Changes for page What an XWiki Security Review Should Actually Include
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,350 @@ 1 +{{velocity}} 2 +#set ($discard = $xwiki.ssx.use('PublicWebSite.WebHome')) 3 +{{html clean="false"}} 4 + 5 + <section class="resource-header" aria-labelledby="hero-title"> 6 + <div class="container"> 7 + <div class="text-center"> 8 + <div class="hero-kicker"> 9 + <i class="fa fa-shield" aria-hidden="true"></i> 10 + XWiki security review 11 + </div> 12 + </div> 13 + 14 + <h1 id="hero-title">What an XWiki security review should actually include</h1> 15 + 16 + <p class="resource-summary"> 17 + A working XWiki instance is not automatically a secure one. A proper review should look at versions, 18 + access rights, authentication, extensions, custom code, infrastructure and operational practices. 19 + </p> 20 + </div> 21 + </section> 22 + 23 + <section class="resource-page"> 24 + <div class="container"> 25 + <div class="resource-layout"> 26 + 27 + <aside class="resource-sidebar" aria-label="Page summary"> 28 + <h4>In this guide</h4> 29 + <ul> 30 + <li><a href="#why-it-matters">Why it matters</a></li> 31 + <li><a href="#what-to-review">What to review</a></li> 32 + <li><a href="#security-checklist">Security checklist</a></li> 33 + <li><a href="#review-output">What the review should produce</a></li> 34 + <li><a href="#when-to-review">When to run a review</a></li> 35 + <li><a href="#security-review-faq">FAQ</a></li> 36 + </ul> 37 + </aside> 38 + 39 + <article class="resource-content"> 40 + 41 + <p> 42 + Many XWiki instances continue to work well from a user perspective while slowly accumulating security 43 + and governance risks. Users can still log in, search, edit pages and access documents, but that does not 44 + always mean the instance is properly secured or easy to maintain. 45 + </p> 46 + 47 + <p> 48 + Security risks are often hidden in less visible areas: outdated versions, inherited permissions, 49 + forgotten administrator accounts, overly powerful rights, old extensions, undocumented scripts, 50 + weak fallback access or backup assumptions that were never tested. 51 + </p> 52 + 53 + <div class="resource-note"> 54 + <p> 55 + <strong>In practice:</strong> an XWiki security review should evaluate the XWiki version, 56 + access rights, authentication setup, installed extensions, custom code, infrastructure, 57 + backups, restore expectations and the operational practices used to maintain the instance. 58 + </p> 59 + </div> 60 + 61 + <p> 62 + An XWiki security review is a structured assessment of the wiki platform, its configuration, 63 + access model, authentication mechanisms, extensions, customizations and operational setup. 64 + The goal is to identify risks, maintenance weaknesses and upgrade blockers before they affect 65 + users or business-critical content. 66 + </p> 67 + 68 + <div class="resource-note"> 69 + <p> 70 + <strong>The main point:</strong> an XWiki security review should not only check whether the application 71 + is online. It should evaluate the platform, the access model and the operational practices around it. 72 + </p> 73 + </div> 74 + 75 + <h2 id="why-it-matters">Why an XWiki security review matters</h2> 76 + 77 + <p> 78 + XWiki is often used as an internal knowledge base, intranet, documentation platform or controlled 79 + document system. In these cases, the platform may contain sensitive procedures, internal decisions, 80 + customer information, technical documentation, compliance records or business-critical workflows. 81 + </p> 82 + 83 + <p> 84 + The more important the content becomes, the more important it is to understand who can access it, who can 85 + change it, which customizations influence it and how safely the instance can be upgraded or restored. 86 + </p> 87 + 88 + <p> 89 + A security review helps identify risks before they become incidents, upgrade blockers or maintenance 90 + surprises. It also gives administrators a clearer view of the current state of the instance. 91 + </p> 92 + 93 + <h2 id="what-to-review">What should be reviewed</h2> 94 + 95 + <h3>1. Version and upgrade status</h3> 96 + <p> 97 + The current XWiki version should be reviewed together with the target upgrade path, installed extensions 98 + and infrastructure dependencies. An outdated instance is not only a maintenance concern. It can also mean 99 + that security fixes, compatibility improvements and platform hardening are missing. 100 + </p> 101 + 102 + <p> 103 + The review should also check whether upgrades are performed regularly or only when something breaks. 104 + A repeatable upgrade process is part of the security posture of a long-running XWiki instance. 105 + </p> 106 + 107 + <p> 108 + For more details on upgrade planning, see 109 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.why-upgrade-xwiki')">why regular XWiki upgrades matter</a>. 110 + </p> 111 + 112 + <h3>2. Access rights and permission model</h3> 113 + <p> 114 + XWiki has a powerful access-rights system, but this flexibility needs a clear governance model. A review 115 + should check who has administration rights, who has script or programming rights, whether rights are 116 + assigned through groups, and whether page-level exceptions are still understandable. 