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PHP

PHP static code analysis

Unique rules to find Bugs, Vulnerabilities, Security Hotspots, and Code Smells in your PHP code

  • All rules 273
  • Vulnerability42
  • Bug51
  • Security Hotspot34
  • Code Smell146
 
Tags
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Server-side requests should not be vulnerable to traversing attacks

           Vulnerability
        2. Credentials should not be hard-coded

           Vulnerability
        3. Secret keys and salt values should be robust

           Vulnerability
        4. Applications should not create session cookies from untrusted input

           Vulnerability
        5. Reflection should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        6. OS commands should not be vulnerable to argument injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        7. A new session should be created during user authentication

           Vulnerability
        8. Authorizations should be based on strong decisions

           Vulnerability
        9. Cipher algorithms should be robust

           Vulnerability
        10. Encryption algorithms should be used with secure mode and padding scheme

           Vulnerability
        11. Server hostnames should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        12. Include expressions should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        13. Dynamic code execution should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        14. HTTP request redirections should not be open to forging attacks

           Vulnerability
        15. Logging should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        16. Server-side requests should not be vulnerable to forging attacks

           Vulnerability
        17. Deserialization should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        18. Endpoints should not be vulnerable to reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks

           Vulnerability
        19. Server certificates should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        20. LDAP connections should be authenticated

           Vulnerability
        21. Cryptographic keys should be robust

           Vulnerability
        22. Weak SSL/TLS protocols should not be used

           Vulnerability
        23. Database queries should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        24. "file_uploads" should be disabled

           Vulnerability
        25. "enable_dl" should be disabled

           Vulnerability
        26. "session.use_trans_sid" should not be enabled

           Vulnerability
        27. "cgi.force_redirect" should be enabled

           Vulnerability
        28. "allow_url_fopen" and "allow_url_include" should be disabled

           Vulnerability
        29. "open_basedir" should limit file access

           Vulnerability
        30. Session-management cookies should not be persistent

           Vulnerability
        31. "sleep" should not be called

           Vulnerability
        32. XML parsers should not be vulnerable to XXE attacks

           Vulnerability
        33. Regular expressions should not be vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks

           Vulnerability
        34. Neither DES (Data Encryption Standard) nor DESede (3DES) should be used

           Vulnerability
        35. Cryptographic RSA algorithms should always incorporate OAEP (Optimal Asymmetric Encryption Padding)

           Vulnerability
        36. A secure password should be used when connecting to a database

           Vulnerability
        37. XPath expressions should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        38. I/O function calls should not be vulnerable to path injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        39. LDAP queries should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        40. OS commands should not be vulnerable to command injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        41. SHA-1 and Message-Digest hash algorithms should not be used in secure contexts

           Vulnerability
        42. Password hashing functions should use an unpredictable salt

           Vulnerability

        Credentials should not be hard-coded

        responsibility - trustworthy
        security
        Vulnerability
        • cwe

        Secret leaks often occur when a sensitive piece of authentication data is stored with the source code of an application. Considering the source code is intended to be deployed across multiple assets, including source code repositories or application hosting servers, the secrets might get exposed to an unintended audience.

        Why is this an issue?

        How can I fix it?

        More Info

        In most cases, trust boundaries are violated when a secret is exposed in a source code repository or an uncontrolled deployment environment. Unintended people who don’t need to know the secret might get access to it. They might then be able to use it to gain unwanted access to associated services or resources.

        The trust issue can be more or less severe depending on the people’s role and entitlement.

        What is the potential impact?

        The consequences vary greatly depending on the situation and the secret-exposed audience. Still, two main scenarios should be considered.

        Financial loss

        Financial losses can occur when a secret is used to access a paid third-party-provided service and is disclosed as part of the source code of client applications. Having the secret, each user of the application will be able to use it without limit to use the third party service to their own need, including in a way that was not expected.

        This additional use of the secret will lead to added costs with the service provider.

        Moreover, when rate or volume limiting is set up on the provider side, this additional use can prevent the regular operation of the affected application. This might result in a partial denial of service for all the application’s users.

        Application’s security downgrade

        A downgrade can happen when the disclosed secret is used to protect security-sensitive assets or features of the application. Depending on the affected asset or feature, the practical impact can range from a sensitive information leak to a complete takeover of the application, its hosting server or another linked component.

        For example, an application that would disclose a secret used to sign user authentication tokens would be at risk of user identity impersonation. An attacker accessing the leaked secret could sign session tokens for arbitrary users and take over their privileges and entitlements.

          Available In:
        • SonarQube IdeCatch issues on the fly,
          in your IDE
        • SonarQube CloudDetect issues in your GitHub, Azure DevOps Services, Bitbucket Cloud, GitLab repositories
        • SonarQube Community BuildAnalyze code in your
          on-premise CI
          Available Since
          10.1
        • SonarQube ServerAnalyze code in your
          on-premise CI
          Developer Edition
          Available Since
          10.1

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