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When designing a REST API or service are there any established best practices for dealing with security (Authentication, Authorization, Identity Management) ?

When building a SOAP API you have WS-Security as a guide and much literature exists on the topic. I have found less information about securing REST endpoints.

While I understand REST intentionally does not have specifications analogous to WS-* I am hoping best practices or recommended patterns have emerged.

Any discussion or links to relevant documents would be very much appreciated. If it matters, we would be using WCF with POX/JSON serialized messages for our REST API's/Services built using v3.5 of the .NET Framework.

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    do you know any full real application using good patterns and practices with REST API and webServices in github? Feb 6, 2016 at 20:15

18 Answers 18

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As tweakt said, Amazon S3 is a good model to work with. Their request signatures do have some features (such as incorporating a timestamp) that help guard against both accidental and malicious request replaying.

The nice thing about HTTP Basic is that virtually all HTTP libraries support it. You will, of course, need to require SSL in this case because sending plaintext passwords over the net is almost universally a bad thing. Basic is preferable to Digest when using SSL because even if the caller already knows that credentials are required, Digest requires an extra roundtrip to exchange the nonce value. With Basic, the callers simply sends the credentials the first time.

Once the identity of the client is established, authorization is really just an implementation problem. However, you could delegate the authorization to some other component with an existing authorization model. Again the nice thing about Basic here is your server ends up with a plaintext copy of the client's password that you can simply pass on to another component within your infrastructure as needed.

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    SSL is an important part of security, but not all applications require that level of encryption. If someone steals in-transit what you are going to post publicly on Twitter, is that such a significant drawback? For the majority of API's SSL encryption is going to be preferred. The infrastructure requirements of SSL are somewhat higher than with plaintext and no intermediate (read here edge based) caching servers can participate in the caching of repeatedly accessed content. Beware, your scalability may suffer if you absolutely require the encryption offered.
    – Norman H
    Jan 1, 2013 at 22:19
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    @NormanH: Your argument is specious, because if somebody can see the entire transaction that I use to post to Twitter, then they could therefore impersonate me and post their own messages under my name. Jan 2, 2013 at 0:51
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    Quoting from wikipedia on Digest authentication, "Digest access authentication is one of the agreed-upon methods a web server can use to negotiate credentials with a user's web browser. It applies a hash function to a password before sending it over the network, which is safer than basic access authentication, which sends plaintext." which would be one standard way of accomplishing what I alluded to above. (See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digest_access_authentication for the details)
    – Norman H
    Jan 2, 2013 at 18:45
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    "sending plaintext passwords over the net is almost universally a bad thing" - Can you elaborate on the "almost"? When is it not a bad idea? May 29, 2014 at 5:23
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    @GregHewgill even in a private network, I wouldn't want my users to be able to intercept each others' passwords. The only situation I can think of, in which it's OK to send a password over a network is when the user is alone in the network. The fact that such things happen elsewhere is hardly a reason to allow it. May 29, 2014 at 8:53
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There are no standards for REST other than HTTP. There are established REST services out there. I suggest you take a peek at them and get a feel for how they work.

For example, we borrowed a lot of ideas from Amazon's S3 REST service when developing our own. But we opted not to use the more advanced security model based on request signatures. The simpler approach is HTTP Basic auth over SSL. You have to decide what works best in your situation.

Also, I highly recommend the book RESTful Web Services from O'reilly. It explains the core concepts and does provide some best practices. You can generally take the model they provide and map it to your own application.

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    RESTful Web Services is definitely a great book. A must read in this area. It was downright inspiring. Jan 9, 2009 at 21:34
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    How is it that @aehlke has received so many upvotes for that comment considering (1) there is no such thing as a REST specification and (2) the Fielding Dissertation on the Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures explicitly mentions REST and HTTP in 6.3: REST Applied to HTTP.
    – user4903
    Apr 15, 2012 at 0:37
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    HTTP is not a requirement for REST.
    – nategood
    May 16, 2013 at 19:21
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    The RESTful Web Services book is available for free from their website: crummy.com/writing/RESTful-Web-Services
    – icc97
    Jun 5, 2018 at 15:08
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    rest functionality is not coupled with the format of the data
    – yolob 21
    May 31, 2019 at 9:46
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There is a great checklist found on Github:

Authentication

  • Don't reinvent the wheel in Authentication, token generation, password storage. Use the standards.

  • Use Max Retry and jail features in Login.

  • Use encryption on all sensitive data.

JWT (JSON Web Token)

  • Use a random complicated key (JWT Secret) to make brute forcing the token very hard.

  • Don't extract the algorithm from the payload. Force the algorithm in the backend (HS256 or RS256).

  • Make token expiration (TTL, RTTL) as short as possible.

