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-rw-r--r--ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/ESAPI.properties369
-rw-r--r--ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/validation.properties32
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diff --git a/ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/ESAPI.properties b/ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/ESAPI.properties
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..290dbff3
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+++ b/ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/ESAPI.properties
@@ -0,0 +1,369 @@
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Configuration
+#
+# If true, then print all the ESAPI properties set here when they are loaded.
+# If false, they are not printed. Useful to reduce output when running JUnit tests.
+# If you need to troubleshoot a properties related problem, turning this on may help.
+# This is 'false' in the src/test/resources/.esapi version. It is 'true' by
+# default for reasons of backward compatibility with earlier ESAPI versions.
+ESAPI.printProperties=true
+
+# ESAPI is designed to be easily extensible. You can use the reference implementation
+# or implement your own providers to take advantage of your enterprise's security
+# infrastructure. The functions in ESAPI are referenced using the ESAPI locator, like:
+#
+# String ciphertext =
+# ESAPI.encryptor().encrypt("Secret message"); // Deprecated in 2.0
+# CipherText cipherText =
+# ESAPI.encryptor().encrypt(new PlainText("Secret message")); // Preferred
+#
+# Below you can specify the classname for the provider that you wish to use in your
+# application. The only requirement is that it implement the appropriate ESAPI interface.
+# This allows you to switch security implementations in the future without rewriting the
+# entire application.
+#
+# ExperimentalAccessController requires ESAPI-AccessControlPolicy.xml in .esapi directory
+ESAPI.AccessControl=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultAccessController
+# FileBasedAuthenticator requires users.txt file in .esapi directory
+ESAPI.Authenticator=org.owasp.esapi.reference.FileBasedAuthenticator
+ESAPI.Encoder=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultEncoder
+ESAPI.Encryptor=org.owasp.esapi.reference.crypto.JavaEncryptor
+
+ESAPI.Executor=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultExecutor
+ESAPI.HTTPUtilities=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultHTTPUtilities
+ESAPI.IntrusionDetector=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultIntrusionDetector
+# Log4JFactory Requires log4j.xml or log4j.properties in classpath
+ESAPI.Logger=org.owasp.esapi.reference.Log4JLogFactory
+#ESAPI.Logger=org.owasp.esapi.reference.JavaLogFactory
+ESAPI.Randomizer=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultRandomizer
+ESAPI.Validator=org.owasp.esapi.reference.DefaultValidator
+
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Authenticator
+#
+Authenticator.AllowedLoginAttempts=3
+Authenticator.MaxOldPasswordHashes=13
+Authenticator.UsernameParameterName=username
+Authenticator.PasswordParameterName=password
+# RememberTokenDuration (in days)
+Authenticator.RememberTokenDuration=14
+# Session Timeouts (in minutes)
+Authenticator.IdleTimeoutDuration=20
+Authenticator.AbsoluteTimeoutDuration=120
+
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Encoder
+#
+# ESAPI canonicalizes input before validation to prevent bypassing filters with encoded attacks.
+# Failure to canonicalize input is a very common mistake when implementing validation schemes.
+# Canonicalization is automatic when using the ESAPI Validator, but you can also use the
+# following code to canonicalize data.
+#
+# ESAPI.Encoder().canonicalize( "%22hello world"" );
+#
+# Multiple encoding is when a single encoding format is applied multiple times. Allowing
+# multiple encoding is strongly discouraged.
+Encoder.AllowMultipleEncoding=false
+
+# Mixed encoding is when multiple different encoding formats are applied, or when
+# multiple formats are nested. Allowing multiple encoding is strongly discouraged.
+Encoder.AllowMixedEncoding=false
+
+# The default list of codecs to apply when canonicalizing untrusted data. The list should include the codecs
+# for all downstream interpreters or decoders. For example, if the data is likely to end up in a URL, HTML, or
+# inside JavaScript, then the list of codecs below is appropriate. The order of the list is not terribly important.
+Encoder.DefaultCodecList=HTMLEntityCodec,PercentCodec,JavaScriptCodec
+
+
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Encryption
+#
+# The ESAPI Encryptor provides basic cryptographic functions with a simplified API.
+# To get started, generate a new key using java -classpath esapi.jar org.owasp.esapi.reference.crypto.JavaEncryptor
+# There is not currently any support for key rotation, so be careful when changing your key and salt as it
+# will invalidate all signed, encrypted, and hashed data.
+#
+# WARNING: Not all combinations of algorithms and key lengths are supported.
+# If you choose to use a key length greater than 128, you MUST download the
+# unlimited strength policy files and install in the lib directory of your JRE/JDK.
