§Protecting against Cross Site Request Forgery
Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF) is a security exploit where an attacker tricks a victim’s browser into making a request using the victim’s session. Since the session token is sent with every request, if an attacker can coerce the victim’s browser to make a request on their behalf, the attacker can make requests on the user’s behalf.
It is recommended that you familiarise yourself with CSRF, what the attack vectors are, and what the attack vectors are not. We recommend starting with this information from OWASP.
There is no simple answer to what requests are safe and what are vulnerable to CSRF requests, the reason for this is that there is no clear specification as to what is allowable from plugins and future extensions to specifications. Historically, browser plugins and extensions have relaxed the rules that frameworks previously thought could be trusted, introducing CSRF vulnerabilities to many applications, and the onus has been on the frameworks to fix them. For this reason, Play takes a conservative approach in its defaults, but allows you to configure exactly when a check is done. By default, Play will require a CSRF check when all of the following are true:
- The request method is not
GET
,HEAD
orOPTIONS
. - The request has one or more
Cookie
orAuthorization
headers. - The CORS filter is not configured to trust the request’s origin.
Note: If you use browser-based authentication other than using cookies or HTTP authentication, such as NTLM or client certificate based authentication, then you must set
play.filters.csrf.header.protectHeaders = null
, or include the headers used in authentication inprotectHeaders
.
§Play’s CSRF protection
Play supports multiple methods for verifying that a request is not a CSRF request. The primary mechanism is a CSRF token. This token gets placed either in the query string or body of every form submitted, and also gets placed in the users session. Play then verifies that both tokens are present and match.
To allow simple protection for non browser requests, Play only checks requests with cookies in the header. If you are making requests with AJAX, you can place the CSRF token in the HTML page, and then add it to the request using the Csrf-Token
header.
Alternatively, you can set play.filters.csrf.header.bypassHeaders
to match common headers: A common configuration would be:
- If an
X-Requested-With
header is present, Play will consider the request safe.X-Requested-With
is added to requests by many popular Javascript libraries, such as jQuery. - If a
Csrf-Token
header with valuenocheck
is present, or with a valid CSRF token, Play will consider the request safe.
This configuration would look like:
play.filters.csrf.header.bypassHeaders {
X-Requested-With = "*"
Csrf-Token = "nocheck"
}
Caution should be taken when using this configuration option, as historically browser plugins have undermined this type of CSRF defence.
§Trusting CORS requests
By default, if you have a CORS filter before your CSRF filter, the CSRF filter will let through CORS requests from trusted origins. To disable this check, set the config option play.filters.csrf.bypassCorsTrustedOrigins = false
.
§Applying a global CSRF filter
Note: As of Play 2.6.x, the CSRF filter is included in Play’s list of default filters that are applied automatically to projects. See the Filters page for more information.
Play provides a global CSRF filter that can be applied to all requests. This is the simplest way to add CSRF protection to an application. To add the filter manually, add it to application.conf
:
play.filters.enabled += play.filters.csrf.CsrfFilter
§Getting the current token
The current CSRF token can be accessed using the CSRF.getToken
method. It takes a RequestHeader
, which can be obtained by calling Controllers.request()
:
Optional<CSRF.Token> token = CSRF.getToken(request());
To help in adding CSRF tokens to forms, Play provides some template helpers. The first one adds it to the query string of the action URL:
@import helper._
@form(CSRF(scalaguide.forms.csrf.routes.ItemsController.save())) {
...
}
This might render a form that looks like this:
<form method="POST" action="/items?csrfToken=1234567890abcdef">
...
</form>
If it is undesirable to have the token in the query string, Play also provides a helper for adding the CSRF token as hidden field in the form:
@form(scalaguide.forms.csrf.routes.ItemsController.save()) {
@CSRF.formField
...
}
This might render a form that looks like this:
<form method="POST" action="/items">
<input type="hidden" name="csrfToken" value="1234567890abcdef"/>
...
</form>
§Adding a CSRF token to the session
To ensure that a CSRF token is available to be rendered in forms, and sent back to the client, the global filter will generate a new token for all GET requests that accept HTML, if a token isn’t already available in the incoming request.
§Applying CSRF filtering on a per action basis
Sometimes global CSRF filtering may not be appropriate, for example in situations where an application might want to allow some cross origin form posts. Some non session based standards, such as OpenID 2.0, require the use of cross site form posting, or use form submission in server to server RPC communications.
In these cases, Play provides two actions that can be composed with your applications actions.
The first action is the play.filters.csrf.RequireCSRFCheck
action which performs the CSRF check. It should be added to all actions that accept session authenticated POST form submissions:
@RequireCSRFCheck
public Result save() {
// Handle body
return ok();
}
The second action is the play.filters.csrf.AddCSRFToken
action, it generates a CSRF token if not already present on the incoming request. It should be added to all actions that render forms:
@AddCSRFToken
public Result get() {
return ok(CSRF.getToken(request()).map(CSRF.Token::value).orElse("no token"));
}
§CSRF configuration options
The full range of CSRF configuration options can be found in the filters reference.conf. Some examples include:
play.filters.csrf.token.name
- The name of the token to use both in the session and in the request body/query string. Defaults tocsrfToken
.play.filters.csrf.cookie.name
- If configured, Play will store the CSRF token in a cookie with the given name, instead of in the session.play.filters.csrf.cookie.secure
- Ifplay.filters.csrf.cookie.name
is set, whether the CSRF cookie should have the secure flag set. Defaults to the same value asplay.http.session.secure
.play.filters.csrf.body.bufferSize
- In order to read tokens out of the body, Play must first buffer the body and potentially parse it. This sets the maximum buffer size that will be used to buffer the body. Defaults to 100k.play.filters.csrf.token.sign
- Whether Play should use signed CSRF tokens. Signed CSRF tokens ensure that the token value is randomised per request, thus defeating BREACH style attacks.
§Testing CSRF
In a functional test, if you are rendering a Twirl template with a CSRF token, you need to have a CSRF token available. You can do this by calling CSRFTokenHelper.addCSRFToken
on a play.mvc.Http.RequestBuilder
instance:
RequestBuilder requestBuilder = CSRFTokenHelper.addCSRFToken(requestBuilder);
Next: Working with Json