Headline
GHSA-29pr-6jr8-q5jm: Sentry SDK leaks sensitive session information when `sendDefaultPII` is set to `True`
Impact
When using the Django integration of the Sentry SDK in a specific configuration it is possible to leak sensitive cookies values, including the session cookie to Sentry. These sensitive cookies could then be used by someone with access to your Sentry issues to impersonate or escalate their privileges within your application.
The below must be true in order for these sensitive values to be leaked:
- Your Sentry SDK configuration has
sendDefaultPII
set toTrue
- You are using a custom name for either of the cookies below in your Django settings.
SESSION_COOKIE_NAME
orCSRF_COOKIE_NAME
Django settings
- You are not configured in your organization or project settings to use our data scrubbing features to account for the custom cookie names
Patches
As of version 1.14.0
, the Django integration of the sentry-sdk
will detect the custom cookie names based on your Django settings and will remove the values from the payload before sending the data to Sentry.
Workarounds
If you can not update your sentry-sdk
to a patched version than you can use the SDKs filtering mechanism to remove the cookies from the payload that is sent to Sentry. For error events this can be done with the before_send callback method and for performance related events (transactions) you can use the before_send_transaction callback method.
If you’d like to handle filtering of these values on the server-side, you can also use our advanced data scrubbing feature to account for the custom cookie names. Look for the $http.cookies
, $http.headers
, $request.cookies
, or $request.headers
fields to target with your scrubbing rule.
References
Credits
Impact
When using the Django integration of the Sentry SDK in a specific configuration it is possible to leak sensitive cookies values, including the session cookie to Sentry. These sensitive cookies could then be used by someone with access to your Sentry issues to impersonate or escalate their privileges within your application.
The below must be true in order for these sensitive values to be leaked:
- Your Sentry SDK configuration has sendDefaultPII set to True
- You are using a custom name for either of the cookies below in your Django settings.
- SESSION_COOKIE_NAME or
- CSRF_COOKIE_NAME Django settings
- You are not configured in your organization or project settings to use our data scrubbing features to account for the custom cookie names
Patches
As of version 1.14.0, the Django integration of the sentry-sdk will detect the custom cookie names based on your Django settings and will remove the values from the payload before sending the data to Sentry.
Workarounds
If you can not update your sentry-sdk to a patched version than you can use the SDKs filtering mechanism to remove the cookies from the payload that is sent to Sentry. For error events this can be done with the before_send callback method and for performance related events (transactions) you can use the before_send_transaction callback method.
If you’d like to handle filtering of these values on the server-side, you can also use our advanced data scrubbing feature to account for the custom cookie names. Look for the $http.cookies, $http.headers, $request.cookies, or $request.headers fields to target with your scrubbing rule.
References
- Sentry Python SDK Filtering
- Sentry Data Scrubbing
Credits
- Tom Wolters (Chapter8)
References
- GHSA-29pr-6jr8-q5jm
- getsentry/sentry-python#1842
- https://github.com/getsentry/sentry-python/releases/tag/1.14.0
Related news
Sentry SDK is the official Python SDK for Sentry, real-time crash reporting software. When using the Django integration of versions prior to 1.14.0 of the Sentry SDK in a specific configuration it is possible to leak sensitive cookies values, including the session cookie to Sentry. These sensitive cookies could then be used by someone with access to your Sentry issues to impersonate or escalate their privileges within your application. In order for these sensitive values to be leaked, the Sentry SDK configuration must have `sendDefaultPII` set to `True`; one must use a custom name for either `SESSION_COOKIE_NAME` or `CSRF_COOKIE_NAME` in one's Django settings; and one must not be configured in one's organization or project settings to use Sentry's data scrubbing features to account for the custom cookie names. As of version 1.14.0, the Django integration of the `sentry-sdk` will detect the custom cookie names based on one's Django settings and will remove the values from the payload be...