I am seeking the strongest security measure for people changing the IDs in the URL for comments, blogs, inbox etc...
Any suggestions?
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Validating the data you get is a great idea, if you're expecting digit, make sure you get digits.
If your concern is people changing urls to see things, like requesting image 44 when you only wanted to show them image 42 you've got a few options:
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Check the session permissions to see if they are allowed to perform the action? If they're allowed to do it, then carry out the action. If not, then give them a 403. |
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If it's just an ID (numeric, I guess), all you have to do is validate it as an integer:
Then you can query your database. You will get empty return sets when the ID does not exist and when it is invalid (because |
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I'd imagine that digitally signing the get requests and appending that to the URL would work. Sign it with a private key known only to your application, and then hash the GET variables and provide a signature in a &sig=blahblahblah. That would probably work, but I don't really understand the need for protecting the GET variables. If designed properly, it really shouldn't matter what the GET variables are. A properly designed app shouldn't allow user GET variables to do anything damaging. |
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First of all, do not rely on $_GET for critical information. Always double-check whether the user has permission to view that comment id, blog id, whatever. As for ID filtering - simple |
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maybe you find phpsec.org guide to php security, chapter 2, form processing interesting. |
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