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04:00
It was half an hour ago, 4.24, just scroll back to that
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I have a website, front end and backend. front end knows nothing about users etc. if you "register a user" (realestate really) you just get a Thank you message. If you log in then if user exist check password_verify if no match then usleep random then return false, if user no exists check non matching password_verify then usleep random then false, if user is ok and password is ok then return true
what is the big timing attack there
if you request a new passord you get the message "Email sent to your email account. If you don't receive email ... " even if user is not already registered
I asked @ircmaxell what he meant by saying this still had a huge timing attack
cause Im genuinely interested in security
What's a timing attack haha!
"even if user is not already registered" — Change this? What if someone uses my email? Do I actually still receive an email with a NULL name?
@OIS Well, while I can't speak to what @ircmaxell meant, exactly, I'd imagine he was likely referring to the fact that you were combating the effects of constant-time string comparison with your random usleep.
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no, the usleep is just to make false passwords take longer then correct
@adeneo I need something for CSS backgrounds, it's a CSS background image.
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04:05
password_verify makes all password checks equal in time in theory
@OIS Right, which directly conflicts with the effect of constant-time string comparison. That's not necessarily a good thing, because it falls under the pretense of security through obscurity.
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@Sherif but it should not be a timing attack as long as false passwords are always longer then correct and one char more or less correct has no effect on the outcome
@OIS Think about what a timing attack actually aims to find, for a second.
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@Sherif ignore the random usleep
Timing attacks are about detecting the variations in time between valid and invalid inputs. If your invalid inputs are always variably longer than valid inputs, you've just exposed a timing attack. Whereas if your valid and invalid inputs are constantly equal, you have no susceptible timing attack vector.
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04:10
@Sherif password_verify should take the same amount of time wether the password is right or wrong
@OIS Yes, password_verify does, but you just introduced a usleep in the event that password_verify fails. Thusly, introducing variable time in the equation.
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that is correct
So that answers your question then.
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still, finding no person does that take less then finding a person
it should be more constant then random
aye
@Sherif that answers it
Yea, but you're comparing two different things there. Finding out if the user exists is a different objective than finding out if the user's password is correct.
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04:13
still, they would have to guess so often they trigger the increased log in time and lots of logs
If you mean guess at whether or not a user exists, then you're making some pretty broad assumptions about what it is they're actually after. The attacker may already have a list of known usernames and just be after attacking the password. If their aim is to just find existing usernames then the playing field is still at level.
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they would dos us before they find the password
The assumption you're making is that they're after both.
Thus creating the worst case scenario.
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well, we're not giving registered users up freely, but it's not a major concern
I'm just stating that they are two different objectives. They aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.
The point of the timing attack is to test for how long invalid inputs take on average, versus valid input, and that way you can give up faster when you've reached mean invalid time.
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04:17
random usleep is for all users not just users not found
just users where password doesn't match
which it doesn't for users not found
Take for example someone that registers a fake account on your site to test whether or not you have a timing attack vector. He can test the time it takes on average to supply the correct password for their newly registered account. Then compare that to invalid inputs. Once they've discovered the mean time they know to just close the socket early if an input doesn't return a response after that time.
Thereby reducing the overall time it takes to test for valid inputs.
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well, if user is not found I verify a password againt a hash I know wil fail
then add random usleep after that
Right, thereby defeating the entire point of password_verify
Don't do that.
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no
cause if password_verify fails they already knows it's false
[sigh]
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04:20
cause if it succeeds they are logged in
Let me ask you this, what is usleep doing for you here? What problem is it solving?
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the only thing they can time is if it on average takes longer then a normal log in which does succeed
which is neglible cause it's usleep not sleep
@OIS Exactly!
It's not negligible.
If it was negligible you wouldn't have bothered adding it.
Meaning, if it does nothing, why did you even bother to do it?
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its ajax calling a webserver calling a microservice calling a db then verifying and sending reply to a script which then redirects...
so lots of things which can add random times
They aren't random. They are statistically deterministic.
What's random (or pseudo random) is your usleep.
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04:23
depending on all the other users of the website
You're avoiding answering the question.
