""" Cross Site Request Forgery Middleware. This module provides a middleware that implements protection against request forgeries from other sites. """ import itertools import re import random from django.conf import settings from django.core.urlresolvers import get_callable from django.utils.cache import patch_vary_headers from django.utils.hashcompat import md5_constructor from django.utils.html import escape from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe _POST_FORM_RE = \ re.compile(r'(]*\bmethod\s*=\s*(\'|"|)POST(\'|"|)\b[^>]*>)', re.IGNORECASE) _HTML_TYPES = ('text/html', 'application/xhtml+xml') # Use the system (hardware-based) random number generator if it exists. if hasattr(random, 'SystemRandom'): randrange = random.SystemRandom().randrange else: randrange = random.randrange _MAX_CSRF_KEY = 18446744073709551616L # 2 << 63 REASON_NO_REFERER = "Referer checking failed - no Referer." REASON_BAD_REFERER = "Referer checking failed - %s does not match %s." REASON_NO_COOKIE = "No CSRF or session cookie." REASON_NO_CSRF_COOKIE = "CSRF cookie not set." REASON_BAD_TOKEN = "CSRF token missing or incorrect." def _get_failure_view(): """ Returns the view to be used for CSRF rejections """ return get_callable(settings.CSRF_FAILURE_VIEW) def _get_new_csrf_key(): return md5_constructor("%s%s" % (randrange(0, _MAX_CSRF_KEY), settings.SECRET_KEY)).hexdigest() def _make_legacy_session_token(session_id): return md5_constructor(settings.SECRET_KEY + session_id).hexdigest() def get_token(request): """ Returns the the CSRF token required for a POST form. No assumptions should be made about what characters might be in the CSRF token. A side effect of calling this function is to make the the csrf_protect decorator and the CsrfViewMiddleware add a CSRF cookie and a 'Vary: Cookie' header to the outgoing response. For this reason, you may need to use this function lazily, as is done by the csrf context processor. """ request.META["CSRF_COOKIE_USED"] = True return request.META.get("CSRF_COOKIE", None) class CsrfViewMiddleware(object): """ Middleware that requires a present and correct csrfmiddlewaretoken for POST requests that have a CSRF cookie, and sets an outgoing CSRF cookie. This middleware should be used in conjunction with the csrf_token template tag. """ def process_view(self, request, callback, callback_args, callback_kwargs): if getattr(request, 'csrf_processing_done', False): return None reject = lambda s: _get_failure_view()(request, reason=s) def accept(): # Avoid checking the request twice by adding a custom attribute to # request. This will be relevant when both decorator and middleware # are used. request.csrf_processing_done = True return None # If the user doesn't have a CSRF cookie, generate one and store it in the # request, so it's available to the view. We'll store it in a cookie when # we reach the response. try: request.META["CSRF_COOKIE"] = request.COOKIES[settings.CSRF_COOKIE_NAME] cookie_is_new = False except KeyError: # No cookie, so create one. This will be sent with the next # response. request.META["CSRF_COOKIE"] = _get_new_csrf_key() # Set a flag to allow us to fall back and allow the session id in # place of a CSRF cookie for this request only. cookie_is_new = True # Wait until request.META["CSRF_COOKIE"] has been manipulated before # bailing out, so that get_token still works if getattr(callback, 'csrf_exempt', False): return None if request.method == 'POST': if getattr(request, '_dont_enforce_csrf_checks', False): # Mechanism to turn off CSRF checks for test suite. It comes after # the creation of CSRF cookies, so that everything else continues to # work exactly the same (e.g. cookies are sent etc), but before the # any branches that call reject() return accept() if request.is_ajax(): # .is_ajax() is based on the presence of X-Requested-With. In # the context of a browser, this can only be sent if using # XmlHttpRequest. Browsers implement careful policies for # XmlHttpRequest: # # * Normally, only same-domain requests are allowed. # # * Some browsers (e.g. Firefox 3.5 and later) relax this # carefully: # # * if it is a 'simple' GET or POST request (which can # include no custom headers), it is allowed to be cross # domain. These requests will not be recognized as AJAX. # # * if a 'preflight' check with the server confirms that the # server is expecting and allows the request, cross domain # requests even with custom headers are allowed. These # requests will be recognized as AJAX, but can only get # through when the developer has specifically opted in to # allowing the cross-domain POST request. # # So in all cases, it is safe to allow these requests through. return accept() if request.is_secure(): # Suppose user visits http://example.com/ # An active network attacker,(man-in-the-middle, MITM) sends a # POST form which targets https://example.com/detonate-bomb/ and # submits it via javascript. # # The attacker will need to provide a CSRF cookie and token, but # that is no problem for a MITM and the session independent # nonce we are using. So the MITM can circumvent the CSRF # protection. This is true for any HTTP connection, but anyone # using HTTPS expects better! For this reason, for # https://example.com/ we need additional protection that treats # http://example.com/ as completely untrusted. Under HTTPS, # Barth et al. found that the Referer header is missing for # same-domain requests in only about 0.2% of cases or less, so # we can use strict Referer checking. referer = request.META.get('HTTP_REFERER') if referer is None: return reject(REASON_NO_REFERER) # The following check ensures that the referer is HTTPS, # the domains match and the ports match - the same origin policy. good_referer = 'https://%s/' % request.get_host() if not referer.startswith(good_referer): return reject(REASON_BAD_REFERER % (referer, good_referer)) # If the user didn't already have a CSRF cookie, then fall back to # the Django 1.1 method (hash of session ID), so a request is not # rejected if the form was sent to the user before upgrading to the # Django 1.2 method (session independent nonce) if cookie_is_new: try: session_id = request.COOKIES[settings.SESSION_COOKIE_NAME] csrf_token = _make_legacy_session_token(session_id) except KeyError: # No CSRF cookie and no session cookie. For POST requests, # we insist on a CSRF cookie, and in this way we can avoid # all CSRF attacks, including login CSRF. return reject(REASON_NO_COOKIE) else: csrf_token = request.META["CSRF_COOKIE"] # check incoming token request_csrf_token = request.POST.get('csrfmiddlewaretoken', None) if request_csrf_token != csrf_token: if cookie_is_new: # probably a problem setting the CSRF cookie return reject(REASON_NO_CSRF_COOKIE) else: return reject(REASON_BAD_TOKEN) return accept() def process_response(self, request, response): if getattr(response, 'csrf_processing_done', False): return response # If CSRF_COOKIE is unset, then CsrfViewMiddleware.process_view was # never called, probaby because a request middleware returned a response # (for example, contrib.auth redirecting to a login page). if request.META.get("CSRF_COOKIE") is None: return response if not request.META.get("CSRF_COOKIE_USED", False): return response # Set the CSRF cookie even if it's already set, so we renew the expiry timer. response.set_cookie(settings.CSRF_COOKIE_NAME, request.META["CSRF_COOKIE"], max_age = 60 * 60 * 24 * 7 * 52, domain=settings.CSRF_COOKIE_DOMAIN) # Content varies with the CSRF cookie, so set the Vary header. patch_vary_headers(response, ('Cookie',)) response.csrf_processing_done = True return response class CsrfResponseMiddleware(object): """ DEPRECATED Middleware that post-processes a response to add a csrfmiddlewaretoken. This exists for backwards compatibility and as an interim measure until applications are converted to using use the csrf_token template tag instead. It will be removed in Django 1.4. """ def __init__(self): import warnings warnings.warn( "CsrfResponseMiddleware and CsrfMiddleware are deprecated; use CsrfViewMiddleware and the template tag instead (see CSRF documentation).", PendingDeprecationWarning ) def process_response(self, request, response): if getattr(response, 'csrf_exempt', False): return response if response['Content-Type'].split(';')[0] in _HTML_TYPES: csrf_token = get_token(request) # If csrf_token is None, we have no token for this request, which probably # means that this is a response from a request middleware. if csrf_token is None: return response # ensure we don't add the 'id' attribute twice (HTML validity) idattributes = itertools.chain(("id='csrfmiddlewaretoken'",), itertools.repeat('')) def add_csrf_field(match): """Returns the matched
tag plus the added element""" return mark_safe(match.group() + "
" + \ "
") # Modify any POST forms response.content, n = _POST_FORM_RE.subn(add_csrf_field, response.content) if n > 0: # Content varies with the CSRF cookie, so set the Vary header. patch_vary_headers(response, ('Cookie',)) # Since the content has been modified, any Etag will now be # incorrect. We could recalculate, but only if we assume that # the Etag was set by CommonMiddleware. The safest thing is just # to delete. See bug #9163 del response['ETag'] return response class CsrfMiddleware(object): """ Django middleware that adds protection against Cross Site Request Forgeries by adding hidden form fields to POST forms and checking requests for the correct value. CsrfMiddleware uses two middleware, CsrfViewMiddleware and CsrfResponseMiddleware, which can be used independently. It is recommended to use only CsrfViewMiddleware and use the csrf_token template tag in templates for inserting the token. """ # We can't just inherit from CsrfViewMiddleware and CsrfResponseMiddleware # because both have process_response methods. def __init__(self): self.response_middleware = CsrfResponseMiddleware() self.view_middleware = CsrfViewMiddleware() def process_response(self, request, resp): # We must do the response post-processing first, because that calls # get_token(), which triggers a flag saying that the CSRF cookie needs # to be sent (done in CsrfViewMiddleware.process_response) resp2 = self.response_middleware.process_response(request, resp) return self.view_middleware.process_response(request, resp2) def process_view(self, request, callback, callback_args, callback_kwargs): return self.view_middleware.process_view(request, callback, callback_args, callback_kwargs)