I used $_SESSION['name'] to handle data from page to page. I mainly used it to keep the user logged in between pages. Within every page, i check if $_SESSION[logged_in'] is true or not. If true, keep user logged in. Otherwise, do something else.
This is how i handle my sessions - basic sample:
<?php
session_start();
if($_SESSION['logged_in'])
{
//show control panel list
}
else
{
//show login box. Once user logs in. Once user logs in,
//fetch userID, username, etc from database. Also set
//$_SESSION['logged_in'] = true.
}
?>
Somewhere in between codes i do the following:
SELECT * FROM User WHERE userID = $_SESSION['userID'];
I'm not sure if $_SESSION['userID'] would be accessible by users or not. If its accessible, then the page would be in threat because a user could change the userID manually and get access to others account he/she desires.
I'm not much into security. Please advice! What can i do?
Note: i'm trying to make code as simple as possible. For now, no oop is involved.
That's pretty good, here are a few other tips for session management:
Do not accept session identifiers from GET/POST variables:
Session identifiers in URL (query string, GET variables) or POST variables are not recommended as it simplifies this attack. It is easy to make links on forms which set GET/POST variables.
Regenerate the SID on each request:
In PHP use session_regenerate_id(). Every time a user's access level changes, it is necessary to regenerate the session identifier. This means that although an attacker may trick a user into accepting a known SID, the SID will be invalid when the attacker attempts to re-use the SID.
Your code is vulnerable to session fixation and session hijacking attacks. See http://phpsec.org/projects/guide/4.html for more information.
As you build bigger, more involved applications, you will also want to be careful how you handle logging the user out and handling other session-related aspects, such as privilege escalation. Handling sessions and logins safely is a tricky beast.
Implementing secure authentication is hard. Unless you are doing it as an academic exercise, i would strongly recommend using the library provided by your framework, if you are lucky enough to have a good one.
You will also want to consider things such as the following:
- Do not allow the session id to be forced. [session fixation]
- When permissions or credentials are changed (e.g. because the user has now logged in or out) then
immediately invalidate the session and start a fresh one.
- Provide a logout feature, and be sure to invalidate the session upon logout.
- Set the session cookie to HttpOnly -Preferably, require HTTPS and alo set the cookie to secure only.
- Consider restricting the session validity to include checking some other information that helps to match the user e.g. user-agent. [session hijacking]
- Always expire sessions after non-use and do not implement "keep me logged in" by reconnecting the user to their old http session.
- Ensure that all session-related data is destroyed when a session is invalidated, regardless of where it is stored. A new user coming along, may just happen to get assigned a session id that has been used previously. This new session must not have any access to session data that has been set previously against that session id.
$_SESSION is one of the server-side Super Globals. It's not accessible by users or transmitted from your server in any way.
Yes, that is pretty much the right idea.
Here are a couple resources that may help, both with understanding session security and secure programming in general:
http://phpsec.org/projects/guide/4.html
http://phpsec.org/projects/guide/