Adds the ability to specify SameSite=none
with the same configurability as Strict
/Lax
in order to disable Chrome's soon-to-be-lax-by-default state.
Adds the ability to disable the automatically-appended 'unsafe-inline'
value when nonces are used #404 (@will)
Adds support for navigate-to, prefetch-src, and require-sri-for #395
NOTE: this version is a breaking change due to the removal of HPKP. Remove the HPKP config, the standard is dead. Apologies for not doing a proper deprecate/major rev cycle 🙏
- See the upgrading to 6.0 guide for the breaking changes.
- A release to deprecate
SecureHeaders::Configuration#get
in prep for 6.x
- Adds support for
nonced_stylesheet_pack_tag
#373 (@paulfri)
- Add nonced versions of Rails link/include tags #372 (@steveh)
- Updates
Referrer-Policy
header to support multiple policy values
- Updates
Expect-CT
header to use a comma separator between directives, as specified in the most current spec.
Well this is a little embarassing. 4.0 was supposed to set the secure/httponly/samesite=lax attributes on cookies by default but it didn't. Now it does. - See the upgrading to 5.0 guide.
- Adds support for
worker-src
CSP directive to 4.x line (github#364)
- See the upgrading to 4.0 guide. Lots of breaking changes.
- Adds support for
worker-src
CSP directive to 3.x line (github#364)
Fix support for the sandbox attribute of CSP. true
and []
represent the maximally restricted policy (sandbox;
) and validate other values.
Adds support for the Expect-CT
header (@jacobbednarz: github#322)
Actually set manifest-src when configured. github#339 Thanks @carlosantoniodasilva!
Update clear-site-data header to use current format specified by the specification.
Fix case where mixing frame-src/child-src dynamically would behave in unexpected ways: github#325
Remove deprecation warning when setting frame-src
. It is no longer deprecated.
Now that Safari 10 supports nonces and it appears to work, enable the nonce feature for safari.
Improved memory use via minor improvements clever hacks that are sadly needed. Thanks @carlosantoniodasilva!
Add support for the clear-site-data header
- Fix bug that can occur when useragent library version is older, resulting in a nil version sometimes.
- Add constant for
strict-dynamic
This release adds support for setting two CSP headers (enforced/report-only) and management around them.
If your CSP did not define a script/style-src and you tried to use a script/style nonce, the nonce would be added to the page but it would not be added to the CSP. A workaround is to define a script/style src but now it should add the missing directive (and populate it with the default-src).
Named Appends are blocks of code that can be reused and composed during requests. e.g. If a certain partial is rendered conditionally, and the csp needs to be adjusted for that partial, you can create a named append for that situation. The value returned by the block will be passed into append_content_security_policy_directives
. The current request object is passed as an argument to the block for even more flexibility.
def show
if include_widget?
@widget = widget.render
use_content_security_policy_named_append(:widget_partial)
end
end
SecureHeaders::Configuration.named_append(:widget_partial) do |request|
if request.controller_instance.current_user.in_test_bucket?
SecureHeaders.override_x_frame_options(request, "DENY")
{ child_src: %w(beta.thirdpartyhost.com) }
else
{ child_src: %w(thirdpartyhost.com) }
end
end
You can use as many named appends as you would like per request, but be careful because order of inclusion matters. Consider the following:
SecureHeader::Configuration.default do |config|
config.csp = { default_src: %w('self')}
end
SecureHeaders::Configuration.named_append(:A) do |request|
{ default_src: %w(myhost.com) }
end
SecureHeaders::Configuration.named_append(:B) do |request|
{ script_src: %w('unsafe-eval') }
end
The following code will produce different policies due to the way policies are normalized (e.g. providing a previously undefined directive that inherits from default-src
, removing host source values when *
is provided. Removing 'none'
when additional values are present, etc.):
def index
use_content_security_policy_named_append(:A)
use_content_security_policy_named_append(:B)
# produces default-src 'self' myhost.com; script-src 'self' myhost.com 'unsafe-eval';
end
def show
use_content_security_policy_named_append(:B)
use_content_security_policy_named_append(:A)
# produces default-src 'self' myhost.com; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-eval';
end
Handle the child-src
/frame-src
transition semi-intelligently across versions. I think the code best descibes the behavior here:
if supported_directives.include?(:child_src)
@config[:child_src] = @config[:child_src] || @config[:frame_src]
else
@config[:frame_src] = @config[:frame_src] || @config[:child_src]
end
Also, @koenpunt noticed that we were loading view helpers in a way that Rails 5 did not like.
