1.9 KiB
Safety and Protection Against DoS Attacks
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For scripting systems open to untrusted user-land scripts, it is always best to limit the amount of resources used by a script so that it does not consume more resources that it is allowed to.
The most important resources to watch out for are:
-
Memory: A malicious script may continuously grow a [string], an [array] or [object map] until all memory is consumed.
It may also create a large [array] or [object map] literal that exhausts all memory during parsing.
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CPU: A malicious script may run an infinite tight loop that consumes all CPU cycles.
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Time: A malicious script may run indefinitely, thereby blocking the calling system which is waiting for a result.
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Stack: A malicious script may attempt an infinite recursive call that exhausts the call stack.
Alternatively, it may create a degenerated deep expression with so many levels that the parser exhausts the call stack when parsing the expression; or even deeply-nested statement blocks, if nested deep enough.
Another way to cause a stack overflow is to load a [self-referencing module][
import
]. -
Overflows: A malicious script may deliberately cause numeric over-flows and/or under-flows, divide by zero, and/or create bad floating-point representations, in order to crash the system.
-
Files: A malicious script may continuously [
import
] an external module within an infinite loop, thereby putting heavy load on the file-system (or even the network if the file is not local).Even when modules are not created from files, they still typically consume a lot of resources to load.
-
Data: A malicious script may attempt to read from and/or write to data that it does not own. If this happens, it is a severe security breach and may put the entire system at risk.