mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
243 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
243 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Security Model
|
|
|
|
This section attempts to document the Zulip security model. Since
|
|
this is new documentation, it likely does not cover every issue; if
|
|
there are details you're curious about, please feel free to ask
|
|
questions on the Zulip development mailing list (or if you think
|
|
you've found a security bug, please report it to
|
|
zulip-security@googlegroups.com so we can do a responsible security
|
|
announcement).
|
|
|
|
## Secure your Zulip server like your email server
|
|
|
|
* It's reasonable to think about security for a Zulip server like you
|
|
do security for a team email server -- only trusted administrators
|
|
within an organization should have shell access to the server.
|
|
|
|
In particular, anyone with root access to a Zulip application server
|
|
or Zulip database server, or with access to the `zulip` user on a
|
|
Zulip application server, has complete control over the Zulip
|
|
installation and all of its data (so they can read messages, modify
|
|
history, etc.). It would be difficult or impossible to avoid this,
|
|
because the server needs access to the data to support features
|
|
expected of a group chat system like the ability to search the
|
|
entire message history, and thus someone with control over the
|
|
server has access to that data as well.
|
|
|
|
## Encryption and Authentication
|
|
|
|
* Traffic between clients (web, desktop and mobile) and the Zulip is
|
|
encrypted using HTTPS. By default, all Zulip services talk to each
|
|
other either via a localhost connection or using an encrypted SSL
|
|
connection.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip requires CSRF tokens in all interactions with the web API to
|
|
prevent CSRF attacks.
|
|
|
|
* The preferred way to login to Zulip is using an SSO solution like
|
|
Google Auth, LDAP, or similar, but Zulip also supports password
|
|
authentication. See
|
|
[the authentication methods documentation](prod-authentication-methods.html)
|
|
for details on Zulip's available authentication methods.
|
|
|
|
### Passwords
|
|
|
|
Zulip stores user passwords using the standard PBKDF2 algorithm.
|
|
|
|
When the user is choosing a password, Zulip checks the password's
|
|
strength using the popular [zxcvbn][zxcvbn] library. Weak passwords
|
|
are rejected, and strong passwords encouraged. The minimum password
|
|
strength allowed is controlled by two settings in
|
|
`/etc/zulip/settings.py`:
|
|
|
|
* `PASSWORD_MIN_LENGTH`: The minimum acceptable length, in characters.
|
|
Shorter passwords are rejected even if they pass the `zxcvbn` test
|
|
controlled by `PASSWORD_MIN_GUESSES`.
|
|
|
|
* `PASSWORD_MIN_GUESSES`: The minimum acceptable strength of the
|
|
password, in terms of the estimated number of passwords an attacker
|
|
is likely to guess before trying this one. If the user attempts to
|
|
set a password that `zxcvbn` estimates to be guessable in less than
|
|
`PASSWORD_MIN_GUESSES`, then Zulip rejects the password.
|
|
|
|
By default, `PASSWORD_MIN_GUESSES` is 10000. This provides
|
|
significant protection against online attacks, while limiting the
|
|
burden imposed on users choosing a password.
|
|
|
|
<!--- Why 10000? See password-strength.md. -->
|
|
|
|
Estimating the guessability of a password is a complex problem and
|
|
impossible to efficiently do perfectly. For background or when
|
|
considering an alternate value for this setting, the article
|
|
["Passwords and the Evolution of Imperfect Authentication"][BHOS15]
|
|
is recommended. The [2016 zxcvbn paper][zxcvbn-paper] adds useful
|
|
information about the performance of zxcvbn, and [a large 2012 study
|
|
of Yahoo users][Bon12] is informative about the strength of the
|
|
passwords users choose.
|
|
|
|
<!---
|
|
If the BHOS15 link ever goes dead: it's reference 30 of the zxcvbn
|
|
paper, aka https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2699390 , in the
|
|
_Communications of the ACM_ aka CACM. (But the ACM has it paywalled.)
