The Open Policy Agent (OPA) community has adopted this security disclosures and response policy to ensure we responsibly handle critical issues.
Security vulnerabilities should be handled quickly and sometimes privately. The primary goal of this process is to reduce the total time users are vulnerable to publicly known exploits.
The Product Security Team (PST) is responsible for organizing the entire response including internal communication and external disclosure but will need help from relevant developers to successfully run this process.
The initial Product Security Team will consist of all maintainers in the private open-policy-agent-security list. In the future we may decide to have a subset of maintainers work on security response given that this process is time consuming.
The OPA community asks that all suspected vulnerabilities be privately and responsibly disclosed via the reporting policy.
If you know of a publicly disclosed security vulnerability please IMMEDIATELY email open-policy-agent-security to inform the Product Security Team (PST) about the vulnerability so they may start the patch, release, and communication process.
If possible the PST will ask the person making the public report if the issue can be handled via a private disclosure process (for example if the full exploit details have not yet been published). If the reporter denies the request for private disclosure, the PST will move swiftly with the fix and release process. In extreme cases GitHub can be asked to delete the issue but this generally isn't necessary and is unlikely to make a public disclosure less damaging.
For each vulnerability a member of the PST will volunteer to lead coordination with the "Fix Team" and is responsible for sending disclosure emails to the rest of the community. This lead will be referred to as the "Fix Lead."
The role of Fix Lead should rotate round-robin across the PST.
Note that given the current size of the OPA community it is likely that the PST is the same as the "Fix team." (I.e., all maintainers). The PST may decide to bring in additional contributors for added expertise depending on the area of the code that contains the vulnerability.
All of the timelines below are suggestions and assume a private disclosure. The Fix Lead drives the schedule using their best judgment based on severity and development time. If the Fix Lead is dealing with a public disclosure all timelines become ASAP (assuming the vulnerability has a CVSS score >= 4; see below). If the fix relies on another upstream project's disclosure timeline, that will adjust the process as well. We will work with the upstream project to fit their timeline and best protect our users.
These steps should be completed within the first 24 hours of disclosure.
- The Fix Lead will work quickly to identify relevant engineers from the affected projects and packages and CC those engineers into the disclosure thread. These selected developers are the Fix Team.
- The Fix Lead will get the Fix Team access to private security repos to develop the fix.
These steps should be completed within the 1-7 days of Disclosure.
- The Fix Lead and the Fix Team will create a CVSS using the CVSS Calculator. The Fix Lead makes the final call on the calculated CVSS; it is better to move quickly than make the CVSS perfect.
- The Fix Team will notify the Fix Lead that work on the fix branch is complete once there are LGTMs on all commits in the private repo from one or more maintainers.
If the CVSS score is under 4.0 (a low severity score) the Fix Team can decide to slow the release process down in the face of holidays, developer bandwidth, etc. These decisions must be discussed on the open-policy-agent-security mailing list.
With the fix development underway, the Fix Lead needs to come up with an overall communication plan for the wider community. This Disclosure process should begin after the Fix Team has developed a Fix or mitigation so that a realistic timeline can be communicated to users.
Disclosure of Forthcoming Fix to Users (Completed within 1-7 days of Disclosure)
- The Fix Lead will email [email protected] informing users that a security vulnerability has been disclosed and that a fix will be made available at YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM UTC in the future via this list. This time is the Release Date.
- The Fix Lead will include any mitigating steps users can take until a fix is available.
The communication to users should be actionable. They should know when to block time to apply patches, understand exact mitigation steps, etc.
Optional Fix Disclosure to Private Distributors List (Completed within 1-14 days of Disclosure):
- The Fix Lead will make a determination with the help of the Fix Team if an issue is critical enough to require early disclosure to distributors. Generally this Private Distributor Disclosure process should be reserved for remotely exploitable or privilege escalation issues. Otherwise, this process can be skipped.
- The Fix Lead will email the patches to [email protected] so distributors can prepare builds to be available to users on the day of the issue's announcement. Distributors should read about the Private Distributors List to find out the requirements for being added to this list.
- What if a vendor breaks embargo? The PST will assess the damage. The Fix Lead will make the call to release earlier or continue with the plan. When in doubt push forward and go public ASAP.
Fix Release Day (Completed within 1-21 days of Disclosure)
- The maintainers will create a new patch release branch from the latest patch release tag + the fix from the security branch. As a practical example if v1.5.3 is the latest patch release in opa.git a new branch will be created called v1.5.4 which includes only patches required to fix the issue.
