Action Controller Request Forgery Protection
Controller actions are protected from Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) attacks by including a token in the rendered HTML for your application. This token is stored as a random string in the session, to which an attacker does not have access. When a request reaches your application, Rails verifies the received token with the token in the session. All requests are checked except GET requests as these should be idempotent. Keep in mind that all session-oriented requests are CSRF protected by default, including JavaScript and HTML requests.
Since HTML and JavaScript requests are typically made from the browser, we need to ensure to verify request authenticity for the web browser. We can use session-oriented authentication for these types of requests, by using the protect_from_forgery method in our controllers.
GET requests are not protected since they don’t have side effects like writing to the database and don’t leak sensitive information. JavaScript requests are an exception: a third-party site can use a <script> tag to reference a JavaScript URL on your site. When your JavaScript response loads on their site, it executes. With carefully crafted JavaScript on their end, sensitive data in your JavaScript response may be extracted. To prevent this, only XmlHttpRequest (known as XHR or Ajax) requests are allowed to make requests for JavaScript responses.
Subclasses of ActionController::Base are protected by default with the :exception strategy, which raises an ActionController::InvalidAuthenticityToken error on unverified requests.
APIs may want to disable this behavior since they are typically designed to be state-less: that is, the request API client handles the session instead of Rails. One way to achieve this is to use the :null_session strategy instead, which allows unverified requests to be handled, but with an empty session:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
protect_from_forgery with: :null_session
end
Note that API only applications don’t include this module or a session middleware by default, and so don’t require CSRF protection to be configured.
The token parameter is named authenticity_token by default. The name and value of this token must be added to every layout that renders forms by including csrf_meta_tags in the HTML head.
Learn more about CSRF attacks and securing your application in the Ruby on Rails Security Guide.
- MODULE ActionController::RequestForgeryProtection::ClassMethods
- MODULE ActionController::RequestForgeryProtection::ProtectionMethods
- CLASS ActionController::RequestForgeryProtection::CookieStore
- CLASS ActionController::RequestForgeryProtection::SessionStore
- A
- C
- F
- G
- H
- M
- N
- P
- R
- U
- V
- X
Constants
| AUTHENTICITY_TOKEN_LENGTH | = | 32 |
| CSRF_TOKEN | = | "action_controller.csrf_token" |
| NULL_ORIGIN_MESSAGE | = | <<~MSG |
Class Public methods
new(...) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 344 def initialize(...) super @marked_for_same_origin_verification = nil end
Instance Public methods
commit_csrf_token(request) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 354 def commit_csrf_token(request) # :doc: csrf_token = request.env[CSRF_TOKEN] csrf_token_storage_strategy.store(request, csrf_token) unless csrf_token.nil? end
reset_csrf_token(request) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 349 def reset_csrf_token(request) # :doc: request.env.delete(CSRF_TOKEN) csrf_token_storage_strategy.reset(request) end
Instance Private methods
any_authenticity_token_valid?() Link
Checks if any of the authenticity tokens from the request are valid.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 447 def any_authenticity_token_valid? # :doc: request_authenticity_tokens.any? do |token| valid_authenticity_token?(session, token) end end
compare_with_global_token(token, session = nil) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 533 def compare_with_global_token(token, session = nil) # :doc: ActiveSupport::SecurityUtils.fixed_length_secure_compare(token, global_csrf_token(session)) end
compare_with_real_token(token, session = nil) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 529 def compare_with_real_token(token, session = nil) # :doc: ActiveSupport::SecurityUtils.fixed_length_secure_compare(token, real_csrf_token(session)) end
csrf_token_hmac(session, identifier) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 570 def csrf_token_hmac(session, identifier) # :doc: OpenSSL::HMAC.digest( OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256.new, real_csrf_token(session), identifier ) end
form_authenticity_param() Link
The form’s authenticity parameter. Override to provide your own.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 590 def form_authenticity_param # :doc: params[request_forgery_protection_token] end
form_authenticity_token(form_options: {}) Link
Creates the authenticity token for the current request.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 459 def form_authenticity_token(form_options: {}) # :doc: masked_authenticity_token(form_options: form_options) end
global_csrf_token(session = nil) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 566 def global_csrf_token(session = nil) # :doc: csrf_token_hmac(session, GLOBAL_CSRF_TOKEN_IDENTIFIER) end
handle_unverified_request() Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 380 def handle_unverified_request # :doc: protection_strategy = forgery_protection_strategy.new(self) if protection_strategy.respond_to?(:warning_message) protection_strategy.warning_message = unverified_request_warning_message end protection_strategy.handle_unverified_request end
mark_for_same_origin_verification!() Link
GET requests are checked for cross-origin JavaScript after rendering.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 419 def mark_for_same_origin_verification! # :doc: @marked_for_same_origin_verification = request.get? end
marked_for_same_origin_verification?() Link
If the verify_authenticity_token before_action ran, verify that JavaScript responses are only served to same-origin GET requests.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 425 def marked_for_same_origin_verification? # :doc: @marked_for_same_origin_verification ||= false end
