Backups / Disaster Recovery
- We keep 14 full backups of each Growsoft database for at least 3 months: 1/day for 7 days, 1/week for 4 weeks, 1/month for 3 months.
- Backups are replicated in at least 3 different data centers, on at least 2 different continents.
- The actual locations of our data centers are specified in our Privacy Policy.
- You can also download manual backups of your live data by requesting us using the ticket or over phone.
- You can contact our Helpdesk to restore any of those backups.
- Hardware failover: for services hosted on bare metal, where hardware failure is possible, we implement local hot standby replication, with monitoring and a manual failover procedure that takes less time.
- Disaster recovery: in case of complete disaster, with a data center entirely down for an extended period, preventing the failover to our local hot-standby (never happened so far, this is the worst-case plan), we have the following objectives:
- RPO (Recovery Point Objective) = 24h. This means you can lose max 24h of work if the data cannot be recovered and we need to restore your latest daily backup.
- RTO (Recovery Time Objective) = 24h for paid subscriptions, 48h for free trials, education offer, freemium users, etc. This is the time to restore the service in a different data center if a disaster occurs and a datacenter is completely down.
- How is this accomplished: we actively monitor our daily backups, and they are replicated in multiples locations on different continents. We have automated provisioning to deploy our services in a new hosting location. Restoring the data based on our backups of the previous day can then be done in a few hours (for the largest clusters), with priority on the paid subscriptions.
We routinely use both the daily backups and provisioning scripts for daily operations, so both parts of the disaster recovery procedure are tested all the time.
Database Security
- Customer data is stored in a dedicated database – no sharing of data between clients.
- Data access control rules implement complete isolation between customer databases running on the same cluster, no access is possible from one database to another.
Password Security
- Customer passwords are protected with industry-standard PBKDF2+SHA512 encryption (salted + stretched for thousands of rounds).
- Growsoft staff does not have access to your password, and cannot retrieve it for you, the only option if you lose it is to reset it.
- Login credentials are always transmitted securely over HTTPS.
- Customer database administrators even have the option to configure the rate limiting and cooldown duration for repeated login attempts.
- Password policies: database administrators have a built-in setting for enforcing a minimum user password length. Other password policies like required character classes are not supported by default because they have been proven counter-productive.
Staff Access
- Growsoft helpdesk staff may sign into your account to access settings related to your support issue. For this they use their own special staff credentials, not your password (which they have no way to know).
- This special staff access improves efficiency and security: they can immediately reproduce the problem you are seeing, you never need to share your password, and we can audit and control staff actions separately!
- Our Helpdesk staff strives to respect your privacy as much as possible, and only access files and settings needed to diagnose and resolve your issue.
System Security
- All Growsoft Cloud servers are running hardened Linux distributions with up-to-date security patches.
- Installations are ad-hoc and minimal to limit the number of services that could contain vulnerabilities (no PHP/MySQL stack for example).
- Only a few trusted Growsoft engineers have clearance to remotely manage the servers – and access is only possible using an encrypted personal SSH keypair, from a computer with full-disk encryption.
Physical Security
Growsoft Cloud servers are hosted in trusted data centers in various regions of the world (e.g. OVH, Google Cloud), and they must all exceed our physical security criterions:
- Restricted perimeter, physically accessed by authorized data center employees only.
- Physical access control with security badges or biometrical security.
- Security cameras monitoring the data center locations 24/7.
- Security personnel on site 24/7.
Credit Card Safety
- We never store credit card information on our own systems.
- Your credit card information is always transmitted securely directly between you and our PCI-Compliant payment acquirers.
Data Encryption
Customer data is always transferred and stored in encrypted form (encryption in transit and at rest).
- All data communications to client instances are protected with state-of-the-art 256-bit SSL encryption (HTTPS).
- All internal data communications between our servers are also protected with state-of-the-art encryption (SSH).
- Our servers are kept under a strict security watch, and always patched against the latest SSL vulnerabilities.
- All our SSL certificates use robust 2048-bit modulus with full SHA-2 certificates chains.
- All customer data (database content and stored files) is encrypted at rest, both in production and in backups (AES-128 or AES-256)
Network defense
- All data center providers used by Growsoft Cloud have very large network capacities, and have designed their infrastructure to withstand the largest Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks. Their automatic and manual mitigation systems can detect and divert attack traffic at the edge of their multi-continental networks, before it gets the chance to disrupt service availability.
- Firewalls and intrusion prevention systems on Growsoft Cloud servers help detect and block threats such as brute-force password attacks.
- Customer database administrators even have the option to configure the rate limiting and cooldown duration for repeated login attempts.
— Growsoft (the software) —
Software Security
Growsoft is developed in house, so the whole codebase is continuously under examination by Growsoft expert developers and contributors worldwide. Community bug reports are therefore one important source of feedback regarding security. We encourage developers to audit the code and report security issues.