- The Fix Lead will cherry-pick the patches onto the main branch and all relevant release branches. The Fix Team will LGTM and merge. Maintainers will merge these PRs as quickly as possible. Changes shouldn't be made to the commits even for a typo in the CHANGELOG as this will change the git sha of the commits leading to confusion and potentially conflicts as the fix is cherry-picked around branches.
- The Fix Lead will request a CVE from DWF and include the CVSS and release details.
- The Fix Lead will email open-policy-agent[-announce]@googlegroups.com now that everything is public announcing the new releases, the CVE number, and the relevant merged PRs to get wide distribution and user action. As much as possible this email should be actionable and include links on how to apply the fix to user's environments; this can include links to external distributor documentation.
- The Fix Lead will remove the Fix Team from the private security repo.
These steps should be completed 1-3 days after the Release Date. The retrospective process should be blameless.
- The Fix Lead will send a retrospective of the process to [email protected] including details on everyone involved, the timeline of the process, links to relevant PRs that introduced the issue, if relevant, and any critiques of the response and release process.
- Maintainers and Fix Team are also encouraged to send their own feedback on the process to [email protected]. Honest critique is the only way we are going to get good at this as a community.
This list is intended to be used primarily to provide actionable information to multiple distribution vendors at once. This list is not intended for individuals to find out about security issues.
The information members receive on open-policy-agent-distributors-announce must not be made public, shared, nor even hinted at anywhere beyond the need-to-know within your specific team except with the list's explicit approval. This holds true until the public disclosure date/time that was agreed upon by the list. Members of the list and others may not use the information for anything other than getting the issue fixed for your respective distribution's users.
Before any information from the list is shared with respective members of your team required to fix said issue, they must agree to the same terms and only find out information on a need-to-know basis.
In the unfortunate event you share the information beyond what is allowed by this policy, you must urgently inform the [email protected] mailing list of exactly what information leaked and to whom. A retrospective will take place after the leak so we can assess how to not make the same mistake in the future.
If you continue to leak information and break the policy outlined here, you will be removed from the list.
This is a team effort. As a member of the list you must carry some water. This could be in the form of the following:
Technical
- Review and/or test the proposed patches and point out potential issues with them (such as incomplete fixes for the originally reported issues, additional issues you might notice, and newly introduced bugs), and inform the list of the work done even if no issues were encountered.
Administrative
- Help draft emails to the public disclosure mailing list.
- Help with release notes.
To be eligible for the open-policy-agent-distributors-announce mailing list, your distribution should:
- Be an actively maintained distribution of OPA components OR offer OPA as a publicly available service in which the product clearly states that it is built on top of OPA. E.g., "SuperAwesomeLinuxDistro" which offers OPA pre-built packages OR "SuperAwesomeCloudProvider's OPA as a Service (EaaS)". A cloud service that uses OPA for a product but does not publicly say they are using OPA does not qualify.
- Have a user base not limited to your own organization.
- Have a publicly verifiable track record up to present day of fixing security issues.
- Not be a downstream or rebuild of another distribution.
- Be a participant and active contributor in the community.
- Accept the Embargo Policy that is outlined above.
- Be willing to contribute back as outlined above.
- Have someone already on the list vouch for the person requesting membership on behalf of your distribution.
New membership requests are sent to [email protected].
In the body of your request please specify how you qualify and fulfill each criterion listed in Membership Criteria.
Here is a pseudo example:
To: [email protected]
Subject: Seven-Corp Membership to open-policy-agent-distributors-announce
Below are each criterion and why I think we, Seven-Corp, qualify.
> 1. Be an actively maintained distribution of OPA components OR offer OPA as a publicly
available service in which the product clearly states that it is built on top of OPA.
We distribute the "Seven" distribution of OPA [link]. We have been doing
this since 1999 before proxies were even cool.
> 2. Have a user base not limited to your own organization.
Our user base spans of the extensive "Seven" community. We have a slack and
GitHub repos and mailing lists where the community hangs out. [links]
> 3. Have a publicly verifiable track record up to present day of fixing security
issues.
We announce on our blog all upstream patches we apply to "Seven." [link to blog
posts]
> 4. Not be a downstream or rebuild of another distribution.
This does not apply, "Seven" is a unique snowflake distribution.
> 5. Be a participant and active contributor in the community.
Our members, Acidburn, Cereal, and ZeroCool are outstanding members and are well
known throughout the OPA community. Especially for their contributions
in hacking the Gibson.
> 6. Accept the Embargo Policy that is outlined above.
We accept.
> 7. Be willing to contribute back as outlined above.
We are definitely willing to help!
> 8. Have someone already on the list vouch for the person requesting membership
on behalf of your distribution.
CrashOverride will vouch for Acidburn joining the list on behalf of the "Seven"
distribution.