CSP - Content Security Policy
Einführung
CSP sind Metainformationen, die dem Browser vorgeben aus welchen Quellen die aktuelle Seite Skripte, Bilder etc. beziehen darf. Dadurch wird der Benutzer besser gegen CrossSiteScripting geschützt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-sx4AmjGCI https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CSP
<meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy"
content="default-src 'self' data: gap: 'unsafe-eval' ws: ;
style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline';
script-src https: *.example.com ;
media-src 'none';
font-src *;
connect-src *;
img-src 'self' data: content:;">
<!--
Also
base-uri /abc/; - limit to content in this folder v2
form-action ; - limit where forms can be sent v2
VALUES
'self' - anything from the same origin
data: - data-uri (base64 images)
gap: - phonegap and cordova used by plugins on iOS
ws: - web sockets
* - anything except data: and blobs
filesystem: - access things on the local filesystem
blob: - allow Binary Large OBjects
mediastream: - allow streamed media
content: - used by Cordova
'none' - prevent anything in the category
https: - anything over https://
*.example.com - anything from any subdomain of example.com
'unsafe-inline' - inline source elements like style attribute, onclick, or script tags
'unsafe-eval' - allow javascript eval( ).
-->
Reporting & Testing
Man kann zum Testen eine Report only Variante implementieren und zusätzlich eine URI definieren, die verstöße gegen die CSP entgegennimmt.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CSP#sample_violation_report
Beispiele
Common
Examples: Common use cases
This section provides examples of some common security policy scenarios.
Example 1
A web site administrator wants all content to come from the site's own origin (this excludes subdomains.)
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'
Example 2
A web site administrator wants to allow content from a trusted domain and all its subdomains (it doesn't have to be the same domain that the CSP is set on.)
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self' trusted.com *.trusted.com
Example 3
A web site administrator wants to allow users of a web application to include images from any origin in their own content, but to restrict audio or video media to trusted providers, and all scripts only to a specific server that hosts trusted code.
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self'; img-src *; media-src media1.com media2.com; script-src userscripts.example.com
Here, by default, content is only permitted from the document's origin, with the following exceptions:
Images may load from anywhere (note the "*" wildcard). Media is only allowed from media1.com and media2.com (and not from subdomains of those sites). Executable script is only allowed from userscripts.example.com.
Example 4
A web site administrator for an online banking site wants to ensure that all its content is loaded using TLS, in order to prevent attackers from eavesdropping on requests.
Content-Security-Policy: default-src https://onlinebanking.jumbobank.com
The server permits access only to documents being loaded specifically over HTTPS through the single origin onlinebanking.jumbobank.com.
Example 5
A web site administrator of a web mail site wants to allow HTML in email, as well as images loaded from anywhere, but not JavaScript or other potentially dangerous content.
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'self' *.mailsite.com; img-src *
Note that this example doesn't specify a script-src; with the example CSP, this site uses the setting specified by the default-src directive, which means that scripts can be loaded only from the originating server.
Reporting Beispiel
Sample violation report
Let's consider a page located at http://example.com/signup.html. It uses the following policy, disallowing everything but stylesheets from cdn.example.com.
Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'none'; style-src cdn.example.com; report-uri /_/csp-reports
The HTML of signup.html looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html>
<head> <title>Sign Up</title> <link rel="stylesheet" href="css/style.css"> </head> <body> ... Content ... </body>
</html>
Can you spot the mistake? Stylesheets are allowed to be loaded only from cdn.example.com, yet the website tries to load one from its own origin (http://example.com). A browser capable of enforcing CSP would send the following violation report as a POST request to http://example.com/_/csp-reports, when the document is visited:
{
"csp-report": {
"document-uri": "http://example.com/signup.html",
"referrer": "",
"blocked-uri": "http://example.com/css/style.css",
"violated-directive": "style-src cdn.example.com",
"original-policy": "default-src 'none'; style-src cdn.example.com; report-uri /_/csp-reports"
}
}
As you can see, the report includes the full path to the violating resource in blocked-uri. This is not always the case. For example, if the signup.html attempted to load CSS from http://anothercdn.example.com/stylesheet.css, the browser would not include the full path, but only the origin (http://anothercdn.example.com). The CSP specification gives an explanation of this odd behavior. In summary, this is done to prevent leaking sensitive information about cross-origin resources.