How can I protect my php source files while opening other users - php

I have developed an web app in PHP, but without me my is client editing files using his knowledge. I want to stop him, to hide, protect or lock my php code. So, he has to come back to me for edits.

If you put your code into Source Control, you can easily monitor and control what code changes are made to your application (and easily reverse them if needed). GIT is a very popular source control system, you should investigate it, this tutorial is very easy to follow: http://gitimmersion.com/

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hide web-app source on a second server

I made a web based program for a customer, and I want to install the app on a local server of him.
I don't want to give him all the source until he has paid for it, so my idea was to store most of the core code on an external server, and only have a kind of include on his server, so he would not be able to see / copy / change the actual PHP code.
I know I can use include() with a URL as soon as I have changed the corresponding entry in the PHP.ini file, but is there a more secure way of doing this?
Also, what configuration should my server have so that the PHP code on his local server would be able to read the PHP on mine? Wouldn't that pose a huge security risk if I allow other servers to "load" my PHP code?
(Notice that I use a free Web hosting service as the "second server" and I don't have any access to the conf files.)
I hope I've explained my situation well enough.
Including your php remotely is a) yes a huge security risk and b) not accomplishing much, since your customer can also "see" that remote code, copy/paste it, and have it all in his possession.
Option 1: Don't give away the app!
If your customer wants to test the app, deploy it to a server that you control. Let him see/use/test the app, without access to the source code.
Option 2: Encode it
If you absolutely have to give your app to the customer and yet need to protect it, look at encoding solutions. We use http://www.ioncube.com/ to encode/protect PHP code that we deploy to a customer's server.

Best methods to clean up a hacked site with no clean version available?

I have been asked to fix a hacked site that was built using osCommerce on a production server.
The site has always existed on the remote host. There is no offline clean version. Let's forget how stupid this is for a moment and deal with what it is.
It has been hacked multiple times and another person fixed it by removing the web shell files/upload scripts.
It is continually hacked often.
What can I do?
Because you cannot trust anything on the web host (it might have had a rootkit installed), the safest approach is to rebuild a new web server from scratch; don't forget to update all the external-facing software before bringing it online. Do all the updating on the happy side of a draconian firewall.
When you rebuild the system, be sure to pay special attention to proper configuration. If the web content is owned by a different Unix user than the web server's userid and the permissions on the files are set to forbid writing, then the web server cannot modify the program files.
Configure your web server's Unix user account so it has write access to only its log files and database sockets, if they are in the filesystem. A hacked web server could still serve hacked pages to clients, but a restart would 'undo' the 'live hack'. Of course, your database contents could be sent to the Yakuza or corrupted by people who think your data should include pictures of unicorns. The Principle of Least Privilege will be a good guideline -- what, exactly, does your web server need to access in order to do its job? Grant only that.
Also consider deploying a mandatory access control system such as AppArmor, SELinux, TOMOYO, or SMACK. Any of these systems, properly configured, can control the scope of what can be damaged or leaked when a system is hacked. (I've worked on AppArmor for ten years, and I'm confident most system administrators can learn how to deploy a workable security policy on their systems in a day or two of study. No tool is applicable to all situations, so be sure to read about all of your choices.)
The second time around, be sure to keep your configuration managed through tools such as as puppet, chef, or at the very least in a revision control system.
Update
Something else, a little unrelated to coming back online, but potentially educational all the same: save the hard drive from the compromised system, so you can mount it and inspect its contents from another system. Maybe there's something that can be learned by doing forensics on the compromised data: you might find that the compromise happened months earlier and had been stealing passwords or ssh keys. You might find a rootkit or further exploit tools. You might find information to show the source of the attack -- perhaps the admin of that site doesn't yet realize they've been hacked.
Be careful when inspecting hacked data -- that .jpg you don't recognize might very well be the exploit that cracked the system in the first place, and viewing it on a 'known good' system might crack it, too. Do the work with a hard drive you can format when you're done. (Virtualized or with a mandatory access control system might be sufficient to confine "passive" data-based hacks, but there's nothing quite like throwaway systems for peace of mind.)
Obtain a fresh copy of the osCommerce version the site was built with, and do a diff between the new fresh osCommerce and the hacked site. Also check for files which exist on the server but not in the osCommerce package.
By manually comparing the differences, you can track down all possible places the hack may have created or modified scripts.
I know this is a little late in the day to be offering this solution but the official fix from osCommerce developement is here:
http://library.oscommerce.com/confluence/display/OSCOM23/(A)+(SEC)+Administration+Tool+Log-In+Update
Once those code changes are applied then most of the actual work is in cleaning up the website. The admin login bypass exploit will be the cause that has allowed attackers to upload files via the file manager (usually) into directories that are writable, often the images directory.
There are other files that are often writable too which can have malicious code appended in them. cookie_usage.php and includes/languages/english/cookie_usage.php are the usual files that are affected, however on some server configurations, all site files can be susceptible.
Even though the official osCommerce fix is linked to above, I would also suggest to make this change as well: In the page above, scroll down till you see the link that says "Update PHP_SELF Value". Make those changes as well.
This will correct the way $PHP_SELF reports and prevent attackers from using malformed URLs in attempts to bypass the admin login.
I also suggest that you add htaccess basic authentication login to the admin directory.
Also check out an addon I authored called osC_Sec which is an all in one security fix, which while works on most php backed websystems, it is specifically designed to deal to the issues that exist in the older versions of osCommerce.
http://addons.oscommerce.com/info/8283

