I am trying to address session fixation/hijacking/sidejacking on an ATG/JBoss/Tomcat site. It seems that by far, the most commons recommendations are:
Grant a new session to the user when they log in. This prevents the attacker from being able to predict the session ID of the victim. I tried this approach first, but I fear it may not work in my case
Use a servlet filter to invalidate the session anytime a session ID (SID) is passed in the URL. The filter additionally prevents url rewriting for creating links w/ SIDs
What are the pros and cons of #2? Some that I've thought of:
Pros:
- This seems like a broader protection than #1: #1 protects against malicious URLs being passed to the victim, #2 protects against any means of acquiring SIDs (insecure wireless networks, access to the machine, etc) - you can't just pass the SID you want to use a request parameter!
Cons:
- Session management will be shot for users without cookies enabled.
- Normal users will be logged out if they click a link w/ jsessionid specified, though I don't believe there will be any legitmate links like that in the system, due to the behavior of the filter.