Detect Request sent from Postman - laravel

I want to make a request to verify people's ID using laravel. Since it's very credential, I want to make it available only if they verify it from their mobiles.
So it must be prevented that the IDs are verified from postman request.
Is there a way to detect that a request is sent from postman or not?
Any idea would be very appreaciated :).
Thank you before

Postman has a tendency to send a header called something like postman-token so you could block the request if such a header exists.
Edit Note that this header can be turned off in postman settingss
As #EdwardChew wrote, this does NOT prevent people from using postman/curl/python/anything else. adding authentication to the endpoint is the best approach.
Sample postman request:
GET /api/car HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:8080
Content-Type: application/json
cache-control: no-cache
Postman-Token: 05f5c492-3697-41b1-be0f-fb9bc4499b96
Since postman has the "code" feature, if the request is blocked it is simple to copy it as a curl command:
curl -X GET \
http://localhost:8080/api/car \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-H 'Postman-Token: e37790ea-a3a5-40cf-ac4c-b80184801f94' \
-H 'cache-control: no-cache'
and just deleting the line with the Postman-Token header. I normally do so when experimenting with APIs.
If you look at the Laravel doucmentation, there is a section on authorization: https://laravel.com/docs/5.8/api-authentication
which would force users to add a header token something like this: Authorization: Bearer 8fyew8f9yefo7o9yg98gyr and you would then be able to verify the caller

So it must be prevented that the IDs are verified from postman request.
Is there a way to detect that a request is sent from postman or not?
Checking that it comes from Postman is easy for requests sent from Postman where the boxes are checked for Postman-Token and/or User-Agent:
So you would add a check for them in your backend, but then the attacker would not send the Postman-Token header and for the User-Agent we will just send exactly the same one your mobile app/browser sends, thus easily bypassing your checks. By the way Postman is not the only tool, others exist like Insomnia, and then you also need to remember that requests may also come from a Proxy like mitmproxy, burp, zap, charlie, and many others. Do you get the point... it's not feasible to rely on headers to identify what is doing the request.
I highlighted the word what because who is in the request for your API backend is not the same as what is doing it.
The Difference Between WHO and WHAT is Accessing the API Server
In an article I wrote, entitled Why Does Your Mobile App Need An Api Key? you can read more about the difference between who and what is accessing your API server, but i will I quote the following from it:
The what is the thing making the request to the API server. Is it really a genuine instance of your mobile app, or is it a bot, an automated script or an attacker manually poking around your API server with a tool like Postman?
The who is the user of the mobile app that we can authenticate, authorize and identify in several ways, like using OpenID Connect or OAUTH2 flows.
So the who is the user of your API server that you will be able to Authenticate and Authorize access to the data, and the what is the software making that request in behalf of the user, your genuine web/mobile app, a tampered one, an automated script or someone manually poking around with your API via cURL, Postman or other similar tools.
By now I hope that you have enough knowledge to understand why the user(who) authentication is not the same as app(what) authentication/attestation.
POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS
I want to make a request to verify people's ID using laravel. Since it's very credential, I want to make it available only if they verify it from their mobiles.
It's not clear if you mean from a mobile browser or mobile app, but I will provide possible solutions for both.
For Mobile Apps
To learn how you can lock your API server to your mobile app I recommend you to read my answer to the question How to secure an API REST for mobile app? for the sections on Securing the API Server and A Possible Better Solution.
For web apps
Due to the nature of how the web was built, all you need is to hit F12 or inspect the page source, and then search for whatever you need to access the API server from another tool.
To learn some useful techniques to try that your API server only responds to requests coming from What you expect, your genuine web app, I invite you to read my answer to the question Secure api data from calls out of the app, specially the section dedicated to Defending the API Server.
DO YOU WANT TO GO THE EXTRA MILE?
I don't know if you already read some of the OWASP resources I am about to link, but in any response for a security question I like to reference the amazing work from the OWASP foundation ;)
For Web Apps
OWASP Web Top 10 Risks
The OWASP Top 10 is a powerful awareness document for web application security. It represents a broad consensus about the most critical security risks to web applications. Project members include a variety of security experts from around the world who have shared their expertise to produce this list.
The Web Security Testing Guide:
The OWASP Web Security Testing Guide includes a "best practice" penetration testing framework which users can implement in their own organizations and a "low level" penetration testing guide that describes techniques for testing most common web application and web service security issues.
For Mobile Apps
OWASP Mobile Security Project - Top 10 risks
The OWASP Mobile Security Project is a centralized resource intended to give developers and security teams the resources they need to build and maintain secure mobile applications. Through the project, our goal is to classify mobile security risks and provide developmental controls to reduce their impact or likelihood of exploitation.
OWASP - Mobile Security Testing Guide:
The Mobile Security Testing Guide (MSTG) is a comprehensive manual for mobile app security development, testing and reverse engineering.
For APIS
OWASP API Security Top 10
The OWASP API Security Project seeks to provide value to software developers and security assessors by underscoring the potential risks in insecure APIs, and illustrating how these risks may be mitigated. In order to facilitate this goal, the OWASP API Security Project will create and maintain a Top 10 API Security Risks document, as well as a documentation portal for best practices when creating or assessing APIs.