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not all users use the microservice
That's just another deflection. What problem is usleep solving for you?
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usleep doesn't solve a problem, it's just there to make failed passwords take longer then correct
@OIS And why do failed passwords need to take longer than correct ones?
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04:26
cause those looking for passwords have to add more margin to their queries, I doubt they'd be happy guessing 100000000 passwords just to miss the correct reply
@OIS Wrong. The entire point of exposing a timing attack is to find the variable length of invalid inputs compared to valid inputs so that you can abandon requests that exceed the valid input quota early. You would never want that if you wanted to prevent timing attacks.
All you've done here is undo what password_verify was trying to protect you from.
If failed inputs take just as long as successful ones, I have no timing attack vector. I have to spend just as much time to determine success vs. failure.
You're solving the wrong problem. If you want to mitigate brute force attacks add limits on failed attempts.
Don't do this nonsense.
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@Sherif no you never want incorrect answers to take less time then correct answers, and if incorrect answers take too much longer then correct answers then you just use resources needlessly
oh dear
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on the web each request has a variable
@OIS You want both incorrect answers and correct answers to take the same amount of time.
You never want either one to take more or less time. That's the entire point.
That's what a timing attack looks for.
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04:30
hmm, so yer saying I should add usleep to correct answers?
NO!
I'm saying you should get rid of usleep.
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that would fix it
No, it would fix nothing.
usleep is just undoing what password_verify is already doing.
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if they abort the request cause they think it's wrong it would be really helpfull in fact
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04:32
@Sherif like I said, ignore the usleep, it's not a safty feature, it's just there cause I added it, it doesn't add nor detract anything
@OIS You're wrong about that. It does detract something. It detracts the timing attack protection that password_verify adds.
If you wanted me to ignore it you wouldn't be asking about it or have mentioned it at all. It's the entire basis of your question.
Telling me to ignore it is like telling me to ignore your entire question.
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@Sherif how? they already know it's not correct with the reply. They don't know if the user exists or not. I don't see how it helps.
@OIS I've already explained how (by removing the constant time comparison). Also, knowing if a user exists is a different objective than knowing if the password is correct. You are comparing two different end-games.
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in @ircmaxells blog about this he used sleep... overstatement. but adding a few microseconds (or not) does not offset all the random times from ajax to webserver to microserver and back
Used sleep for what?
I'm sure whatever you're talking about has nothing to do with password_verify.
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04:37
in @ircmaxell blog he illustrated timing attack with sleep() - I use usleep which will give close to no increase in time
@OIS Do you even read what you type before hitting enter? You're saying he used sleep to illustrate a timing attack. Meaning, he's trying to prove the point to you that variable time is the problem.
You're talking out of both sides of your mouth right now.
On the one hand what he's doing is trying to explain a problem set. On the other hand you are trying to discuss solving for the problem set. One is a demonstration and the other is supposedly a solution to some problem.
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@Sherif I said ignore the usleep. I dont see how adding usleep suddenly makes it prone to usleep if it's safe to timeing attack without it. It's not like I added usleep to combat timing attack. I "solved timing attack" wihtout usleep, I just added it to make false password longer then correct even if we got a lot of users and heavy load.
* prone to timing attack
@OIS Well, this is where you are talking out of both sides of your mouth. A timing attack means that $invalidInputTime === $validInputTime. So by introducing $invalidInputTime + $randomMicroseconds you have explicitly broken that equation (thereby creating a timing attack).
You're trying to solve two very different problems with the wrong approach.
The user problem and the password problem are not one and the same.
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well, the usleep shouldn't not offset the server random timings at heavy load vs no load
and dont tell me your server doesn't very with microseconds between no load and heavy load
*vary
Alright, I can't see this conversation being any more constructive at this point. So, I'm just going to disengage here. I've already explained why you're wrong. I can't remove your delusions for you. I can only point out the facts to you.
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04:47
well, I can't see how its less secure from the non explenations you've given so far
Ill have to test more, but I don't see it
thanks anyway @Sherif
Because you are saying two conflicting things. You're being delusional.
