12 Java API for XML Processing (JAXP) Security Guide

The JDK and Java XML APIs have been improved over the years with various measures and tools that can help prevent applications from being exploited by XML-related attacks. This guide shows you how to use the secure processing features of Java API for XML Processing (JAXP) to safeguard your applications and systems.

See the java.xml module summary for more information.

Security Issues in XML Processing

XML processing can expose applications to certain vulnerabilities. Among the most prominent and well-known attacks are the XML External Entity (XXE) injection attack and the exponential entity expansion attack, also know as the XML bomb or billion laughs attack. These attacks can potentially cause serious damage to a system by denying its services or worse, lead to the loss of sensitive data.

You should evaluate your applications' requirements and operating environment to assess the level of potential threat, for example, whether or to what extent the applications are exposed to untrusted XML sources.

XML External Entity Injection Attack

The XML, XML Schema, and XSLT standards define a number of structures that enable the embedding of external content in XML documents through system identifiers that reference external resources. In general, XML processors resolve and retrieve almost all of these external resources; see External Resources Supported by XML, Schema, and XSLT Standards for a list of constructs that support the inclusion of external resources. In addition, some constructs enable the execution of applications through external functions. XML External Entity (XXE) injection attacks exploit XML processors that have not been secured by restricting the external resources that it may resolve, retrieve, or execute. This can result in disclosing sensitive data such as passwords or enabling arbitrary execution of code.

External Resources Supported by XML, Schema, and XSLT Standards

XML, Schema, and XSLT standards support the following constructs that require external resources. The default behavior of the JDK XML processors is to make a connection and fetch the external resources as specified.

  • External DTD: references an external Document Type Definition (DTD), for example:

    <!DOCTYPE root_element SYSTEM "url">
  • External Entity Reference: Refers to external data, the following is the syntax:

    <!ENTITY name SYSTEM "url">
  • General entity reference, for example:

    <?xml version="1.0" standalone="no" ?>
    <!DOCTYPE doc [<!ENTITY otherFile SYSTEM "otherFile.xml">]>
    <doc>
        <a>
            <b>&otherFile;</b>
        </a>
    </doc>
  • External Parameter Entities: The following is the syntax:

    <!ENTITY % name SYSTEM uri>

    The following is an example:

    <?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?>
        <!DOCTYPE doc [
          <!ENTITY % ent1 SYSTEM "http://www.example.com/student.dtd">
          %ent1;
        ]>
  • XInclude: Includes an external infoset in an XML document, for example:
    <Book xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude">
        <xi:include href=toc.xml"/>
        <xi:include href=part1.xml"/>
        <xi:include href=part2.xml"/>
        <xi:include href=index.xml"/>
    </Book>
  • References to XML Schema components using the schemaLocation attribute and import and include elements, for example:

    <xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
        <xs:include schemaLocation="http://www.example.com/schema/schema1.xsd"/>
        <!-- ... -->
    </xs:schema>
  • Combining style sheets using import or include elements, the following is the syntax:
    <xsl:include href="include.xsl"/>
  • xml-stylesheet processing instruction: Used to include a stylesheet in an XML document, for example:
    <?xml-stylesheet href="include.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
  • XSLT document() function: Used to access nodes in an external XML document, for example:
    <xsl:variable name="dummy" select="document('DocumentFunc2.xml')"/>

Exponential Entity Expansion Attack

The exponential entity expansion attack, also know as the XML bomb or billion laughs attack, is a denial-of-service attack that involves XML parsers. The basic exploit is to have several layers of nested entities, each referring to a number of entities of the next layer. The following is a sample SOAP document that contains deeply nested entity references:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding ="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE bbb[
    <!ENTITY x100 "bbb">
    <!ENTITY  x99 "&x100;&x100;">
    <!ENTITY  x98 "&x99;&x99;">
    ...
    <!ENTITY   x2 "&x3;&x3;">
    <!ENTITY   x1 "&x2;&x2;">
]>
<SOAP-ENV:Envelope xmlns:SOAP-ENV=...>
    <SOAP-ENV:Body>
        <ns1:aaa xmlns:ns1="urn:aaa" SOAP-ENV:encodingStyle="...">
            <foobar xsi:type="xsd:string">&x1;</foobar>
        </ns1:aaa>
    </SOAP-ENV:Body>
</SOAP-ENV:Envelope>

When an XML parser encounters such a document, it will attempt to resolve the entity declaration by expanding the references. Because the references are nested, the expansion becomes exponential by the number of entities each refers to. Such a process can lead the XML parser to consume 100% of CPU time and a large amount of memory, and eventually the system runs out of memory.