|
|
.
|
|
Hooray for USENIX and IEEE: the other papers' canonical links are
|
|
not paywalled. The Yahoo study is reference 5 in BHOS15.
|
|
-->
|
|
|
|
[zxcvbn]: https://github.com/dropbox/zxcvbn
|
|
[BHOS15]: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~fms27/papers/2015-BonneauHerOorSta-passwords.pdf
|
|
[zxcvbn-paper]: https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/usenixsecurity16/sec16_paper_wheeler.pdf
|
|
[Bon12]: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6234435/
|
|
|
|
## Messages and History
|
|
|
|
* Zulip message content is rendered using a specialized Markdown
|
|
parser which escapes content to protect against cross-site scripting
|
|
attacks.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports both public streams and private ("invite-only")
|
|
streams. Any Zulip user can join any public stream in the realm,
|
|
and can view the complete message history of any public stream
|
|
without joining the stream.
|
|
|
|
* A private ("invite-only") stream is hidden from users who are not
|
|
subscribed to the stream. Users who are not members of a private
|
|
stream cannot read messages on the stream, send messages to the
|
|
stream, or join the stream, even if they are a Zulip realm
|
|
administrator. Users can join private streams only when they are
|
|
invited. However, any member of a private stream can invite other
|
|
users to the stream. When a new user joins a private stream, they
|
|
can see future messages sent to the stream, but they do not receive
|
|
access to the stream's message history.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports editing the content and topics of messages that have
|
|
already been sent. As a general philosophy, our policies provide
|
|
hard limits on the ways in which message content can be changed or
|
|
undone. In contrast, our policies around message topics favor
|
|
usefulness (e.g. for conversational organization) over faithfulness
|
|
to the original.
|
|
|
|
The message editing policy can be configured on the /#organization
|
|
page. There are three configurations provided out of the box: (i)
|
|
users cannot edit messages at all, (ii) users can edit any message
|
|
they have sent, and (iii) users can edit the content of any message
|
|
they have sent in the last N minutes, and the topic of any message
|
|
they have sent. In (ii) and (iii), topic edits can also be
|
|
propagated to other messages with the same original topic, even if
|
|
those messages were sent by other users. The default setting is
|
|
(iii), with N = 10.
|
|
|
|
In addition, and regardless of the configuration above, messages
|
|
with no topic can always be edited to have a topic, by anyone in the
|
|
organization, and the topic of any message can also always be edited
|
|
by a realm administrator.
|
|
|
|
Also note that while edited messages are synced immediately to open
|
|
browser windows, editing messages is not a safe way to redact secret
|
|
content (e.g. a password) shared unintentionally. Other users may
|
|
have seen and saved the content of the original message, or have an
|
|
integration (e.g. push notifications) forwarding all messages they
|
|
receive to another service. Zulip stores the edit history of
|
|
messages, but it may or may not be available to clients, depending
|
|
on an organization-level setting.
|
|
|
|
## Users and Bots
|
|
|
|
* There are three types of users in a Zulip realm: Administrators,
|
|
normal users, and bots. Administrators have the ability to
|
|
deactivate and reactivate other human and bot users, delete streams,
|
|
add/remove administrator privileges, as well as change configuration
|
|
for the overall realm (e.g. whether an invitation is required to
|
|
join the realm). Being a Zulip administrator does not provide the
|
|
ability to interact with other users' private messages or the
|
|
messages sent to private streams to which the administrator is not
|
|
subscribed. However, a Zulip administrator subscribed to a stream
|
|
can toggle whether that stream is public or private. Also, Zulip
|
|
realm administrators have administrative access to the API keys of
|
|
all bots in the realm, so a Zulip administrator may be able to
|
|
access messages sent to private streams that have bots subscribed,
|
|
by using the bot's credentials.