"Static" PHP page security

I'm currently building a website, using PHP, and looking into securing the website fully. Currently, and in the future, I don't plan on using SQL, or even user-submitted input anywhere on the website - the PHP pages are basically simply in place for ease in piecing together several different HTML fragments to create a full page, using requires.
What type of vulnerabilities, if any, should I be aware of to protect against?
There are no vulnerabilities in the situation you've outlined.
If you are using any query string variables to load pages, they may need to be secured. For example: article.php?page=php-page-security.
Otherwise just make sure that your server software is updated regularly to the latest versions, and access to the web server is properly secured. It sounds like your code is pretty basic and you aren't doing any processing in PHP, so you should be fine.
This is a huge topic that can't be answered in a single post. Some tips:
Secure physical access to your web server (your hosting provider should handle this)
Minimize remote access to the server. Setup a firewall, use proper passwords, regularly run updates
Secure your code (PHP and javascript). Make sure to "clean" any qstrings you might process and never use eval. Consider using a framework to simplify this step.
Keep server logs and review them regularly for mischief.
This is just a jumping point. A google search for "web application security" will turn up troves of information. Good luck!
Possible exploits are in the overall server security.
As you use PHP in that simple manner, there's a risk that you do not know it well enough and might overlook some hole: like user input option, or file access rights which would allow a bad guy to upload his php to the server.
PHP offers too much for a simple task of including files. More capabilities == more risk.
I'd use server-side includes for the sake of assembling several files into one web page, and just disable php — faster, more secure.
You should be sure that your software (e.g. webserver, operating system, PHP) is up-to-date, with the latest security patches and updates. You can also hide PHP (read the official guide or [search Google])(http://www.google.com/search?q=hiding+php)
By combining all the advice you get from the answers here, your application will be something more that perfectly safe.
As #Toast said, you had better block incoming traffic and only allow port 80 by using a firewall (Netfilter/iptables on Linux), except if you want to enable additional services, such as FTP.
And in case you want the data travelling between the server and the client to be safe, then HTTPS is the best solution.
If you're not basing the "piecing together" on any kind of user-provided data, and not including any user-provided data into the page, then you're about as vulnerable as a plain static .html file.
That means you're not doing:
include($_GET['pageName']); // hello total server compromise
or
echo "Hello, ", $_GET['username']; // hello cross-site-scripting!
and the like.

Source control with specific restrictions to files and folders

I'm currently using SSH+SVN for a web project developed primarily in PHP. There is another developer working with me and we both check out from the repo into our own sandboxes which is viewable from the web.
I want to bring in new implementers and restrict them to certain parts of the project code. How do I achieve this and still allow them to have a sandbox to preview the site with their changes in it?
For example, I have a piece of code called proprietary_algo.php that needs to be restricted to only privileged developers (read, write, execute). All other new implementers can still view the site via their sandbox, which requires the execution of proprietary_algo.php, but they cannot copy the code or read the code inside of it.
I'm open to moving away from SVN or setting up a whole new process if I can achieve this.
Added note: no, NDAs and trust will not cut it. For our business need and situation, the specific source files need to be restricted.
MORE INFO:
I setup a virtual host and DNS that points to their sandbox dir (example: devuser1.mydomain.com) so they can do testing. They checkout code directly from trunk into their sandbox and edit code on their IDEs remotely connected via SSH. As mentioned above, there are some code in the repo that should be off limits, but still needed to run the site when they edit and test in their sandboxes. All devs share the same MySQL DB instance.
You can do that if you use svn+httpd.
Addressing "requires the execution of proprietary_algo.php, but they cannot copy the code or read the code inside of it." If NDAs won't cut it, you are in for a world of pain.
Even once you've set things up with the SVN access controls, you won't be able to stop their PHP script copying the secret scripts to HTTP output.
Actually, you can stop it, but they'd have to either:
Call the secret script via a http request (e.g. curl). You'll need to implement an XML/JSON/name-your-HTTP-RPC-method interface between trusted and untrusted code.
Allow untrusted code to execute
CGI-mode scripts.