Configuring JAXP for Secure XML Processing

JAXP consists of a set of APIs for parsing, serializing, transforming, querying, and traversing XML documents. See JAXP APIs.

JAXP adds a layer of security through factories and processors. You access APIs from JAXP through factories, which ensure that they are configured according to JAXP properties that you've set based on your security requirements. You configure and instantiate factories with their respective processors. See Factories and Processors.

You configure JAXP processors through JAXP properties. You can set JAXP properties through JAXP factories, as System properties, or in a JAXP configuration file. See Configuring with JAXP Properties.

The section Security-Related Properties describes properties you can set to configure JAXP for secure XML processing.

In addition, JAXP enables you to register custom resolvers and catalogs, which intercept references to external resources and resolve them with local ones. This eliminates the need to read and access external resources, which helps remove a source of potential risk. See Using Resolvers and Catalogs.

JAXP APIs

JAXP consists of a set of APIs built XML technologies and standards that are essential for XML processing. These include APIs for the following:

  • Parsing:
  • Serializing: StAX and Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations (XSLT) (javax.xml.transform package)
  • Transformation: XSLT
  • Querying and traversing XML documents: XML XPath Language (XPath) (javax.xml.xpath package)
  • Resolving external resources: XML Catalog API (javax.xml.catalog package)

Factories and Processors

Factories are the entry points of each JAXP API. They provide methods that enable applications to set JAXP properties programmatically before creating processors. Factories also support the JAXP lookup mechanism, which enable you to deploy applications with third-party implementations instead of JDK implementations.

Processors are aggregates of parsers (or readers), serializers (or writers), validators, and transformers that control and perform the processing in their respective areas. Factories configure and instantiate their corresponding factories. For example, you configure and instantiate the DocumentBuilder and SAXParser processors with the DocumentBuilderFactory and SAXParserFactory factories, respectively.

Configuring with JAXP Properties

You configure JAXP processors through JAXP properties. The following lists the ways you can set JAXP properties in order of precedence from highest to lowest. For example, if you set a JAXP property's value through a factory, then it will override any other value set in a different way.

Not all JAXP properties can be set by all of these ways. See the java.xml module summary to determine which method you can set a specific JAXP property.

If you haven't set a particular JAXP property with one of these ways, then the Java runtime uses the value specified in the default JAXP properties file. If a property doesn't exist in this file, then the Java runtime uses its default value. However, if Feature for Secure Processing (FSP) is turned on, then the Java runtime uses a more restrictive value, if applicable. See the table Implementation Specific Properties in the java.xml module summary for more information.

See the default JAXP configuration file <java-home>/conf/jaxp.properties for information about additional JAXP properties.

Setting JAXP Properties Through JAXP Factories

If you can modify your application's code, or you're creating a new application, then you can set JAXP properties through JAXP factories or a parser. Set these properties through the following interfaces:

    DocumentBuilderFactory dbf = DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();
    dbf.setAttribute(name, value);
 
    SAXParserFactory spf = SAXParserFactory.newInstance();
    SAXParser parser = spf.newSAXParser();
    parser.setProperty(name, value);

    SchemaFactory schemaFactory = SchemaFactory.newInstance(schemaLanguage);
    schemaFactory.setProperty(name, value);
 
    TransformerFactory factory = TransformerFactory.newInstance();
    factory.setAttribute(name, value);
 
    XMLInputFactory xif = XMLInputFactory.newInstance();
    xif.setProperty(name, value);

    XPathFactory xf = XPathFactory.newInstance();
    xf.setProperty(name, value);

The following is an example of setting processing limits:

    dbf.setAttribute("jdk.xml.entityExpansionLimit", "2000");
    dbf.setAttribute("jdk.xml.totalEntitySizeLimit", "100000");
    dbf.setAttribute("jdk.xml.maxParameterEntitySizeLimit", "10000"); 
    dbf.setAttribute("jdk.xml.maxElementDepth", "100");

    factory.setAttribute("jdk.xml.xpathTotalOpLimit", "1000"); 
    xf.setProperty("jdk.xml.xpathExprGrpLimit", "20");  

The following is an example of limiting a DOM parser to only local connections for external DTDs:

    dbf.setAttribute(XMLConstants.ACCESS_EXTERNAL_DTD, "file, jar:file");

If a parser module within the application handles untrusted sources, it may further restrict access. The following code overrides those in the JAXP configuration file and those specified by System properties and enables the XML processor to read local files only:

    DocumentBuilderFactory dbf =
    DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance();   
    dbf.setAttribute(XMLConstants.ACCESS_EXTERNAL_DTD, "file");
    // ...   
    SchemaFactory schemaFactory = SchemaFactory.newInstance(XMLConstants.W3C_XML_SCHEMA_NS_URI);   
    schemaFactory.setProperty(XMLConstants.ACCESS_EXTERNAL_DTD, "file");   
    schemaFactory.setProperty(XMLConstants.ACCESS_EXTERNAL_SCHEMA, "file");

As described in Configuring JAXP for Secure XML Processing, JAXP properties specified through JAXP factories have the narrowest scope, affecting only the processors created by the factories, and therefore override any default settings, System properties, and those in the JAXP configuration file. By setting JAXP properties through JAXP factories, you can ensure that your applications behave the same way regardless of which JDK release you're using or whether JAXP properties are set through other means.

