Securing webhooks

If not used carefully, webhooks can create security vulnerabilities in your Django application.

At minimum, you should use https and a shared authentication secret for your Anymail webhooks. (Really, for any webhooks.)

Use https

For security, your Django site must use https. The webhook URLs you give your ESP need to start with https (not http).

Without https, the data your ESP sends your webhooks is exposed in transit. This can include your customers’ email addresses, the contents of messages you receive through your ESP, the shared secret used to authorize calls to your webhooks (described in the next section), and other data you’d probably like to keep private.

Configuring https is beyond the scope of Anymail, but there are many good tutorials on the web. If you’ve previously dismissed https as too expensive or too complicated, please take another look. Free https certificates are available from Let’s Encrypt, and many hosting providers now offer easy https configuration using Let’s Encrypt or their own no-cost option.

If you aren’t able to use https on your Django site, then you should not set up your ESP’s webhooks.

Use a shared authentication secret

A webhook is an ordinary URL—anyone can post anything to it. To avoid receiving random (or malicious) data in your webhook, you should use a shared random secret that your ESP can present with webhook data, to prove the post is coming from your ESP.

Most ESPs recommend using HTTP basic authentication as this shared secret. Anymail includes support for this, via the ANYMAIL_WEBHOOK_SECRET setting. Basic usage is covered in the webhooks configuration docs.

If something posts to your webhooks without the required shared secret as basic auth in the HTTP Authorization header, Anymail will raise an AnymailWebhookValidationFailure error, which is a subclass of Django’s SuspiciousOperation. This will result in an HTTP 400 “bad request” response, without further processing the data or calling your signal receiver function.

In addition to a single “random:random” string, you can give a list of authentication strings. Anymail will permit webhook calls that match any of the authentication strings:

ANYMAIL = {
    ...
    'WEBHOOK_SECRET': [
        'abcdefghijklmnop:qrstuvwxyz0123456789',
        'ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLK:JIHGFEDCBA9876543210',
    ],
}

This facilitates credential rotation: first, append a new authentication string to the list, and deploy your Django site. Then, update the webhook URLs at your ESP to use the new authentication. Finally, remove the old (now unused) authentication string from the list and re-deploy.

Warning

If your webhook URLs don’t use https, this shared authentication secret won’t stay secret, defeating its purpose.

Signed webhooks

Some ESPs implement webhook signing, which is another method of verifying the webhook data came from your ESP. Anymail will verify these signatures for ESPs that support them. See the docs for your specific ESP for more details and configuration that may be required.

Even with signed webhooks, it doesn’t hurt to also use a shared secret.

Additional steps

Webhooks aren’t unique to Anymail or to ESPs. They’re used for many different types of inter-site communication, and you can find additional recommendations for improving webhook security on the web.

For example, you might consider:

  • Tracking event_id, to avoid accidental double-processing of the same events (or replay attacks)

  • Checking the webhook’s timestamp is reasonably close the current time

  • Configuring your firewall to reject webhook calls that come from somewhere other than your ESP’s documented IP addresses (if your ESP provides this information)

  • Rate-limiting webhook calls in your web server or using something like django-ratelimit

But you should start with using https and a random shared secret via HTTP auth.