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ESLint Plugin focused on common security issues and misconfigurations.

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eslint-plugin-sdl

Node.js integration E2E integration

ESLint Plugin focused on common security issues and misconfigurations.

Plugin is intended as a baseline for projects that follow Microsoft Security Development Lifecycle (SDL) and use ESLint to perform Static Analysis Security Testing (SAST).

Installation

npm install microsoft/eslint-plugin-sdl

or

yarn add microsoft/eslint-plugin-sdl

Configs

Including an ESLint configuration file in your project allows you to customize how ESLint applies rules to your project. You can include the plugin in your configuration file as described in examples for recommended and required configurations.

ESLint will then only enforce rules you specify in the rules section of your configuration file at the severity level you designate. For example:

const pluginMicrosoftSdl = require("@microsoft/eslint-plugin-sdl");

module.exports = [
  ...pluginMicrosoftSdl.configs.recommended,
  {
    rules: {
      "no-eval": "error",
      "@microsoft/sdl/no-inner-html": "error"
    }
  }
];

You can also used the below Shareable Config files using flat config model as guidelines depending on the type of project.

Plugin is shipped with following Shareable Configs:

  • angular - Set of rules for modern Angular applications
  • angularjs - Set of rules for legacy AngularJS applications
  • common - Set of rules for common JavaScript applications
  • electron - Set of rules for Electron applications
  • node - Set of rules for Node.js applications
  • react - Set of rules for ReactJS applications
  • recommended - SDL Recommended rules for all applications
  • required - SDL Required rules for all applications
  • typescript - Set of rules for TypeScript applications

Rules

Where possible, we leverage existing rules from ESLint and community plugins such as react, typescript-eslint or security.

We also implemented several custom rules where we did not find sufficient alternative in the community.

Name Description
no-caller Bans usage of deprecated functions arguments.caller() and arguments.callee that could potentially allow access to call stack.
no-delete-var Bans usage of operator delete on variables as it can lead to unexpected behavior.
no-eval Bans usage of eval() that allows code execution from string argument.
no-implied-eval Bans usage of setTimeout(), setInterval() and execScript(). These functions are similar to eval() and prone to code execution.
no-new-func Bans calling new Function() as it's similar to eval() and prone to code execution.
node/no-deprecated-api Bans usage of deprecated APIs in Node.
@microsoft/sdl/no-angular-bypass-sanitizer Calls to bypassSecurityTrustHtml, bypassSecurityTrustScript and similar methods bypass DomSanitizer in Angular and need to be reviewed.
@microsoft/sdl/no-angularjs-bypass-sce Calls to $sceProvider.enabled(false), $sceDelegate.trustAs(), $sce.trustAs() and relevant shorthand methods (e.g. trustAsHtml or trustAsJs) bypass Strict Contextual Escaping (SCE) in AngularJS and need to be reviewed.
@microsoft/sdl/no-angularjs-enable-svg Calls to $sanitizeProvider.enableSvg(true) increase attack surface of the application by enabling SVG support in AngularJS sanitizer and need to be reviewed.
@microsoft/sdl/no-angularjs-sanitization-whitelist Calls to $compileProvider.aHrefSanitizationWhitelist or $compileProvider.imgSrcSanitizationWhitelist configure whitelists in AngularJS sanitizer and need to be reviewed.
@microsoft/sdl/no-cookies HTTP cookies are an old client-side storage mechanism with inherent risks and limitations. Use Web Storage, IndexedDB or other modern methods instead.
@microsoft/sdl/no-document-domain Writes to document.domain property must be reviewed to avoid bypass of same-origin checks. Usage of top level domains such as azurewebsites.net is strictly prohibited.
@microsoft/sdl/no-document-write Calls to document.write or document.writeln manipulate DOM directly without any sanitization and should be avoided. Use document.createElement() or similar methods instead.
@microsoft/sdl/no-electron-node-integration Node.js Integration must not be enabled in any renderer that loads remote content to avoid remote code execution attacks.
@microsoft/sdl/no-html-method Direct calls to method html() often (e.g. in jQuery framework) manipulate DOM without any sanitization and should be avoided. Use document.createElement() or similar methods instead.
@microsoft/sdl/no-inner-html Assignments to innerHTML or outerHTML properties manipulate DOM directly without any sanitization and should be avoided. Use document.createElement() or similar methods instead.
@microsoft/sdl/no-insecure-url Insecure protocols such as HTTP or FTP should be replaced by their encrypted counterparts (HTTPS, FTPS) to avoid sending potentially sensitive data over untrusted networks in plaintext.
@microsoft/sdl/no-msapp-exec-unsafe Calls to MSApp.execUnsafeLocalFunction() bypass script injection validation and should be avoided.
@microsoft/sdl/no-postmessage-star-origin Always provide specific target origin, not * when sending data to other windows using postMessage to avoid data leakage outside of trust boundary.
@microsoft/sdl/no-unsafe-alloc When calling Buffer.allocUnsafe and Buffer.allocUnsafeSlow, the allocated memory is not wiped-out and can contain old, potentially sensitive data.
@microsoft/sdl/no-winjs-html-unsafe Calls to WinJS.Utilities.setInnerHTMLUnsafe() and similar methods do not perform any input validation and should be avoided. Use WinJS.Utilities.setInnerHTML() instead.
react/iframe-missing-sandbox The sandbox attribute enables an extra set of restrictions for the content in the iframe and should always be specified.
react/no-danger Bans usage of dangerouslySetInnerHTML property in React as it allows passing unsanitized HTML in DOM.
@typescript-eslint/no-implied-eval Similar to built-in ESLint rule no-implied-eval. Bans usage of setTimeout(), setInterval(), setImmediate(), execScript() or new Function() as they are similar to eval() and allow code execution from string arguments.

Contributing

This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com.

When you submit a pull request, a CLA bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., status check, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.