Enportal/5.5/admin/system administration/security


Overview

The overall security of, and provided by, Edge Technologies products is very important to us and our customers. This is fulfilled via development processes, staying abreast of known vulnerabilities, and listening to our customers when security concerns are raised.

Our software is deployed in many different scenarios such as Internet facing portals, internal corporate usage, and secure environments with multi-factor authentication. One key reason for this is the ability of enPortal to harden proxied web applications such as restricting who and what someone can access - something the proxied web application cannot do itself. enPortal has even been used to address known vulnerabilities in proxied web applications such as Cross-site scripting (XSS) if the vendor of that application isn't able to address it.


Security Patches

If Edge becomes aware of a vulnerability in a component used by our products, or within the product itself, depending on the severity we will either produce a patch for existing deployments or address the issue in the subsequent product release.

To report security concerns or issues regarding known vulnerability please contact Support.

Passwords & Secrets

enPortal and AppBoard need to store passwords or secrets for a number of different purposes:

  • user authentication (if not using an external auth provider such as LDAP)
  • Single-Sign-On (SSO) tokens for proxied web applications (if not using auth pass-through)
  • access credentials if using an external configuration database
  • access credentials for AppBoard Data Sources

By default all these passwords and secrets are stored encrypted using 128-bit AES (approved by NIST). Best practices are to create a new encryption key after installing the product.

Features & Recommendations

Edge Technologies enPortal and AppBoard have a common code base and the following set of features and recommendations apply to both unless otherwise indicated. Although we endeavour to provide a secure configuration out-of-the-box, due to interoperability and some items relying on specific configuration, it is recommended to be familiar with all the security related features and determine what suits your organization best.

  1. Run as non-root on Linux/UNIX systems. This is the default configuration. Running as root is possible, for instance to bind to port < 1024, however in this case it's recommended to use JSVC which can be used to bind to the port and give up privileges, or some external mechanism to act as the end point such as a load balancer which talks to the server on a port > 1024.
  2. enable SSL/TLS (HTTPS). The products ship with a self-signed certificate to enable for easy testing, however this certificate should be replaced as soon as possible.
  3. Ensure the latest supported version of Java is used on the server.
  4. Implement system-wide or domain-specific password policies to ensure end-users have secure passwords.
  5. Use multi-factor authentication. For example, we have customers using CAC that makes use of HTTPS client authentication. Other options are possible via our extensible authentication handlers.
  6. Change the default encryption key as mentioned in the Passwords & Secrets section above.
  7. Disable the default accounts. Administrator privileges can be assigned to other users as needed (/portalAdministration role)
  8. Customize the login page. This can be used to disable form pre-fill or to provide/remove content as deemed necessary.
  9. Restrict access to the host. Clients only require access to the single listening port of the server - and this should be the only port open to the clients. The server itself will need access to the proxied web applications (enPortal) and any data sources (AppBoard).
  10. Concurrent user sessions. By default a user can be logged in multiple times, however this can be changed so that only one session can exist for a given user. This really depends on your organizations usage and security policies.
  11. use the enPortal CRS to virtually harden proxied web applications. This may be to completely restrict the content that's exposed to users or even to require authentication when the web application doesn't support it.
  12. By default user and domain credentials are echoed in HTTP responses (but not the password). Some security analysis tools will identify this as a security vulnerability, and users can disable this functionality by editing/adding [INSTALL_HOME]/server/webapps/enportal/WEB-INF/config/custom.properties and adding the line jsp.usercookies=false.
  13. Cross-site scripting (XSS) and Vulnerability Tool Hardening:
    • enPortal core components are protected by performing input validation and a configurable set of rules checks all client requests (query, headers, body) for malicious matches.
    • The CRS can be used to provide protection to proxied web applications. Some default handlers are included with enPortal but disabled by default.
    • Refer to the Managing XSS Rules page for more information.
  14. SSL Browser Caching
    • By default, Appboard now marks all content (excpet for images, CSS, or Javascript) as non-cacheable, which is a suggestion to browsers not to retain such content for efficiency purposes. There is a property (request.ssl.cache, specified in WEB-INF/config/config.properties) which can be toggled to "true" and will cause XML, HTML, and SWF content to be cached, as well. Setting this to "true" may slightly increase client performance with the increased risk of possibly sensitive content being retained by browsers.