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Ill see if I can figure it out on my own
no, I just don't understand how what yer saying should have an impact
I know what you say, I just don't see the effect
Because you're trying to justify a solution for a completely different problem and ignoring the fact that you've created another problem.
This is the delusional part.
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:)
I'm trying to explain to you that these are two different problems and you keep ignoring that.
You're never going to make sense of anything if all you do is ask questions and then ignore the answers.
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04:50
well, I don't see how adding a usleep which might be smaller then normal fluctuations would add a problem.
under heavy load
@OIS Yet at the same time you also state that you don't see how it solves anything.
You're talking out of both sides of your mouth.
You don't even try to make sense of your own words. No wonder you're having trouble making sense of the words of others.
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well, it's only cause if you're checking if a user+password is correct you HAVE to wait longer then average if you don't want to miss it.
Wrong!!!
For the millionth time wrong!
You don't even understand what a timing attack is.
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afaik timing attack is about checking if a user exists or if a byte more or less is wrong
nothing of that will be helped or not adding or removing usleep
Wrong again.
Still wrong.
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04:54
ok
what is a timing attack?
no links pls
@OIS If I answer this question for the third time, will you actually read and try to understand the answer this time? Or will you continue to ignore it and waste my time?
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yes
"*Take for example someone that registers a fake account on your site to test whether or not you have a timing attack vector. He can test the time it takes on average to supply the correct password for their newly registered account. Then compare that to invalid inputs. Once they've discovered the mean time they know to just close the socket early if an input doesn't return a response after that time.
Thereby reducing the overall time it takes to test for valid inputs.*"
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yeah...
I've read that 3 times
So if your invalid inputs are always variably taking LONGER than your valid ones, I know to just close the socket early when they don't return in the average valid time.
i.e. I DO NOT have to wait longer.
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04:56
and @sherif it repeats what I said about timing attacks earlier, just less detailed
@OIS What?
I'm starting to think you're borderline trolling now.
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no @Sherif cause all http connections have random times, under heavy load it might take more
anyway, if it takes more, so what, it doesnt make it less secure
@OIS That has nothing to do with it. You can measure the time it takes to make the TCP connection and the time it takes to receive the data over the wire, and eliminate it from the time it takes to complete the entire transaction to measure the wait time.
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the point of a timing attack is to know if "aaa" is closer to the password then "aab"
or if the user exists at all
@Sherif and you won't know that until you receive the response
Which is why you test for it first, as demonstrated by my simple example.
There's no way on earth you are actually here to learn anything. I'm out.
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05:00
...
sorry, Im just not conviced... it's not like I add a second
I just add a little
it shouldn't be statistically noticable
that is at max rand
but if everyone thinks like you then that is great @Sherif cause noone will break in
 
2 hours later…
07:31
hi
good moining
@AndreaFaulds sure, wanna make the changes suggested in issues list and expose modern pattern matching api ... we have until October ...
moin all
@JoeWatkins morning sir
07:51
moring
dafuq, codinglove?
can't delete it ...
dafuq indeed
1 message moved to Trash
oh I can
mornings
@AndreaFaulds Not UTF-8 is wrong, but to say "use only UTF-8". The more correct saying is: "use only UTF-8 otherwise you have reason not to". But that has changed even on w3 site quite: w3.org/International/questions/qa-choosing-encodings
08:23
moin
moin @FlorianMargaine
Whats new in the world of php?
@Mikhail much
but when did you leave?
if we want to give you an accurate timeline.
Last time I wrote something for production it was 2004
like what ware the coolest things with the language
oh, in that case you haven't missed anything. all caught up.
08:32
0
A: Avoid Blank Function in Class That Extends To Abstract Class

James ChoiWhat I would do is refactor my code and add another abstract class (called AA) that "abstract class A" will extend as well as "class B". I'd move all the fields/methods that ALL four classes should have in common to AA. In psuedocode (haven't done java in a minute) // Contains fields and method...

help please
Can I do $foo->length() because its the future?