Setting JAXP Properties as System Properties

System properties may be useful if you can't modify your application's code.

To set JAXP properties for an entire JDK invocation, set their corresponding System properties on the command line. For example, if your application, MyApp requires access to external DTDs and schemas, then set the System properties javax.xml.accessExternalDTD and javax.xml.accessExternalSchema as follows:

java -Djavax.xml.accessExternalDTD="file,http" -Djavax.xml.accessExternalSchema="file, http" MyApp

To set JAXP properties for only a portion of the application, set their corresponding System properties before the portion, and then clear them afterward. For example, if your application requires access to external DTDs and schemas, then add these lines to your application's initialization code block:

    System.setProperty("javax.xml.accessExternalDTD", "file, http");
    System.setProperty("javax.xml.accessExternalSchema", "file, http");

Then, once your application is done processing XML documents or before it exits, clear out the properties as follows:

    System.clearProperty("javax.xml.accessExternalDTD");   
    System.clearProperty("javax.xml.accessExternalSchema");

Note:

JAXP properties related to processing limits are specific to the JDK implementation while those related to external access restrictions are standard properties.
Setting JAXP Properties in a JAXP Configuration File

You can set JAXP properties in a JAXP configuration file, which is a java.util.Properties file. (See Properties in The Java Tutorials for more information about Java properties.)

Format of a JAXP Configuration File

A JAXP configuration file is a text file that contains names and values of JAXP properties, one name-value pair on each line. For example, the following JAXP configuration file sets the maxGeneralEntitySizeLimit processing limit property to 2000 and restricts access to the file and HTTP protocols for external references set by the stylesheet processing instruction, document function, and the import and include elements.

jdk.xml.maxGeneralEntitySizeLimit=2000
javax.xml.accessExternalStylesheet=file, http

If you don't want to allow any external connection by XML processors, you can set all access external restrictions to file only:

javax.xml.accessExternalDTD=file
javax.xml.accessExternalSchema=file
javax.xml.accessExternalStylesheet=file

If you want to prevent applications from accidentally reading external files through an XML processor, set the external access restrictions as in the following JAXP configuration file:

javax.xml.accessExternalDTD=""   
javax.xml.accessExternalSchema=""   
javax.xml.accessExternalStylesheet=""

Tip:

If you can specify a JAXP property as a System property, then you can specify the same JAXP property in a JAXP configuration file. See the java.xml module summary to determine where to set the value of a specific JAXP property.

Specifying a User-Defined JAXP Configuration File

To use your own JAXP configuration file, specify its name and location with the java.xml.config.file System property. If you specify a file path that's not absolute, then it's relative to the current working directory. If the value of this System property hasn't been specified when a JAXP factory is instantiated, then no further attempt will be made to check its value.

A user-defined JAXP configuration file is read only once when the JAXP implementation is initialized. This means that it won't work if you modify it after a JAXP factory has been instantiated.

Default JAXP Configuration File

The JDK contains a default JAXP configuration file <java_home>/conf/jaxp.properties. However, it's recommended that you create your own user-defined JAXP configuration file instead.

If you have specified a user-defined JAXP configuration file with the System property java.xml.config.file and that file exists, then any settings in it override those in the default JAXP configuration file.

Security-Related Properties

The following sections describe the properties you can set to configure JAXP for secure XML processing:

JAXP Properties for Processing Limits

XML processing can sometimes be a memory intensive operation. Applications, especially those that accept XML, XSD and XSL from untrusted sources, should take steps to guard against excessive memory consumption by using JAXP properties for processing limits.

Evaluate your application's requirements and operating environment to determine the acceptable processing limits for your system configurations and set these limits accordingly. For example, use size-related limits to prevent malformed XML sources from consuming large amounts of memory. Use the jdk.xml.entityExpansionLimit property to enable an application to control memory consumption under an acceptable level.

The JDK XML parsers observe processing limits by default. Both DOM and SAX parsers have Feature for Secure Processing (FSP) turned on by default and therefore turn on the limits. The StAX parser also observes processing limits by default even though it doesn't support FSP.

