CGI::Application::Plugin::ProtectCSRF(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | CGI::Application::Plugin::ProtectCSRF(3pm) |
NAME¶
CGI::Application::Plugin::ProtectCSRF - generate and verify anti-CSRF tickets
VERSION¶
1.01
SYNPSIS¶
use Your::App; use base qw(CGI::Application); use CGI::Application::Plugin::Session; # mandatory !! use CGI::Application::Plugin::ProtectCSRF; sub input_form : PublishCSRFID { my $self = shift; do_something(); } sub finish : ProtectCSRF { my $self = shift; $self->clear_csrf_id; do_something(); }
DESCRIPTION¶
CGI::Application::Plugin::ProtectCSRF provides tools to protect forms in CGI::Application web applications from CSRF attacks. Run mode handlers may be declared with the "PublishCSFRID" or "ProtectCSFR" attributes. The former should usually be applied to a run mode, whose HTML includes a "form" tag. In this case a ticket is generated and stored in the session during a prerun callback and a "hidden" control field, publishing the ticket, is added to the form during a postrun callback. Conversely the "ProtectCSRF" attribute should normally be applied to the corresponding run modes that process data from a submitted form. A prerun callback checks for the hidden field and checks that it matches the ticket saved in the session. If the check fails the page is redirected to a customizable error page. On success the form processing run mode should use the "clear_csrf_id" method, so that subsequent calls to forms from that session will generate fresh tickets.
ACTION¶
PublishCSRFID¶
Run modes declared with the "PublishCSRFID" attribute, take the following actions:
- - generate CSRF ticket and store it in the session;
- - generate the form as per the module code;
- - add a hidden element to the form publishing the CSRF ticket.
# publish CSRF ticket sub input_form : PublishCSRFID { my $self = shift; return <<HTML; <form action="foo" method="post"> <input type="text" name="name"> <input type="submit" value="submit!"> <input type="hidden" name="rm" value="finish"> </form> HTML } # display html source <form action="foo" method="post"> <input type="hidden" name="_csrf_id" value="random string" /> <- insert hidden field <input type="text" name="name"> <input type="submit" value="submit!"> <input type="hidden" name="rm" value="finish"> </form>
ProtectCSRF¶
Run modes declared with the "ProtectCSRF" attribute, take the following actions:
- - verify that the submitted CSRF ticket matches the ticket saved in the session. If there is any sort of issue with the ticket the page is redirected to a customizable error page;
- - the form is processed as per the module code;
- - the form should call the "clear_csfr_id" method so that subsequent forms generate fresh tickets. The code does not do this because if the form validation fails it might be best to retain the same ticket.
sub finish : ProtectCSRF { my $self = shift; # required! Unless forms and their processing are tightly # coupled by clearing the ticket between invocations, # the meaning of the ticket is lost. $self->clear_csrf_id; # The processing that you want to perform (DB processing etc) do_something(); }
METHOD¶
csrf_id¶
This method returns the CSRF ticket saved in the session.
Example:
sub input_form : PublishCSRFID { my $self = shift; my $csrf_id = $self->csrf_id; do_something(); }
protect_csrf_config¶
This method initializes the ProtectCSRF state using any configuration options that were passed to it. The available options are:
- csrf_error_status - The HTTP status code that would be set on the CSRF error page if a CSRF attack is identified. It defaults to 200.
- csrf_error_mode - The CGI::Application runmode name. This defaults to "_csrf_error".
- csrf_error_tmpl - The HTML displayed in the event of a CSRF attack being detected in the form of a scalarref or filepath or filehandle. One may consider HTML::Template for inspiration on thse formats. The default is $CSRF_ERROR_TMPL which is a scalarref.
- csrf_error_tmpl_param - A hashref of parameters to be placed in the above template. See HTML::Template.
- csrf_id - The name of the session parameter used to store the CSRF ticket.This defaults to "_csrf_id".
- csrf_post_only - If set non-POST requests to a run mode which is protected by this module would be rejected. By default this is 0.
Example:
sub cgiapp_init { my $self = shift; $self->tmpl_path("/path/to/template"); $self->protect_csrf_config( csrf_error_status => 403, # change forbidden csrf_error_tmpl => "csrf_error.tmpl", csrf_error_tmpl_param => { TITLE => "CSRF ERROR", MESSAGE => "your access is csrf!"}, csrf_id => "ticket_id", csrf_post_only => 1 ); } # csrf_error.tmpl <html><head><title><TMPL_VAR NAME=TITLE ESCAPE=HTML></title></head> <body> <h1>CSRF Error</h1> <span style="color: red"><TMPL_VAR NAME=MESSAGE ESCAPE=HTML></span> </body> </html>
clear_csrf_id¶
This method clears the CSFR ticket. This should be done during the processing of a form request.
Example :
sub cgiapp_init { my $self = shift; $self->protect_csrf_config; } sub input { my $self = shift; do_something(). # input form display.. } sub confirm : PublishCSRFID { my $self = shift; do_something(). # publish csrf_id and input check and confirm display.. } sub complete : ProtectCSRF { my $self = shift; $self->clear_csrf_id(1); # clear csrf_id for CSRF protect do_something(); # DB insert etc.. }
CALLBACK¶
_publish_csrf_id¶
prerun callback
_csrf_forbidden¶
prerun callback
_add_csrf_id¶
postrun callback
CAUTION¶
This module should not be seen as a panacea for all web security issues. The user should fully understand and act on all security threats his application may face, including whether this module is an adequate and useful tool.
SEE ALSO¶
Attribute::Handlers, Carp, CGI::Application, CGI::Application::Plugin::Session, Digest::SHA, Exporter, HTML::TokeParser, HTML::Template
AUTHOR¶
Akira Horimoto <kurt0027@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2006 - 2008 Akira Horimoto
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2022-06-09 | perl v5.34.0 |