@JosuaMarcelChrisano The question is meaningless. Without understanding the semantics of what A, B, C, and D are how do you expect any sort of informed advice?
put together an example that makes a remote amount of sense and you might get help
Okay here is a slightly more legit question. Helping some people out to make a website, I have the functionality down with PHP+SMARTY but the site looks like 2001. They want to hire a web designer, what framework should the frame shoudl I use to be friendly to the web designer?
Do people still use wordpress/drupal for stuff?
any. why should the designer care what you're implementing the site with?
@Mikhail sadly... yes :*(
idk I don't do webdev and I never dealt with a web designer, I just want somebody to make my thing look good. I'm not sure what kind of product to expect from a web designer. I don't know what they give...
I work with drupal :P
@Mikhail if the web designer has access to the templates and the css, they can make your website look good
@Mikhail just use something like twig if you are worried about your designer using the php template syntax. Your templates should be decoupled from your code anyways so it shouldn't matter. And you dont need a framework
@Patrick he said the site was using smarty already
ah I guess reading would help
people still use smarty? ...
08:46
@Patrick Thats what my site looks like :-(
Do the smarty people still use smarty?
@Mikhail This is why I bootstrap all the things
call it "retro" and say it's coming back around
I know it's bad to use bootstrap for everything but I'm lazy
needs more flat ui
@Patrick I use bootstrap too... but I think I'm going to use material design for my next thing
08:50
@FlorianMargaine I don't like that fly in effect... Having to use those docs kills it for me already... :(
when you click on a link
Morning
moin @PeeHaa
08:55
o/
09:07
Well on that site I'm working on I deployed Apache's SQL and Xcache. Is xcache still good?
so does bugs.php.net have a hidden ui somewhere that isn't completely horrible? I'm trying to flip through to maybe pitch in for bugfest but this is downright painful
@PaulCrovella Would be cool if the random_bug button did something server side :-)
a version of "random bug" that didn't keep feeding me suspended or assigned reports might be useful
oh, finally an open one... and it's for PHP-GTK (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
@PaulCrovella oldest?
Hmm, php-gtk website has several years of post reminding people they ain't dead.
09:17
@PaulCrovella bugs.php.net/…
in the future we will get php-qt
@PaulCrovella you can close this one bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=7068
do we still support sybase? bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=7398
@NikiC ever possible? bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=7930
@PaulCrovella an interesting bug feature request to work on: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=8685
another one that could be easier: bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=9095
@PaulCrovella convinced in the bug tracker now? :P
posted on December 31, 2014 by kbironneau

/* by kober */

mornings
@Mikhail gtk is still very much alive, but the web site is not. Liz says she wants to burninate the site, move the src to pecl and merge the useful content into php.net, but it's all about time
I think the docs are actually already in docbook, it's just a really old version
09:48
@FlorianMargaine From the technical side, yes. At least I don't see any obvious issues.
k, leaving it open then
Guys, I'm having trouble with CSS escaping values in Japanese
I suspect it's a single vs multibyte issue
Is there a reliable way to get the Unicode value from a multibyte character?
@DaveRandom there is a "Dave" in the js room... he has a couple of starred messages. Like this. I always think it's you at first.
@FlorianMargaine ...because I have loads of STDs?
@SecondRikudo Meaning you aren't sure what the input character set is?
In fact, can you make a fiddle?
09:54
@DaveRandom because the name :P
@DaveRandom The input charset is UTF8
although I know it's "Chris"... I never see you with this name anyway. Dave suits you.
The code is legacy (PHP 5.1), and I bet they never thought about having to support anything other than English
I always think "hmmm I know this guy" when I see you answering on internals
09:55
Font names in Japanese screwed it up :P
@SecondRikudo Then I can't picture what the issue would be? What do you mean by "CSS escaping values"?
@DaveRandom Our application, for some reason I still cannot fathom, allows the user to insert certain CSS rules
In order to prevent them from doing naughty things, we escape those rules as they leave the database (at the exit point)
By "escaping" do you mean "putting quotes around the value"?
Wait, you mean you let the user type raw CSS in and display it???
09:59
> for some reason I still cannot fathom
@DaveRandom Trust me, I'm crying about it every day, and I've taken it as a personal challenge to get rid of this silly-ass system.

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