STIGhubSTIGhub
STIGsSearchCompareAbout

STIGhub

A free tool to search and browse the entire DISA STIG library. Saves up to 75% in security compliance research time.

Navigation

  • Browse STIGs
  • Search
  • Compare Versions

Resources

  • About
  • VPAT
  • DISA STIG Library
STIGs updated 2 hours ago
Powered by Pylon
© 2026 Beacon Cloud Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.
← Back to Application Programming Interface (API) Security Requirements Guide

V-274613

CAT II (Medium)

The API must specify allowed origins when using Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS).

Rule ID

SV-274613r1143646_rule

STIG

Application Programming Interface (API) Security Requirements Guide

Version

V1R1

CCIs

CCI-001310

Discussion

Invalid user input occurs when a user inserts data or characters into an application's data entry fields and the application is unprepared to process that data. This results in unanticipated application behavior, potentially leading to an application or information system compromise. Invalid input is one of the primary methods employed when attempting to compromise an application. Checking the valid syntax and semantics of information system inputs (e.g., character set, length, numerical range, and acceptable values) verifies that inputs match specified definitions for format and content. Software applications typically follow well-defined protocols that use structured messages (i.e., commands or queries) to communicate between software modules or system components. Structured messages can contain raw or unstructured data interspersed with metadata or control information. If software applications use attacker-supplied inputs to construct structured messages without properly encoding such messages, then the attacker could insert malicious commands or special characters that can cause the data to be interpreted as control information or metadata. Consequently, the module or component that receives the tainted output will perform the wrong operations or otherwise interpret the data incorrectly. Prescreening inputs prior to passing to interpreters prevents the content from being unintentionally interpreted as commands. Input validation helps to ensure accurate and correct inputs and prevent attacks such as cross-site scripting and a variety of injection attacks.

Check Content

If CORS is not in use, this requirement is not applicable.

Verify the API specifies origins when using CORS.

If the API is using CORS and does not specify allowed origins, this is a finding.

Fix Text

Build or configure the API to specify allowed origins when using CORS.