|
|
|
|
In the future, Zulip's security model may change to allow realm
|
|
administrators to access private messages (e.g. to support auditing
|
|
functionality).
|
|
|
|
* Every Zulip user has an API key, available on the settings page.
|
|
This API key can be used to do essentially everything the user can
|
|
do; for that reason, users should keep their API key safe. Users
|
|
can rotate their own API key if it is accidentally compromised.
|
|
|
|
* To properly remove a user's access to a Zulip team, it does not
|
|
suffice to change their password or deactivate their account in the
|
|
SSO system, since neither of those prevents authenticating with the
|
|
user's API key or those of bots the user has created. Instead, you
|
|
should deactivate the user's account in the "Organization settings"
|
|
interface (`/#organization`); this will automatically also
|
|
deactivate any bots the user had created.
|
|
|
|
* The Zulip mobile apps authenticate to the server by sending the
|
|
user's password and retrieving the user's API key; the apps then use
|
|
the API key to authenticate all future interactions with the site.
|
|
Thus, if a user's phone is lost, in addition to changing passwords,
|
|
you should rotate the user's Zulip API key.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip bots are used for integrations. A Zulip bot can do everything
|
|
a normal user in the realm can do including reading other, with a
|
|
few exceptions (e.g. a bot cannot login to the web application or
|
|
create other bots). In particular, with the API key for a Zulip
|
|
bot, one can read any message sent to a public stream in that bot's
|
|
realm. A likely future feature for Zulip is [limited bots that can
|
|
only send messages](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/373).
|
|
|
|
* Certain Zulip bots can be marked as "API super users"; these special
|
|
bots have the ability to send messages that appear to have been sent
|
|
by another user (an important feature for implementing integrations
|
|
like the Jabber, IRC, and Zephyr mirrors). They also have the
|
|
ability to see the names of all streams (including private streams).
|
|
|
|
They can only be created on the command line (with `manage.py
|
|
knight --permission=api_super_user`).
|
|
|
|
## User-uploaded content
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports user-uploaded files; ideally they should be hosted
|
|
from a separate domain from the main Zulip server to protect against
|
|
various same-domain attacks (e.g. zulip-user-content.example.com)
|
|
using the S3 integration.
|
|
|
|
The URLs of user-uploaded files are secret; if you are using the
|
|
"local file upload" integration, anyone with the URL of an uploaded
|
|
file can access the file. This means the local uploads integration
|
|
is vulnerable to a subtle attack where if a user clicks on a link in
|
|
a secret .PDF or .HTML file that had been uploaded to Zulip, access
|
|
to the file might be leaked to the other server via the Referrer
|
|
header (see [the "Uploads world readable" issue on
|
|
GitHub](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/320)).
|
|
|
|
The Zulip S3 file upload integration is relatively safe against that
|
|
attack, because the URLs of files presented to users don't host the
|
|
content. Instead, the S3 integration checks the user has a valid
|
|
Zulip session in the relevant realm, and if so then redirects the
|
|
browser to a one-time S3 URL that expires a short time later.
|
|
Keeping the URL secret is still important to avoid other users in
|
|
the Zulip realm from being able to access the file.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports using the Camo image proxy to proxy content like
|
|
inline image previews that can be inserted into the Zulip message
|
|
feed by other users over HTTPS.
|
|
|
|
* By default, Zulip will provide image previews inline in the body of
|
|
messages when a message contains a link to an image. You can
|
|
control this using the `INLINE_IMAGE_PREVIEW` setting.
|
|
|
|
## Final notes and security response
|
|
|
|
If you find some aspect of Zulip that seems inconsistent with this
|
|
security model, please report it to zulip-security@googlegroups.com so
|
|
that we can investigate and coordinate an appropriate security release
|
|
if needed.
|
|
|
|
Zulip security announcements will be sent to
|
|
zulip-announce@googlegroups.com, so you should subscribe if you are
|
|
running Zulip in production.
|