CWE-651

Exposure of WSDL File Containing Sensitive Information
AI Translation Available

The Web services architecture may require exposing a Web Service Definition Language (WSDL) file that contains information on the publicly accessible services and how callers of these services should interact with them (e.g. what parameters they expect and what types they return).

Status
incomplete
Abstraction
variant
Web Server

An information exposure may occur if any of the following apply:

- The WSDL file is accessible to a wider audience than intended.

- The WSDL file contains information on the methods/services that should not be publicly accessible or information about deprecated methods. This problem is made more likely due to the WSDL often being automatically generated from the code.

- Information in the WSDL file helps guess names/locations of methods/resources that should not be publicly accessible.

Common Consequences

confidentiality
Impacts
read application data

Potential Mitigations

Phases:
architecture and design
Descriptions:
• Make sure that WSDL does not describe methods that should not be publicly accessible. Make sure to protect service methods that should not be publicly accessible with access controls.
• Limit access to the WSDL file as much as possible. If services are provided only to a limited number of entities, it may be better to provide WSDL privately to each of these entities than to publish WSDL publicly.
• Do not use method names in WSDL that might help an adversary guess names of private methods/resources used by the service.