django1/django/core/signing.py

195 lines
6.3 KiB
Python

"""
Functions for creating and restoring url-safe signed JSON objects.
The format used looks like this:
>>> signing.dumps("hello")
'ImhlbGxvIg:1QaUZC:YIye-ze3TTx7gtSv422nZA4sgmk'
There are two components here, separated by a ':'. The first component is a
URLsafe base64 encoded JSON of the object passed to dumps(). The second
component is a base64 encoded hmac/SHA1 hash of "$first_component:$secret"
signing.loads(s) checks the signature and returns the deserialised object.
If the signature fails, a BadSignature exception is raised.
>>> signing.loads("ImhlbGxvIg:1QaUZC:YIye-ze3TTx7gtSv422nZA4sgmk")
u'hello'
>>> signing.loads("ImhlbGxvIg:1QaUZC:YIye-ze3TTx7gtSv422nZA4sgmk-modified")
...
BadSignature: Signature failed: ImhlbGxvIg:1QaUZC:YIye-ze3TTx7gtSv422nZA4sgmk-modified
You can optionally compress the JSON prior to base64 encoding it to save
space, using the compress=True argument. This checks if compression actually
helps and only applies compression if the result is a shorter string:
>>> signing.dumps(range(1, 20), compress=True)
'.eJwFwcERACAIwLCF-rCiILN47r-GyZVJsNgkxaFxoDgxcOHGxMKD_T7vhAml:1QaUaL:BA0thEZrp4FQVXIXuOvYJtLJSrQ'
The fact that the string is compressed is signalled by the prefixed '.' at the
start of the base64 JSON.
There are 65 url-safe characters: the 64 used by url-safe base64 and the ':'.
These functions make use of all of them.
"""
import base64
import json
import time
import zlib
from django.conf import settings
from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured
from django.utils import baseconv
from django.utils.crypto import constant_time_compare, salted_hmac
from django.utils.encoding import force_text, smart_bytes
from django.utils.importlib import import_module
class BadSignature(Exception):
"""
Signature does not match
"""
pass
class SignatureExpired(BadSignature):
"""
Signature timestamp is older than required max_age
"""
pass
def b64_encode(s):
return base64.urlsafe_b64encode(s).strip('=')
def b64_decode(s):
pad = '=' * (-len(s) % 4)
return base64.urlsafe_b64decode(s + pad)
def base64_hmac(salt, value, key):
return b64_encode(salted_hmac(salt, value, key).digest())
def get_cookie_signer(salt='django.core.signing.get_cookie_signer'):
modpath = settings.SIGNING_BACKEND
module, attr = modpath.rsplit('.', 1)
try:
mod = import_module(module)
except ImportError as e:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
'Error importing cookie signer %s: "%s"' % (modpath, e))
try:
Signer = getattr(mod, attr)
except AttributeError as e:
raise ImproperlyConfigured(
'Error importing cookie signer %s: "%s"' % (modpath, e))
return Signer('django.http.cookies' + settings.SECRET_KEY, salt=salt)
class JSONSerializer(object):
"""
Simple wrapper around json to be used in signing.dumps and
signing.loads.
"""
def dumps(self, obj):
return json.dumps(obj, separators=(',', ':'))
def loads(self, data):
return json.loads(data)
def dumps(obj, key=None, salt='django.core.signing', serializer=JSONSerializer, compress=False):
"""
Returns URL-safe, sha1 signed base64 compressed JSON string. If key is
None, settings.SECRET_KEY is used instead.
If compress is True (not the default) checks if compressing using zlib can
save some space. Prepends a '.' to signify compression. This is included
in the signature, to protect against zip bombs.
Salt can be used to namespace the hash, so that a signed string is
only valid for a given namespace. Leaving this at the default
value or re-using a salt value across different parts of your
application without good cause is a security risk.
"""
data = serializer().dumps(obj)
# Flag for if it's been compressed or not
is_compressed = False
if compress:
# Avoid zlib dependency unless compress is being used
compressed = zlib.compress(data)
if len(compressed) < (len(data) - 1):
data = compressed
is_compressed = True
base64d = b64_encode(data)
if is_compressed:
base64d = '.' + base64d
return TimestampSigner(key, salt=salt).sign(base64d)
def loads(s, key=None, salt='django.core.signing', serializer=JSONSerializer, max_age=None):
"""
Reverse of dumps(), raises BadSignature if signature fails
"""
base64d = smart_bytes(
TimestampSigner(key, salt=salt).unsign(s, max_age=max_age))
decompress = False
if base64d[0] == '.':
# It's compressed; uncompress it first
base64d = base64d[1:]
decompress = True
data = b64_decode(base64d)
if decompress:
data = zlib.decompress(data)
return serializer().loads(data)
class Signer(object):
def __init__(self, key=None, sep=':', salt=None):
self.sep = sep
self.key = key or settings.SECRET_KEY
self.salt = salt or ('%s.%s' %
(self.__class__.__module__, self.__class__.__name__))
def signature(self, value):
return base64_hmac(self.salt + 'signer', value, self.key)
def sign(self, value):
value = smart_bytes(value)
return '%s%s%s' % (value, self.sep, self.signature(value))
def unsign(self, signed_value):
signed_value = smart_bytes(signed_value)
if not self.sep in signed_value:
raise BadSignature('No "%s" found in value' % self.sep)
value, sig = signed_value.rsplit(self.sep, 1)
if constant_time_compare(sig, self.signature(value)):
return force_text(value)
raise BadSignature('Signature "%s" does not match' % sig)
class TimestampSigner(Signer):
def timestamp(self):
return baseconv.base62.encode(int(time.time()))
def sign(self, value):
value = smart_bytes('%s%s%s' % (value, self.sep, self.timestamp()))
return '%s%s%s' % (value, self.sep, self.signature(value))
def unsign(self, value, max_age=None):
result = super(TimestampSigner, self).unsign(value)
value, timestamp = result.rsplit(self.sep, 1)
timestamp = baseconv.base62.decode(timestamp)
if max_age is not None:
# Check timestamp is not older than max_age
age = time.time() - timestamp
if age > max_age:
raise SignatureExpired(
'Signature age %s > %s seconds' % (age, max_age))
return value