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What are some guidelines for maintaining responsible session security with PHP? There's information all over the web, so it's about time it all landed in one place!

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11 Answers

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There is a couple of things todo in order to keep your session secure:

  1. Use SSL when authenticating users or performing sensitive operations.
  2. Regenerate the session id whenever the security level changes (such as logging in). You can even regenerate the session id every request if you wish.
  3. Have sessions timeout
  4. Don't use register globals
  5. Store authentication details on the server. That is don't send details such as username in the cookie.
  6. Check the $SERVER['HTTPUSER_AGENT']. This adds a small barrier to session hijacking. You can also check the IP address. But this causes problems for users that have changing IP address due to load balancing on multiple internet connections etc (which is the case in our environment here).
  7. Lock down access to the sessions on the file system or use custom session handling
  8. For sensitive operations consider requiring the user to provide their authenication details
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Using SSL only for some operations is not enough, unless you have separate sessions for encrypted and unencrypted traffic. If you use single session over HTTPS and HTTP, attacker will steal it on first non-HTTPS request. – porneL Nov 16 '08 at 14:41
I agree with porneL. Also, for number 6, if an attacker has your session id, wouldn't they also have access to your user agent? – Chad Aug 5 at 22:16
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One guideline is to call session_regenerate_id every time a session's security level changes. This helps prevent session hijacking.

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I think one of the major problems (which is being addressed in PHP 6) is register_globals. Right now one of the standard methods used to avoid register_globals is to use the $_REQUEST, $_GET or $_POST arrays.

The "correct" way to do it (as of 5.2, although it's a little buggy there, but stable as of 6, which is coming soon) is through filters.

So instead of:

$username = $_POST["username"];

you would do:

$username = filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'username', FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING);

or even just:

$username = filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'username');

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This has no relation to the question at all. – The Pixel Developer Aug 12 at 4:02
Really? Then why in the accepted answer do they mention not to use register globals? Wouldn't, as far as most run-of-the-mill developers are concerned, register globals and form variable handling fall under the umbrella of "sessions" even if it isn't technically part of the "session" object? – cmcculloh Aug 18 at 18:06
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This is pretty trivial and obvious, but be sure to session_destroy after every use. This can be difficult to implement if the user does not log out explicitly, so a timer can be set to do this.

Here is a good tutorial on setTimer() and clearTimer().

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I would love to hear from someone with experience in maintaining persistent Sessions across several servers.

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Keep the session details in a database. The PHP documentation illustrates how to do this. – scotts Aug 11 at 19:04
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The main problem with PHP sessions and security (besides session hijacking) comes with what environment you are in. By default PHP stores the session data in a file in the OS's temp directory. Without any special thought or planning this is a world readable directory so all of your session information is public to anyone with access to the server.

As for maintaining sessions over multiple servers. At that point it would be better to switch PHP to user handled sessions where it calls your provided functions to CRUD (create, read, update, delete) the session data. At that point you could store the session information in a database or memcache like solution so that all application servers have access to the data.

Storing your own sessions may also be advantageous if you are on a shared server because it will let you store it in the database which you often times have more control over then the filesystem.

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I would check both IP and User Agent to see if they change

if ($_SESSION['user_agent'] != $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT']
    || $_SESSION['user_ip'] != $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'])
{
    //Something fishy is going on here?
}
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IP can legitimately change if user is behind load-balanced proxy farm. – porneL Nov 16 '08 at 14:42
And user_agent can change every time a user upgrades their browser. – scotts Aug 11 at 19:03
@scotts I agree with the IP part but for the browser upgrade, you would set the session when they login so I don't see how they would upgrade there browser without creating a new session once they login again. – jasondavis Sep 7 at 11:36
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Using IP address isn't really the best idea in my experience. For example; my office has two IP addresses that get used depending on load and we constantly run into issues using IP addresses.

Instead, I've opted for storing the sessions in a separate database for the domains on my servers. This way no one on the file system has access to that session info. This was really helpful with phpBB before 3.0 (they've since fixed this) but it's still a good idea I think.

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If you you use session_set_save_handler() you can set your own session handler. For example you could store your sessions in the database. Refer to the php.net comments for examples of a database session handler.

DB sessions are also good if you have multiple servers otherwise if you are using file based sessions you would need to make sure that each webserver had access to the same filesystem to read/write the sessions.

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You need to be sure the session data are safe. By looking at your php.ini or using phpinfo() you can find you session settings. session.savepath_ tells you where they are saved.

Check the permission of the folder and of its parents. It shouldn't be public (/tmp) or be accessible by other websites on your shared server.

Assuming you still want to use php session, You can set php to use an other folder by changing session.savepath_ or save the data in the database by changing session.savehandler_ .

You might be able to set session.savepath_ in your php.ini (some providers allow it) or for apache + modphp, in a .htaccess file in your site root folder: phpvalue session.savepath "/home/example.com/html/session". You can also set it at run time with _sessionsavepath() .

Check Chris Shiflett's tutorial or ZendSessionSaveHandler_DbTable to set and alternative session handler.

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This session fixation paper has very good pointers where attack may come. See also session fixation page at Wikipedia.

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