Security checklist for developers

This document is provided as a supplement to . This is a list of common development tasks, and the security measures that need to be taken.

Security checklist
{| class="wikitable" | ! If you are working with ... ! have you ...


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Browser Cookies

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 * reduced reviewer anxiety by using instead of  ?
 * fetched cookies using ?
 * set cookies using ?


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Dynamic code generation
Avoid using functions like and , as well as the  [ https://php.net/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers pattern modifier] for. While powerful and convenient, these features are inherently insecure:
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 * it's easier to put arbitrary strings into text processed by a regular expressions, which – when combined with the pattern modifier – can lead to code injection attacks.
 * it is harder to read and maintain code that is part of a string.
 * static analysis tools won't catch warnings and errors in the code.
 * opcode caches (like APC) can't cache code mixed into strings.
 * sometimes has garbage-collection issues.
 * A loop which has a inside will create a new function on each iteration.

Sometimes you really do need these features (obviously needs to run    but in most cases, we'd rather see the function broken out and referred as a callback.

Inline lambda functions will make it easier to make your callback inline while retaining the benefits of code that's written in native syntax instead of strings.


 * Anything external that is used in part of regex should be escaped with preg_quote ($externalStr, $delimiter) . It puts a backslash in front of every character that is part of the regular expression syntax, and escapes also the delimiter given as second parameter:


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External programs

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 * executed the program via from namespace  ?
 * quoted all arguments to external programs using the above's secure parameter passing facilities (which is basically everything except for )?

Note that old /  are not recommended because they make it easier for developers to miss escaping a parameter.
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Forms

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 * used  to implement anti-CSRF measures?
 * used when checking the token to avoid timing attacks?
 * reduced reviewer anxiety by using or extending MediaWiki's existing form functionality?


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GET data

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 * reduced reviewer anxiety by using instead of  ?


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Output (API, CSS, JavaScript, HTML, XML, etc.)
Any content that MediaWiki generates can be a vector for XSS attacks.
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 * used the  and  helper classes?


 * reduced reviewer anxiety by using ResourceLoader to deliver CSS and JavaScript resources?
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User provided CSS
User provided CSS (Say for use in a attribute) needs to be sanitized to prevent XSS, as well as to disallow insertion of tracking images (via background-image), etc
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 * Use the Sanitizer::checkCss method for any css received from a user, possibly along with the Html class.


 * For CSS provided by the extension (and not the user), this is not needed (and will remove some valid things like ).  However, extension provided CSS should go in stylesheets loaded by ResourceLoader, and not in  attributes.
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POST data

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 * reduced reviewer anxiety by using instead of
 * Always validate that any POST data received is what you expect it to be


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Query strings

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 * See #GET data above


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Sessions

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Reviewer anxiety

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 * Clearly added comments to explain unexpected or odd parts of your code?


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SQL queries

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 * used MediaWiki's database wrappers?


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Automated checking
Some of these issues can be checked with phan-taint-check-plugin, which is required for all MediaWiki code in Wikimedia production. This is of course just a tool, and it cannot detect all issue types, and may miss issues even in the issue types it can check for.