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I have a webhook view which receives POST requests from a payment gateway. It identifies the customer and updates the amount with the provided data.

This can be exploited very easily if the webhook URL somehow gets leaked.

For e.g.

curl --data "cust_no=xxxxxxxxxx&amount=1000" https://example.com/wallet/payment_webhook/

How can I make it secure so that it doesn't accept such requests? It should validate that the request is coming only from the payment gateway.

Update:

The webhook request contains transaction details along with the customer number.

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  • Hard to say without info on the model... what authorisation do you use? is the customer number the same as the request.user's?
    – Sayse
    Jan 27, 2016 at 14:32
  • Yes. The payment gateway gives me transaction info along with the customer number. Jan 27, 2016 at 14:35
  • I'd say that it's the responsibility of the gateway to properly authenticate itself. Consult its documentation. If you need help, please specify what payment gateway you are using. Jan 27, 2016 at 14:39
  • 1
    agree with @AndreaCorbellini, like Paypal restricts users payment notification webhook to validate the data by posting back same data to another Paypal URL. So your payment gateway must have something like that in place. Jan 27, 2016 at 14:43
  • I checked the Stripe documentation and there's nothing which handles it. Check it here stripe.com/docs/webhooks Jan 27, 2016 at 14:49

1 Answer 1

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It's explicitly documented on the webhooks documentation:

Best practices

[...]

For optimum security, you can confirm the event data with Stripe before acting upon it. To do so:

  1. Parse the JSON data as above.
  2. Grab the received Event object ID value.
  3. Use the Event object ID in a retrieve event API call.
  4. Take action using the returned Event object.

See also Webhook-Mailer for a working example. Pay particular attention to this line:

# Retrieving the event from the Stripe API guarantees its authenticity  
event = Stripe::Event.retrieve(data[:id])
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  • Thank you! I'll make the necessary changes. Jan 27, 2016 at 14:59
  • In addition to this, you can also use HTTP basic auth, i.e. you'd set up your webhook endpoint in your Stripe settings to be username:[email protected]/example.com/wallet/…. In your event handler, you could then validate that the username and password you received are the same ones you set up in Stripe.
    – Ywain
    Jan 27, 2016 at 18:20

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