117 + </p> 118 + 119 + <p> 120 + It is also important to review inherited rights, public areas, restricted spaces, old groups, inactive 121 + users and sensitive pages. Many permission problems do not come from one obvious mistake, but from years 122 + of small exceptions that nobody reviewed later. 123 + </p> 124 + 125 + <p> 126 + For a deeper look at this topic, see <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.xwiki-access-rights-governance')">why XWiki access rights need a clear governance model</a>. 127 + </p> 128 + 129 + <h3>3. Authentication and identity management</h3> 130 + <p> 131 + Authentication should be reviewed beyond the simple question of whether users can log in. LDAP, Active 132 + Directory, OIDC, SAML, SSO and MFA setups all need to be checked together with group synchronization, 133 + fallback login options, local administrator accounts and recovery procedures. 134 + </p> 135 + 136 + <p> 137 + SSO is useful, but it does not automatically guarantee a clean access model. Authentication confirms who 138 + the user is. Authorization still depends on how XWiki groups and rights are configured. 139 + </p> 140 + 141 + <h3>4. Extensions and custom code</h3> 142 + <p> 143 + Installed extensions, custom applications, Velocity scripts, Groovy scripts, macros, sheets, templates, 144 + UI extensions and Java components are all part of the security and maintenance surface of the instance. 145 + </p> 146 + 147 + <p> 148 + A review should identify what is installed, what is customized, what is still used, what is documented and 149 + what needs special validation during upgrades. Custom code should be tracked, explained and tested, not 150 + discovered accidentally during an incident or a production upgrade. 151 + </p> 152 + 153 + <p> 154 + Customizations should also be reviewed from a maintenance perspective. See 155 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.xwiki-custom-development')">how to keep XWiki custom development maintainable across upgrades</a>. 156 + </p> 157 + 158 + <h3>5. Configuration, infrastructure and operations</h3> 159 + <p> 160 + The review should also cover the environment around XWiki: HTTPS and reverse proxy configuration, database 161 + access, filesystem and attachment storage, mail configuration, PDF export services, logs, monitoring, 162 + server access and separation between production and staging. 163 + </p> 164 + 165 + <p> 166 + Backups should be reviewed together with restore expectations. A backup strategy is incomplete if nobody 167 + knows what is included, how long recovery would take or whether the restore process has ever been tested. 168 + </p> 169 + 170 + <div class="resource-inline-cta"> 171 + <p> 172 + <strong>Need a clearer view of your XWiki security posture?</strong> 173 + A structured review can check versions, access rights, authentication, 174 + extensions, custom code, infrastructure, backups and operational practices. 175 + </p> 176 + <a class="btn btn-secondary" href="$xwiki.getURL('contact.WebHome')">Request a security review</a> 177 + </div> 178 + 179 + <h2 id="security-checklist">XWiki security review checklist</h2> 180 + 181 + <p> 182 + A practical XWiki security review should cover both application-level and operational risks. 183 + The following checklist can be used as a starting point when reviewing a production instance. 184 + </p> 185 + 186 + <ul class="resource-checklist"> 187 + <li>Check the current XWiki version, target version and upgrade path.</li> 188 + <li>Review installed extensions, outdated components and unsupported customizations.</li> 189 + <li>Audit administrator, script and programming rights.</li> 190 + <li>Review groups, inherited permissions and page-level exceptions.</li> 191 + <li>Validate authentication, SSO, MFA, fallback access and administrator recovery options.</li> 192 + <li>Identify custom scripts, templates, macros, UI extensions and Java components.</li> 193 + <li>Review public, internal and restricted areas.</li> 194 + <li>Check infrastructure, HTTPS, reverse proxy, database, filesystem and mail configuration.</li> 195 + <li>Confirm backup coverage, restore expectations and rollback procedures.</li> 196 + <li>Document findings and prioritize remediation actions.</li> 197 + </ul> 198 + 199 + <h2 id="review-output">What the review should produce</h2> 200 + 201 + <p> 202 + A useful security review should not only produce a list of detected problems. It should produce a practical action 203 + plan. Each finding should explain the risk, the affected area, the recommended action and the priority. 204 + </p> 205 + 206 + <p> 207 + Some findings may require immediate action, such as exposed administration rights or unsafe fallback 208 + access. Others may become planned improvements, such as cleaning old groups, documenting custom code, 209 + reviewing extensions or preparing the next upgrade. 210 + </p> 211 + 212 + <div class="resource-note"> 213 + <p> 214 + <strong>A useful review should separate findings by priority:</strong> immediate risks, 215 + planned remediation, maintenance improvements and documentation gaps. This makes the result 216 + easier to act on instead of producing a generic list of observations. 