linkDomSanitizer
npm Package | @angular/platform-browser |
---|---|
Module | import { DomSanitizer } from '@angular/platform-browser'; |
Source | platform-browser/src/security/dom_sanitization_service.ts |
linkSecurity Risk
Calling any of the bypassSecurityTrust...
APIs disables Angular's built-in
sanitization for the value passed in. Carefully check and audit all values and code paths going
into this call. Make sure any user data is appropriately escaped for this security context.
For more detail, see the Security Guide.
linkOverview
class DomSanitizer implements Sanitizer {
sanitize(context: SecurityContext, value: SafeValue | string | null): string | null
bypassSecurityTrustHtml(value: string): SafeHtml
bypassSecurityTrustStyle(value: string): SafeStyle
bypassSecurityTrustScript(value: string): SafeScript
bypassSecurityTrustUrl(value: string): SafeUrl
bypassSecurityTrustResourceUrl(value: string): SafeResourceUrl
}
linkDescription
DomSanitizer helps preventing Cross Site Scripting Security bugs (XSS) by sanitizing values to be safe to use in the different DOM contexts.
For example, when binding a URL in an <a [href]="someValue">
hyperlink, someValue
will be
sanitized so that an attacker cannot inject e.g. a javascript:
URL that would execute code on
the website.
In specific situations, it might be necessary to disable sanitization, for example if the
application genuinely needs to produce a javascript:
style link with a dynamic value in it.
Users can bypass security by constructing a value with one of the bypassSecurityTrust...
methods, and then binding to that value from the template.
These situations should be very rare, and extraordinary care must be taken to avoid creating a Cross Site Scripting (XSS) security bug!
When using bypassSecurityTrust...
, make sure to call the method as early as possible and as
close as possible to the source of the value, to make it easy to verify no security bug is
created by its use.
It is not required (and not recommended) to bypass security if the value is safe, e.g. a URL that does not start with a suspicious protocol, or an HTML snippet that does not contain dangerous code. The sanitizer leaves safe values intact.
linkMembers
sanitize(context: SecurityContext, value: SafeValue | string | null): string | null
Sanitizes a value for use in the given SecurityContext.
If value is trusted for the context, this method will unwrap the contained safe value and use
it directly. Otherwise, value will be sanitized to be safe in the given context, for example
by replacing URLs that have an unsafe protocol part (such as javascript:
). The implementation
is responsible to make sure that the value can definitely be safely used in the given context.
bypassSecurityTrustHtml(value: string): SafeHtml
Bypass security and trust the given value to be safe HTML. Only use this when the bound HTML
is unsafe (e.g. contains <script>
tags) and the code should be executed. The sanitizer will
leave safe HTML intact, so in most situations this method should not be used.
WARNING: calling this method with untrusted user data exposes your application to XSS security risks!
bypassSecurityTrustStyle(value: string): SafeStyle
Bypass security and trust the given value to be safe style value (CSS).
WARNING: calling this method with untrusted user data exposes your application to XSS security risks!
bypassSecurityTrustScript(value: string): SafeScript
Bypass security and trust the given value to be safe JavaScript.
WARNING: calling this method with untrusted user data exposes your application to XSS security risks!
bypassSecurityTrustUrl(value: string): SafeUrl
Bypass security and trust the given value to be a safe style URL, i.e. a value that can be used
in hyperlinks or <img src>
.
WARNING: calling this method with untrusted user data exposes your application to XSS security risks!
bypassSecurityTrustResourceUrl(value: string): SafeResourceUrl
Bypass security and trust the given value to be a safe resource URL, i.e. a location that may
be used to load executable code from, like <script src>
, or <iframe src>
.
WARNING: calling this method with untrusted user data exposes your application to XSS security risks!