Virus code injected in PHP Files

I own a website running on LAMP - Linux, Apache, mySQL and PHP. In the past 2-3 weeks the PHP and jQuery files on my website have become infected from malware from a site called gumblar.cn
I can't understand how does this malware get into my PHP files and how do I prevent it from happening again and again.
Any ideas?
UPDATE:
Looks like it is a cpanel exploit
Your site is cracked, so the crackers simply replace your files.
You should always upgrade your Linux OS, Apache, MySQL, PHP, and the web PHP programs whenever a security alert is announced.
Linux servers running open services without upgrading them regularly are the most vulnerable boxes on internet.
No one here can provide a conclusive solution based on the information you provided, so all we can suggest is that you follow good security practices and standards and correct any weak points immediately.
Make sure your software is up-to-date. It's very possible to gain access to local files through exploits in PHP programs, so keep any third-party applications you're running on their latest versions (especially very widespread programs like Wordpress and phpBB), and do whatever you can to ensure that your server is running the correct versions of its services (PHP, Apache, etc.).
Use strong passwords. A strong password is a long, random list of characters. It should have nothing to do with your life, it should have no readily available acronyms or mnemonics, it should not resemble a dictionary word, and it should contain a healthy interspersing of different characters; numbers, letters of different cases, and symbols. It should also be reasonably long, ideally more than 26 characters. This should help keep people from bruteforcing your credentials for enough time for competent sysadmins to take action against the attackers.
Work with the administrators at your hosting provider to understand what happened in this particular case and do things to correct it. They may not have noticed anything unusual; for instance, if you have an easy password, or if this attack was perpetrated by a trusted individual, or if you have an unpatched exploit in a custom PHP application, there would be nothing to indicate an improper use.
Shared hosts also have many people with access to the same local machine, so things like file permissions and patching of locally-accessible exploits both within your application and generally is very important. Make sure your host has good policies on this and make sure that none of your software unequivocally trusts local connections or users.
The nature of the attack (an import of malware from a site that appears to do this kind of thing en masse) suggests that you were running an exploitable application or that your username/password combination was not sufficiently strong, but the administrators at your provider are really the only ones able to supply accurate details on how this happened. Good luck. :)
Chances are, there is an application on your server with a known vulnerability that has been attacked, and something has modified files on your web site or installed a new file.
When searching for information on gumblar.cn, it looks like they use a trojan called JS-Redirector-H. Not sure if this is what is involved here.
Fixing this may involve restoring your web site from backup, if you have no way of knowing what has been modified. If you have source control or a recent version, you may be able to do a whole-site diff. But you will also need to fix the security vulnerability that allowed this to happen in the first place.
Chances are it's some insecure app, or an app you installed some time ago but have not updated recently. A few people who have complained about this mentioned that they use Gallery (ie PHP Gallery). Though I'm not sure if that's connected.
If you are not the server administrator, talk to the server admin. They may be able to help, and it would be wise to let them know about this.
Google Advisory:
http://safebrowsing.clients.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?client=Firefox&hl=en-US&site=http://gumblar.cn (linking doesn't work)
First, contact your hosting company and report this. If this is server-wide, they need to know about it.
The most common cause of infections like this is vulnerable popular PHP software (such as PHPBB, Mamboserver and other popular systems). If you're running any 3rd party PHP code, make sure you have the latest version.
If you've determined that this only affects your site, restore from a backup. If you don't have any backups, try re-installing everything (you can probably migrate the database) you have (to the latest version) and go through your own PHP code (if any).
PHP Programs are actually simple text files that run on the server by the PHP interpreter. if your application is infected, then I think there are tow posiibilities:
1.they have used some security hole in YOUR application to inject some code into your server, so now they have changed some of your PHP files, or some of your database information.
if this is the case, you better double check every single place where you are fetching information from the user (text inputs, file uploads, cookie values, ...), make sure everything is well filtered. this is very common security practice to filter anything that comes from the user. you also better make sure that the data that is currently saved in your database (or file system) is clean. I suggest using Zend_Filter component of the Zend Framework to filter user input. there are many full featured filter libraries out there.
2.they could have run some program on your server, that is affecting your PHP source files. so somehow they have accomplished running some program/script your server, that is changing your application.
