Finding ID | Version | Rule ID | IA Controls | Severity |
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V-2272 | WG460 A22 | SV-6932r5_rule | ECSC-1 | Medium |
Description |
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PERL (Practical Extraction and Report Language) is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text files, extracting information from those text files, and printing reports based on that information. The language is often used in shell scripting and is intended to be practical, easy to use, and efficient means of generating interactive web pages for the user. Unfortunately, many widely available freeware PERL programs (scripts) are extremely insecure. This is most readily accomplished by a malicious user substituting input to a PERL script during a POST or a GET operation. Consequently, the founders of PERL have developed a mechanism named TAINT that protects the system from malicious input sent from outside the program. When the data is tainted, it cannot be used in programs or functions such as eval(), system(), exec(), pipes, or popen(). The script will exit with a warning message. It is vital that if PERL is being used, the following line appear in the first line of PERL scripts: #!/usr/local/bin/perl –T |
STIG | Date |
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APACHE SITE 2.0 for Unix | 2011-12-12 |
Check Text ( C-30932r2_chk ) |
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When a PERL script is invoked for execution on a UNIX server, the method which invokes the script must utilize the TAINT option. The server’s interpreter examines the first line of the script. Typically, the first line of the script contains a reference to the script’s language and processing options. The first line of a PERL script will be as follows: #!/usr/local/bin/perl –T The –T at the end of the line referenced above, tells the UNIX server to execute a PERL script using the TAINT option. Perform the following steps: 1) grep perl httpd.conf |grep -v '#' You should also check /apache/sysconfig.d/loadmodule.conf for PERL. NOTE: The name of the loadmodule.conf may vary by installation. If Apache doesn't have the mod_perl module loaded and it doesn't use PERL, this check is Not Applicable. 2) grep -i 'PerlTaintCheck' httpd.conf If 'PerlTaintCheck on' is set, this is not a finding, and the check can stop here. NOTE: If the PerlTaintCheck is a part of an included config file, this meets the requirement. 3) Check each individual PERL script. From the ServerRoot directory: find . -name '*.pl' From the DocumentRoot directory: find . -name '*.pl' Examine the beginning of every PERL script for the -T option. If the -T option is not specified in any PERL script, this is a finding. NOTE: This only applies to PERL scripts that are used by the web server. NOTE: If the mod_perl module is installed and the directive “PerlTaintCheck on” in the httpd.conf is used, this satisfies the requirement. |
Fix Text (F-2321r4_fix) |
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Add the TAINT call to the PERL script. #!/usr/local/bin/perl –T |