Why not adopt me?
NAME
Plack::Middleware::XSRFBlock - Block XSRF Attacks with minimal changes to your app
VERSION
version 0.0.17
SYNOPSIS
The simplest way to use the plugin is:
use Plack::Builder;
my $app = sub { ... };
builder {
enable 'XSRFBlock';
$app;
}
You may also over-ride any, or all of these values:
builder {
enable 'XSRFBlock',
parameter_name => 'xsrf_token',
cookie_name => 'PSGI-XSRF-Token',
cookie_options => {},
cookie_expiry_seconds => (3 * 60 * 60),
token_per_request => 0,
meta_tag => undef,
inject_form_input => 1,
header_name => undef,
secret => undef,
http_method_regex => qr{^post$}i,
contents_to_filter_regex => qr{^(text/html|application/xhtml(?:\+xml)?)\b}i,
blocked => sub {
return [ $status, $headers, $body ]
},
;
$app;
}
DESCRIPTION
This middleware blocks XSRF. You can use this middleware without any modifications to your application.
OPTIONS
- parameter_name (default: 'xsrf_token')
-
The name assigned to the hidden form input containing the token.
-
The name of the cookie used to store the token value.
-
The expiration time in seconds of the XSRF token
-
If set to a true value, the XSRF token cookie will be set as a session cookie and
cookie_expiry_seconds
will be ignored. -
Extra cookie options to be set with the cookie. This is useful for things like setting
HttpOnly
to tell the browser to only send it with HTTP requests, andSecure
on the cookie to force the cookie to only be sent on SSL requests.builder { enable 'XSRFBlock', cookie_options => { secure => 1, httponly => 1 }; }
- token_per_request (default: 0)
-
If this is true a new token is assigned for each request made (but see below).
This may make your application more secure, but more susceptible to double-submit issues.
If this is a coderef, the coderef will be evaluated with the following arguments:
- http_method_regex (default: qr{^post$}i)
-
Which HTTP methods to check. Can be useful to also handle PUT, DELETE, PATCH, and the like.
- contents_to_filter_regex default: qr{^(text/html|application/xhtml(?:\+xml)?)\b}i)
-
Only modify <form> elements in responses whose content type matches this regex
The middleware object itself,
The request,
The environment
If the result of the evaluation is a true value, a new token will be assigned. This allows fine-grained control, for example to avoid assigning new tokens when incidental requests are made (e.g. on-page ajax requests).
- meta_tag (default: undef)
-
If this is set, use the value as the name of the meta tag to add to the head section of output pages.
This is useful when you are using javascript that requires access to the token value for making AJAX requests.
- inject_form_input (default: 1)
-
If this is unset, hidden inputs will not be injected into your forms, and no HTML parsing will be done on the page responses.
This can be useful if you only do AJAX requests, and can utilize headers and/or cookies instead, and not need the extra overhead of processing the HTML document every time.
- header_name (default: undef)
-
If this is set, use the value as the name of the response heaer that the token can be sent in. This is useful for non-browser based submissions; e.g. Javascript AJAX requests.
- secret (default: undef)
-
Signs the cookie with supplied secret (if set).
- blocked (default: undef)
-
If this is set it should be a PSGI application that is returned instead of the default HTTP_FORBIDDEN(403) and text/plain response.
This could be useful if you'd like to perform some action that's more in keeping with your application - e.g. return a styled error page.
ERRORS
The module emits various errors based on the cause of the XSRF detected. The messages will be of the form XSRF detected [reason]
- form field missing
-
The request was submitted but there was no value submitted in the form field specified by <C$self->parameter_name> [default: xsrf_token]
- xsrf token missing
-
The application has been configured to accept an 'X-' header and no token value was found in either the header or a suitable form field. [default: undef]
-
There is no cookie with the name specified by
$self-
cookie_name> [default: PSGI-XSRF-Token] - invalid token
-
The cookie token and form value were both submitted correctly but the values do not match.