The following table describes the JAXP properties for processing limits supported in the JDK. The value for each of these processing limits is a positive integer. A value less than or equal to 0 indicates no limit. If the value is not an integer, a NumericFormatException is thrown. You can specify the values of these properties through its factory, as a System property, or in a JAXP configuration file.

See the table Implementation Specific Properties in the java.xml module summary for more information.

Table 12-1 JAXP Processing Limit Properties

Property Name Description Default Value Supported Factories
jdk.xml.elementAttributeLimit Limits the number of attributes an element can have. 10000

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.entityExpansionLimit Limits the number of entity expansions. 64000

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.entityReplacementLimit Limits the total number of nodes in all entity references. 3000000

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.maxElementDepth Limits the maximum element depth. 0

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.maxGeneralEntitySizeLimit Limits the maximum size of any general entities. 0

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.maxOccurLimit Limits the number of content model nodes that may be created when building a grammar for a W3C XML Schema that contains maxOccurs attributes with values other than "unbounded". 5000

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.maxParameterEntitySizeLimit Limits the maximum size of any parameter entities, including the result of nesting multiple parameter entities. 1000000

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.maxXMLNameLimit Limits the maximum size of XML names, including element name, attribute name and namespace prefix and URI. 1000

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.totalEntitySizeLimit Limits the total size of all entities that include general and parameter entities. The size is calculated as an aggregation of all entities. 5x10^7

DocumentBuilderFactory
SAXParserFactory
XMLInputFactory
SchemaFactory
TransformerFactory

jdk.xml.xpathExprGrpLimit Limits the number of groups an XPath expression can contain. 10

TransformerFactory
XPathFactory

jdk.xml.xpathExprOpLimit Limits the number of operators an XPath expression can contain. 100

TransformerFactory
XPathFactory

jdk.xml.xpathTotalOpLimit Limits the total number of XPath operators in an XSL Stylesheet. 100000 TransformerFactory
When to Use Processing Limits

When determining which processing limits to apply and what values to use, at the system level, consider the amount of memory available for applications and whether XML, XSD, or XSL sources from untrusted sources are accepted and processed. At the application level, consider whether certain constructs such as DTDs are used.

Memory Setting and Limits

XML processing can be very memory intensive. The amount of memory that should be allowed to be consumed depends on the requirements of the applications in a specific environment. Processing of malformed XML data must be prevented from consuming excessive memory.

The default limits are generally set to allow legitimate XML inputs for most applications with memory usage allowed for a small hardware system, such as a PC. It is recommended that the limits are set to the smallest possible values, so that any malformed input can be caught before it consumes large amounts of memory.

The limits are correlated, but not entirely redundant. You should set appropriate values for all of the limits: usually the limits should be set to a much smaller value than the default.

For example, ENTITY_EXPANSION_LIMIT and GENERAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT can be set to prevent excessive entity references. But when the exact combination of the expansion and entity sizes are unknown, TOTAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT can serve as a overall control. Similarly, while TOTAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT controls the total size of a replacement text, if the text is a very large chunk of XML, ENTITY_REPLACEMENT_LIMIT sets a restriction on the total number of nodes that can appear in the text and prevents overloading the system.

Estimating the Limits Using the getEntityCountInfo Property

To help you analyze what values you should set for the limits, a special property called http://www.oracle.com/xml/jaxp/properties/getEntityCountInfo is available. The following code snippet, from Processing Limit Samples in The Java Tutorials, shows an example of using the property:

    public static final String ORACLE_JAXP_PROPERTY_PREFIX =
        "http://www.oracle.com/xml/jaxp/properties/";
    // ...
    public static final String JDK_ENTITY_COUNT_INFO = 
        ORACLE_JAXP_PROPERTY_PREFIX + "getEntityCountInfo";
    // ...
    parser.setProperty(JDK_ENTITY_COUNT_INFO, "yes");

When you run the processing limit sample with the DTD in W3C MathML 3.0, it prints out the following table:

Table 12-2 Running JAXP Processing Limits Sample with DTD in W3C MatchML 3.0

Property Limit Total Size Size Entity Name
ENTITY_EXPANSION_LIMIT 64000 1417 0 null
MAX_OCCUR_NODE_LIMIT 5000 0 0 null
ELEMENT_ATTRIBUTE_LIMIT 10000 0 0 null
TOTAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT 50000000 55425 0 null
GENERAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT 0 0 0 null
PARAMETER_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT 1000000 0 7303 %MultiScriptExpression
MAX_ELEMENT_DEPTH_LIMIT 0 2 0 null
MAX_NAME_LIMIT 1000 13 13 null
ENTITY_REPLACEMENT_LIMIT 3000000 0 0 null

In this example, the total number of entity references, or the entity expansion, is 1417; the default limit is 64000. The total size of all entities is 55425; the default limit is 50000000. The biggest parameter entity is %MultiScriptExpression with a length of 7303 after all references are resolved; the default limit is 1000000.

