Spectra Assure
Community
warningRisk: Hardening
Scanned: 8 days ago

dotnet-sos

latest
Top 10k
Diagnostic SOS installer
License: Permissive (MIT)
Published: about 2 months ago



SAFE Assessment

Compliance

Licenses
No license compliance issues
Secrets
No sensitive information found

Security

Vulnerabilities
No known vulnerabilities detected
Hardening
8 reduced effectiveness mitigations

Threats

Tampering
No evidence of software tampering
Malware
No evidence of malware inclusion

Popularity

6.59M
Total Downloads
Contributors
Declared Dependencies
0
Dependents

Top issues

Problem

Security Development Lifecycle (SDL) is a group of enhanced compile-time checks that report common coding mistakes as errors. These checks prevent the use of hard-to-secure string manipulation functions. They enforce static memory access checks, and allow only the use of range-verified string parsing functions. While these checks do not prevent every memory corruption issue by themselves, they do help reduce the likelihood.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
1 packages
found in
Top 1k
23 packages
found in
Top 10k
4.71k packages
in community

Next steps

It's highly recommended to enable these checks for all software components used at security boundaries, or those that process user controlled inputs.
To enable these checks, refer to your programming language toolchain documentation.
In Microsoft VisualStudio, you can enable this feature by setting the compiler option /SDL to ON.

Problem

Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) are structured addresses that point to locations and assets on the internet. URLs allow software developers to build complex applications that exchange data with servers that can be hosted in multiple geographical regions. URLs can commonly be found embedded in documentation, configuration files, source code and compiled binaries. One or more embedded URLs were discovered to link to raw files hosted on GitHub. Attackers often abuse popular web services to host malicious payloads. Since code-sharing services URLs are typically allowed by security solutions, using them for payload delivery increases the odds that the malicious code will reach the user. While the presence of code-sharing service locations does not imply malicious intent, all of their uses in a software package should be documented and approved. An increasing number of software supply chain attacks in the open source space leverages the GitHub service to deliver malicious payloads.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
22 packages
found in
Top 1k
142 packages
found in
Top 10k
59.57k packages
in community

Next steps

Investigate reported detections.
If the software should not include these network references, investigate your build and release environment for software supply chain compromise.
You should delay the software release until the investigation is completed, or until the issue is risk accepted.
Consider an alternative delivery mechanism for software packages.

Problem

Security Development Lifecycle (SDL) is a group of enhanced compile-time checks that report common coding mistakes as errors, preventing them from reaching production. These checks minimize the number of security issues by enforcing strict memory access checks. They also prevent the use of hard-to-secure string and memory manipulation functions. To prove the binary has been compiled with these checks enabled, the compiler emits a special debug object. Removing the debug table eliminates this proof. Therefore, this check only applies to binaries that still have their debug tables.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
3 packages
found in
Top 1k
47 packages
found in
Top 10k
13.12k packages
in community

Next steps

You should keep the debug table to prove that the SDL process has been followed.
To enable these checks, refer to your programming language toolchain documentation.
In Microsoft VisualStudio, you can enable this feature by setting the compiler option /SDL to ON.

Problem

Stack canary is a special value written onto the stack that allows the operating system to detect and terminate the program if a stack overrun occurs. Older compilers might generate stack cookies in a way that makes it possible to determine their value, allowing the attacker to render the mitigation ineffective.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
13 packages
found in
Top 10k
2.59k packages
in community

Next steps

In GCC, you can enable the stack canary with -fstack-protector-strong or -fstack-protector-all flag, but it may also be enabled by default in more recent versions of the compiler.
Consider upgrading your compiler.

Problem

Software components contain executable code that performs actions implemented during its development. These actions are called behaviors. In the analysis report, behaviors are presented as human-readable descriptions that best match the underlying code intent. While most behaviors are benign, some are commonly abused by malicious software with the intent to cause harm. When a software package shares behavior traits with malicious software, it may become flagged by security solutions. Any detection from security solutions can cause friction for the end-users during software deployment. While the behavior is likely intended by the developer, there is a small chance this detection is true positive, and an early indication of a software supply chain attack.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
4 packages
found in
Top 10k
1.09k packages
in community

Next steps

Investigate reported detections.
If the software intent does not relate to the reported behavior, investigate your build and release environment for software supply chain compromise.
You should delay the software release until the investigation is completed, or until the issue is risk accepted.
Consider rewriting the flagged code without using the marked behaviors.

Top behaviors

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior commonly used by malicious software (Important)
Behavior uncommon for this community (Uncommon)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
6 packages
found in
Top 10k
1.23k packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior often found in this community (Common)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
4 packages
found in
Top 1k
70 packages
found in
Top 10k
23.06k packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior uncommon for this community (Uncommon)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
1 packages
found in
Top 1k
27 packages
found in
Top 10k
8.91k packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior uncommon for this community (Uncommon)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
1 packages
found in
Top 1k
23 packages
found in
Top 10k
3.08k packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior uncommon for this community (Uncommon)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
6 packages
found in
Top 10k
1.1k packages
in community

Top vulnerabilities

No vulnerabilities found.