Parse.com REST API authentication - ios

Parse.com's REST API docs (https://www.parse.com/docs/rest) say: Authentication is done via HTTP headers. The X-Parse-Application-Id header identifies which application you are accessing, and the X-Parse-REST-API-Key header authenticates the endpoint. In the examples with curl that follow, the headers are stored in shell variables APPLICATION_ID and REST_API_KEY, so to follow along in the terminal, export these variables.
I am building a Sencha Touch app as a native app on iOS and Android using Phonegap, and I was wondering whether it is secure to expose these keys to the client while making the REST calls?
Also, can someone explain to me how does security work in this scenario? Help is much appreciated! Thanks!

Without phonegap , in a proguard , post processed android apk , the string values of the 2 headers you mention are exposed client-side . not a big issue. TLS covers the http header values during network leg and far more important for app security, you have Full ACL at the DB row level(parse/mongo) contingent on permissions of 'current user()'. So with no access to logon, some outsider doesn't have any more than obfuscated string value to an app-level access token.
. One odd thing is that with parse the lease time on the client-side token value foapi key is permanent rather than say a month.
Parse REST security is robust n well executed.
Can't speak to what PG framework offers in obfuscate/minify/uglify area but you should check that.

Related

Restrict GET route in Rails 4 to app only

We have a JSON hash that the backend processes and serves to our frontend to calculate a map. The JSON hash is rendered from a GET request and is constantly being updated (not cached).
We need a way to lock down the route so that only the app itself can connect to it (stopping bots from pinging the URL to grab the hash). The frontend and backend are tied together in one Rails application (no separate services).
My issue is that ActionController::RequestForgeryProtection::ClassMethods does not support GET and ActionController::HttpAuthentication::Token is overkill since I need to restrict the JSON hash to the app (not to a specific user). Request.referrer can be spoofed so I hesitate in checking that.
I would appreciate any suggestions on how to reject outside GET requests to a Controller when it is not the app making the request.
Rails: 4.2.6
You won't be able to prevent arbitrary programs (ie: "user agents") from making HTTP requests against your server. You can, however, refuse to respond with useful content unless the user agent can prove that it's your app.
What you want to do is cryptographically sign your requests in your client app, then verify the signature on your server before responding. I don't know of any Ruby/Rails library to do precisely that (and I couldn't find any upon a cursory search), but it could be built from existing libraries. Here's a quick and dirty implementation concept:
Embed a secret key into the client app.
Whenever the client app makes a request, it:
Generates a UUID that will be used exactly once, ever. (A "nonce").
Generate a signiture by hashing the nonce with the secret key.
Pass the nonce and the signature with the request (probably as HTTP headers)
When the server receives a request, it generates a signature based on the incoming nonce and the secret key (which it already knows). If the signature matches, and the nonce has never been used before, then the server returns the content. If either of those conditions are not true, then the server can't guarantee that it's your client app making the request, and thus should respond with a failure.
Disclaimers:
This is entirely dependent on the security of the secret key embedded in the client app. If the key is hacked (and it will be, given enough effort on the part of the attacker), then this scheme falls apart.
If you use the same secret key for all client apps (and there's a good chance you'll need to, depending on your app architecture), then if one client app install gets hacked, you lose security on all of your installations.
This is just an illustration of the general principle, not a fully fledged secure implementation. I'm not a security expert and have not run through all of the potential attack vectors for this plan.
I also suggest reading up on how OAuth works. It solves a similar problem, and you may be able to adapt it for your purposes.

Locking an API to App-Use only

I've written a rails back-end for the mobile app I'm working on and it occured to me that even though I'm using token authentication, anyone could write a malicious script that continually registers users / continually makes requests in attempts to fill the database / attack the server.
I guess there are two questions here:
1) What modifications would I need to make in order to ONLY allow API access from my mobile app
2) How can I protect my API urls?
Thanks :)
There are multiple things you can do to protect your API :
The simplest thing you can start with is verifying the user-agent header in your request. That usually gives you a good indicator of what the initiating device is.
That being said, it isn't always accurate and its definitely fakeable.
If you control the client side of the mobile app as well, you could encrypt the requests/responses with a cypher or key system which requires a key that only your mobile-app knows. Look at openssl for that... using a public/private key pair.
Token authentication is a good idea. I would actually look at oAuth or similar systems for authentication and keep your session timers short.
On top of that, you can probably add some rate control in order to limit consecutive calls from the same IP in a given timespan.
Finally, I would look at something like "fail2ban" or similar to automatically ban brute-force type attacks.

