ESLint rules for Node Security
This project will help identify potential security hotspots, but finds a lot of false positives which need triage by a human.
npm install --save-dev eslint-plugin-security
Add the following to your .eslintrc
file:
"plugins": [
"security"
],
"extends": [
"plugin:security/recommended"
]
- Use GitHub pull requests.
- Conventions:
- We use our custom ESLint setup.
- Please implement a test for each new rule and use this command to be sure the new code respects the style guide and the tests keep passing:
npm run-script cont-int
npm test
Locates potentially unsafe regular expressions, which may take a very long time to run, blocking the event loop.
More information: https://blog.liftsecurity.io/2014/11/03/regular-expression-dos-and-node.js
Detects calls to buffer
with noAssert
flag set
From the Node.js API docs: "Setting noAssert
to true skips validation of the offset
. This allows the offset
to be beyond the end of the Buffer
."
Detects instances of child_process
& non-literal exec()
More information: https://blog.liftsecurity.io/2014/08/19/Avoid-Command-Injection-Node.js
Detects object.escapeMarkup = false
, which can be used with some template engines to disable escaping of HTML entities. This can lead to Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities.
More information: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Cross-site_Scripting_(XSS)
Detects eval(variable)
which can allow an attacker to run arbitary code inside your process.
More information: http://security.stackexchange.com/questions/94017/what-are-the-security-issues-with-eval-in-javascript
Detects Express csrf
middleware setup before method-override
middleware. This can allow GET
requests (which are not checked by csrf
) to turn into POST
requests later.
More information: https://blog.liftsecurity.io/2013/09/07/bypass-connect-csrf-protection-by-abusing
Detects variable in filename argument of fs
calls, which might allow an attacker to access anything on your system.
More information: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Path_Traversal
Detects RegExp(variable)
, which might allow an attacker to DOS your server with a long-running regular expression.
More information: https://blog.liftsecurity.io/2014/11/03/regular-expression-dos-and-node.js
Detects require(variable)
, which might allow an attacker to load and run arbitrary code, or access arbitrary files on disk.
More information: http://www.bennadel.com/blog/2169-where-does-node-js-and-require-look-for-modules.htm
Detects variable[key]
as a left- or right-hand assignment operand.
More information: https://blog.liftsecurity.io/2015/01/14/the-dangers-of-square-bracket-notation/
Detects insecure comparisons (==
, !=
, !==
and ===
), which check input sequentially.
More information: https://snyk.io/blog/node-js-timing-attack-ccc-ctf/
Detects if pseudoRandomBytes()
is in use, which might not give you the randomness you need and expect.
More information: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18130254/randombytes-vs-pseudorandombytes