I think instead of detecting whether the request comes from Postman, it is better for you to protect the endpoint with authentication.
With this, even tho the user submitted a request through postman, you can still make sure that it is the user itself who made the request.
Please do let me know if there are actually other concerns bothering you. Cheers :)

Related

API instagram can't get data [duplicate]

tl;dr; About the Same Origin Policy
I have a Grunt process which initiates an instance of express.js server. This was working absolutely fine up until just now when it started serving a blank page with the following appearing in the error log in the developer's console in Chrome (latest version):
XMLHttpRequest cannot load https://www.example.com/
No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested
resource. Origin 'http://localhost:4300' is therefore not allowed access.
What is stopping me from accessing the page?
tl;dr — When you want to read data, (mostly) using client-side JS, from a different server you need the server with the data to grant explicit permission to the code that wants the data.
There's a summary at the end and headings in the answer to make it easier to find the relevant parts. Reading everything is recommended though as it provides useful background for understanding the why that makes seeing how the how applies in different circumstances easier.
About the Same Origin Policy
This is the Same Origin Policy. It is a security feature implemented by browsers.
Your particular case is showing how it is implemented for XMLHttpRequest (and you'll get identical results if you were to use fetch), but it also applies to other things (such as images loaded onto a <canvas> or documents loaded into an <iframe>), just with slightly different implementations.
The standard scenario that demonstrates the need for the SOP can be demonstrated with three characters:
Alice is a person with a web browser
Bob runs a website (https://www.example.com/ in your example)
Mallory runs a website (http://localhost:4300 in your example)
Alice is logged into Bob's site and has some confidential data there. Perhaps it is a company intranet (accessible only to browsers on the LAN), or her online banking (accessible only with a cookie you get after entering a username and password).
Alice visits Mallory's website which has some JavaScript that causes Alice's browser to make an HTTP request to Bob's website (from her IP address with her cookies, etc). This could be as simple as using XMLHttpRequest and reading the responseText.
The browser's Same Origin Policy prevents that JavaScript from reading the data returned by Bob's website (which Bob and Alice don't want Mallory to access). (Note that you can, for example, display an image using an <img> element across origins because the content of the image is not exposed to JavaScript (or Mallory) … unless you throw canvas into the mix in which case you will generate a same-origin violation error).
Why the Same Origin Policy applies when you don't think it should
For any given URL it is possible that the SOP is not needed. A couple of common scenarios where this is the case are:
Alice, Bob, and Mallory are the same person.
Bob is providing entirely public information
… but the browser has no way of knowing if either of the above is true, so trust is not automatic and the SOP is applied. Permission has to be granted explicitly before the browser will give the data it has received from Bob to some other website.
Why the Same Origin Policy applies to JavaScript in a web page but little else
Outside the web page
Browser extensions*, the Network tab in browser developer tools, and applications like Postman are installed software. They aren't passing data from one website to the JavaScript belonging to a different website just because you visited that different website. Installing software usually takes a more conscious choice.
There isn't a third party (Mallory) who is considered a risk.
* Browser extensions do need to be written carefully to avoid cross-origin issues. See the Chrome documentation for example.
Inside the webpage
Most of the time, there isn't a great deal of information leakage when just showing something on a webpage.
If you use an <img> element to load an image, then it gets shown on the page, but very little information is exposed to Mallory. JavaScript can't read the image (unless you use a crossOrigin attribute to explicitly enable request permission with CORS) and then copy it to her server.
That said, some information does leak so, to quote Domenic Denicola (of Google):
The web's fundamental security model is the same origin policy. We
have several legacy exceptions to that rule from before that security
model was in place, with script tags being one of the most egregious
