Debugger Security
The ability to debug another process gives you extremely broad powers that you would not otherwise have, especially when debugging remotely. A malicious debugger could inflict widespread damage on the machine being debugged. Because of this, there are restrictions on who can do debugging. For more information, see Remote Debugging Permissions.
However, many developers do not realize that the security threat can also flow in the opposite direction. It is possible for malicious code in the debuggee process to jeopardize the security of the debugging machine: there are a number of security exploits that must be guarded against.
Security Best Practices
There is an implicit trust relationship between the code you are debugging, and the debugger. If you are willing to debug something, you should also be willing to run it. The bottom line is that you must be able to trust what you are debugging. If you cannot trust it, then you should not debug it, or you should debug it from a machine that you can afford to jeopardize, and in an isolated environment.
In order to reduce the potential attack surface, debugging should be disabled on production machines. For the same reason, debugging should never be enabled indefinitely.
Managed Debugging Security
Here are some general recommendations that apply to all managed debugging.
Be careful when attaching to an untrusted user’s process: when you do so, you assume that it is trustworthy. When you attempt to attach to an untrusted user's process, a security warning dialog box confirmation will appear asking whether you want to attach to the process. "Trusted users" include you, and a set of standard users commonly defined on machines that have the .NET Framework installed, such as aspnet, localsystem, networkservice, and localservice. For more information, see Security Warning: Attaching to an Untrusted Process Can Be Dangerous.
Be careful when downloading a project off the Internet and loading it into Visual Studio. This is very risky to do even without debugging. When you do this, you are assuming that the project and the code that it contains are trustworthy.
For more information, see Debugging Managed Code.
Remote Debugging Security
Local debugging is generally safer than remote debugging. Remote debugging increases the total surface area that can be probed.
The Visual Studio Remote Debugging Monitor (msvsmon.exe) is used in remote debugging, and there are several security recommendations for configuring it. The preferred way to configure the authentication mode is Windows Authentication, because No Authentication mode is insecure. When using Windows Authentication mode, be aware that granting an untrusted user permission to connect to msvsmon is dangerous, as will be indicated by a dialog box warning.
Do not debug an unknown process on a remote machine: there are potential exploits that might affect the machine running the debugger, or that might compromise msvsmon.exe, the Visual Studio Remote Debugging Monitor. If you absolutely must debug an unknown process, try debugging locally, and use a firewall to keep any potential threats localized.
For more information, see Remote Debugging Setup.
Web Services Debugging Security
It is safer to debug locally, but since you probably do not have Visual Studio installed on the web server, local debugging might not be practical. Generally, debugging Web services is done remotely, except during development, so the recommendations for remote debugging security also apply to Web services debugging. Here are some additional best practices. For more information, see Debugging XML Web Services.
Do not enable debugging on a Web server that has been compromised.
Make sure you know the Web server is secure before debugging it. If you are not sure it is secure, do not debug it.
Be especially careful if you are debugging a Web service that is exposed on the Internet.
External Components
Be aware of the trust status of external components that your program interacts with, especially if you did not write the code. Also be aware of components that Visual Studio or the debugger might use.
Symbols and Source Code
Two Visual Studio tools that require thinking about security are the following:
Source Server, which provides you with versions of source code from a source code repository. It is useful when you do not have the current version of a program's source code. For more information, see How to: Get Source Code Using Source Server and Security Warning: Debugger Must Execute Untrusted Command.
Symbol Server, which is used to supply the symbols needed to debug a crash during a system call. For more information, see How to: Specify a Symbol Path and How to: Use a Symbol Server.
See Also
Reference
Security Warning: Attaching to an Untrusted Process Can Be Dangerous
Security Warning: Debugger Must Execute Untrusted Command