The Growsoft R&D processes have code review steps that include security aspects, for new and contributed pieces of code.
Secure by design
Growsoft is designed in a way that prevents introducing most common security vulnerabilities:
- SQL injections are prevented by the use of a higher-level API that does not require manual SQL queries.
- XSS attacks are prevented by the use of a high-level templating system that automatically escapes injected data.
- The framework prevents RPC access to private methods, making it harder to introduce exploitable vulnerabilities.
OWASP Top Vulnerabilities
Here is where Growsoft stands on the top security issue for web applications, as listed by the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP):
- Injection Flaws: Injection flaws, particularly SQL injection, are common in web applications. Injection occurs when user-supplied data is sent to an interpreter as part of a command or query. The attacker’s hostile data tricks the interpreter into executing unintended commands or changing data.
Growsoft relies on an object-relational-mapping (ORM) framework that abstracts query building and prevents SQL injections by default. Developers do not normally craft SQL queries manually, they are generated by the ORM, and parameters are always properly escaped.
- Cross Site Scripting (XSS): XSS flaws occur whenever an application takes user supplied data and sends it to a web browser without first validating or encoding that content. XSS allows attackers to execute scripts in the victim’s browser which can hijack user sessions, deface web sites, possibly introduce worms, etc.
The Growsoft framework escapes all expressions rendered into views and pages by default, preventing XSS. Developers have to specially mark expressions as “safe” for raw inclusion into rendered pages.
- Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF): A CSRF attack forces a logged-on victim’s browser to send a forged HTTP request, including the victim’s session cookie and any other automatically included authentication information, to a vulnerable web application. This allows the attacker to force the victim’s browser to generate requests the vulnerable application thinks are legitimate requests from the victim.
The Growsoft website engine includes a built-in CSRF protection mechanism. It prevents any HTTP controller to receive a POST request without the corresponding security token. This is the recommended technique for CSRF prevention. This security token is only known and present when the user genuinely accessed the relevant website form, and an attacker cannot forge a request without it.
- Malicious File Execution: Code vulnerable to remote file inclusion (RFI) allows attackers to include hostile code and data, resulting in devastating attacks, such as total server compromise.
Growsoft does not expose functions to perform remote file inclusion. However it allows privileged users to customize features by adding custom expressions that will be evaluated by the system. These expressions are always evaluated by a sandboxed and sanitized environment that only allows access to permitted functions.
- Insecure Direct Object Reference: A direct object reference occurs when a developer exposes a reference to an internal implementation object, such as a file, directory, database record, or key, as a URL or form parameter. Attackers can manipulate those references to access other objects without authorization.
Growsoft access control is not implemented at the user interface level, so there is no risk in exposing references to internal objects in URLs. Attackers cannot circumvent the access control layer by manipulating those references, because every request still has to go through the data access validation layer.
- Insecure Cryptographic Storage: Web applications rarely use cryptographic functions properly to protect data and credentials. Attackers use weakly protected data to conduct identity theft and other crimes, such as credit card fraud.
Growsoft uses industry-standard secure hashing for user passwords (by default PBKDF2 + SHA-512, with key stretching) to protect stored passwords. It is also possible to use external authentication systems such as OAuth 2.0 or LDAP, in order to avoid storing user passwords locally at all.
- Insecure Communications: Applications frequently fail to encrypt network traffic when it is necessary to protect sensitive communications.
Growsoft Cloud runs on HTTPS by default. For on-premise installations, it is recommended to run Growsoft behind a web server implementing the encryption and proxying request to Growsoft, for example Apache, Lighttpd or nginx. The Growsoft deployment guide includes a Security checklist for safer public deployments.
- Failure to Restrict URL Access: Frequently an application only protects sensitive functionality by preventing the display of links or URLs to unauthorized users. Attackers can use this weakness to access and perform unauthorized operations by accessing those URLs directly.
Growsoft access control is not implemented at the user interface level, and the security does not rely on hiding special URLs. Attackers cannot circumvent the access control layer by reusing or manipulating any URL, because every request still has to go through the data access validation layer. In rare cases where a URL provides unauthenticated access to sensitive data, such as special URLs customers use to confirm an order, these URLs are digitally signed with unique tokens and only sent via email to the intended recipient.
Reporting Security Vulnerabilities
If you need to report a security vulnerability, please head over to our customer support. These reports are treated with high priority, the problem is immediately assessed and solved by the Growsoft security team, in collaboration with the reporter, and then disclosed in a responsible manner to Growsoft customers and users.
Security policy last update date: 28/11/2024
Security policy updated on this article:
OWASP Top Vulnerabilities
Security policy updated 20/11/2024