APPSEC-SHADOW-API
API · Improper inventory management (shadow/zombie APIs)
Résumé
Improper Inventory Management is the failure to maintain a complete, current inventory of deployed API hosts, versions and endpoints, leaving undocumented 'shadow' APIs and deprecated-but-still-running 'zombie' APIs reachable (OWASP API9:2023). The mechanism is divergence between what is documented or patched and what is actually exposed: an old /v1 left online after /v2 ships, a debug or staging host, or an unretired beta keeps serving traffic while lacking the authentication, authorization, rate limiting and security fixes of the current version, so an attacker who enumerates version paths or subdomains by guessing, fuzzing or brute force targets the weakest exposed surface. Salt Security research indicates a large share of deployed APIs do not match their documentation. The canonical case is the September 2022 Optus breach in Australia: an unauthenticated API endpoint exposed on a secondary/older domain, where an access-control fix applied to the main site was never propagated, remained reachable and leaked PII for roughly 9.5 million customers.
Comment l’éviter dans votre code
- Maintain an automated, continuously discovered inventory of all API hosts and versions.
- Decommission deprecated endpoints fully; return 410 Gone and remove backend routes.
- Block non-production hosts (staging/debug/beta) from internet egress.
- Propagate auth, rate-limit and patch changes across every version and subdomain.
- Run automated API discovery scans to detect shadow and zombie endpoints.
Références
Vulnérabilités liées
Tout AppSec →- MEDIUMAPPSEC-SOURCEMAP-DISCLOSURE
A source map (.map) is a build artifact that maps minified bundle code back to the original source, and bundlers embed the full original code in its sourcesContent field. Left reachable in production or shipped inside a package, it hands anyone the unminified codebase, internal comments, hidden API endpoints, auth logic, and any secrets that were compiled in. Discovery is trivial: open DevTools and read the Sources tab, request the bundle's .map URL directly, or Google-dork for ext:map intext:webpack, then reconstruct the whole project with a tool like unwebpack-sourcemap. Passive scanners such as Acunetix and Burp already flag it as a standalone finding. It is usually rated medium on its own but escalates fast when the recovered source contains live credentials or undocumented endpoints; exposed Webpack source maps have leaked hardcoded Stripe secret keys that enabled unauthorized payments. High-profile cases include Apple's App Store web front-end in November 2025, shipped with source maps still enabled, and Anthropic's Claude Code, whose entire TypeScript source leaked via a source map left in a published npm package in March 2026.
- HIGHAPPSEC-GRAPHQL-ABUSE
GraphQL servers expose three abuse primitives stemming from the query language's flexibility. Leaving introspection enabled lets any client send a __schema query and recover the entire type system, including internal admin mutations and deprecated fields, providing a map of the attack surface (OWASP API8/API2). Because per-request rate limiters count one HTTP request regardless of operations inside it, an attacker can use field aliasing (e.g. attempt0:login(...), attempt1:login(...)) or array batching to pack dozens of login or verifyOtp mutations into a single request, brute-forcing credentials or short OTP/2FA codes while the rate limiter sees only one request; this aliasing-bypass technique is reproduced in the PortSwigger Web Security Academy 'Bypassing GraphQL brute force protections' lab and Wallarm's GraphQL batching research. Deeply nested or recursive queries cause an exponential explosion of resolver and database calls, exhausting CPU, memory and connection pools for denial of service, the core of OWASP API4:2023 Unrestricted Resource Consumption. HackerOne has disclosed a real GraphQL authentication-bypass finding, and Apollo Server v4 disabled array batching by default in response to these attacks.
- HIGHAPPSEC-RACE-TOCTOU
A business-logic race condition exploits the brief window between a check on shared state and the act that mutates it (time-of-check to time-of-use), letting concurrent requests each pass the same check before any of them commits, so a limited resource is consumed more times than allowed (OWASP API6:2023, Unrestricted Access to Sensitive Business Flows). The vulnerable code is any check-then-act sequence on shared state without atomic database-level locking: validate a single-use coupon or gift card then redeem it, check a balance then withdraw or transfer, or verify a one-per-user limit then grant. Firing many near-simultaneous requests collapses the state machine and redeems one coupon multiple times, withdraws the same balance twice, or bypasses a per-user cap. James Kettle's 'Smashing the state machine: the true potential of web race conditions' (PortSwigger, published 9 August 2023, presented at Black Hat USA and DEF CON 31) introduced the single-packet attack, which withholds the final HTTP/2 frames of 20-30 requests and releases them in one TCP packet, neutralizing network jitter and squeezing arrivals into a sub-millisecond window so the race becomes reliably exploitable.
- CRITICALAPPSEC-NOAUTH-2023
nOAuth, disclosed by Descope's security team on June 20, 2023 (reported to Microsoft on April 11, 2023), is a cross-tenant account-takeover class in multi-tenant Microsoft Entra ID (Azure AD) OAuth applications, mapping to OWASP API2:2023 Broken Authentication. The flaw existed because Entra ID emitted an 'email' claim in the OIDC token that was both mutable and unverified, while applications used that email rather than the immutable 'sub'/'oid' claim to identify and link the signed-in user. An attacker who controlled their own Entra tenant could set the email attribute of an attacker account to a victim's email address, then use 'Log in with Microsoft' against any vulnerable app; the app merged accounts by the spoofed email and granted full control of the victim's account, requiring no interaction from the victim. Descope confirmed real exposure in major SaaS apps including a design platform with millions of monthly users. Microsoft mitigated by no longer emitting unverified email claims by default for app registrations created after June 2023 and added the xms_edov claim and a RemoveUnverifiedEmailClaim flag.
- HIGHAPPSEC-TMOBILE-API-2023
On January 19, 2023 T-Mobile disclosed in an SEC 8-K filing that an attacker had abused a single API to obtain data on roughly 37 million current postpaid and prepaid customer accounts, with access beginning on or around November 25, 2022 and continuing about six weeks until detection on January 5, 2023 and cutoff a day later. The exposed fields included names, billing addresses, emails, phone numbers, dates of birth, account numbers, and plan features; T-Mobile stated no passwords, payment card data, Social Security numbers, or government IDs were taken. T-Mobile only stated that a bad actor obtained data through a single API without authorization, without publishing the low-level mechanism; the security-community consensus reconstruction is Broken Object Level Authorization (BOLA/IDOR), where the API returned per-customer records without verifying the caller was authorized for that specific object, letting the attacker walk through customer identifiers at scale. The mechanism maps to BOLA via a user-controlled key, or, if the endpoint lacked authorization entirely, to missing authorization.
- CRITICALAPPSEC-AUTO-API-2023
On January 3, 2023 Sam Curry and a team of researchers published Web Hackers vs. The Auto Industry, documenting critical API authorization flaws across about 16 automakers including Kia, Hyundai, Honda, Nissan, Acura, Infiniti, BMW, Ferrari, Porsche, Rolls Royce and Mercedes-Benz, plus telematics providers such as SiriusXM Connected Vehicle Services and Spireon. The connected-car APIs treated the VIN, which is visible through the windshield and effectively public, as an object identifier without verifying the caller actually owned the vehicle, a Broken Object Level Authorization flaw. Using only a target VIN, researchers could enroll a vehicle to an attacker account or bypass ownership checks and then remotely unlock, start, locate, honk, and track vehicles, achieving full account takeover. Several manufacturers also had Broken Function Level Authorization and misconfigured SSO/OTP endpoints exposing internal dealer portals. The work maps to OWASP API1:2023 (BOLA) and API5:2023 (BFLA).