You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
31 lines
1.7 KiB
31 lines
1.7 KiB
8 years ago
|
SECURITY
|
||
|
--------
|
||
|
The fetch and push protocols are not designed to prevent one side from
|
||
|
stealing data from the other repository that was not intended to be
|
||
|
shared. If you have private data that you need to protect from a malicious
|
||
|
peer, your best option is to store it in another repository. This applies
|
||
|
to both clients and servers. In particular, namespaces on a server are not
|
||
|
effective for read access control; you should only grant read access to a
|
||
|
namespace to clients that you would trust with read access to the entire
|
||
|
repository.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The known attack vectors are as follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
. The victim sends "have" lines advertising the IDs of objects it has that
|
||
|
are not explicitly intended to be shared but can be used to optimize the
|
||
|
transfer if the peer also has them. The attacker chooses an object ID X
|
||
|
to steal and sends a ref to X, but isn't required to send the content of
|
||
|
X because the victim already has it. Now the victim believes that the
|
||
|
attacker has X, and it sends the content of X back to the attacker
|
||
|
later. (This attack is most straightforward for a client to perform on a
|
||
|
server, by creating a ref to X in the namespace the client has access
|
||
|
to and then fetching it. The most likely way for a server to perform it
|
||
|
on a client is to "merge" X into a public branch and hope that the user
|
||
|
does additional work on this branch and pushes it back to the server
|
||
|
without noticing the merge.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
. As in #1, the attacker chooses an object ID X to steal. The victim sends
|
||
|
an object Y that the attacker already has, and the attacker falsely
|
||
|
claims to have X and not Y, so the victim sends Y as a delta against X.
|
||
|
The delta reveals regions of X that are similar to Y to the attacker.
|