mask_token(raw_token) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 522 def mask_token(raw_token) # :doc: one_time_pad = SecureRandom.random_bytes(AUTHENTICITY_TOKEN_LENGTH) encrypted_csrf_token = xor_byte_strings(one_time_pad, raw_token) masked_token = one_time_pad + encrypted_csrf_token encode_csrf_token(masked_token) end
non_xhr_javascript_response?() Link
Check for cross-origin JavaScript responses.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 430 def non_xhr_javascript_response? # :doc: %r(\A(?:text|application)/javascript).match?(media_type) && !request.xhr? end
normalize_action_path(action_path) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 620 def normalize_action_path(action_path) # :doc: uri = URI.parse(action_path) uri.path.chomp("/") end
per_form_csrf_token(session, action_path, method) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 559 def per_form_csrf_token(session, action_path, method) # :doc: csrf_token_hmac(session, [action_path, method.downcase].join("#")) end
protect_against_forgery?() Link
Checks if the controller allows forgery protection.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 595 def protect_against_forgery? # :doc: allow_forgery_protection && (!session.respond_to?(:enabled?) || session.enabled?) end
real_csrf_token(_session = nil) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 551 def real_csrf_token(_session = nil) # :doc: csrf_token = request.env.fetch(CSRF_TOKEN) do request.env[CSRF_TOKEN] = csrf_token_storage_strategy.fetch(request) || generate_csrf_token end decode_csrf_token(csrf_token) end
request_authenticity_tokens() Link
Possible authenticity tokens sent in the request.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 454 def request_authenticity_tokens # :doc: [form_authenticity_param, request.x_csrf_token] end
unmask_token(masked_token) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 514 def unmask_token(masked_token) # :doc: # Split the token into the one-time pad and the encrypted # value and decrypt it. one_time_pad = masked_token[0...AUTHENTICITY_TOKEN_LENGTH] encrypted_csrf_token = masked_token[AUTHENTICITY_TOKEN_LENGTH..-1] xor_byte_strings(one_time_pad, encrypted_csrf_token) end
valid_authenticity_token?(session, encoded_masked_token) Link
Checks the client’s masked token to see if it matches the session token. Essentially the inverse of masked_authenticity_token.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 482 def valid_authenticity_token?(session, encoded_masked_token) # :doc: if encoded_masked_token.nil? || encoded_masked_token.empty? || !encoded_masked_token.is_a?(String) return false end begin masked_token = decode_csrf_token(encoded_masked_token) rescue ArgumentError # encoded_masked_token is invalid Base64 return false end # See if it's actually a masked token or not. In order to # deploy this code, we should be able to handle any unmasked # tokens that we've issued without error. if masked_token.length == AUTHENTICITY_TOKEN_LENGTH # This is actually an unmasked token. This is expected if # you have just upgraded to masked tokens, but should stop # happening shortly after installing this gem. compare_with_real_token masked_token elsif masked_token.length == AUTHENTICITY_TOKEN_LENGTH * 2 csrf_token = unmask_token(masked_token) compare_with_global_token(csrf_token) || compare_with_real_token(csrf_token) || valid_per_form_csrf_token?(csrf_token) else false # Token is malformed. end end
valid_per_form_csrf_token?(token, session = nil) Link
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 537 def valid_per_form_csrf_token?(token, session = nil) # :doc: if per_form_csrf_tokens correct_token = per_form_csrf_token( session, request.path.chomp("/"), request.request_method ) ActiveSupport::SecurityUtils.fixed_length_secure_compare(token, correct_token) else false end end
valid_request_origin?() Link
Checks if the request originated from the same origin by looking at the Origin header.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 610 def valid_request_origin? # :doc: if forgery_protection_origin_check # We accept blank origin headers because some user agents don't send it. raise InvalidAuthenticityToken, NULL_ORIGIN_MESSAGE if request.origin == "null" request.origin.nil? || request.origin == request.base_url else true end end
verified_request?() Link
Returns true or false if a request is verified. Checks:
-
Is it a GET or HEAD request? GETs should be safe and idempotent
-
Does the
form_authenticity_tokenmatch the given token value from the params? -
Does the
X-CSRF-Tokenheader match theform_authenticity_token?
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 441 def verified_request? # :doc: !protect_against_forgery? || request.get? || request.head? || (valid_request_origin? && any_authenticity_token_valid?) end
verify_authenticity_token() Link
The actual before_action that is used to verify the CSRF token. Don’t override this directly. Provide your own forgery protection strategy instead. If you override, you’ll disable same-origin <script> verification.
Lean on the protect_from_forgery declaration to mark which actions are due for same-origin request verification. If protect_from_forgery is enabled on an action, this before_action flags its after_action to verify that JavaScript responses are for XHR requests, ensuring they follow the browser’s same-origin policy.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 370 def verify_authenticity_token # :doc: mark_for_same_origin_verification! if !verified_request? logger.warn unverified_request_warning_message if logger && log_warning_on_csrf_failure handle_unverified_request end end
verify_same_origin_request() Link
If verify_authenticity_token was run (indicating that we have forgery protection enabled for this request) then also verify that we aren’t serving an unauthorized cross-origin response.
Source: show
# File actionpack/lib/action_controller/metal/request_forgery_protection.rb, line 409 def verify_same_origin_request # :doc: if marked_for_same_origin_verification? && non_xhr_javascript_response? if logger && log_warning_on_csrf_failure logger.warn CROSS_ORIGIN_JAVASCRIPT_WARNING end raise ActionController::InvalidCrossOriginRequest, CROSS_ORIGIN_JAVASCRIPT_WARNING end end