phpcs-security-audit is a set of PHP_CodeSniffer rules that finds vulnerabilities and weaknesses related to security in PHP code.
It currently has core PHP rules as well as Drupal 7 specific rules.
The tool also checks for CVE issues and security advisories related to the CMS/framework. This enable you to follow the versioning of components during static code analysis.
The main reason of this project for being an extension of PHP_CodeSniffer is to have easy integration into continuous integration systems. It is also able to find security bugs that are not detected with some object oriented analysis (such as PHPMD).
phpcs-security-audit in its beginning was backed by Pheromone (later on named Floe design + technologies) and written by Jonathan Marcil.
Requires PHP CodeSniffer version 3.x with PHP 5.4 or higher.
The easiest way to install is using Composer:
#WARNING: this currently doesn't work up until the v3 package is released
#See Contribute section bellow for git clone instruction
composer require --dev pheromone/phpcs-security-audit
./vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=./vendor/pheromone/phpcs-security-audit/example_base_ruleset.xml ./vendor/pheromone/phpcs-security-audit/tests.php
This will also install the DealerDirect Composer PHPCS plugin which will register the Security
standard with PHP_CodeSniffer.
If you want to integrate it all with Jenkins, go see http://jenkins-php.org/ for extensive help.
Simply point to any XML ruleset file and a folder:
phpcs --extensions=php,inc,lib,module,info --standard=./vendor/pheromone/phpcs-security-audit/example_base_ruleset.xml /your/php/files/
Specifying extensions is important since for example PHP code is within .module files in Drupal.
To have a quick example of output you can use the provided tests.php file:
$ phpcs --extensions=php,inc,lib,module,info --standard=./vendor/pheromone/phpcs-security-audit/example_base_ruleset.xml ./vendor/pheromone/phpcs-security-audit/tests.php
FILE: tests.php
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOUND 16 ERROR(S) AND 15 WARNING(S) AFFECTING 22 LINE(S)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6 | WARNING | Possible XSS detected with . on echo
6 | ERROR | Easy XSS detected because of direct user input with $_POST on
| | echo
8 | WARNING | db_query() is deprecated except when doing a static query
8 | ERROR | Potential SQL injection found in db_query()
9 | WARNING | Usage of preg_replace with /e modifier is not recommended.
For the Drupal AdvisoriesContrib you need to change your /etc/php5/cli/php.ini
to have:
short_open_tag = On
in order to get rid of "No PHP code was found in this file" warnings.
Please note that only Drupal modules downloaded from drupal.org are supported. If you are using contrib module but from another source, the version checking will probably won't work and will generate warning.
As in normal PHP CodeSniffer rules, customization is provided in the XML files that are in the top folder of the project.
These global parameters are used in many rules:
- ParanoiaMode: set to 1 to add more checks. 0 for less.
- CmsFramework: set to the name of a folder containings rules and Utils.php (such as Drupal7, Symfony2).
They can be set in a custom ruleset phpcs.xml[.dist]
XML file or from the command line for permanent config with --config-set
or at runtime with --runtime-set
. Note that the XML override all CLI options so remove it if you want to use it. The CLI usage is as follow phpcs --runtime-set ParanoiaMode 0 --extensions=php --standard=./vendor/pheromone/phpcs-security-audit/example_base_ruleset.xml tests.php
;
In some case you can force the paranoia mode on or off with the parameter forceParanoia
inside the XML rule.
If you want to fork and help or just do your own sniffs you can use the utilities provided by phpcs-security-audit rules in order to facilitate the process.
Let's say you have a custom CMS function that is taking user input from $_GET
when a function call to get_param()
is done.
You have to create a new Folder in Sniffs/ that will be the name of your framework. Then you'll need to create a file named Utils.php that will actually be the function that will specialise the generic sniffs. To guide you, just copy the file from another folder such as Drupal7/.
The main function you'll want to change is is_direct_user_input
where you'll want to return TRUE when get_param()
is seen:
public static function is_direct_user_input($var) {
if (parent::is_direct_user_input($var)) {
return TRUE;
} else {
if ($var == 'get_param') {
return TRUE;
}
}
return FALSE;
}
Don't forget to set the occurrence of param "CmsFramework" in your XML base configuration in order to select your newly added utilities.
You are not required to do your own sniffs for the modification to be useful, since you are specifying what is a user input for other rules, but you could use the newly created directory to do so.
If you implement any public cms/framework customization please make a pull request to help the project grows.
It is possible to install with a git clone
and play with it in the same folder.
composer install
./vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=example_base_ruleset.xml --extensions=php tests.php
By default it should set PHPCS to look in the current folder:
PHP CodeSniffer Config installed_paths set to ../../../
If for any reason you need to change this (should work out of the box) you will need to phpcs --config-set installed_paths
as explained in PHP_CodeSniffer docs.
Master can contain breaking changes, so people are better to rely on releases for stable versions.
Those release packages are available here on GitHub or on Packagist.
Some guidelines if you want to create new rules:
- Ensure that
ParanoiaMode
controls how verbose your sniff is- If sometime the sniff is a valid security concern, run it when paranoia=true only
- Warnings are generally issued instead of Errors for most-of-the-time when paranoia=false
- Errors are always generated when you are use about user input being used
- Prefer false positives (annoying results) over false negatives (missing results)
- paranoia=false should solve false positive, otherwise warn on anything remotely suspicious
- Include at least one test that trigger your sniff into
tests.php
- Keep it as a one liner, doesn't need to make sense
- Don't forget to include your new sniff in the
example_base_ruleset.xml
andexample_drupal7_ruleset.xml
when it applies.
As any security tools, this one comes with it's share of annoyance. At first a focus on finding vulnerabilities will be done, but later it is planned to have a phase where efforts will be towards reducing annoyances, in particular with the number of false positives.
- It's a generator of false positives. This can actually help you learn what are the weak functions in PHP. Paranoia mode will fix that by doing a major cut-off on warnings when set to 0.
- This tool was created around 10 years ago. Some of its parts might look outdated, and support for old PHP code will still be present. The reality is that many code base scanned with it might be as old as the tool.
- It's slow. On big Drupal modules and core it can take too much time (and RAM, reconfigure cli/php.ini to use 512M if needed) to run. Not sure if it's because of bugs in PHPCS or this set of rules, but will be investigated last. Meanwhile you can configure PHPCS to ignore big contrib modules (and run another instance of PHPCS for .info parsing only for them). An example is og taking hours, usually everything runs under 1-2 minutes and sometime around 5 minute. You can try using the
--parallel=8
(or another number) option to try and speed things up on supported OSes. Possible workaround is to use phpcs --ignore=folder to skip scanning of those parts. - For Drupal advisories checking: a module with multiple versions might be secure if a lesser fixed version exists and you'll still get the error or warning. Keep everything updated at latest as recommended on Drupal's website.