217 + </p> 218 + </div> 219 + 220 + <p> 221 + The best outcome is a clearer, safer and more maintainable XWiki instance: one where administrators 222 + understand the access model, critical features are documented and future upgrades can be planned with 223 + fewer surprises. 224 + </p> 225 + 226 + <h2 id="when-to-review">When should an XWiki security review be done?</h2> 227 + 228 + <p> 229 + A review is especially useful before a major upgrade, after years of organic growth, after an authentication 230 + change, before exposing the instance more broadly, after a migration, or when the wiki becomes more 231 + business-critical than it was when first installed. 232 + </p> 233 + 234 + <p> 235 + It is also useful when administration responsibilities change. A new team should not have to guess how 236 + permissions, extensions, customizations and recovery procedures were configured years earlier. 237 + </p> 238 + 239 + <h2 id="security-review-faq">XWiki security review FAQ</h2> 240 + 241 + <h3>What should an XWiki security review include?</h3> 242 + <p> 243 + An XWiki security review should include the installed XWiki version, upgrade path, 244 + access rights, groups, authentication setup, installed extensions, custom code, 245 + infrastructure, backups, restore expectations and operational procedures. 246 + </p> 247 + 248 + <h3>Is an updated XWiki instance automatically secure?</h3> 249 + <p> 250 + No. Updating XWiki is important, but security also depends on permissions, 251 + authentication, extensions, custom code, infrastructure configuration, backups 252 + and how the instance is maintained. 253 + </p> 254 + 255 + <h3>Does SSO solve XWiki access control?</h3> 256 + <p> 257 + No. SSO helps authenticate users, but access control still depends on XWiki groups, 258 + inherited permissions, page-level rights and administrative privileges. 259 + </p> 260 + 261 + <h3>Why should custom code be reviewed?</h3> 262 + <p> 263 + Custom scripts, templates, macros, UI extensions and Java components can affect 264 + permissions, workflows, rendering, integrations and upgrade behavior. They should 265 + be identified, documented and tested. 266 + </p> 267 + 268 + <h3>When should an XWiki security review be done?</h3> 269 + <p> 270 + A review is useful before a major upgrade, after years of organic growth, after 271 + authentication changes, before exposing the wiki more broadly, or when the instance 272 + becomes business-critical. 273 + </p> 274 + 275 + <div class="resource-note"> 276 + <p> 277 + Related resources: 278 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.why-upgrade-xwiki')">why regular XWiki upgrades matter</a> 279 + and 280 + <a href="$xwiki.getURL('resources.xwiki-custom-development')">how to keep XWiki custom development maintainable across upgrades</a>. 281 + </p> 282 + </div> 283 + 284 + <div class="resource-cta"> 285 + <h3>Need an XWiki security review?</h3> 286 + <p> 287 + If your XWiki instance has grown over time, contains sensitive content, uses custom code or depends on 288 + SSO, extensions and business-critical workflows, a structured review can help identify risks and define 289 + the safest next steps. 290 + </p> 291 + <a class="btn btn-primary" href="$xwiki.getURL('contact.WebHome')">Request a security review</a> 292 + </div> 293 + 294 + </article> 295 + 296 + </div> 297 + </div> 298 + </section> 299 + 300 + <script type="application/ld+json"> 301 + { 302 + "@context": "https://schema.org", 303 + "@type": "FAQPage", 304 + "mainEntity": [ 305 + { 306 + "@type": "Question", 307 + "name": "What should an XWiki security review include?", 308 + "acceptedAnswer": { 309 + "@type": "Answer", 310 + "text": "An XWiki security review should include the installed XWiki version, upgrade path, access rights, groups, authentication setup, installed extensions, custom code, infrastructure, backups, restore expectations and operational procedures." 311 + } 312 + }, 313 + { 314 + "@type": "Question", 315 + "name": "Is an updated XWiki instance automatically secure?", 316 + "acceptedAnswer": { 317 + "@type": "Answer", 318 + "text": "No. Updating XWiki is important, but security also depends on permissions, authentication, extensions, custom code, infrastructure configuration, backups and how the instance is maintained." 319 + } 320 + }, 321 + { 322 + "@type": "Question", 323 + "name": "Does SSO solve XWiki access control?", 324 + "acceptedAnswer": { 325 + "@type": "Answer", 326 + "text": "No. SSO helps authenticate users, but access control still depends on XWiki groups, inherited permissions, page-level rights and administrative privileges." 327 + } 328 + }, 329 + { 330 + "@type": "Question", 331 + "name": "Why should custom code be reviewed in XWiki?", 332 + "acceptedAnswer": { 333 + "@type": "Answer", 334 + "text": "Custom scripts, templates, macros, UI extensions and Java components can affect permissions, workflows, rendering, integrations and upgrade behavior. 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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ 1 +What an XWiki Security Review Should Actually Include | Agnease