and most dangerous. (See the various "JSONP" attacks.)
Many years ago, perhaps with the introduction of XHR or web fonts (I
can't recall precisely), we drew a line in the sand, and said no new
web platform features would break the same origin policy. The existing
features need to be grandfathered in and subject to carefully-honed
and oft-exploited exceptions, for the sake of not breaking the web,
but we certainly can't add any more holes to our security policy.
This is why you need CORS permission to load fonts across origins.
Why you can display data on the page without reading it with JS
There are a number of circumstances where Mallory's site can cause a browser to fetch data from a third party and display it (e.g. by adding an <img> element to display an image). It isn't possible for Mallory's JavaScript to read the data in that resource though, only Alice's browser and Bob's server can do that, so it is still secure.
CORS
The Access-Control-Allow-Origin HTTP response header referred to in the error message is part of the CORS standard which allows Bob to explicitly grant permission to Mallory's site to access the data via Alice's browser.
A basic implementation would just include:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
… in the response headers to permit any website to read the data.
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://example.com
… would allow only a specific site to access it, and Bob can dynamically generate that based on the Origin request header to permit multiple, but not all, sites to access it.
The specifics of how Bob sets that response header depend on Bob's HTTP server and/or server-side programming language. Users of Node.js/Express.js should use the well-documented CORS middleware. Users of other platforms should take a look at this collection of guides for various common configurations that might help.
NB: Some requests are complex and send a preflight OPTIONS request that the server will have to respond to before the browser will send the GET/POST/PUT/Whatever request that the JS wants to make. Implementations of CORS that only add Access-Control-Allow-Origin to specific URLs often get tripped up by this.
Obviously granting permission via CORS is something Bob would only do only if either:
The data was not private or
Mallory was trusted
How do I add these headers?
It depends on your server-side environment.
If you can, use a library designed to handle CORS as they will present you with simple options instead of having to deal with everything manually.
Enable-Cors.org has a list of documentation for specific platforms and frameworks that you might find useful.
But I'm not Bob!
There is no standard mechanism for Mallory to add this header because it has to come from Bob's website, which she does not control.
If Bob is running a public API then there might be a mechanism to turn on CORS (perhaps by formatting the request in a certain way, or a config option after logging into a Developer Portal site for Bob's site). This will have to be a mechanism implemented by Bob though. Mallory could read the documentation on Bob's site to see if something is available, or she could talk to Bob and ask him to implement CORS.
Error messages which mention "Response for preflight"
Some cross-origin requests are preflighted.
This happens when (roughly speaking) you try to make a cross-origin request that:
Includes credentials like cookies
Couldn't be generated with a regular HTML form (e.g. has custom headers or a Content-Type that you couldn't use in a form's enctype).
If you are correctly doing something that needs a preflight
In these cases then the rest of this answer still applies but you also need to make sure that the server can listen for the preflight request (which will be OPTIONS (and not GET, POST, or whatever you were trying to send) and respond to it with the right Access-Control-Allow-Origin header but also Access-Control-Allow-Methods and Access-Control-Allow-Headers to allow your specific HTTP methods or headers.
If you are triggering a preflight by mistake
Sometimes people make mistakes when trying to construct Ajax requests, and sometimes these trigger the need for a preflight. If the API is designed to allow cross-origin requests but doesn't require anything that would need a preflight, then this can break access.
Common mistakes that trigger this include:
trying to put Access-Control-Allow-Origin and other CORS response headers on the request. These don't belong on the request, don't do anything helpful (what would be the point of a permissions system where you could grant yourself permission?), and must appear only on the response.
trying to put a Content-Type: application/json header on a GET request that has no request body the content of which to describe (typically when the author confuses Content-Type and Accept).
