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SecureHandlebars

Automatically applying context-sensitive output escaping to prevent XSS!

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Introduction

Check out the latest slide deck, presented in the OWASP AppSec USA 2015.

Security is of utmost importance!

Imagine a template is written like so: <a href="{{url}}">{{url}}</a>. When it is compiled with an untrusted user data like {"url": "javascript:alert(666)"}, secure-handlebars automatically applies contextual escaping and generates the HTML <a href="x-javascript:alert(666)">javascript:alert(666)</a> as a result.

Clearly, the same {{url}} must be escaped according to different output contexts to prevent malicious script executions, which otherwise would be vulnerable if the original Handlebars is used alone.

This is archived by enhancing the original Handlebars to perform the following steps:

alt Visualizing the architecture of secure-handlebars

<!--### Demonstration Click [here](https://yahoo.github.io/secure-handlebars/demosSecureHandlebars.html) for a quick demo!-->

Supported Contexts

ContextExamples
HTML Data<div>{{output}}</div>
HTML Comment<!-- {{output}} -->
HTML Attribute Value <br>(unquoted, single-quoted and double-quoted)<a class={{output}}> <br> <div class='{{output}}'> <br> <div class="{{output}}">
URI in Attribute Value <br>(unquoted, single-quoted and double-quoted)<a href={{output}}> <br> <a href='{{output}}'> <br> <a href="{{output}}">
CSS in Attribute Value <br>(unquoted, single-quoted and double-quoted)<div style="color:{{output}}"> <br> <div style="backgrount:url({{output}})">
It is generally a bad idea to place an {{expression}} inside those scriptable contexts (e.g., <script>{{script}}</script> or <div onclick="{{onclick}}"). Check out the Section of Warnings and Workarounds for resolutions.

Quick Start

Server-side Use for Express w/Handlebars

We highly recommend using the express-secure-handlebars npm for a streamlined experience of template pre-processing, compilating, context-sensitive output escaping, and data binding.

Client-side Use

Automatically apply Contextual XSS Escaping for Handlebars templates on client-side

<!-- Disable <script src="dist/handlebars.min.js"></script> -->
<script src="dist/secure-handlebars.min.js"></script>

<script>
// given data stores a handlebars template as string
var html = '<a href="{{url}}">{{url}}</a>',
    data = {url: 'javascript:alert(666)'};

// Compile the template and apply data binding w/automatic contextual escaping
// the resulted html is '<a href="x-javascript:alert(666)">javascript:alert(666)</a>'
var html = Handlebars.compile(html)(data);
</script>

Advanced Usage for Pre-processing Templates Only

You can perform offline pre-processing for your templates using the provided CLI utility, which rewrites the templates to insert contextual output escaping filter markups. Fully compatible with the original Handlebars, the rewritten templates can be further compiled and data-binded with secure-handlebars-helpers.

To achieve this, install the secure-handlebars npm globally, so it can be used in any project.

npm install secure-handlebars -g

Given a handlebars template file named sample.hbs like so:

<!doctype html>
<html><title>{{title}}</title></html>

Get the template with contextual escaping filters inserted:

handlebarspp sample.hbs > sample.shbs

The pre-processed template file sample.shbs that is fully-compatible with the original (runtime) Handlebars:

<!doctype html>
<html><title>{{{yd title}}}</title></html>

These rewritten templates can then go through the standard Handlebars pre-compilation process, and be used with secure-handlebars-helpers during runtime compilation. On the other hand, this utility also faciilates statistics collection. For instance, you can write a simple script to count the number of dangerous contexts (such as <script>{{script}}</script>).

Development

How to test

npm test

Known Limitations & Issues

Warnings and Workarounds

When output expressions are found inside dangerous (yet-to-be-supported) contexts, we echo warnings and gracefully fallback to apply the default Handlebars escapeExpression(). These warnings are indications of potential security exploits, and thus require closer inspections. Instead of simply abusing {{{raw_expression}}} to suppress the warnings, here are some alternative suggestions to secure your applications.

<!-- Rewrite <script>var strJS = {{strJS}};</script> as: -->
<input type="hidden" id="strJS" value="{{strJS}}">
<script>var strJS = document.getElementById('strJS').value;</script>
<!-- Rewrite <div onclick="hello({{name}})"> as: --> <div onclick="hello(this.getAttribute('data-name'))" data-name="{{name}}"> ``` <script> function search(url, keyword) { var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); xhr.open('GET', url, true); // ... document.getElementById('status').innerHTML = 'Searching for ' + keyword; } </script> <!-- Rewrite <div onclick="search('/query?q={{keyword}}&lang=us', '{{keyword}}')"> as: --> <div onclick="search(this.getAttribute('data-url'), this.getAttribute('data-keyword'))" data-url="/query?q={{uriComponentData keyword}}&lang=us" data-keyword="{{inHTMLData keyword}}"> ``` The manually-applied filters here are to pre-escape `{{keyword}}` depending on the ultimate output contexts, while the `{{` `}}` is still needed (**NOT** `{{{ }}}`) to let `secure-handlebars` automatically applies the escaping filter for the immediate attribute value context. <script src="dist/xss-filters.min.js"></script> <script> function search(keyword) { // ... document.getElementById('status').innerHTML = 'Searching for ' + xssFilters.inHTMLData(keyword); } </script> <div onclick="search(this.getAttribute('data-keyword'))" data-keyword="{{keyword}}"> ```

License

This software is free to use under the BSD license. See the LICENSE file for license text and copyright information.