@dankohn was seeing "already initialized" errors in his output. This change conditionally defines the constants.
@stefansundin noticed that supplying false
to "boolean" CSP directives (e.g. upgrade-insecure-requests
and block-all-mixed-content
) would still include the value.
While not officially part of the spec and not implemented anywhere, support for the experimental referrer-policy
header was preemptively added.
Additionally, two minor enhancements were added this version:
- Warn when the HPKP report host is the same as the current host. By definition any generated reports would be reporting to a known compromised connection.
- Filter unsupported CSP directives when using Edge. Previously, this was causing many warnings in the developer console.
SecureHeaders supports Secure
, HttpOnly
and SameSite
cookies. These can be defined in the form of a boolean, or as a Hash for more refined configuration.
Note: Regardless of the configuration specified, Secure cookies are only enabled for HTTPS requests.
Boolean-based configuration is intended to globally enable or disable a specific cookie attribute.
config.cookies = {
secure: true, # mark all cookies as Secure
httponly: false, # do not mark any cookies as HttpOnly
}
Hash-based configuration allows for fine-grained control.
config.cookies = {
secure: { except: ['_guest'] }, # mark all but the `_guest` cookie as Secure
httponly: { only: ['_rails_session'] }, # only mark the `_rails_session` cookie as HttpOnly
}
SameSite cookies permit either Strict
or Lax
enforcement mode options.
config.cookies = {
samesite: {
strict: true # mark all cookies as SameSite=Strict
}
}
Strict
and Lax
enforcement modes can also be specified using a Hash.
config.cookies = {
samesite: {
strict: { only: ['_rails_session'] },
lax: { only: ['_guest'] }
}
}
script
/style-src
hashes can be used to whitelist inline content that is static. This has the benefit of allowing inline content without opening up the possibility of dynamic javascript like you would with a nonce
.
You can add hash sources directly to your policy :
::SecureHeaders::Configuration.default do |config|
config.csp = {
default_src: %w('self')
# this is a made up value but browsers will show the expected hash in the console.
script_src: %w(sha256-123456)
}
end
You can also use the automated inline script detection/collection/computation of hash source values in your app.
rake secure_headers:generate_hashes
This will generate a file (config/secure_headers_generated_hashes.yml
by default, you can override by setting ENV["secure_headers_generated_hashes_file"]
) containing a mapping of file names with the array of hash values found on that page. When ActionView renders a given file, we check if there are any known hashes for that given file. If so, they are added as values to the header.
---
scripts:
app/views/asdfs/index.html.erb:
- "'sha256-yktKiAsZWmc8WpOyhnmhQoDf9G2dAZvuBBC+V0LGQhg='"
styles:
app/views/asdfs/index.html.erb:
- "'sha256-SLp6LO3rrKDJwsG9uJUxZapb4Wp2Zhj6Bu3l+d9rnAY='"
- "'sha256-HSGHqlRoKmHAGTAJ2Rq0piXX4CnEbOl1ArNd6ejp2TE='"
This will not compute dynamic hashes by design. The output of both helpers will be a plain script
/style
tag without modification and the known hashes for a given file will be added to script-src
/style-src
when hashed_javascript_tag
and hashed_style_tag
are used. You can use raise_error_on_unrecognized_hash = true
to be extra paranoid that you have precomputed hash values for all of your inline content. By default, this will raise an error in non-production environments.