If this is the largest file that the application is expected to process, it is recommended that the limits be set to smaller numbers. For example, 2000 for ENTITY_EXPANSION_LIMIT, 100000 for TOTAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT, and 10000 for PARAMETER_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT.

JAXP Properties for External Access Restrictions

JAXP properties for external access restrictions, along with their corresponding System properties, enable you to regulate external connections.

External access restrictions enable you to specify the type of external connections that can or cannot be permitted. The property values are a list of protocols. The JAXP processors check if a given external connection is permitted by matching the protocol with those in the list. Processors will attempt to establish the connection if it is on the list, or reject it if not. Use these JAXP properties along with custom resolvers and the Catalog API (see Using Resolvers and Catalogs) to reduce the risk of external connections by rejecting and resolving them with local resources.

Note:

Explicitly turning on Feature for Secure Processing (FSP) through the API, for example, factory.setFeature(XMLConstants.FEATURE_SECURE_PROCESSING, true), disables all external connections.

The external access restrictions JAXP properties are defined in javax.xml.XMLConstants as follows:

You can specify the values of these properties as a System property or in a JAXP configuration file.

Table 12-3 External Access Restrictions JAXP Properties

Property Description Default Value
javax.xml.accessExternalDTD Restricts access to external DTDs and external entity references to the protocols specified all, connection permitted to all protocols
javax.xml.accessExternalSchema Restricts access to the protocols specified for external references set by the schemaLocation attribute, import element, and include element all, connection permitted to all protocols
javax.xml.accessExternalStylesheet Restricts access to the protocols specified for external references set by the stylesheet processing instruction, document function, and import and include elements. all, connection permitted to all protocols

Values of External Access Restrictions JAXP Properties

All JAXP properties for external access restrictions have values of the same format:

  • Value: A list of protocols separated by comma. A protocol is the scheme portion of an URI, or in the case of the JAR protocol, jar plus the scheme portion separated by colon. A scheme is defined as:

    scheme = alpha *( alpha | digit | "+" | "-" | "." )

    where alpha = a-z and A-Z.

    The JAR protocol is defined as: jar[:scheme]

    Protocols are case-insensitive. Any whitespace characters as defined by Character.isSpaceChar in the value are ignored. Examples of protocols are file, http, and jar:file.

  • Default value: The default value is implementation specific. For the JDK, the default value is all, which grants permissions to all protocols.

  • Granting all access: The keyword all grants permission to all protocols. For example, specifying javax.xml.accessExternalDTD=all in the JAXP configuration file enables a system to work as before with no restrictions on accessing external DTDs and entity references.

  • Denying any access: An empty string ("") means that no permission is granted to any protocol. For example, specifying javax.xml.accessExternalDTD="" in the JAXP configuration file instructs JAXP processors to deny any external connections.

When to Use External Access Restrictions

The XML processors, by default, attempt to connect and read external resources that are referenced in XML sources. Note that this may potentially expose applications and systems to risks posed by external connections. It's therefore recommended that applications consider limiting external connections with external access restriction properties.

Internal applications and systems that handle only trusted XML documents may not need these restrictions. Applications and systems that rely on the Java Security Manager to regulate external connections may also have no need for them. However, keep in mind that external access restrictions are specific to the XML processors and are at the top layer of the process, which means that the processors check these restrictions before any connections are made. They may therefore serve as an additional and more direct protection against external connection risks.

WARNING:

The Security Manager and APIs related to it have been deprecated and are subject to removal in a future release. There is no replacement for the Security Manager. See JEP 411 for discussion and alternatives.

You can use external access restriction properties along with custom resolvers and catalogs (see Using Resolvers and Catalogs) to effectively manage external connections and reduce risks.

Even in a trusted environment with trusted sources, it's recommended that you use both external access restrictions and resolvers to minimize dependencies on external sources.

JAXP Property Precedence and External Access Restrictions

External access restrictions have no effect on the relevant constructs that they attempt to restrict in the following situations:

  • When there is a resolver and the source returned by the resolver is not null: This applies to entity resolvers that may be set on SAX and DOM parsers, XML resolvers on StAX parsers, LSResourceResolver on SchemaFactory, a Validator or ValidatorHandler, or URIResolver on a transformer.

  • When a schema is created explicitly by calling the newSchema method from SchemaFactory.

