The Nginx HMAC secure link module enhances the security and functionality of the standard secure link module.
Secure token is created using secure HMAC construction with an arbitrary hash algorithm supported by OpenSSL, e.g.:
blake2b512
, blake2s256
, gost
, md4
, md5
, mdc2
, rmd160
, sha1
, sha224
, sha256
,
sha3-224
, sha3-256
, sha3-384
, sha3-512
, sha384
, sha512
, sha512-224
, sha512-256
, shake128
, shake256
, sm3
.
Furthermore, secure token is created as described in RFC2104, that is,
H(secret_key XOR opad,H(secret_key XOR ipad, message))
instead of a simple MD5(secret_key,message, expire)
.
You'll need to re-compile Nginx from source to include this module.
Modify your compile of Nginx by adding the following directive (modified to suit your path of course):
Static module (built-in nginx binary)
./configure --add-module=/absolute/path/to/ngx_http_hmac_secure_link_module
Dynamic nginx module ngx_http_hmac_secure_link_module.so
module
./configure --with-compat --add-dynamic-module=/absolute/path/to/ngx_http_hmac_secure_link_module
Build Nginx
make
make install
Message to be hashed is defined by secure_link_hmac_message
, secret_key
is given by secure_link_hmac_secret
, and hashing algorithm H is defined by secure_link_hmac_algorithm
.
For improved security the timestamp in ISO 8601 the format 2017-12-08T07:54:59+00:00
(one possibility according to ISO 8601) or as Unix Timestamp
should be appended to the message to be hashed.
It is possible to create links with limited lifetime. This is defined by an optional parameter. If the expiration period is zero or it is not specified, a link has the unlimited lifetime.
Configuration example for server side.
location ^~ /files/ {
# Variable to be passed are secure token, timestamp, expiration period (optional)
secure_link_hmac "$arg_st,$arg_ts,$arg_e";
# Secret key
secure_link_hmac_secret "my_secret_key";
# Message to be verified
secure_link_hmac_message "$uri|$arg_ts|$arg_e";
# Cryptographic hash function to be used
secure_link_hmac_algorithm sha256;
# In production environment, we should not reveal to potential attacker
# why hmac authentication has failed
# - If the hash is incorrect then $secure_link_hmac is a NULL string.
# - If the hash is correct but the link has already expired then $secure_link_hmac is "0".
# - If the hash is correct and the link has not expired then $secure_link_hmac is "1".
if ($secure_link_hmac != "1") {
return 404;
}
rewrite ^/files/(.*)$ /files/$1 break;
}
Application side should use a standard hash_hmac function to generate hash, which then needs to be base64url encoded. Example in Perl below.
Variable $data contains secure token, timestamp in ISO 8601 format, and expiration period in seconds
perl_set $secure_token '
sub {
use Digest::SHA qw(hmac_sha256_base64);
use POSIX qw(strftime);
my $now = time();
my $key = "my_very_secret_key";
my $expire = 60;
my $tz = strftime("%z", localtime($now));
$tz =~ s/(\d{2})(\d{2})/$1:$2/;
my $timestamp = strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S", localtime($now)) . $tz;
my $r = shift;
my $data = $r->uri;
my $digest = hmac_sha256_base64($data . "|" . $timestamp . "|" . $expire, $key);
$digest =~ tr(+/)(-_);
$data = "st=" . $digest . "&ts=" . $timestamp . "&e=" . $expire;
return $data;
}
';
A similar function in PHP
$secret = 'my_very_secret_key';
$expire = 60;
$algo = 'sha256';
$timestamp = date('c');
$unixtimestamp = time();
$stringtosign = "/files/top_secret.pdf|{$unixtimestamp}|{$expire}";
$hashmac = base64_encode(hash_hmac($algo, $stringtosign, $secret, true));
$hashmac = strtr($hashmac, '+/', '-_');
$hashmac = str_replace('=', '', $hashmac);
$host = $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'];
$loc = "https://{$host}/files/top_secret.pdf?st={$hashmac}&ts={$unixtimestamp}&e={$expire}";
Using Unix timestamp in Node.js
const crypto = require("crypto");
const secret = 'my_very_secret_key';
const expire = 60;
const unixTimestamp = Math.round(Date.now() / 1000.);
const stringToSign = `/files/top_secret.pdf|${unixTimestamp}|${expire}`;
const hashmac = crypto.createHmac('sha256', secret).update(stringToSign).digest('base64')
.replace(/=/g, '')
.replace(/\+/g, '-')
.replace(/\//g, '_');
const loc = `https://host/files/top_secret.pdf?st=${hashmac}&ts=${unixTimestamp}&e=${expire}`;
Bash version
#!/bin/bash
SECRET="my_super_secret"
TIME_STAMP="$(date -d "today + 0 minutes" +%s)";
EXPIRES="3600"; # seconds
URL="/file/my_secret_file.txt"
ST="$URL|$TIME_STAMP|$EXPIRES"
TOKEN="$(echo -n $ST | openssl dgst -sha256 -hmac $SECRET -binary | openssl base64 | tr +/ -_ | tr -d =)"
echo "http://127.0.0.1$URL?st=$TOKEN&ts=$TIME_STAMP&e=$EXPIRES"
It is also possible to use this module with a Nginx acting as proxy server.
The string to be signed is defined in secure_link_hmac_message
, the secure_link_hmac_token
variable contains then a secure token to be passed to backend server.
location ^~ /backend_location/ {
set $expire 60;
secure_link_hmac_message "$uri|$time_iso8601|$expire";
secure_link_hmac_secret "my_very_secret_key";
secure_link_hmac_algorithm sha256;
proxy_pass "http://backend_server$uri?st=$secure_link_hmac_token&ts=$time_iso8601&e=$expire";
}
$secure_link_hmac
-$secure_link_hmac_token
-$secure_link_hmac_expires
- The lifetime of a link passed in a request.
Git source repositories: http://github.com/nginx-modules/ngx_http_hmac_secure_link_module/tree/master
Please feel free to fork the project at GitHub and submit pull requests or patches.