  • Don't store sensitive data in the JWT payload, it can be decoded easily.

OAuth

  • Always validate redirect_uri server-side to allow only whitelisted URLs.

  • Always try to exchange for code and not tokens (don't allow response_type=token).

  • Use state parameter with a random hash to prevent CSRF on the OAuth authentication process.

  • Define the default scope, and validate scope parameters for each application.

Access

  • Limit requests (Throttling) to avoid DDoS / brute-force attacks.

  • Use HTTPS on server side to avoid MITM (Man In The Middle Attack)

  • Use HSTS header with SSL to avoid SSL Strip attack.

Input

  • Use the proper HTTP method according to the operation: GET (read), POST (create), PUT/PATCH (replace/update), and DELETE (to delete a record), and respond with 405 Method Not Allowed if the requested method isn't appropriate for the requested resource.

  • Validate content-type on request Accept header (Content Negotiation) to allow only your supported format (e.g. application/xml, application/json, etc) and respond with 406 Not Acceptable response if not matched.

  • Validate content-type of posted data as you accept (e.g. application/x-www-form-urlencoded, multipart/form-data, application/json, etc).

  • Validate User input to avoid common vulnerabilities (e.g. XSS, SQL-Injection, Remote Code Execution, etc).

  • Don't use any sensitive data (credentials, Passwords, security tokens, or API keys) in the URL, but use standard Authorization header.

  • Use an API Gateway service to enable caching, Rate Limit policies (e.g. Quota, Spike Arrest, Concurrent Rate Limit) and deploy APIs resources dynamically.

Processing

  • Check if all the endpoints are protected behind authentication to avoid broken authentication process.

  • User own resource ID should be avoided. Use /me/orders instead of /user/654321/orders.

  • Don't auto-increment IDs. Use UUID instead.

  • If you are parsing XML files, make sure entity parsing is not enabled to avoid XXE (XML external entity attack).

  • If you are parsing XML files, make sure entity expansion is not enabled to avoid Billion Laughs/XML bomb via exponential entity expansion attack.

  • Use a CDN for file uploads.

  • If you are dealing with huge amount of data, use Workers and Queues to process as much as possible in background and return response fast to avoid HTTP Blocking.

  • Do not forget to turn the DEBUG mode OFF.

Output

  • Send X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff header.

  • Send X-Frame-Options: deny header.

  • Send Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'none' header.

  • Remove fingerprinting headers - X-Powered-By, Server, X-AspNet-Version etc.

  • Force content-type for your response, if you return application/json then your response content-type is application/json.

  • Don't return sensitive data like credentials, Passwords, security tokens.

  • Return the proper status code according to the operation completed. (e.g. 200 OK, 400 Bad Request, 401 Unauthorized, 405 Method Not Allowed, etc).

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    Nice list, though a bit opinionated - and it starts with a nonsense imho: "Don't use Basic Auth Use standard authentication (e.g. JWT, OAuth)." You can't get more standard-y than Basic Auth, and it has its place, especially for APIs where the clients are not browsers (for browsers JWT is usually more suitable). OAuth on the other hand is using a whole other set of compromises for authentication and is not really comparable to Basic Auth and JWT.
    – johndodo
    Dec 24, 2017 at 19:43
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    You're right, BasicAuth with HTTPS is common, but it is hotly debated - security.stackexchange.com/questions/988/… . I will remove this point anyway.
    – Andrejs
    Dec 28, 2017 at 16:38
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You may also want to take a look at OAuth, an emerging open protocol for token-based authorization specifically targeting http apis.

It is very similar to the approach taken by flickr and remember the milk "rest" apis (not necessarily good examples of restful apis, but good examples of the token-based approach).

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    But it seems that 2-legged oAuth, which i think is what is need here, isn't covered (lack of info) as much as the 3-legged one.
    – redben
    Nov 11, 2010 at 0:04
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    OAuth is about delegation of authorization i.e. I the owner of the information / account let service A interact with my data on service B (e.g. I let Twitter write on my facebook). It's not authorization in the broader sense which is about controlling what users can do on resources (data, information, services...). This is where XACML steps in. XACML lets you define authorization policies about who can do what. Sep 24, 2013 at 22:15
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I'm kind of surprised SSL with client certificates hasn't been mentioned yet. Granted, this approach is only really useful if you can count on the community of users being identified by certificates. But a number of governments/companies do issue them to their users. The user doesn't have to worry about creating yet another username/password combination, and the identity is established on each and every connection so communication with the server can be entirely stateless, no user sessions required. (Not to imply that any/all of the other solutions mentioned require sessions)

