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dist | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
Content Security Policy middleware
Content Security Policy helps prevent unwanted content being injected into your webpages; this can mitigate cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities, malicious frames, unwanted trackers, and more. If you want to learn how CSP works, check out the fantastic HTML5 Rocks guide, the Content Security Policy Reference, and the Content Security Policy specification. This module helps set Content Security Policies.
Usage:
const csp = require('helmet-csp')
app.use(csp({
// Specify directives as normal.
directives: {
defaultSrc: ["'self'", 'default.com'],
scriptSrc: ["'self'", "'unsafe-inline'"],
styleSrc: ['style.com'],
fontSrc: ["'self'", 'fonts.com'],
imgSrc: ['img.com', 'data:'],
sandbox: ['allow-forms', 'allow-scripts'],
reportUri: '/report-violation',
objectSrc: ["'none'"],
upgradeInsecureRequests: true,
workerSrc: false // This is not set.
},
// This module will detect common mistakes in your directives and throw errors
// if it finds any. To disable this, enable "loose mode".
loose: false,
// Set to true if you only want browsers to report errors, not block them.
// You may also set this to a function(req, res) in order to decide dynamically
// whether to use reportOnly mode, e.g., to allow for a dynamic kill switch.
reportOnly: false,
// Set to true if you want to blindly set all headers: Content-Security-Policy,
// X-WebKit-CSP, and X-Content-Security-Policy.
setAllHeaders: false,
// Set to true if you want to disable CSP on Android where it can be buggy.
disableAndroid: false,
// Set to false if you want to completely disable any user-agent sniffing.
// This may make the headers less compatible but it will be much faster.
// This defaults to `true`.
browserSniff: true
}))
There are a lot of inconsistencies in how browsers implement CSP. Helmet looks at the user-agent of the browser and sets the appropriate header and value for that browser. If no user-agent is matched, it will set all the headers with the 2.0 spec.
Supported directives
Directives can be kebab-cased (like script-src
) or camel-cased (like scriptSrc
); they are equivalent.
The following directives are supported:
base-uri
orbaseUri
block-all-mixed-content
orblockAllMixedContent
child-src
orchildSrc
connect-src
orconnectSrc
default-src
ordefaultSrc
font-src
orfontSrc
form-action
orformAction
frame-ancestors
orframeAncestors
frame-src
orframeSrc
img-src
orimgSrc
manifest-src
ormanifestSrc
media-src
ormediaSrc
object-src
orobjectSrc
plugin-types
orpluginTypes
prefetch-src
orprefetchSrc
report-to
orreportTo
report-uri
orreportUri
require-sri-for
orrequireSriFor
sandbox
orsandbox
script-src
orscriptSrc
style-src
orstyleSrc
upgrade-insecure-requests
orupgradeInsecureRequests
worker-src
orworkerSrc
Handling CSP violations
If you've specified a reportUri
, browsers will POST any CSP violations to your server. Here's a simple example of a route that handles those reports:
// You need a JSON parser first.
app.use(bodyParser.json({
type: ['json', 'application/csp-report']
}))
app.post('/report-violation', (req, res) => {
if (req.body) {
console.log('CSP Violation: ', req.body)
} else {
console.log('CSP Violation: No data received!')
}
res.status(204).end()
})
Not all browsers send CSP violations in the same way, so this might require a little work.
Note: If you're using a CSRF module like csurf, you might have problems handling these violations without a valid CSRF token. The fix is to put your CSP report route above csurf middleware.
Generating nonces
You can dynamically generate nonces to allow inline <script>
tags to be safely evaluated. Here's a simple example:
const crypto = require('crypto')
app.use(function (req, res, next) {
res.locals.nonce = crypto.randomBytes(16).toString('hex')
next()
})
app.use(csp({
directives: {
scriptSrc: [
"'self'",
(req, res) => `'nonce-${res.locals.nonce}'` // 'nonce-348c18b14aaf3e00938d8bdd613f1149'
]
}
}))
app.use((req, res) => {
res.end(`<script nonce="${res.locals.nonce}">alert(1 + 1);</script>`)
})
Using CSP with a CDN
The default behavior of CSP is generate headers tailored for the browser that's requesting your page. If you have a CDN in front of your application, the CDN may cache the wrong headers, rendering your CSP useless. Make sure to eschew a CDN when using this module or set the browserSniff
option to false
.