This is a AWK
script that cleans your PHP
configuration. Cleaning here means that the settings are supposed to
be sane for either a production or development
enviroment. There are slight differences between the configuration for
both settings. Namely the runtime parameter that allows the errors to
be displayed on the site.
Displaying the errors is something that is useful in a development environment it makes sense to have the errors being displayed. In a production or staging environment it doesn't. It's a information disclosure vulnerability. It reveals a lot of, potentially:
-
the path where the your PHP scripts are installed;
-
which PHP extensions you have enabled/disabled;
-
which setup you use to run your site.
The path disclosure vulnerability opens up the door for path traversal exploits which can compromise not only the specific site but also other sites which may be hosted on the same machine.
The following settings are altered:
-
Error logging — for production/staging environments log all errors on
syslog
; for development environments log the errors on the web client. -
PHP exposition: don't expose that you're running PHP and which version you're running.
-
zlib compression and compression level: if available use
zlib
with compression level1
. -
memory limit: a generous 512 MB.
-
POST and upload maximum sizes. Assuming that the there are things in the site, like drupal nodes or any other unit of content, that have two attachments in average, then limit the size of each upload to the maximum memory size, just in case there's buffering of this data by PHP.
-
cgi.fix_pathinfo set to 0. Do not translate the
PATHINFO
components automagically. This has been a source of repeated p0wnage out there, Drupal doesn't use PATHINFO, but WordPress does. Please do not rely on a lazy bastard technique to have your site working. Instead use the proper config with your web server and/or CGI/FastCGI handling. -
Do not allow for
fopen
orinclude
to open files specified through a URI. Only files in the the filesystem that the web server and or the FastCGI handling infrastructure can see. Don't ever use external resources or allow them to be specified through a URL. -
Don't allow for manipulation of cookies through the DOM, i.e., JavaScript manipulation of cookies. All modern browsers support the
HttpOnly
flag. IE6, 7 and 8 also support it. -
Setup additional entropy for session token generation using the hardware random number generator
/dev/urandom
. This requires PHP 5.3 or later.
To use this script(s) do the following:
-
Just clone the git repo or download a snaphost.
-
Run the shell script
php_cleanup
. It accepts one mandatory and two optional arguments:a) The first argument specifies if we are cleaning up a production or a development environment.
b) The second argument specifies the memory limit for PHP. By default is 512M.
c) The last argument specifies the filename of the PHP runtime control file.
php.ini
(or similar) file to cleanup. By default it assumes that the PHP runtime configuration isphp.ini
and is in the current directory.
-
Cleanup a production site, running the script on the directory of
php.ini
:php_cleanup -p
-
Cleanup a development site, running the script on the directory of
php.ini
:php_cleanup -d
-
Cleanup a production site with PHP FPM, running the script from an arbitrary directory (assuming the PHP filesystem layout of debian):
php_cleanup -p /etc/php5/fpm/php.ini
-
Cleanup a production site with PHP FPM, running the script from an arbitrary directory (assuming the PHP filesystem layout of debian) and set the memory limit to 2G:
php_cleanup -p -m 2G /etc/php5/fpm/php.ini