The ModSecurity-nginx connector is the connection point between nginx and libmodsecurity (ModSecurity v3). Said another way, this project provides a communication channel between nginx and libmodsecurity. This connector is required to use LibModSecurity with nginx.
The ModSecurity-nginx connector takes the form of an nginx module. The module simply serves as a layer of communication between nginx and ModSecurity.
Notice that this project depends on libmodsecurity rather than ModSecurity (version 2.9 or less).
The old version uses ModSecurity standalone, which is a wrapper for Apache internals to link ModSecurity to nginx. This current version is closer to nginx, consuming the new libmodsecurity which is no longer dependent on Apache. As a result, this current version has less dependencies, fewer bugs, and is faster. In addition, some new functionality is also provided - such as the possibility of use of global rules configuration with per directory/location customizations (e.g. SecRuleRemoveById).
Before compile this software make sure that you have libmodsecurity installed. You can download it from the ModSecurity git repository. For information pertaining to the compilation and installation of libmodsecurity please consult the documentation provided along with it.
With libmodsecurity installed, you can proceed with the installation of the ModSecurity-nginx connector, which follow the nginx 3rd party module installation procedure:
./configure --add-module=/path/to/ModSecurity-nginx
Further information about nginx 3rd party add-ons support are available here: http://wiki.nginx.org/3rdPartyModules
ModSecurity for nginx extends your nginx configuration directives. It adds four new directives and they are:
syntax: modsecurity on | off
context: http, server, location
default: off
Turns on or off ModSecurity functionality. Note that this configuration directive is no longer related to the SecRule state. Instead, it now serves solely as an nginx flag to enable or disable the module.
syntax: modsecurity_rules_file <path to rules file>
context: http, server, location
default: no
Specifies the location of the modsecurity configuration file, e.g.:
server {
modsecurity on;
location / {
root /var/www/html;
modsecurity_rules_file /etc/my_modsecurity_rules.conf;
}
}
syntax: modsecurity_rules_remote <key> <URL to rules>
context: http, server, location
default: no
Specifies from where (on the internet) a modsecurity configuration file will be downloaded. It also specifies the key that will be used to authenticate to that server:
server {
modsecurity on;
location / {
root /var/www/html;
modsecurity_rules_remote my-server-key https://my-own-server/rules/download;
}
}
syntax: modsecurity_rules <modsecurity rule>
context: http, server, location
default: no
Allows for the direct inclusion of a ModSecurity rule into the nginx configuration. The following example is loading rules from a file and injecting specific configurations per directory/alias:
server {
modsecurity on;
location / {
root /var/www/html;
modsecurity_rules_file /etc/my_modsecurity_rules.conf;
}
location /ops {
root /var/www/html/opts;
modsecurity_rules '
SecRuleEngine On
SecDebugLog /tmp/modsec_debug.log
SecDebugLogLevel 9
SecRuleRemoveById 10
';
}
}
syntax: modsecurity_transaction_id string
context: http, server, location
default: no
Allows to pass transaction ID from nginx instead of generating it in the library. This can be useful for tracing purposes, e.g. consider this configuration:
log_format extended '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] '
'"$request" $status $body_bytes_sent '
'"$http_referer" "$http_user_agent" $request_id';
server {
server_name host1;
modsecurity on;
modsecurity_transaction_id "host1-$request_id";
access_log logs/host1-access.log extended;
error_log logs/host1-error.log;
location / {
...
}
}
server {
server_name host2;
modsecurity on;
modsecurity_transaction_id "host2-$request_id";
access_log logs/host2-access.log extended;
error_log logs/host2-error.log;
location / {
...
}
}
Using a combination of log_format and modsecurity_transaction_id you will be able to find correlations between access log and error log entries using the same unique identificator.
String can contain variables.
As an open source project we invite (and encourage) anyone from the community to contribute to our project. This may take the form of: new functionality, bug fixes, bug reports, beginners user support, and anything else that you are willing to help with. Thank you.
We prefer to have your patch within the GitHub infrastructure to facilitate our review work, and our QA integration. GitHub provides an excellent documentation on how to perform “Pull Requests”. More information available here: https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests/
Please respect the coding style in use. Pull requests can include various commits, so provide one fix or one functionality per commit. Do not change anything outside the scope of your target work (e.g. coding style in a function that you have passed by).
Within our code there are various items marked as TODO or FIXME that may need your attention. Check the list of items by performing a grep:
$ cd /path/to/modsecurity-nginx
$ egrep -Rin "TODO|FIXME" -R *
You may also take a look at recent bug reports and open issues to get an idea of what kind of help we are looking for.
Along with the manual testing, we strongly recommend that you to use the nginx test utility to make sure that you patch does not adversely affect the behavior or performance of nginx.
The nginx tests are available on: http://hg.nginx.org/nginx-tests/
To use those tests, make sure you have the Perl utility prove (part of Perl 5) and proceed with the following commands:
$ cp /path/to/ModSecurity-nginx/tests/* /path/to/nginx/test/repository
$ cd /path/to/nginx/test/repository
$ TEST_NGINX_BINARY=/path/to/your/nginx prove .
If you are facing problems getting your added functionality to pass all the nginx tests, feel free to contact us or the nginx mailing list at: http://nginx.org/en/support.html
We respect the nginx debugging schema. By using the configuration option "--with-debug" during the nginx configuration you will also be enabling the connector's debug messages. Core dumps and crashes are expected to be debugged in the same fashion that is used to debug nginx. For further information, please check the nginx debugging information: http://wiki.nginx.org/Debugging
If you are facing a configuration issue or if something is not working as you expect it to be, please use ModSecurity user’s mailing list. Issues on GitHub are also welcome, but we prefer to have users question on the mailing list first, where you can reach an entire community. Also don’t forget to look for an existing issue before opening a new one.
Lastly, If you are planning to open an issue on GitHub, please don’t forget to tell us the version of your libmodsecurity and the version of the nginx connector you are running.
Please do not publicly report any security issue. Instead, contact us at: [email protected] to report the issue. Once the problem is fixed we will provide you with credit for the discovery.
We would love to discuss any ideas that you may have for a new feature. Please keep in mind this is a community driven project so be sure to contact the community via the mailing list to get feedback first. Alternatively, feel free to open GitHub issues requesting for new features. Before opening a new issue, please check if there is an existing feature request for the desired functionality.
Having our packages in distros on time is something we highly desire. Let us know if there is anything we can do to facilitate your work as a packager.