<%= hashed_style_tag do %>
body {
background-color: black;
}
<% end %>
<%= hashed_style_tag do %>
body {
font-size: 30px;
font-color: green;
}
<% end %>
<%= hashed_javascript_tag do %>
console.log(1)
<% end %>
Content-Security-Policy: ...
script-src 'sha256-yktKiAsZWmc8WpOyhnmhQoDf9G2dAZvuBBC+V0LGQhg=' ... ;
style-src 'sha256-SLp6LO3rrKDJwsG9uJUxZapb4Wp2Zhj6Bu3l+d9rnAY=' 'sha256-HSGHqlRoKmHAGTAJ2Rq0piXX4CnEbOl1ArNd6ejp2TE=' ...;
See github#239
This meant that when header caches were regenerated upon calling SecureHeaders.override(:name)
and using it with use_secure_headers_override
would result in default values for anything other than CSP/HPKP.
See github#235
idempotent_additions?
would return false when comparing OPT_OUT
with OPT_OUT
, causing header_hash_for
to return a header cache with { nil => nil }
which cause the middleware to blow up when { nil => nil }
was merged into the rack header hash.
This is a regression in 3.1.0 only.
Now it returns true. I've added a test case to ensure that header_hash_for
will never return such an element.
New feature: marking all cookies as secure. Added by @jmera in github#231. In the future, we'll probably add the ability to whitelist individual cookies that should not be marked secure. PRs welcome.
Internal refactoring: In github#232, we changed the way dynamic CSP is handled internally. The biggest benefit is that highly dynamic policies (which can happen with multiple append/override
calls per request) are handled better:
- Only the CSP header cache is busted when using a dynamic policy. All other headers are preserved and don't need to be generated. Dynamic X-Frame-Options changes modify the cache directly.
- Idempotency checks for policy modifications are deferred until the end of the request lifecycle and only happen once, instead of per
append/override
call. The idempotency check itself is fairly expensive itself. - CSP header string is produced at most once per request.
Bug fix for handling policy merges where appending a non-default source value (report-uri, plugin-types, frame-ancestors, base-uri, and form-action) would be combined with the default-src value. Appending a directive that doesn't exist in the current policy combines the new value with default-src
to mimic the actual behavior of the addition. However, this does not make sense for non-default-src values (a.k.a. "fetch directives") and can lead to unexpected behavior like a report-uri
value of *
. Previously, this config:
{
default_src => %w(*)
}
When appending:
{
report_uri => %w(https://report-uri.io/asdf)
}
Would result in default-src *; report-uri *
which doesn't make any sense at all.
Bug fix for handling CSP configs that supply a frozen hash. If a directive value is nil
, then appending to a config with a frozen hash would cause an error since we're trying to modify a frozen hash. See github#223.
Adds upgrade-insecure-requests
support for requests from Firefox and Chrome (and Opera). See the spec for details.
secure_headers 3.0.0 is a near-complete, not-entirely-backward-compatible rewrite. Please see the upgrade guide for an in-depth explanation of the changes and the suggested upgrade path.
See github#203 and https://github.com/twitter/secureheaders/commit/cfad0e52285353b88e46fe384e7cd60bf2a01735
Upon upgrading to secure_headers 2.5.0, I get a flood of these deprecations when running my tests: [DEPRECATION] secure_header_options_for will not be supported in secure_headers
/cc @bquorning
This release contains deprecation warnings for those wishing to upgrade to the 3.x series. With this release, fixing all deprecation warnings will make your configuration compatible when you decide to upgrade to the soon-to-be-released 3.x series (currently in pre-release stage).
No changes to functionality should be observed unless you were using procs as CSP config values.
If you use the header_hash
method for setting your headers in middleware and you opted out of a header (via setting the value to false
), you would run into an exception as described in github#193
NoMethodError:
undefined method `name' for nil:NilClass
# ./lib/secure_headers.rb:63:in `block in header_hash'
# ./lib/secure_headers.rb:54:in `each'
# ./lib/secure_headers.rb:54:in `inject'
# ./lib/secure_headers.rb:54:in `header_hash'
@igrep reported an anti-patter in use regarding UserAgentParser. This caused UserAgentParser to reload it's entire configuration set twice* per request. Moving this to a cached constant prevents the constant reinstantiation and will improve performance.
