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The default SecurityManager checks whether the caller of a particular method has sufficient permissions to proceed with an action. An action is a level of access; for instance, the actions for java.io.FilePermission are "read", "write", "execute", and "delete" [[Sun 2006]]. The "Permission Descriptions and Risks" guide [[Permissions 2008]] enumerates the default permissions and the risks associated with granting these permissions to Java code.

Sometimes, stronger restrictions than those provided by the default security manager are necessary. Custom permissions prove to be more suitable for privilege separation in such cases. Failure to provide custom permissions when no corresponding default permissions exist can lead to privilege escalation vulnerabilities where untrusted callers can execute restricted operations or actions.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example contains a privileged block that is used to perform two sensitive operations, loading a library and setting the default exception handler. When used, the default security manager does not permit the loading of the library unless the RuntimePermission loadLibrary.awt is granted in the policy file. However, the security manager does not automatically guard a caller from performing the second sensitive operation of setting the default exception handler. This is because the permission for this operation is not non-default and, consequently, unavailable. This security weakness can be exploited, for example, by programming and installing an exception handler that reveals information that a legitimate handler would filter out.

class LoadLibrary {
  private void loadLibrary() {
    AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction() {
      public Object run() {
        // privileged code
        System.loadLibrary("awt");
        // perform some sensitive operation like setting the default exception handler
        MyExceptionReporter.setExceptionReporter(reporter); 
        return null; 
      }
    });		  
  }
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution defines a custom permission ExceptionReporterPermission with target exc.reporter to prohibit illegitimate callers from setting the default exception handler. This can be achieved by subclassing BasicPermission which allows binary style permissions (either allow or disallow).

By default, permissions cannot be defined to support actions using BasicPermission, but the actions can be freely implemented in the subclass, if required. BasicPermission is abstract, even though it contains no abstract methods; it defines all the methods that it extends from the Permission class. The custom defined subclass of the BasicPermission class has to define two constructors to call the most appropriate (one- or two-argument) superclass constructor (the superclass lacks a default constructor). The two-argument constructor also accepts an action even though a basic permission does not use it. This is required for constructing permission objects from the policy file. Note that the custom defined subclass of the BasicPermission class is declared to be final in accordance with guideline SEC53-J. Classes that derive from a sensitive class or implement a sensitive interface must be declared final.

The compliant solution then uses a security manager to check whether the caller has the requisite permission to set the handler. The code throws a SecurityException if the check fails. The custom permission class ExceptionReporterPermission is also defined with the two required constructors.

class LoadLibrary {
  private void loadLibrary() {
    AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction() {
      public Object run() {
        // privileged code
        System.loadLibrary("awt");
      
        SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager();
        if(sm != null) {
          sm.checkPermission(new ExceptionReporterPermission("exc.reporter"));
        }

        // perform some sensitive operation like setting the default exception handler
        MyExceptionReporter.setExceptionReporter(reporter); 
        return null; 
      }
    });		  
  }
}

final class ExceptionReporterPermission extends BasicPermission {
  public ExceptionReporterPermission(String permName) {
    super(permName);
  }

  // Even though the actions parameter is ignored, this constructor has to be defined
  public ExceptionReporterPermission(String permName, String actions) {
    super(permName, actions);
  }
}

Assuming that the above sources reside in the c:\package directory on a Windows based system, for example, the policy file needs to grant two permissions, ExceptionReporterPermission exc.reporter and RuntimePermission loadlibrary.awt.

grant codeBase "file:c:\\package" {  // For *nix, file:${user.home}/package/ 
  permission ExceptionReporterPermission "exc.reporter";
  permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "loadLibrary.awt"; 
};

Risk Assessment

Running Java code without defining custom permissions where default permissions are inapplicable can leave an application open to privilege escalation vulnerabilities.

Guideline

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

SEC10-J

medium

probable

high

P4

L3

Automated Detection

TODO

Related Vulnerabilities

Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this guideline on the CERT website.

Related Guidelines

MITRE CWE: CWE-732, "Incorrect Permission Assignment for Critical Resource"

Bibliography

[[API 2006]] Class SecurityManager
[[Oaks 2001]] Chapter 5: The Access Controller, "Permissions"
[[Policy 2002]]
[[Sun 2006]] Permission Descriptions and Risks


SEC09-J. Do not base security checks on untrusted sources      09. Platform Security (SEC)      SEC11-J. Call the superclass's getPermissions method when writing a custom class loader

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