In either of these cases, removing the extra request header will often be enough to avoid the need for a preflight (which will solve the problem when communicating with APIs that support simple requests but not preflighted requests).
Opaque responses (no-cors mode)
Sometimes you need to make an HTTP request, but you don't need to read the response. e.g. if you are posting a log message to the server for recording.
If you are using the fetch API (rather than XMLHttpRequest), then you can configure it to not try to use CORS.
Note that this won't let you do anything that you require CORS to do. You will not be able to read the response. You will not be able to make a request that requires a preflight.
It will let you make a simple request, not see the response, and not fill the Developer Console with error messages.
How to do it is explained by the Chrome error message given when you make a request using fetch and don't get permission to view the response with CORS:
Access to fetch at 'https://example.com/' from origin 'https://example.net' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. If an opaque response serves your needs, set the request's mode to 'no-cors' to fetch the resource with CORS disabled.
Thus:
fetch("http://example.com", { mode: "no-cors" });
Alternatives to CORS
JSONP
Bob could also provide the data using a hack like JSONP which is how people did cross-origin Ajax before CORS came along.
It works by presenting the data in the form of a JavaScript program that injects the data into Mallory's page.
It requires that Mallory trust Bob not to provide malicious code.
Note the common theme: The site providing the data has to tell the browser that it is OK for a third-party site to access the data it is sending to the browser.
Since JSONP works by appending a <script> element to load the data in the form of a JavaScript program that calls a function already in the page, attempting to use the JSONP technique on a URL that returns JSON will fail — typically with a CORB error — because JSON is not JavaScript.
Move the two resources to a single Origin
If the HTML document the JS runs in and the URL being requested are on the same origin (sharing the same scheme, hostname, and port) then the Same Origin Policy grants permission by default. CORS is not needed.
A Proxy
Mallory could use server-side code to fetch the data (which she could then pass from her server to Alice's browser through HTTP as usual).
It will either:
add CORS headers
convert the response to JSONP
exist on the same origin as the HTML document
That server-side code could be written & hosted by a third party (such as CORS Anywhere). Note the privacy implications of this: The third party can monitor who proxies what across their servers.
Bob wouldn't need to grant any permissions for that to happen.
There are no security implications here since that is just between Mallory and Bob. There is no way for Bob to think that Mallory is Alice and to provide Mallory with data that should be kept confidential between Alice and Bob.
Consequently, Mallory can only use this technique to read public data.
Do note, however, that taking content from someone else's website and displaying it on your own might be a violation of copyright and open you up to legal action.
Writing something other than a web app
As noted in the section "Why the Same Origin Policy only applies to JavaScript in a web page", you can avoid the SOP by not writing JavaScript in a webpage.
That doesn't mean you can't continue to use JavaScript and HTML, but you could distribute it using some other mechanism, such as Node-WebKit or PhoneGap.
Browser extensions
It is possible for a browser extension to inject the CORS headers in the response before the Same Origin Policy is applied.
These can be useful for development but are not practical for a production site (asking every user of your site to install a browser extension that disables a security feature of their browser is unreasonable).
They also tend to work only with simple requests (failing when handling preflight OPTIONS requests).
Having a proper development environment with a local development server
is usually a better approach.
Other security risks
Note that SOP / CORS do not mitigate XSS, CSRF, or SQL Injection attacks which need to be handled independently.
Summary
There is nothing you can do in your client-side code that will enable CORS access to someone else's server.
If you control the server the request is being made to: Add CORS permissions to it.
If you are friendly with the person who controls it: Get them to add CORS permissions to it.
If it is a public service:
Read their API documentation to see what they say about accessing it with client-side JavaScript:
They might tell you to use specific URLs
They might support JSONP
They might not support cross-origin access from client-side code at all (this might be a deliberate decision on security grounds, especially if you have to pass a personalized API Key in each request).
Make sure you aren't triggering a preflight request you don't need. The API might grant permission for simple requests but not preflighted requests.
If none of the above apply: Get the browser to talk to your server instead, and then have your server fetch the data from the other server and pass it on. (There are also third-party hosted services that attach CORS headers to publically accessible resources that you could use).
Target server must allowed cross-origin request. In order to allow it through express, simply handle http options request :
app.options('/url...', function(req, res, next){
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', "*");
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'POST');
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", "accept, content-type");
res.header("Access-Control-Max-Age", "1728000");
return res.sendStatus(200);
});
As this isn't mentioned in the accepted answer.
This is not the case for this exact question, but might help others that search for that problem
This is something you can do in your client-code to prevent CORS errors in some cases.
You can make use of Simple Requests.
In order to perform a 'Simple Requests' the request needs to meet several conditions. E.g. only allowing POST, GET and HEAD method, as well as only allowing some given Headers (you can find all conditions here).
If your client code does not explicit set affected Headers (e.g. "Accept") with a fix value in the request it might occur that some clients do set these Headers automatically with some "non-standard" values causing the server to not accept it as Simple Request - which will give you a CORS error.
This is happening because of the CORS error. CORS stands for Cross Origin Resource Sharing. In simple words, this error occurs when we try to access a domain/resource from another domain.
Read More about it here: CORS error with jquery
To fix this, if you have access to the other domain, you will have to allow Access-Control-Allow-Origin in the server. This can be added in the headers. You can enable this for all the requests/domains or a specific domain.
How to get a cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) post request working
These links may help
This CORS issue wasn't further elaborated (for other causes).
I'm having this issue currently under different reason.
My front end is returning 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header error as well.
Just that I've pointed the wrong URL so this header wasn't reflected properly (in which i kept presume it did). localhost (front end) -> call to non secured http (supposed to be https), make sure the API end point from front end is pointing to the correct protocol.
I got the same error in Chrome console.
My problem was, I was trying to go to the site using http:// instead of https://. So there was nothing to fix, just had to go to the same site using https.
This bug cost me 2 days. I checked my Server log, the Preflight Option request/response between browser Chrome/Edge and Server was ok. The main reason is that GET/POST/PUT/DELETE server response for XHTMLRequest must also have the following header:
access-control-allow-origin: origin
"origin" is in the request header (Browser will add it to request for you). for example:
Origin: http://localhost:4221
you can add response header like the following to accept for all:
access-control-allow-origin: *
or response header for a specific request like:
access-control-allow-origin: http://localhost:4221
The message in browsers is not clear to understand: "...The requested resource"
note that:
CORS works well for localhost. different port means different Domain.
if you get error message, check the CORS config on the server side.
In most housing services just add in the .htaccess on the target server folder this:
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin 'https://your.site.folder'
I had the same issue. In my case i fixed it by adding addition parameter of timestamp to my URL. Even this was not required by the server I was accessing.
Example yoururl.com/yourdocument?timestamp=1234567
Note: I used epos timestamp
"Get" request with appending headers transform to "Options" request. So Cors policy problems occur. You have to implement "Options" request to your server. Cors Policy about server side and you need to allow Cors Policy on your server side. For Nodejs server:details
app.use(cors)
For Java to integrate with Angular:details
#CrossOrigin(origins = "http://localhost:4200")
You should enable CORS to get it working.