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  • We actually do use this for some integrations as well as encrypted vpn tunnels to support older systems that we don't control that can not communicate over https.
    – Casey
    Sep 5, 2012 at 13:55
  • Client certs can make trouble when you need load balancing... it can be done, but it's less straight-forward. Oct 15, 2012 at 18:11
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    @fiXedd - The opposite has been my experience with client certs because they are truly stateless. Client cert authenticated connections can be load balanced with a dumb load balancer with no regard to connection stickyness because they require absolutely zero shared state between the client and server.
    – stinkymatt
    Oct 15, 2012 at 19:25
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    Oh, you can do it.... you can just have the load balancer forward the TCP traffic, but you can't, for instance, have the load balancer be the termination point for the SSL. Oct 19, 2012 at 16:12
  • Is it still secure if the client certificates and its root authority are self-signed? The root authority will be imported into the client's trusted root certificate authorities.
    – Joyce
    Mar 18, 2015 at 17:17
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Everyone in these answers has overlooked true access control / authorization.

If for instance your REST APIs / web services are about POSTing / GETing medical records, you may want to define access control policie about who can access the data and under which circumstances. For instance:

  • doctors can GET the medical record of a patient they have a care relationship with
  • no one can POST medical data outside practice hours (e.g. 9 to 5)
  • end-users can GET medical records they own or medical records of patients for whom they are the guardian
  • nurses can UPDATE the medical record of a patient that belongs to the same unit as the nurse.

In order to define and implement those fine-grained authorizations, you will need to use an attribute-based access control language called XACML, the eXtensible Access Control Markup Language.

The other standards here are for the following:

  • OAuth: id. federation and delegation of authorization e.g. letting a service act on my behalf on another service (Facebook can post to my Twitter)
  • SAML: identity federation / web SSO. SAML is very much about who the user is.
  • WS-Security / WS-* standards: these focus on the communication between SOAP services. They are specific to the application-level messaging format (SOAP) and they deal with aspects of messaging e.g. reliability, security, confidentiality, integrity, atomicity, eventing... None cover access control and all are specific to SOAP.

XACML is technology-agnostic. It can be applied to java apps, .NET, Python, Ruby... web services, REST APIs, and more.

The following are interesting resources:

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    I don't understand why can't you just implement token system that will get the user and his permissions which will essentially be the same thing?
    – Stan
    Dec 31, 2013 at 15:23
  • You can take a token-based approach. That works well too but you still need the logic that defines which permissions users get, in other words, which permissions to insert inside the token. That's what XACML can help you achieve. It also avoids token bloat. Jan 2, 2014 at 7:44
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    As a side comment, what does "9 to 5" contribute to security? As if attackers are only active at night? Not to speak of the severe usage implications, as if doctors only work "9 to 5".
    – Roland
    Jul 11, 2016 at 13:43
  • That's a common requirement in healthcare scenarios. Check out HL7 for instance. There are break-the-glass scenarios too in case a doctor does need access outside hours. As for hackers, once they're in all bets are off Jul 11, 2016 at 14:44
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    Some of my colleagues are investigating that indeed. Thanks @SimplyG. May 9, 2018 at 12:00
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I've used OAuth a few times, and also used some other methods (BASIC/DIGEST). I wholeheartedly suggest OAuth. The following link is the best tutorial I've seen on using OAuth:

The OAuth 1.0 Guide | hueniverse

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    Although this is a very old answer relating to OAuth 1.0, it's worth noting that the author of the link you cite had this to say about OAuth 2.0: "I reached the conclusion that OAuth 2.0 is a bad protocol...When compared with OAuth 1.0, the 2.0 specification is more complex, less interoperable, less useful, more incomplete, and most importantly, less secure.". To be clear, the comment I am quoting was made several years after you posted your answer.
    – skomisa
    Jan 22, 2019 at 20:29
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    The link seems to be broken, fyi.
    – Nae
    Dec 6, 2021 at 21:43
  • outdated since about 2016, see an Archive of oit on web.archive.org
    – Tom Newton
    Jul 3, 2023 at 13:08
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One of the best posts I've ever come across regarding Security as it relates to REST is over at 1 RainDrop. The MySpace API's use OAuth also for security and you have full access to their custom channels in the RestChess code, which I did a lot of exploration with. This was demo'd at Mix and you can find the posting here.

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  • Thanks for the link (1 RainDrop) - very interesting discussion of security as it relates to SOAP v REST
    – Nathan
    Oct 13, 2008 at 23:07
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Thanks for the excellent advice. We ended up using a custom HTTP header to pass an identity token from the client to the service, in preparation for integrating our RESTful API with the the upcoming Zermatt Identity framework from Microsoft. I have described the problem here and our solution here. I also took tweakt's advice and bought RESTful Web Services - a very good book if you're building a RESTful API of any kind.