Twitter api request

I have read the documentation of twitter , and created an app and have all the keys needed .
Now i am trying to understand that simple one line http request ,to get a user latest twits .
I have read this Simplest PHP example for retrieving user_timeline with Twitter API version 1.1
but there is not one line code in there to make the request ( i don't know java script).
so , i have this :
https://api.twitter.com/1.1/statuses/user_timeline.json?screen_name=twitterapi&count=2
Which will not work because my keys should be in this line, but i don't understand how to add them?? where and how i add my keys to this ?
This url is like a node or address so twitter server knows what kind of request you need.
https://api.twitter.com/1.1/statuses/user_timeline.json?screen_name=twitterapi&count=2
Beside url you can pass many other parameter using http header, which is best to be used with server langunge programming, e.g PHP.
In PHP you can pass your credentials by changing header. While current twitter API are using Oauth, it's going to difficult to learn using Oauth this way, the easiest option is to use others' library. Check out 'twitter API library' (just google it)

What is the standard way to handle twitter API keys in GPL'd desktop applications?

While developing an desktop application that needs to access twitter API , one must somehow pass the API key (application specific consumer key and consumer secret ) for the application to the user. Twitter's API TOS states that the application's API key cannot be publicly available and if that happens, they reset it. When that application is under GPL , meaning the developer needs to provide the source code to the user, how that user would be able to obtain the API key without it being publicly available ? Is there a standard way to handle this issue ?
Thanks.
Edit:
To clarify the situation, I was storing them in plain text in my code for cree.py so far as a conscious decision. But yesterday Twitter support team contacted me that they have reseted my key and their reasoning was the following :
C. You should not solicit another developer's consumer keys or consumer secrets especially if they will be stored or used for actions outside of that developer's control. Keys and secrets that are compromised will be reset by Twitter. For example, online services that ask for these values in order to provide a "tweet-branding" service are not allowed.
https://dev.twitter.com/terms/api-terms
If an application's keys are posted publicly, it allows for external parties to hijack the application's API access. This presents an enormous abuse risk, and as such we've reset your API keys. Please take care to ensure that these keys are not posted publicly again.
Thanks,
Twitter API Policy
Well, TTYtter evidently uses the honour system:
# yes, this is plaintext. obfuscation would be ludicrously easy to crack,
# and there is no way to hide them effectively or fully in a Perl script.
# so be a good neighbour and leave this the fark alone, okay? stealing
# credentials is mean and inconvenient to users. this is blessed by
# arrangement with Twitter. don't be a d*ck. thanks for your cooperation.
$oauthkey = (!length($oauthkey) || $oauthkey eq 'X') ?
"XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX" : $oauthkey;
$oauthsecret = (!length($oauthsecret) || $oauthsecret eq 'X') ?
"XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX" : $oauthsecret;
(I have replaced the actual keys with Xs, to make it a little less likely that anyone will go to the trouble to abuse them, but rest assured that they are present in full in the actual source!)
Also, I don't see anything in the Rules of the Road actually requiring you to keep these things secret: the closest thing I see is the statement "Keys and secrets that are compromised will be reset by Twitter."; they never actually say what "compromised" means, though.
I might be dense here, but why don't you store them in a configuration file, the Windows registry etc and get them from there? Then distribute the application without the file, and you're done.
Maybe another solution would be to use a server, the server interacts with the twitter api, and the you request information to your server with your desktop application
Like that, the API key is only stored on the server, and not any user can get it.