A nasty regression meant that many CSP configuration values were "reset" after the first request, one of these being the "enforce" flag. See github#184 for the full list of fields that were affected. Thanks to @spdawson for reporting this github#183
This release may change the output of headers based on per browser support. Unsupported directives will be omitted based on the user agent per request. See github#179
p.s. this will likely be the last non-bugfix release for the 2.x line. 3.x will be a major change. Sneak preview: github#181
If you leveraged secure_headers
automatic filling of empty directives, the header value will change but it should not affect how the browser applies the policy. The content of CSP reports may change if you do not update your policy.
config.csp = {
:default_src => "'self'"
}
would produce default-src 'self'; connect-src 'self'; frame-src 'self' ... etc.
config.csp = {
:default_src => "'self'"
}
will produce default-src 'self'
The reason for this is that a default-src
violation was basically impossible to handle. Chrome sends an effective-directive
which helps indicate what kind of violation occurred even if it fell back to default-src
. This is part of the CSP Level 2 spec so hopefully other browsers will implement this soon.
Just set the values yourself, but really a default-src
of anything other than 'none'
implies the policy can be tightened dramatically. "ZOMG don't you work for github and doesn't github send a default-src
of *
???" Yes, this is true. I disagree with this but at the same time, github defines every single known directive that a browser supports so default-src
will only apply if a new directive is introduced, and we'd rather fail open. For now.
config.csp = {
:default_src => "'self'",
:connect_src => "'self'",
:frame_src => "'self'"
... etc.
}
Besides, relying on default-src
is often not what you want and encourages an overly permissive policy. I've seen it. Seriously. default-src 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval' https: http:;
That's terrible.
See github#167 and github#168
tl;dr is that there is a class method SecureHeaders::header_hash
that will return a hash of header name => value pairs useful for merging with the rack header hash in middleware.
As discussed in github#154
2.2.3 - 2015-08-14 20:26:12 UTC - Adds ability to opt-out of automatically adding data: sources to img-src
See github#161
See github#147
Allows you to override a controller method that returns a config in the context of the executing action.
See github#150
Safari will generate a warning that it doesn't support nonces. Safari will fall back to the unsafe-inline
. Things will still work, but an ugly message is printed to the console.
This opts out safari and IE users from the inline script protection. I haven't verified any IE behavior yet, so I'm just assuming it doesn't work.
Facilitates better per-request config:
:enforce => lambda { |controller| controller.current_user.beta_testing? }
NOTE if you used lambda
config values, this will raise an exception until you add the controller reference:
bad:
lambda { true }
good:
lambda { |controller| true }
proc { true }
proc { |controller| true }
Includes github#143 (which is really just github#132) from @thirstscolr
Just a small change that adds a constant that was missing as reported in github#141
Fixes an issue where view helpers (for nonces, hashes, etc) weren't available in views.
This release contains support for more csp level 2 features such as the new directives, the script hash integration, and more.
It also sets a new header by default: X-Permitted-Cross-Domain-Policies
Support for hpkp is not included in this release as the implementations are still very unstable.
🚀
The only change between this and the first pre release is that the X-Permitted-Cross-Domain-Policies support is included.
This removes the forwarder and "experimental" feature. The forwarder wasn't well maintained and created a lot of headaches. Also, it was using an outdated certificate pack for compatibility. That's bad. The experimental feature wasn't really used and it complicated the codebase a lot. It's also a questionably useful API that is very confusing.
This release is intended to be ready for CSP level 2. Mainly, this means there is direct support for hash/nonce of inline content and includes many new directives (which do not inherit from default-src)
- Adds X-Download-Options support
- Adds support for X-XSS-Protection reporting
- Defers loading of rails engine for faster boot times
@agl just made a new option for HSTS representing confirmation that a site wants to be included in a browser's preload list (https://hstspreload.appspot.com).
This just adds a new 'preload' option to the HSTS settings to specify that option.
Tagging Requests
It's often valuable to send extra information in the report uri that is not available in the reports themselves. Namely, "was the policy enforced" and "where did the report come from"
{
:tag_report_uri => true,
:enforce => true,
:app_name => 'twitter',
:report_uri => 'csp_reports'
}
Results in
report-uri csp_reports?enforce=true&app_name=twitter