  • When external resources are not required: For example, the following features and properties are supported by the JDK and may be used to instruct the processor to not load the external DTD or resolve external entities:

    http://apache.org/xml/features/disallow-doctype-decl true
    http://apache.org/xml/features/nonvalidating/load-external-dtd false
    http://xml.org/sax/features/external-general-entities false
    http://xml.org/sax/features/external-parameter-entities false
JAXP Property for Extension Functions

Because Feature for Secure Processing (FSP) is off by default for Transformer and XPath, extension functions are allowed. For applications processing documents from untrusted sources, it is recommended to turn off the extension functions feature. There are two ways to do so:

  • By setting FSP to true, for example:

        TransformerFactory tf = TransformerFactory.newInstance();          
        tf.setFeature(XMLConstants.FEATURE_SECURE_PROCESSING, true);
  • By setting the jdk.xml.enableExtensionFunctions property to false through TransformerFactory or XPathFactory, as a System property, or in a JAXP configuration file.

In cases where extension functions are disabled as a result of installing a Java Security Manager, applications may also choose to re-enable the extension functions feature by setting the property jdk.xml.enableExtensionFunctions to true. The following table defines this property:

Table 12-4 The jdk.xml.enableExtensionFunctions Property

Property Description Default Value Supported Factories
jdk.xml.enableExtensionFunctions If true, then XSLT and XPath extension functions are allowed. If false, then extension functions aren't allowed. false

TransformerFactory
XPathFactory

WARNING:

The Security Manager and APIs related to it have been deprecated and are subject to removal in a future release. There is no replacement for the Security Manager. See JEP 411 for discussion and alternatives.
JAXP Property for Third-Party Parsers

The JDK will always use its system-default parser even when there's a third-party parser on the classpath. To override the JDK system-default parser, set the jdk.xml.overrideDefaultParser property to true through TransformerFactory, SchemaFactory, or XPathFactory, as a System property, or in a JAXP configuration file.

Table 12-5 The jdk.xml.enableExtensionFunctions Property

Property Description Default Value Supported Factories
jdk.xml.overrideDefaultParser If true, then it enables the use of a third-party's parser implementation to override the system-default parser for the JDK's Transformer, Validator, and XPath implementations. If false, then it disables the use of third-party parser implementations. false

TransformerFactory
SchemaFactory
XPathFactory

DTD Properties

If your applications don't require DTDs, then consider disabling DTD processing to safeguard against many common DTD-related attacks, including denial-of-service, XML external entity (XXE), and server-side request forgery (SSRF).

Disabling DTD Processing for SAX and DOM Parsers

To disable DTD processing for SAX and DOM parsers, set the feature http://apache.org/xml/features/disallow-doctype-decl to true through a factory. The following code snippet disables DTDs for SAX parsers. A fatal error is thrown if the incoming XML document contains a DOCTYPE declaration.

    final static String DISALLOW_DTD =
        "http://apache.org/xml/features/disallow-doctype-decl";
    // ...
    SAXParserFactory spf = SAXParserFactory.newInstance();      
    spf.setFeature(DISALLOW_DTD, true);

Disabling DTD processing for StAX Parsers

To disable DTD processing for StAX parsers, set the property SupportDTD to false with the the XMLInputFactory.setProperty method:

    XMLInputFactory xif = XMLInputFactory.newInstance();
    xif.setProperty(XMLInputFactory.SUPPORT_DTD, Boolean.FALSE);

Using Resolvers and Catalogs

You can register custom resolvers and catalogs on a JDK XML processor to intercept any references to external resources and resolve them with local ones. This feature eliminates the need to read and access external resources, thus helping to remove a source of potential risk.

Java XML Resolvers

The Java XML API supports various resolvers that you can register on JDK XML processors to resolve external resources. These resolvers includes entity resolvers for SAX and DOM parsers, XML resolvers for StAX parsers, LSResourceResolver for validation, and URIResolver for transformation.

Entity Resolvers for SAX and DOM

SAX defines an interface that DOM also supports, org.xml.sax.EntityResolver. It enables applications to step into the entity resolution process and perform entity resolution on their own terms. The following is the interface's definition:

package org.xml.sax;

public interface EntityResolver {
    public InputSource resolveEntity(String publicID, String systemID)
        throws SAXException;
}

You can then register an implementation of the interface on a SAX driver:

    EntityResolver resolver = ...;
    SAXParserFactory factory = SAXParserFactory.newInstance();
    factory.setNamespaceAware(true);
    XMLReader reader = factory.newSAXParser().getXMLReader();
    reader.setEntityResolver(resolver);

Alternatively, you can register it on a DOM builder:

    DocumentBuilder builder =
        DocumentBuilderFactory.newInstance().newDocumentBuilder();       
    docBuilder.setEntityResolver(resolver);
XMLResolver for StAX

StAX defines a javax.xml.stream.XMLResolver interface:

package javax.xml.stream;

public interface XMLResolver {
    public Object resolveEntity(
        String publicID, String systemID,
        String baseURI, String namespace)
        throws XMLStreamException;
}

You can register it on a StAX factory:

    XMLResolver resolver = ...;
    XMLInputFactory xif = XMLInputFactory.newInstance();
    xif.setProperty(XMLInputFactory.RESOLVER, resolver);
URIResolver for javax.xml.transform

The javax.xml.transform API supports custom resolution of external resources through the URIResolver interface:

package javax.xml.transform;

public interface URIResolver {
    public Source resolve(String href, String base)
        throws TransformerException;
}

You can register an implementation of URIResolver on a Transformer as follows:

    URIResolver resolver = ...;
    TransformerFactory tf = TransformerFactory.newInstance();
    Transformer t =
      tf.newTransformer(new StreamSource(
        new StringReader("xsl source")));
    t.setURIResolver(resolver);
LSResourceResolver for javax.xml.validation

The javax.xml.validation API supports Document Object Model Level 3 Load and Save (DOM LS) DOM through the LSResourceResolver interface:

package org.w3c.dom.ls;

public interface LSResourceResolver {
    public LSInput resolveResource(
        String type, String namespaceURI, String publicId,
        String systemId, String baseURI);
}

You can register an implementation of LSResourceResolver on a SchemaFactory as follows:

    SchemaFactory schemaFactory =
        SchemaFactory.newInstance("http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema");
    LSResourceResolver resolver = ...;
    schemaFactory.setResourceResolver(resolver);
The Catalog API

The XML Catalog API supports the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) XML Catalogs, OASIS Standard V1.1. This API is fully implemented by the JDK XML processors and easy to use. See XML Catalog API in Java Platform, Standard Edition Core Libraries.

Use the XML Catalog API to resolve external resources with the CatalogResolver interface and to enable catalogs on JDK XML processors.

Catalog Resolver

You can use a CatalogResolver as a custom resolver that substitutes external references with local resources configured as Catalog objects. You can register a CatalogResolver on factories or processors in place of EntityResolver, XMLResolver, URIResolver or LSResourceResolver as described in Java XML Resolvers. In the following code snippet, a CatalogResolver is registered as an EntityResolver on a SAXParserFactory:

    URI catalogUri = URI.create("file:///users/auser/catalog/catalog.xml")
    CatalogResolver cr =
        CatalogManager.catalogResolver(CatalogFeatures.defaults(), catalogUri);
    SAXParserFactory factory = SAXParserFactory.newInstance();
    factory.setNamespaceAware(true);
    XMLReader reader = factory.newSAXParser().getXMLReader();
    reader.setEntityResolver(cr);
Enable Catalogs on JDK XML Processors

The JDK XML processors implement the Catalog API as a native function. Therefore, there is no need to instantiate a CatalogResolver outside the processors. All you need to do is register the catalog files on the XML processors through the setProperty or setAttribute methods, through System properties, or in the JAXP configuration file. The XML processors then perform the mappings through the catalogs automatically. The following code snippet demonstrates how to register catalogs on StAX parsers through XMLInputFactory:

    String catalog = "file:///users/auser/catalog/catalog.xml";
    XMLInputFactory factory = XMLInputFactory.newInstance();
    factory.setProperty(CatalogFeatures.Feature.FILES.getPropertyName(), catalog);

For more examples, see XML Catalog API in Java Platform, Standard Edition Core Libraries.

Handling Errors from JAXP Properties

It is recommended that applications catch org.xml.sax.SAXNotRecognizedException when setting JAXP properties so that the applications will work properly on older releases that don't support them.

For example, the following method, isNewPropertySupported, from Processing Limit Samples in The Java Tutorials, detects if the sample is run with a version of the JDK that supports the JDK_GENERAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT property:

    public boolean isNewPropertySupported() {
        try {
            SAXParser parser = getSAXParser(false, false, false);
            parser.setProperty(JDK_GENERAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT, "10000");
        } catch (ParserConfigurationException ex) {
            fail(ex.getMessage());
        } catch (SAXException ex) {
            String err = ex.getMessage();
            if (err.indexOf("Property '" + JDK_GENERAL_ENTITY_SIZE_LIMIT +
                                           "' is not recognized.") > -1) {
                // expected before this patch
                debugPrint("New limit properties not supported. Samples not run.");
                return false;
            }
        }
        return true;
    }

