Your peers will tell you how interesting they think this vulnerability is, and you'll add that to the upvotes score on your branch. nickname_instructions: | A catchy name for this vulnerability that would draw attention it. If the report mentions a nickname, use that. Must be under 30 characters. Optional. reported_instructions: | What date was the vulnerability reported to the security team? Look at the security bulletins and bug reports. It is not necessarily the same day that the CVE was created. Leave blank if no date is given. Please enter your date in YYYY-MM-DD format. announced_instructions: | Was there a date that this vulnerability was announced to the world? You can find this in changelogs, blogs, bug reports, or perhaps the CVE date. A good source for this is Chrome's Stable Release Channel (https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/). Please enter your date in YYYY-MM-DD format. fixes_vcc_instructions: | Please put the commit hash in "commit" below (see my example in CVE-2011-3092.yml). Fixes and VCCs follow the same format. published_instructions: | Is there a published fix or patch date for this vulnerability? Please enter your date in YYYY-MM-DD format. description_instructions: | You can get an initial description from the CVE entry on cve.mitre.org. These descriptions are a fine start, but they can be kind of jargony. Rewrite this description IN YOUR OWN WORDS. Make it interesting and easy to read to anyone with some programming experience. We can always pull up the NVD description later to get more technical. Try to still be specific in your description, but remove project-specific stuff. Remove references to versions, specific filenames, and other jargon that outsiders to this project would not understand. Technology like "regular expressions" is fine, and security phrases like "invalid write" are fine to keep too. Your target audience is people just like you before you took any course in security |
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