How can we do VAPT using OWASP ZAP in microservices?

I had gone through the OWASP ZAP and I found that ZAP requires endpoint of the web application.
But still, I tried to provide URL of REST APIs of our microservices but I was getting 404 error. What I think is OWASP ZAP scans on HTTP GET method and don't allow POST method or else.
Below is the screenshot of ZAP:
Link to the screenshot of ZAP
I know there is a post related to test of rest API but that post i was not full clear and was also not related to micro services.
Please recommend any better open source software and way through which we can do our VAPT test easily.
Thanks
The ZAP Quick Start option only supports GET requests, but you can easily send POST requests using the Manual Request dialog. With APIs the main problem is how to discover them. Does that end point link to all of the other API end points?

Cross domain http request from arduino

I am working with a project in which I have to send data from arduino using http post request to my web rest api. I know web browsers do not allow cross domain requests. So here do I have to take care of same origin policy or not? If yes then while testing my api I use fiddler , so is not it cross domain?
If the client making the request isn’t running in a browser, the same-origin policy doesn’t apply.
The “origin” concept and the notion of same-origin are in practice really only relevant to web apps running in browsers. Browsers are the only runtimes that enforce the same-origin policy. Runtimes other than browsers can all freely make cross-origin requests without restrictions.
So unless the client code you’re sending data from on the Arduino is running in a browser, you don’t need to worry about any cross-origin restrictions prevent you from doing anything.

Cross-Site Scripting requirement makes my API useless

Maybe I'm just not understanding this right, but this doesn't seem to make sense to me.
I have an MVC4 project exposing an ASP.NET WebApi. It works great making calls to the API within that project, but obviously making calls to it from another running project (on another port) requires cross-site scripting.
But here's my question: Doesn't this defeat the purpose of an API? If I want to make calls to the reddit API from my site, the fact that this is considered cross-site scripting makes it not only a bad security practice, but in some cases impossible.
If XSS is required to do this, doesn't that make AJAX pretty useless as a whole?
Simple answer: Of course not!! Pretty much the whole of the modern web is built on AJAX, if it was so pointless it would never have gone from a MS proprietary API to being the backbone of web 2.0 and all that has come since.
Complex answer: Firstly, XSS is a form of attack/vulnerability, not a form of request. What you're referring to is the same-origin policy, which limits AJAX requests to the same domain, for security reasons.
JSONP is typically used to make async requests to third party APIs. Your own API will typically sit on the same domain as your website so you will not have problems. If your API must be on another domain, you can either look at CORS or setup of a transparent reverse proxy to forward your requests to another server.
Hopefully this all makes sense, it'll at least give you a good foundation of knowledge to build from.
Traditionally, most apps have had both a server and a client component. The server component would do all the heavy lifting, including making requests to other APIs. Since the API request is done server-side, the request could go to any remote API server. There was never any thought given to accessing APIs from the client, since people expected the server to do it.
In recent years, we've seen more and more functionality pushed from the server onto the client, specifically through JavaScript. But making remote requests is one of the things that couldn't move to the client, due to browser's same-origin policy. So its not that the purpose of the API is defeated, its that we are now using APIs in ways we didn't conceive of before.
It would be irresponsible for browsers to suddenly ignore the same-origin policy. This would break the thousands of sites out there who depend on same-origin policies for security. So instead, the W3C has proposed the Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) spec. The CORS spec allows requests to be made across domains, but does so securely by letting the the server have the final say in who can access the API. This makes cross-domain requests possible, without breaking existing APIs.

HTTP digest authentication for AJAX requests

Hey SO, so I've got an API I'm making calls to in a browser application. Said API lives on a server that requires whitelisting and HTTP Digest Authentication.
To meet the whitelisting requirement, I'm running all API calls through a proxy, which is whitelisted. The calls are originating from an iFrame, currently populated by an index.html file.
What I need to know is how I can authenticate via HTTP Digest in the background. Most of the resources I can find online seem to involve the original HTTP Digest Authentication setup, but what I'm looking to do is automate login.
Despite the non-secretive subject matter, it is somehow critical that I keep the digest parameters obfuscated from users. Perhaps I could change the served file to index.php and then somehow set the magic headers? Even then, if the calls made via XHR, would the index.php headers authenticate the separate request?
Overall, I'm just lost, and the API developers in question are not exactly responsive, so thought I'd turn here.
It appears that in the end, this was not possible. I had to switch to building a thin back-end to route requests through.

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