When input files contain constructs that cause an over-the-limit exception, applications may check the error code to determine the nature of the failure. The following error codes are defined for processing limits:

  • EntityExpansionLimit: JAXP00010001
  • ElementAttributeLimit: JAXP00010002
  • MaxEntitySizeLimit: JAXP00010003
  • TotalEntitySizeLimit: JAXP00010004
  • MaxXMLNameLimit: JAXP00010005
  • maxElementDepth: JAXP00010006
  • EntityReplacementLimit: JAXP00010007

The error code has the following format:

"JAXP" + components (two digits) + error category (two digits) + sequence number

The code JAXP00010001, therefore, represents the JAXP base parser security limit EntityExpansionLimit.

If access to external resources is denied due to the restrictions set by external access restrictions, then an exception will be thrown with an error in the following format:

[type of construct]: Failed to read [type of construct]
    "[name of the external resource]", because "[type of restriction]"
    access is not allowed due to restriction set by the
    [property name] property.

For example, suppose the following:

  • The ACCESS_EXTERNAL_DTD JAXP property is set as follows:

    parser.setProperty(
        "http://javax.xml.XMLConstants/property/accessExternalDTD", "file");
  • Your application tries to fetch an external DTD with the HTTP protocol.

  • The parser parsed an XML file that contains an external reference to http://www.example.com/dtd/properties.dtd.

The error message would look like the following:

External DTD: Failed to read external DTD
    "http://www.example.com/dtd/properties.dtd", because "http"
    access is not allowed due to restriction set by the
    accessExternalDTD property.

General Recommendations for JAXP Security

The following are general recommendations for configuring JAXP properties and features to help secure your applications and systems:

  • Create and specify a user-defined JAXP configuration file with property settings tailored to your environment; see Setting JAXP Properties in a JAXP Configuration File. Afterward, adjust individual features and properties in accordance with specific requirements of the applications through factory settings or System properties.
  • For processing limits, adjust them so that they are just large enough to accommodate the maximum amount your applications require.
  • For external access restrictions, reduce or eliminate your applications' reliance on external resources, including the use of resolvers, then tighten these restrictions.
  • Set up a local catalog and enable the Catalog API on all XML processors to further reduce your applications' reliance on external resources.

Relationship with Security Manager

WARNING:

The Security Manager and APIs related to it have been deprecated and are subject to removal in a future release. There is no replacement for the Security Manager. See JEP 411 for discussion and alternatives.

JAXP properties are checked first before a connection is attempted, whether or not a SecurityManager is present. This means that a connection may be blocked even if it is granted permission by the SecurityManager. For example, if the JAXP properties are set to disallow the HTTP protocol, then they will effectively block any connection attempt even when an application has a SocketPermission.

For the purpose of restricting connections, the SecurityManager can be viewed as being at a lower level. Permissions are checked after JAXP properties are evaluated. For example, if an application does not have a SocketPermission, then a SecurityException will be thrown even if JAXP properties are set to allow HTTP connections.

When a SecurityManager is present, Feature for Secure Processing (FSP) is set to true. This behavior does not turn on any external access restrictions.

Appendix A: Glossary of Java API for XML Processing Terms and Definitions

Table 12-6 JAXP Glossary

Term Definition
JAXP Java API for XML Processing
Java SE XML API APIs defined in the JAXP JSR and integrated into Java SE
Java XML API Equivalent term for Java SE XML API
Java XML Features and Properties XML-related features and properties defined by the Java SE specification
java.xml The java.xml module
JDK XML The JDK implementation of the Java XML API
JDK XML Parsers The JDK implementation of the XML parsers
JDK XML Properties The JDK Implementation-only properties
FSP FEATURE_SECURE_PROCESSING

Appendix B: Java and JDK XML Features and Properties Naming Convention

Java and JDK XML features and properties are defined in the javax.xml.XMLConstants class. The features have a prefix http://javax.xml.XMLConstants/feature; the properties, http://javax.xml.XMLConstants/property. If there is a corresponding System property, its prefix is javax.xml.

The JDK XML properties are JDK implementation-only properties. The prefix of the properties is http://www.oracle.com for JDK 8 and earlier and jdk.xml for JDK 9 and later. The following table summarizes this naming convention:

Table 12-7 Java and JDK XML Features and Properties Naming Convention

Scope API Property Prefix System Property Prefix Java SE and JDK Version
Java SE

http://javax.xml.XMLConstants/feature

http://javax.xml.XMLConstants/property

javax.xml Since 1.4
JDK http://www.oracle.com/xml/jaxp/properties jdk.xml Since 7
JDK jdk.xml jdk.xml Since 9