API Security Checklist
Checklist of the most important security countermeasures when designing, testing, and releasing your API.
Authentication
- Don’t use Basic Auth. Use standard authentication instead (e.g., JWT).
- Don’t reinvent the wheel in Authentication, token generation, password storage. Use the standards.
- Use Max Retry and jail features in Login.
- Use encryption on all sensitive data.
JWT (JSON Web Token)
- Use a random complicated key (JWT Secret) to make brute forcing the token very hard.
- Don’t extract the algorithm from the header. Force the algorithm in the backend (HS256 or RS256).
- Make token expiration (TTL, RTTL) as short as possible.
- Don’t store sensitive data in the JWT payload, it can be decoded easily.
- Avoid storing too much data. JWT is usually shared in headers and they have a size limit.
Access
- Limit requests (Throttling) to avoid DDoS / brute-force attacks.
- Use HTTPS on server side with TLS 1.2+ and secure ciphers to avoid MITM (Man in the Middle Attack).
- Use HSTS header with SSL to avoid SSL Strip attacks.
- Turn off directory listings.
- For private APIs, allow access only from whitelisted IPs/hosts.
Authorization OAuth
- Always validate redirect_uri server-side to allow only whitelisted URLs.
- Always try to exchange for code and not tokens (don’t allow response_type=token).
- Use state parameter with a random hash to prevent CSRF on the OAuth authorization process.
- Define the default scope, and validate scope parameters for each application.
Input
- Use the proper HTTP method according to the operation: GET (read), POST (create), PUT/PATCH (replace/update), and DELETE (to delete a record), and respond with 405 Method Not Allowed if the requested method isn’t appropriate for the requested resource.
- Validate content-type on request Accept header (Content Negotiation) to allow only your supported format (e.g., application/xml, application/json, etc.) and respond with 406 Not Acceptable response if not matched.
- Validate content-type of posted data as you accept (e.g., application/x-www-form-urlencoded, multipart/form-data, application/json, etc.).
- Validate user input to avoid common vulnerabilities (e.g., XSS, SQL-Injection, Remote Code Execution, etc.).
- Don’t use any sensitive data (credentials, Passwords, security tokens, or API keys) in the URL, but use standard Authorization header.
- Use only server-side encryption.
- Use an API Gateway service to enable caching, Rate Limit policies (e.g., Quota, Spike Arrest, or Concurrent Rate Limit) and deploy APIs resources dynamically.
Processing
- Check if all the endpoints are protected behind authentication to avoid broken authentication process.
- User own resource ID should be avoided. Use /me/orders instead of /user/654321/orders.
- Don’t auto-increment IDs. Use UUID instead.
- If you are parsing XML data, make sure entity parsing is not enabled to avoid XXE (XML external entity attack).
- If you are parsing XML, YAML or any other language with anchors and refs, make sure entity expansion is not enabled to avoid Billion Laughs/XML bomb via exponential entity expansion attack.
- Use a CDN for file uploads.
- If you are dealing with huge amount of data, use Workers and Queues to process as much as possible in background and return response fast to avoid HTTP Blocking.
- Do not forget to turn the DEBUG mode OFF.
- Use non-executable stacks when available.
Output
- Send X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff header.
- Send X-Frame-Options: deny header.
- Send Content-Security-Policy: default-src ‘none’ header.
- Remove fingerprinting headers – X-Powered-By, Server, X-AspNet-Version, etc.
- Force content-type for your response. If you return application/json, then your content-type response is application/json.
- Don’t return sensitive data like credentials, passwords, or security tokens.
- Return the proper status code according to the operation completed. (e.g., 200 OK, 400 Bad Request, 401 Unauthorized, 405 Method Not Allowed, etc.).
CI & CD
- Audit your design and implementation with unit/integration tests coverage.
- Use a code review process and disregard self-approval.
- Ensure that all components of your services are statically scanned by AV software before pushing to production, including vendor libraries and other dependencies.
- Continuously run security tests (static/dynamic analysis) on your code.
- Check your dependencies (both software and OS) for known vulnerabilities.
- Design a rollback solution for deployments.
Monitoring
- Use centralized logins for all services and components.
- Use agents to monitor all traffic, errors, requests, and responses.
- Use alerts for SMS, Slack, Email, Telegram, Kibana, Cloudwatch, etc.
- Ensure that you aren’t logging any sensitive data like credit cards, passwords, PINs, etc.
- Use an IDS and/or IPS system to monitor your API requests and instances.
NOTE: Special Thanks to
for the API Security Checklist