+# See http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp for more information.
+#
+# Backward compatibility with ESAPI Java 1.4 is supported by the two deprecated API
+# methods, Encryptor.encrypt(String) and Encryptor.decrypt(String). However, whenever
+# possible, these methods should be avoided as they use ECB cipher mode, which in almost
+# all circumstances a poor choice because of it's weakness. CBC cipher mode is the default
+# for the new Encryptor encrypt / decrypt methods for ESAPI Java 2.0. In general, you
+# should only use this compatibility setting if you have persistent data encrypted with
+# version 1.4 and even then, you should ONLY set this compatibility mode UNTIL
+# you have decrypted all of your old encrypted data and then re-encrypted it with
+# ESAPI 2.0 using CBC mode. If you have some reason to mix the deprecated 1.4 mode
+# with the new 2.0 methods, make sure that you use the same cipher algorithm for both
+# (256-bit AES was the default for 1.4; 128-bit is the default for 2.0; see below for
+# more details.) Otherwise, you will have to use the new 2.0 encrypt / decrypt methods
+# where you can specify a SecretKey. (Note that if you are using the 256-bit AES,
+# that requires downloading the special jurisdiction policy files mentioned above.)
+#
+# ***** IMPORTANT: Do NOT forget to replace these with your own values! *****
+# To calculate these values, you can run:
+# java -classpath esapi.jar org.owasp.esapi.reference.crypto.JavaEncryptor
+#
+Encryptor.MasterKey=tzfztf56ftv
+Encryptor.MasterSalt=123456ztrewq
+
+# Provides the default JCE provider that ESAPI will "prefer" for its symmetric
+# encryption and hashing. (That is it will look to this provider first, but it
+# will defer to other providers if the requested algorithm is not implemented
+# by this provider.) If left unset, ESAPI will just use your Java VM's current
+# preferred JCE provider, which is generally set in the file
+# "$JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/security/java.security".
+#
+# The main intent of this is to allow ESAPI symmetric encryption to be
+# used with a FIPS 140-2 compliant crypto-module. For details, see the section
+# "Using ESAPI Symmetric Encryption with FIPS 140-2 Cryptographic Modules" in
+# the ESAPI 2.0 Symmetric Encryption User Guide, at:
+# http://owasp-esapi-java.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/documentation/esapi4java-core-2.0-symmetric-crypto-user-guide.html
+# However, this property also allows you to easily use an alternate JCE provider
+# such as "Bouncy Castle" without having to make changes to "java.security".
+# See Javadoc for SecurityProviderLoader for further details. If you wish to use
+# a provider that is not known to SecurityProviderLoader, you may specify the
+# fully-qualified class name of the JCE provider class that implements
+# java.security.Provider. If the name contains a '.', this is interpreted as
+# a fully-qualified class name that implements java.security.Provider.
+#
+# NOTE: Setting this property has the side-effect of changing it in your application
+# as well, so if you are using JCE in your application directly rather than
+# through ESAPI (you wouldn't do that, would you? ;-), it will change the
+# preferred JCE provider there as well.
+#
+# Default: Keeps the JCE provider set to whatever JVM sets it to.
+Encryptor.PreferredJCEProvider=
+
+# AES is the most widely used and strongest encryption algorithm. This
+# should agree with your Encryptor.CipherTransformation property.
+# By default, ESAPI Java 1.4 uses "PBEWithMD5AndDES" and which is
+# very weak. It is essentially a password-based encryption key, hashed
+# with MD5 around 1K times and then encrypted with the weak DES algorithm
+# (56-bits) using ECB mode and an unspecified padding (it is
+# JCE provider specific, but most likely "NoPadding"). However, 2.0 uses
+# "AES/CBC/PKCSPadding". If you want to change these, change them here.
+# Warning: This property does not control the default reference implementation for
+# ESAPI 2.0 using JavaEncryptor. Also, this property will be dropped
+# in the future.
+# @deprecated
+Encryptor.EncryptionAlgorithm=AES
+# For ESAPI Java 2.0 - New encrypt / decrypt methods use this.
+Encryptor.CipherTransformation=AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding
+
+# Applies to ESAPI 2.0 and later only!
+# Comma-separated list of cipher modes that provide *BOTH*
+# confidentiality *AND* message authenticity. (NIST refers to such cipher
+# modes as "combined modes" so that's what we shall call them.) If any of these
+# cipher modes are used then no MAC is calculated and stored
+# in the CipherText upon encryption. Likewise, if one of these
+# cipher modes is used with decryption, no attempt will be made
+# to validate the MAC contained in the CipherText object regardless
+# of whether it contains one or not. Since the expectation is that
+# these cipher modes support support message authenticity already,
+# injecting a MAC in the CipherText object would be at best redundant.