if this is the case, I suggest your check all your server processes and make sure you know every process that is running. although I think this is less possible.
Ok, this is NOT a programming question and SO is not the place for this because if we would tolerate such questions here we would soon be a first aid / support site for ppl with bad shared hosting accounts.
I only didn't vote for closing because I feel bad turning a few ppl down who are probably feeling really bad about a problem they don't have the knowledge to fix.
First of all: google for gumblar.cn, there is a growing number of potentialy helpful posts accumulating as we speak.
If you're a real beginner and you feel you don't get any of the things in the answers here then just do the following:
Get a new host
Google for information about all your software until you know, if the software is safe. If it's not, don't use it, until the developers have fixed the problem. An example of a not secure software is 'Galery'.
Install all your software (the secure ones only) FRESH INSTALL!!
Copy over static files (like images) to the new server. Do NOT copy over any dynamic files, like php scripts, as they could be infected.
Don't upload any of your own PHP scripts until you've checked them for security vulnerabilities. If you don't know how to do this, don't upload anything before you've learned about these things.
I have been affected by this virus/malware and currently cleaning up. I hope this will be helpful:
1) You most likely have a TROJAN on your PC. To verify this simply run (Start > Run... or Windows key + R) and type "cmd" or "regedit". If either of those doesnt open its window as expected, you have the Js:Redirector trojan. You can also verify that the anti virus programs aVast and Malware Bytes can not connect to updates for some reason (sneaky trojan that is). Plus, you'll notice that the Security program of the Control Panel was disabled, you wouldn't have seen a notification in the tray icons to tell you that the virus protection was disabled.
2) This is a very recent exploit, apparently of vulnerabilities inflash or pdf plugins, thus you are not safe even if you didn't use Internet Explorer!
As for me, I believe because I hate programs slowing down my PC, I have my Windows Updates on "manual", and I didn't have resident protection (scanning of all web connections, etc), and I was probably infected by visiting another hacked site which was not blacklisted yet. Also I was over confident in non-IE browsers! I sometimes ignore the blacklist warning as I am curious about what the scripts do etc, and forgot once again just how BAD Windows really is. Conclusion: leave Windows Updates on automatic, have minimal resident protection (aVast Web Shield + Network Shield).
3) Because this is a trojan that sends back your FTP password, it doesn't matter how good your password was!
4) Try to lceanup your PC with Malware or aVast, it will find a file ending with ".ctv"
You MUST have a virus database dated 14 May or more recent. If you can't update (as explained above), then follow these instructions (you'll need to extrapolate but basically you have a file, the name may vary, which is pointed in the registry, and use HiJackThis to remove it, once you rebout without this file excuted, all is fine)
5) Of course update your passwords, BUT make sure the trojan is removed first!
6) For an exact list of all pages modified try to get a FTP log and you'll find the IP of the script/hacker and all touched files.
7) If you have a complete local copy of the "production" environment, then the safest is to delete ALL the site on the server, and re-upload all files.
8) During the clean up process DONT visit your infected site, or you will re-install the trojan! If you have the latest aVast Home Edition and the "Web Shield" protection it will give you a warning and block the page from being executed by your browser.
like Francis mentioned, try to get your hosting company to make sure their software is up to date.
On your side, change your ftp password to something completely obscure as soon as possible. I've seen this happen to people before. What these 'hackers' do is a brute force on your ftp account, download a couple of files, modify them slightly, and then re-upload the infected copies. If you have access to the ftp log files you'll probably see a connection to your account from an IP other than yours. You may be able to submit this to your hosting company and ask them to black-list that IP from accessing their servers.
That website (gumblar.cn that you mentioned) is being tested for malware. You can monitor results here: http://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/gumblar.cn/postid?p=1659540
I had something like this happen to me at an old hosting provider. Somehow, someone, was able to infect Apache in some way so that a special header was injected into all my PHP files which caused the browser to try to download and run in the browser. While they got it fixed, the quick solution was to take down all my PHP files, and change my index file a plain HTML file. Whether or not this stops the problem for you depends on how the server is infected. The best thing and probably most responsible thing you can do is to protect your visitors by taking down site, and if possible (if text files aren't infected), display a message stating that if they visited recently they may have been infected.
Needless to say, I switched hosting providers quick soon after my site was infected. My hosting provider was pretty bad in a lot of other ways, but this was pretty much the final straw.

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