- invalid signature
-
The cookies signature is invalid, indicating it was tampered with on the way to the browser.
detect_xsrf($self, $request, $env)
returns a message explaining the XSRF-related problem, or undef
if there's no problem
should_be_filtered($self, $request, $env, $res)
returns true if the response should be filtered by this middleware (currently, if its content-type matches contents_to_filter_regex
)
generate_token($self, $request, $env, $res)
Returns the token value to use for this response.
If the cookie is already set, and we do not want a different token for each request, returns the cookie's value.
Otherwise, generates a new value based on some random data. If secret
is set, the value is also signed.
cookie_handler($self, $request, $env, $res, $token)
sets the given token as a cookie in the response
filter_response_html($self, $request, $env, $res, $token)
Filters the response, injecting <input>
elements with the token value into all forms whose method matches http_method_regex
.
Streaming responses are still streaming after the filtering.
filter_response($self, $request, $env)
Calls the application, and (if the response "should_be_filtered
"), it injects the token in the cookie and (if "inject_form_input
") the forms.
invalid_signature($self, $value)
Returns true if the value is not correctly signed. If we're not signing tokens, this method always returns false.
xsrf_detected($self, $args)
Invoked when the XSRF is detected. Calls the "blocked
" coderef if we have it, or returns a 403.
The blocked
coderef is invoked like:
$self->blocked->($env,$msg, app => $self->app);
the original request PSGI environment
the error message (from "
detect_xsrf
")a hash, currently
app => $self->app
, so you can call the original application
log($self, $level, $msg)
log through the PSGI logger, if defined
EXPLANATION
This module is similar in nature and intention to Plack::Middleware::CSRFBlock but implements the xSRF prevention in a different manner.
The solution implemented in this module is based on a CodingHorror article - Preventing CSRF and XSRF Attacks.
The driving comment behind this implementation is from the Felten and Zeller paper:
When a user visits a site, the site should generate a (cryptographically
strong) pseudorandom value and set it as a cookie on the user's machine.
The site should require every form submission to include this pseudorandom
value as a form value and also as a cookie value. When a POST request is
sent to the site, the request should only be considered valid if the form
value and the cookie value are the same. When an attacker submits a form
on behalf of a user, he can only modify the values of the form. An
attacker cannot read any data sent from the server or modify cookie
values, per the same-origin policy. This means that while an attacker can
send any value he wants with the form, he will be unable to modify or read
the value stored in the cookie. Since the cookie value and the form value
must be the same, the attacker will be unable to successfully submit a
form unless he is able to guess the pseudorandom value.
What's wrong with Plack::Middleware::CSRFBlock?
Plack::Middleware::CSRFBlock is a great module. It does a great job of preventing CSRF behaviour with minimal effort.
However when we tried to use it uses the session to store information - which works well most of the time but can cause issues with session timeouts or removal (for any number of valid reasons) combined with logging (back) in to the application in another tab (so as not to interfere with the current screen/tab state).
Trying to modify the existing module to provide the extra functionality and behaviour we decided worked better for our use seemed too far reaching to try to force into the existing module.
FURTHER READING
Preventing CSRF and XSRF Attacks
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/10/preventing-csrf-and-xsrf-attacks.html
Preventing Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF)
Cross-Site Request Forgeries: Exploitation and Prevention [PDF]
https://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~daw/teaching/cs261-f11/reading/csrf.pdf
Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) Prevention Cheat Sheet
https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Cross-Site_Request_Forgery_(CSRF)_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet
SEE ALSO
Plack::Middleware::CSRFBlock, Plack::Middleware, Plack
AUTHOR
Chisel <chisel@chizography.net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Chisel Wright.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
CONTRIBUTORS
Andrey Khozov <andrey@rydlab.ru>
Chisel <chisel.wright@net-a-porter.com>
Daniel Perrett <dp13@sanger.ac.uk>
Gianni Ceccarelli <dakkar@thenautilus.net>
Gianni Ceccarelli <gianni.ceccarelli@broadbean.com>
Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
Matthew Ryall <matt.ryall@gmail.com>
Matthias Zeichmann <matthias.zeichmann@gmail.com>
Michael Kröll <michael.kroell@geizhals.at>
Sebastian Willert <willert@gmail.com>
Sterling Hanenkamp <sterling@ziprecruiter.com>
William Wolf <throughnothing@gmail.com>