+#
+# Note that as of JDK 1.5, the SunJCE provider does not support *any*
+# of these cipher modes. Of these listed, only GCM and CCM are currently
+# NIST approved. YMMV for other JCE providers. E.g., Bouncy Castle supports
+# GCM and CCM with "NoPadding" mode, but not with "PKCS5Padding" or other
+# padding modes.
+Encryptor.cipher_modes.combined_modes=GCM,CCM,IAPM,EAX,OCB,CWC
+
+# Applies to ESAPI 2.0 and later only!
+# Additional cipher modes allowed for ESAPI 2.0 encryption. These
+# cipher modes are in _addition_ to those specified by the property
+# 'Encryptor.cipher_modes.combined_modes'.
+# Note: We will add support for streaming modes like CFB & OFB once
+# we add support for 'specified' to the property 'Encryptor.ChooseIVMethod'
+# (probably in ESAPI 2.1).
+# DISCUSS: Better name?
+Encryptor.cipher_modes.additional_allowed=CBC
+
+# 128-bit is almost always sufficient and appears to be more resistant to
+# related key attacks than is 256-bit AES. Use '_' to use default key size
+# for cipher algorithms (where it makes sense because the algorithm supports
+# a variable key size). Key length must agree to what's provided as the
+# cipher transformation, otherwise this will be ignored after logging a
+# warning.
+#
+# NOTE: This is what applies BOTH ESAPI 1.4 and 2.0. See warning above about mixing!
+Encryptor.EncryptionKeyLength=128
+
+# Because 2.0 uses CBC mode by default, it requires an initialization vector (IV).
+# (All cipher modes except ECB require an IV.) There are two choices: we can either
+# use a fixed IV known to both parties or allow ESAPI to choose a random IV. While
+# the IV does not need to be hidden from adversaries, it is important that the
+# adversary not be allowed to choose it. Also, random IVs are generally much more
+# secure than fixed IVs. (In fact, it is essential that feed-back cipher modes
+# such as CFB and OFB use a different IV for each encryption with a given key so
+# in such cases, random IVs are much preferred. By default, ESAPI 2.0 uses random
+# IVs. If you wish to use 'fixed' IVs, set 'Encryptor.ChooseIVMethod=fixed' and
+# uncomment the Encryptor.fixedIV.
+#
+# Valid values: random|fixed|specified 'specified' not yet implemented; planned for 2.1
+Encryptor.ChooseIVMethod=random
+# If you choose to use a fixed IV, then you must place a fixed IV here that
+# is known to all others who are sharing your secret key. The format should
+# be a hex string that is the same length as the cipher block size for the
+# cipher algorithm that you are using. The following is an *example* for AES
+# from an AES test vector for AES-128/CBC as described in:
+# NIST Special Publication 800-38A (2001 Edition)
+# "Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation".
+# (Note that the block size for AES is 16 bytes == 128 bits.)
+#
+Encryptor.fixedIV=0x000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f
+
+# Whether or not CipherText should use a message authentication code (MAC) with it.
+# This prevents an adversary from altering the IV as well as allowing a more
+# fool-proof way of determining the decryption failed because of an incorrect
+# key being supplied. This refers to the "separate" MAC calculated and stored
+# in CipherText, not part of any MAC that is calculated as a result of a
+# "combined mode" cipher mode.
+#
+# If you are using ESAPI with a FIPS 140-2 cryptographic module, you *must* also
+# set this property to false.
+Encryptor.CipherText.useMAC=true
+
+# Whether or not the PlainText object may be overwritten and then marked
+# eligible for garbage collection. If not set, this is still treated as 'true'.
+Encryptor.PlainText.overwrite=true
+
+# Do not use DES except in a legacy situations. 56-bit is way too small key size.
+#Encryptor.EncryptionKeyLength=56
+#Encryptor.EncryptionAlgorithm=DES
+
+# TripleDES is considered strong enough for most purposes.
+# Note: There is also a 112-bit version of DESede. Using the 168-bit version
+# requires downloading the special jurisdiction policy from Sun.