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    This approach sounds fishy to me. What prevents an attacker from using the identity token to masquerade the client? HTTPS doesn't protect the URL or headers the last time I checked...
    – Gili
    Oct 3, 2008 at 18:10
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    Hmmm...not sure you're right about that. I believe that except for the few headers required to understand what kind of encryption is required, all other headers are encrypted.
    – Nathan
    Oct 29, 2008 at 23:23
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    That is wrong. HTTPS protects EVERYTHING. It goes: TCP handshake... TLS handshake... <ENCRYPTED> GET /foo 200 OK... teardown </ENCRYPTED>. Feb 4, 2009 at 13:31
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    Note that you can also pass a token as a cookie (instead of a custom header). This behaves well in browsers as it uses an HTTP header with standard behaviours in most toolkits and applications. On the service side, the cookie does not have to relate to a session, you can use it to communicate any token you wish. Nov 10, 2011 at 19:51
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    The Wayback Machine is a beautiful thing: problem description and solution
    – cjc343
    Oct 23, 2012 at 20:03
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OWASP(Open Web Application Security Project) has some cheat sheets covering about all aspects of Web Application development. This Project is a very valuable and reliable source of information. Regarding REST services you can check this: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/REST_Security_Cheat_Sheet

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I would recommend OAuth 2/3. You can find more information at http://oauth.net/2/

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    Care to elaborate why would you recommend version 2 when it remains largely incomplete? IMHO, version 1.0a remains a solid solution for most apps.
    – Butifarra
    Mar 20, 2013 at 22:57
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The fact that the SOAP world is pretty well covered with security standards doesn't mean that it's secure by default. In the first place, the standards are very complex. Complexity is not a very good friend of security and implementation vulnerabilities such as XML signature wrapping attacks are endemic here.

As for the .NET environment I won't help much, but “Building web services with Java” (a brick with ~10 authors) did help me a lot in understanding the WS-* security architecture and, especially, its quirks.

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I searched a lot about restful ws security and we also ended up with using token via cookie from client to server to authenticate the requests . I used spring security for authorization of requests in service because I had to authenticate and authorized each request based on specified security policies that has already been in DB.

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REST itself offers no security standards, but things like OAuth and SAML are rapidly becoming the standards in this space. However, authentication and authorization are only a small part of what you need to consider. Many of the known vulnerabilities relating to web applications apply very much to REST apis. You have to consider input validation, session cracking, inappropriate error messages, internal employee vulnerabilities and so on. It is a big subject.

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I want to add(in line with stinkeymatt), simplest solution would be to add SSL certificates to your site. In other words, make sure your url is HTTPS://. That will cover your transport security (bang for the buck). With RESTful url's, idea is to keep it simple (unlike WS* security/SAML), you can use oAuth2/openID connect or even Basic Auth (in simple cases). But you will still need SSL/HTTPS. Please check ASP.NET Web API 2 security here: http://www.asp.net/web-api/overview/security (Articles and Videos)

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As @Nathan ended up with which is a simple HTTP Header, and some had said OAuth2 and client side SSL certificates. The gist of it is this... your REST API shouldn't have to handle security as that should really be outside the scope of the API.

Instead a security layer should be put on top of it, whether it is an HTTP Header behind a web proxy (a common approach like SiteMinder, Zermatt or even Apache HTTPd), or as complicated as OAuth 2.

The key thing is the requests should work without any end-user interaction. All that is needed is to ensure that the connection to the REST API is authenticated. In Java EE we have the notion of a userPrincipal that can be obtained on an HttpServletRequest. It is also managed in the deployment descriptor that a URL pattern can be secure so the REST API code does not need to check anymore.

In the WCF world, I would use ServiceSecurityContext.Current to get the current security context. You need to configure you application to require authentication.

There is one exception to the statement I had above and that's the use of a nonce to prevent replays (which can be attacks or someone just submitting the same data twice). That part can only be handled in the application layer.

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For Web Application Security, you should take a look at OWASP (https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Main_Page) which provides cheatsheets for various security attacks. You can incorporate as many measures as possible to secure your Application. With respect to API security (authorization, authentication, identity management), there are multiple ways as already mentioned (Basic,Digest and OAuth). There are loop holes in OAuth1.0, so you can use OAuth1.0a (OAuth2.0 is not widely adopted due to concerns with the specification)

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It's been a while but the question is still relevant, though the answer might have changed a bit.

An API Gateway would be a flexible and highly configurable solution. I tested and used KONG quite a bit and really liked what I saw. KONG provides an admin REST API of its own which you can use to manage users.

Express-gateway.io is more recent and is also an API Gateway.

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