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| author | Chris McDonough <chrism@plope.com> | 2013-10-20 16:29:12 -0400 |
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| committer | Chris McDonough <chrism@plope.com> | 2013-10-20 16:29:12 -0400 |
| commit | d7550c4f8ae023f9a00d6293ba3c94ca14b412f2 (patch) | |
| tree | bc3634c3b2c3a647b43cbe715b968997c63c3b52 /docs/narr/security.rst | |
| parent | 777112d521e337fefc2e0c217add7ac283d087b3 (diff) | |
| parent | 2edbe1b61c7ace0a13f0d7242f333982a6fc9fde (diff) | |
| download | pyramid-d7550c4f8ae023f9a00d6293ba3c94ca14b412f2.tar.gz pyramid-d7550c4f8ae023f9a00d6293ba3c94ca14b412f2.tar.bz2 pyramid-d7550c4f8ae023f9a00d6293ba3c94ca14b412f2.zip | |
fix merge conflict and prevent warning from showing up during testing (dont import ITemplateRenderer)
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/narr/security.rst')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/narr/security.rst | 28 |
1 files changed, 28 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/narr/security.rst b/docs/narr/security.rst index 6517fedf8..e85ed823a 100644 --- a/docs/narr/security.rst +++ b/docs/narr/security.rst @@ -669,3 +669,31 @@ following interface: After you do so, you can pass an instance of such a class into the :class:`~pyramid.config.Configurator.set_authorization_policy` method at configuration time to use it. + +.. _admonishment_against_secret_sharing: + +Admonishment Against Secret-Sharing +----------------------------------- + +A "secret" is required by various components of Pyramid. For example, the +:term:`authentication policy` below uses a secret value ``seekrit``:: + + authn_policy = AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy('seekrit', hashalg='sha512') + +A :term:`session factory` also requires a secret:: + + my_session_factory = SignedCookieSessionFactory('itsaseekreet') + +It is tempting to use the same secret for multiple Pyramid subsystems. For +example, you might be tempted to use the value ``seekrit`` as the secret for +both the authentication policy and the session factory defined above. This is +a bad idea, because in both cases, these secrets are used to sign the payload +of the data. + +If you use the same secret for two different parts of your application for +signing purposes, it may allow an attacker to get his chosen plaintext signed, +which would allow the attacker to control the content of the payload. Re-using +a secret across two different subsystems might drop the security of signing to +zero. Keys should not be re-used across different contexts where an attacker +has the possibility of providing a chosen plaintext. + |
