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Logging is essential for debugging, incident response, and collecting forensic evidence. Nevertheless, logging sensitive data raises many concerns, including the privacy of the stakeholders, limitations imposed by the law on the collection of personal information, and the potential for data exposure by insiders. Sensitive information includes, but is not limited to, IP addresses, user names and passwords, email addresses, credit card numbers, and any personally identifiable information such as social security numbers. Many countries prohibit or restrict collection of personal data; others permit retention of personal data only when held in an anonymized form. Consequently, logs must not contain sensitive data, particularly when prohibited by law.

Unfortunately, violations of this rule are common. For example, prior to version 0.8.1, the LineControl Java client logged sensitive information, including the local user's password, as documented by CVE-2005-2990.

The java.util.logging class provides a basic logging framework for JDK versions 1.4 and higher. Other logging frameworks exist, but the basic principles apply regardless of the particular logging framework chosen.

Programs typically support varying levels of protection. Some information, such as access times, can be safely logged. Some information can be logged, but the log file must be restricted from everyone but particular administrators. Other information, such as credit card numbers, can be included in logs only in encrypted form. Information, such as passwords, should not be logged at all.

For the following code examples, the log lies outside the trust boundary of the information being recorded. Also, normal log messages should include additional parameters such as date, time, source event, and so forth. This information has been omitted from the following code examples for brevity.

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant code example, a server logs the IP address of the remote client in the event of a security exception. This data can be misused, for example, to build a profile of a user's browsing habits. Such logging may violate legal restrictions in many countries.

When the log cannot contain IP addresses, it should not contain any information about a SecurityException, because it might leak an IP address. When an exception contains sensitive information, the custom MyExceptionReporter class should extract or cleanse it before returning control to the next statement in the catch block (see rule ERR00-J. Do not suppress or ignore checked exceptions).

public void logRemoteIPAddress(String name) {
  Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("com.organization.Log");
  InetAddress machine = null;
  try {
    machine = InetAddress.getByName(name);
  } catch (UnknownHostException e) {
    Exception e = MyExceptionReporter.handle(e);
  } catch (SecurityException e) {
    Exception e = MyExceptionReporter.handle(e);
    logger.severe(name + "," + machine.getHostAddress() + "," +
                  e.toString());
  }
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution does not log security exceptions except for the logging implicitly performed by MyExceptionReporter.

  // ...
  catch (SecurityException e) {
    Exception e = MyExceptionReporter.handle(e);
  }

Noncompliant Code Example

Log messages with sensitive information should not be printed to the console display for security reasons (a possible example of sensitive information is passenger age). The java.util.logging.Logger class supports different logging levels that can be used for classifying such information. These are FINEST, FINER, FINE, CONFIG, INFO, WARNING, and SEVERE. By default, the INFO, WARNING, and SEVERE levels print the message to the console, which is accessible by end users and system administrators.

If we assume that the passenger age can appear in log files on the current system but not on the console display, this code example is noncompliant.

logger.info("Age: " + passengerAge);

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution logs the passenger age at the FINEST level to prevent this information from displaying on the console. As noted previously, we are assuming the age may appear in system log files but not on the console.

// make sure that all handlers only print log messages rated INFO or higher
Handler handlers[] = logger.getHandlers();
for (int i = 0; i < handlers.length; i++) {
  handlers[i].setLevel(Level.INFO);
}
// ...
logger.finest("Age: " + passengerAge);

Risk Assessment

Logging sensitive information can violate system security policies and can violate user privacy when the logging level is incorrect or when the log files are insecure.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

FIO13-J

medium

probable

high

P4

L3

Related Guidelines

MITRE CWE

CWE-532. Information exposure through log files

 

CWE-533. Information exposure through server log files

 

CWE-359. Privacy violation

 

CWE-542. Information exposure through cleanup log files

Bibliography

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[[API 2006

AA. Bibliography#API 06]]

Class java.util.logging.Logger

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

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[[Chess 2007

AA. Bibliography#Chess 07]]

11.1, Privacy and Regulation: Handling Private Information

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

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[[CVE 2011

AA. Bibliography#CVE 08]]

[CVE-2005-2990

http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2005-2990]

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

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[[Sun 2006

AA. Bibliography#Sun 06]]

[Java Logging Overview

http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/logging/overview.html]

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>


      12. Input Output (FIO)      

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