Fair enough, and I'm happy that this discussion has started. 

For now, IMO, CSP is a big help in protecting these types of apps. Token 
binding will of course help too, once it's available/practical.

-Brock

On 5/18/2018 12:47:49 PM, John Bradley <ve7...@ve7jtb.com> wrote:
There are lots of issues with the current implicit flow around fragment 
encoding as well.
 
However moving the token used for refresh from being a HTTP only cookie to a 
refresh token available in the DOM makes me uncomfortable without having 
sufficient mitigations against XSS.
 
The current flow is vulnerable to  XSS for the AT, however if that is short 
lived it restricts the damage.
 
The better solution is token binding the AT and perhaps a RT. 
 
We need to start talking about it.  There are issues around potentially using 
service workers etc as well.
 
So we should start but I am not sure of what the correct answer is yet.
 
John B.
 
Sent from Mail [https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986] for Windows 10
 
From: Brock Allen [mailto:brockal...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, May 18, 2018 6:36 PM
To: John Bradley [mailto:ve7...@ve7jtb.com]; David Waite 
[mailto:da...@alkaline-solutions.com]; Hannes Tschofenig 
[mailto:hannes.tschofe...@arm.com]
Cc: oauth@ietf.org [mailto:oauth@ietf.org]
Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] is updated guidance needed for JS/SPA apps?
 
It sounds to me as if you're hesitant to recommend code flow (at least for now) 
then for browser-based JS apps.
 
-Brock
 
On 5/18/2018 12:27:48 PM, John Bradley <ve7...@ve7jtb.com> wrote:
Yes that was the original intent to have the AT be short lived and refresh the 
AT via the authorization endpoint based on the session cookie. 
The session cookie should also be flagged as http only to protect it. 
Having a refresh token in local storrage may introduce new security issues 
unless it is token bound. 
Understanding the security issues of the code flow in the browser is important, 
before any new recommendation. 
John B.
From: Brock Allen
Sent: Friday, May 18, 2:46 PM
Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] is updated guidance needed for JS/SPA apps?
To: David Waite, Hannes Tschofenig
Cc: oauth@ietf.org


One thing I maybe should have listed in the pros/cons in my original email is 
session management and token lifetime considerations, keeping in mind the 
original intent of the implicit flow.
What I mean is that with implicit grant type, the client's ability to get new 
access tokens is limited to the user's session at the AS/OP. Obviously other 
flows make more sense to obtain longer lived access (via refresh tokens), but I 
don't know about a browser-based JS app. In a sense there's a bit of protection 
for the end user built into that design by virtue of being tied to the user's 
cookie at the AS/OP.
Just throwing that out as an additional discussion point.
-Brock
On 5/18/2018 6:04:47 AM, David Waite <da...@alkaline-solutions.com> wrote:
I have written some guidance already (in non-RFC format) on preferring code for 
single page apps, and other security practices (CORS, CSP). From the AS point 
of view, it aligns well with the native apps BCP. There are benefits of 
thinking about native and SPA apps just as ‘public clients’ from a 
policy/properties point of view. It also greatly simplifies OAuth/OIDC support 
on both the AS administrator and client developer side when converting web 
properties into native apps using technologies like Electron or Cordova.
For the later requirements in the list around token policy, I am not sure these 
are requirements for single page apps per se. I don’t believe the need for a 
policy using short-lived refresh tokens, revoking at signout, or use of the 
revocation endpoint are different from browser and native applications. Rather 
they seem to be a function of usage patterns that an AS may need to support, 
and we happen to sometimes associate those usage patterns with typical usage of 
native apps vs of browser apps. For example, browser login on a borrowed device 
can easily leak over to being app authorization - the 
authentication/authorization are web-based processes to achieve SSO.
I have been working on some guidance here around token lifetimes and policies, 
but I don’t know whether that brings in too much AS/OP business logic (and, 
likely implied product/deployment features) to be industry practices.
-DW
On May 17, 2018, at 10:23 AM, Hannes Tschofenig <hannes.tschofe...@arm.com 
[mailto:hannes.tschofe...@arm.com]> wrote:
Hi Brock,
 
there have been several attempts to start writing some guidance but so far we 
haven’t gotten too far.
IMHO it would be great to have a document.
 
Ciao
Hannes
 
From: OAuth [mailto:oauth-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:oauth-boun...@ietf.org]] On 
Behalf Of Brock Allen
Sent: 17 May 2018 14:57
To: oauth@ietf.org [mailto:oauth@ietf.org]
Subject: [OAUTH-WG] is updated guidance needed for JS/SPA apps?
 
Much like updated guidance was provided with the "OAuth2 for native apps" RFC, 
should there be one for "browser-based client-side JS apps"? I ask because 
google is actively discouraging the use of implicit flow:
 
https://github.com/openid/AppAuth-JS/issues/59#issuecomment-389639290 
[https://github.com/openid/AppAuth-JS/issues/59#issuecomment-389639290]
 
>From what I can tell, the complaints with implicit are:
* access token in URL
* access token in browser history
* iframe complexity when using prompt=none to "refresh" access tokens
 
But this requires:
* AS/OP to support PKCE
* AS/OP to support CORS 
* user-agent must support CORS
* AS/OP to maintain short-lived refresh tokens 
* AS/OP must aggressively revoke refresh tokens at user signout (which is not 
something OAuth2 "knows" about)
* if the above point can't work, then client must proactively use revocation 
endpoint if/when user triggers logout
 
Any use in discussing this?
 
-Brock
 
IMPORTANT NOTICE: The contents of this email and any attachments are 
confidential and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, 
please notify the sender immediately and do not disclose the contents to any 
other person, use it for any purpose, or store or copy the information in any 
medium. Thank you. _______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org [mailto:OAuth@ietf.org]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth 
[https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth]


 
_______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth

Reply via email to