+#Encryptor.EncryptionKeyLength=168
+#Encryptor.EncryptionAlgorithm=DESede
+
+Encryptor.HashAlgorithm=SHA-512
+Encryptor.HashIterations=1024
+Encryptor.DigitalSignatureAlgorithm=SHA1withDSA
+Encryptor.DigitalSignatureKeyLength=1024
+Encryptor.RandomAlgorithm=SHA1PRNG
+Encryptor.CharacterEncoding=UTF-8
+
+# This is the Pseudo Random Function (PRF) that ESAPI's Key Derivation Function
+# (KDF) normally uses. Note this is *only* the PRF used for ESAPI's KDF and
+# *not* what is used for ESAPI's MAC. (Currently, HmacSHA1 is always used for
+# the MAC, mostly to keep the overall size at a minimum.)
+#
+# Currently supported choices for JDK 1.5 and 1.6 are:
+# HmacSHA1 (160 bits), HmacSHA256 (256 bits), HmacSHA384 (384 bits), and
+# HmacSHA512 (512 bits).
+# Note that HmacMD5 is *not* supported for the PRF used by the KDF even though
+# the JDKs support it. See the ESAPI 2.0 Symmetric Encryption User Guide
+# further details.
+Encryptor.KDF.PRF=HmacSHA256
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Logging
+# Set the application name if these logs are combined with other applications
+Logger.ApplicationName=Ecompportal_application
+# If you use an HTML log viewer that does not properly HTML escape log data, you can set LogEncodingRequired to true
+Logger.LogEncodingRequired=false
+# Determines whether ESAPI should log the application name. This might be clutter in some single-server/single-app environments.
+Logger.LogApplicationName=true
+# Determines whether ESAPI should log the server IP and port. This might be clutter in some single-server environments.
+Logger.LogServerIP=true
+# LogFileName, the name of the logging file. Provide a full directory path (e.g., C:\\ESAPI\\ESAPI_logging_file) if you
+# want to place it in a specific directory.
+Logger.LogFileName=Ecompportal_ESAPI_logging_file
+# MaxLogFileSize, the max size (in bytes) of a single log file before it cuts over to a new one (default is 10,000,000)
+Logger.MaxLogFileSize=10000000
+
+
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Intrusion Detection
+#
+# Each event has a base to which .count, .interval, and .action are added
+# The IntrusionException will fire if we receive "count" events within "interval" seconds
+# The IntrusionDetector is configurable to take the following actions: log, logout, and disable
+# (multiple actions separated by commas are allowed e.g. event.test.actions=log,disable
+#
+# Custom Events
+# Names must start with "event." as the base
+# Use IntrusionDetector.addEvent( "test" ) in your code to trigger "event.test" here
+# You can also disable intrusion detection completely by changing
+# the following parameter to true
+#
+IntrusionDetector.Disable=false
+#
+IntrusionDetector.event.test.count=2
+IntrusionDetector.event.test.interval=10
+IntrusionDetector.event.test.actions=disable,log
+
+# Exception Events
+# All EnterpriseSecurityExceptions are registered automatically
+# Call IntrusionDetector.getInstance().addException(e) for Exceptions that do not extend EnterpriseSecurityException
+# Use the fully qualified classname of the exception as the base
+
+# any intrusion is an attack
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntrusionException.count=1
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntrusionException.interval=1
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntrusionException.actions=log,disable,logout
+
+# for test purposes
+# CHECKME: Shouldn't there be something in the property name itself that designates
+# that these are for testing???
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntegrityException.count=10
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntegrityException.interval=5
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.IntegrityException.actions=log,disable,logout
+
+# rapid validation errors indicate scans or attacks in progress
+# org.owasp.esapi.errors.ValidationException.count=10
+# org.owasp.esapi.errors.ValidationException.interval=10
+# org.owasp.esapi.errors.ValidationException.actions=log,logout
+
+# sessions jumping between hosts indicates session hijacking
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.AuthenticationHostException.count=2
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.AuthenticationHostException.interval=10
+IntrusionDetector.org.owasp.esapi.errors.AuthenticationHostException.actions=log,logout
+
+
+#===========================================================================
+# ESAPI Validation
+#
+# The ESAPI Validator works on regular expressions with defined names. You can define names
+# either here, or you may define application specific patterns in a separate file defined below.
+# This allows enterprises to specify both organizational standards as well as application specific
+# validation rules.