Implementing a 2 Legged OAuth Provider

I'm trying to find my way around the OAuth spec, its requirements and any implementations I can find and, so far, it really seems like more trouble than its worth because I'm having trouble finding a single resource that pulls it all together. Or maybe it's just that I'm looking for something more specialized than most tutorials.
I have a set of existing APIs--some in Java, some in PHP--that I now need to secure and, for a number of reasons, OAuth seems like the right way to go. Unfortunately, my inability to track down the right resources to help me get a provider up and running is challenging that theory. Since most of this will be system-to-system API usage, I'll need to implement a 2-legged provider. With that in mind...
Does anyone know of any good tutorials for implementing a 2-legged OAuth provider with PHP?
Given that I have securable APIs in 2 languages, do I need to implement a provider in both or is there a way to create the provider as a "front controller" that I can funnel all requests through?
When securing PHP services, for example, do I have to secure each API individually by including the requisite provider resources on each?
Thanks for your help.
Rob, not sure where you landed on this but wanted to add my 2 cents in case anyone else ran across this question.
I more or less had the same question a few months ago and hearing about "OAuth" for the better part of a year. I was developing a REST API I needed to secure so I started reading about OAuth... and then my eyes started to roll backwards in my head.
I probably gave it a good solid day or 2 of skimming and reading until I decided, much like you, that OAuth was confusing garbage and just gave up on it.
So then I started researching ways to secure APIs in general and started to get a better grasp on ways to do that. The most popular way seemed to be sending requests to the API along with a checksum of the entire message (encoded with a secret that only you and the server know) that the server can use to decide if the message had been tampered with on it's way from the client, like so:
Client sends /user.json/123?showFriends=true&showStats=true&checksum=kjDSiuas98SD987ad
Server gets all that, looks up user "123" in database, loads his secret key and then (using the same method the client used) re-calculates it's OWN checksum given the request arguments.
If the server's generated checksum and the client's sent checksum match up, the request is OK and executed, if not, it is considered tampered with and rejected.
The checksum is called an HMAC and if you want a good example of this, it is what Amazon Web Services uses (they call the argument 'signature' not 'checksum' though).
So given that one of the key components of this to work is that the client and server have to generate the HMAC in the same fashion (otherwise they won't match), there have to be rules on HOW to combine all the arguments... then I suddenly understood all that "natural byte-ordering of parameters" crap from OAuth... it was just defining the rules for how to generate the signature because it needed to.
Another point is that every param you include in the HMAC generation is a value that then can't be tampered with when you send the request.
So if you just encode the URI stem as the signature, for example:
/user.json == askJdla9/kjdas+Askj2l8add
then the only thing in your message that cannot be tampered with is the URI, all of the arguments can be tampered with because they aren't part of the "checksum" value that the server will re-calculate.
Alternatively, even if you include EVERY param in the calculation, you still run the risk of "replay attacks" where a malicious middle man or evesdropped can intercept an API call and just keep resending it to the server over and over again.
You can fix that by adding a timestamp (always use UTC) in the HMAC calculation as well.
REMINDER: Since the server needs to calculate the same HMAC, you have to send along any value you use in the calculation EXCEPT YOUR SECRET KEY (OAuth calls it a consumer_secret I think). So if you add timestamp, make sure you send a timestamp param along with your request.
If you want to make the API secure from replay attacks, you can use a nonce value (it's a 1-time use value the server generates, gives to the client, the client uses it in the HMAC, sends back the request, the server confirms and then marks that nonce value as "used" in the DB and never lets another request use it again).
NOTE: 'nonce' are a really exact way to solve the "replay attack" problem -- timestamps are great, but because computers don't always have in-sync timestamp values, you have to allow an acceptable window on the server side of how "old" a request might be (say 10 mins, 30 mins, 1hr.... Amazon uses 15mins) before we accept or reject it. In this scenario your API is technically vulnerable during the entire window of time.
I think nonce values are great, but should only need to be used in APIs that are critical they keep their integrity. In my API, I didn't need it, but it would be trivial to add later if users demanded it... I would literally just need to add a "nonce" table in my DB, expose a new API to clients like:
/nonce.json
and then when they send that back to me in the HMAC calculation, I would need to check the DB to make sure it had never been used before and once used, mark it as such in the DB so if a request EVER came in again with that same nonce I would reject it.
Summary
Anyway, to make a long story short, everything I just described is basically what is known as "2-legged OAuth". There isn't that added step of flowing to the authority (Twitter, Facebook, Google, whatever) to authorize the client, that step is removed and instead the server implicitly trusts the client IF the HMAC's they are sending match up. That means the client has the right secret_key and is signing it's messages with it, so the server trusts it.
If you start looking around online, this seems to be the preferred method for securing API methods now-adays, or something like it. Amazon almost exactly uses this method except they use a slightly different combination method for their parameters before signing the whole thing to generate the HMAC.
If you are interested I wrote up this entire journey and thought-process as I was learning it. That might help provide a guided thinking tour of this process.
I would take a step back and think about what a properly authenticated client is going to be sending you.
Can you store the keys and credentials in a common database which is accessible from both sets of services, and just implement the OAuth provider in one language? When the user sends in a request to a service (PHP or Java) you then check against the common store. When the user is setting up the OAuth client then you do all of that through either a PHP or Java app (your preference), and store the credentials in the common DB.
There are some Oauth providers written in other languages that you might want to take a look at:
PHP - http://term.ie/oauth/example/ (see bottom of page)
Ruby - http://github.com/mojodna/sample-oauth-provider
.NET http://blog.bittercoder.com/PermaLink,guid,0d080a15-b412-48cf-b0d4-e842b25e3813.aspx

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