b10abd690b
This module generates tokens to help protect against a website attack known as Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF, also known as XSRF). CSRF is an attack where an attacker fools a browser into make a request to a web server for which that browser will automatically include some form of credentials (cookies, cached HTTP Basic authentication, etc.), thus abusing the web server's trust in the user for malicious use. The most common CSRF mitigation is sending a special, hard-to-guess token with every request, and then require that any request that is not idempotent (i.e., has side effects) must be accompanied with such a token. This mitigation depends critically on the fact that while an attacker can easily make the victim's browser make a request, the browser security model (same-origin policy, or SOP for short) prevents third-party sites from reading the results of that request.
14 lines
889 B
Text
14 lines
889 B
Text
This module generates tokens to help protect against a website attack
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known as Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF, also known as XSRF). CSRF
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is an attack where an attacker fools a browser into make a request to
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a web server for which that browser will automatically include some
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form of credentials (cookies, cached HTTP Basic authentication, etc.),
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thus abusing the web server's trust in the user for malicious use.
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The most common CSRF mitigation is sending a special, hard-to-guess
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token with every request, and then require that any request that is
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not idempotent (i.e., has side effects) must be accompanied with such
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a token. This mitigation depends critically on the fact that while an
|
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attacker can easily make the victim's browser make a request, the
|
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browser security model (same-origin policy, or SOP for short) prevents
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third-party sites from reading the results of that request.
|