+#
+Validator.ConfigurationFile=validation.properties
+Validator.ConfigurationFile.MultiValued=false
+
+# Validators used by ESAPI
+Validator.AccountName=^[a-zA-Z0-9]{3,20}$
+Validator.SystemCommand=^[a-zA-Z\\-\\/]{1,64}$
+Validator.RoleName=^[a-z]{1,20}$
+
+#the word TEST below should be changed to your application
+#name - only relative URL's are supported
+Validator.Redirect=^\\/test.*$
+
+# Global HTTP Validation Rules
+# Values with Base64 encoded data (e.g. encrypted state) will need at least [a-zA-Z0-9\/+=]
+Validator.HTTPScheme=^(http|https)$
+Validator.HTTPServerName=^[a-zA-Z0-9_.\\-]*$
+Validator.HTTPParameterName=^[a-zA-Z0-9_]{1,32}$
+Validator.HTTPParameterValue=^[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-\\/+=@_ ]*$
+Validator.HTTPCookieName=^[a-zA-Z0-9\\-_]{1,32}$
+Validator.HTTPCookieValue=^[a-zA-Z0-9\\-\\/+=_ ]*$
+Validator.HTTPHeaderName=^[a-zA-Z0-9\\-_]{1,32}$
+Validator.HTTPHeaderValue=^[a-zA-Z0-9()\\-=\\*\\.\\?;,+\\/:&_ ]*$
+Validator.HTTPContextPath=^\\/?[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-\\/_]*$
+Validator.HTTPServletPath=^[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-\\/_]*$
+Validator.HTTPPath=^[a-zA-Z0-9.\\-_]*$
+Validator.HTTPQueryString=^[a-zA-Z0-9()\\-=\\*\\.\\?;,+\\/:&_ %]*$
+Validator.HTTPURI=^[a-zA-Z0-9()\\-=\\*\\.\\?;,+\\/:&_ ]*$
+Validator.HTTPURL=^.*$
+Validator.HTTPJSESSIONID=^[A-Z0-9]{10,30}$
+
+# Validation of file related input
+Validator.FileName=^[a-zA-Z0-9!@#$%^&{}\\[\\]()_+\\-=,.~'` ]{1,255}$
+Validator.DirectoryName=^[a-zA-Z0-9:/\\\\!@#$%^&{}\\[\\]()_+\\-=,.~'` ]{1,255}$
diff --git a/ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/validation.properties b/ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/validation.properties
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..b275093f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/ecomp-sdk/epsdk-app-overlay/src/main/resources/validation.properties
@@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
+# The ESAPI validator does many security checks on input, such as canonicalization
+# and whitelist validation. Note that all of these validation rules are applied *after*
+# canonicalization. Double-encoded characters (even with different encodings involved,
+# are never allowed.
+#
+# To use:
+#
+# First set up a pattern below. You can choose any name you want, prefixed by the word
+# "Validation." For example:
+# Validation.Email=^[A-Za-z0-9._%-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\\.[a-zA-Z]{2,4}$
+#
+# Then you can validate in your code against the pattern like this:
+# ESAPI.validator().isValidInput("User Email", input, "Email", maxLength, allowNull);
+# Where maxLength and allowNull are set for you needs, respectively.
+#
+# But note, when you use boolean variants of validation functions, you lose critical
+# canonicalization. It is preferable to use the "get" methods (which throw exceptions) and
+# and use the returned user input which is in canonical form. Consider the following:
+#
+# try {
+# someObject.setEmail(ESAPI.validator().getValidInput("User Email", input, "Email", maxLength, allowNull));
+#
+Validator.SafeString=^[.\\p{Alnum}\\p{Space}]{0,1024}$
+#Given the discussion: https://github.com/ESAPI/esapi-java-legacy/issues/374, a better upper-bound for domain name
+#was selected as 62. This is slightly under the length in RFC-1035
+Validator.Email=^[A-Za-z0-9._%'-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\\.[a-zA-Z]{2,62}$
+Validator.Gmail=^[A-Za-z0-9._%'-+]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\\.[a-zA-Z]{2,62}$
+Validator.IPAddress=^(?:(?:25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)\\.){3}(?:25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01]?[0-9][0-9]?)$
+#Validator.URL=^(?:ht|f)tp(s?+)\\:\\/\\/[0-9a-zA-Z](?:[-.\\w]*[0-9a-zA-Z])*(?::(?:0-9)*)*(?:\\/?+)(?:[a-zA-Z0-9\\-\\.\\?\\,\\:\\'\\/\\\\\\+=&%\\$#_]*)?+$
+Validator.URL=^(?:ht|f)tp(?:s?)(?:[:A-Za-z0-9%/#?&.=-]*)$
+Validator.CreditCard=^(\\d{4}[- ]?){3}\\d{4}$
+Validator.SSN=^(?!000)([0-6]\\d{2}|7([0-6]\\d|7[012]))([ -]?)(?!00)\\d\\d\\3(?!0000)\\d{4}$ \ No newline at end of file