The library provides csrf (xsrf) protection for aiohttp.web.
Breaking Change: New in 0.1.0 is Blake3 hashes are used by default. This means you must pass secret_phrase
to
aiohttp_csrf.storage.SessionStorage
note: The package aiohttp-csrf-fixed is aiohttp_csrf 0.0.2 + this commit. The maintainer didn't submit a PR so I just saw it by chance. I haven't had time to closely examine it but I think it's just removing the HTTP security error that happens if no CSRF is provided. Why do that? An HTTP error is good because it tells the client what happened and lets you handle it by middleware.
0.1.1: Converted @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_exempt
decorator to a co-routine to make it compatible with latest aiohttp.
The library allows you to implement csrf (xsrf) protection for requests
Basic usage example:
import aiohttp_csrf
from aiohttp import web
FORM_FIELD_NAME = '_csrf_token'
COOKIE_NAME = 'csrf_token'
def make_app():
csrf_policy = aiohttp_csrf.policy.FormPolicy(FORM_FIELD_NAME)
csrf_storage = aiohttp_csrf.storage.CookieStorage(COOKIE_NAME)
app = web.Application()
aiohttp_csrf.setup(app, policy=csrf_policy, storage=csrf_storage)
app.middlewares.append(aiohttp_csrf.csrf_middleware)
async def handler_get_form_with_token(request):
token = await aiohttp_csrf.generate_token(request)
body = '''
<html>
<head><title>Form with csrf protection</title></head>
<body>
<form method="POST" action="/">
<input type="hidden" name="{field_name}" value="{token}" />
<input type="text" name="name" />
<input type="submit" value="Say hello">
</form>
</body>
</html>
''' # noqa
body = body.format(field_name=FORM_FIELD_NAME, token=token)
return web.Response(
body=body.encode('utf-8'),
content_type='text/html',
)
async def handler_post_check(request):
post = await request.post()
body = 'Hello, {name}'.format(name=post['name'])
return web.Response(
body=body.encode('utf-8'),
content_type='text/html',
)
app.router.add_route(
'GET',
'/',
handler_get_form_with_token,
)
app.router.add_route(
'POST',
'/',
handler_post_check,
)
return app
web.run_app(make_app())
First of all, you need to initialize aiohttp_csrf
in your application:
app = web.Application()
csrf_policy = aiohttp_csrf.policy.FormPolicy(FORM_FIELD_NAME)
csrf_storage = aiohttp_csrf.storage.CookieStorage(COOKIE_NAME)
aiohttp_csrf.setup(app, policy=csrf_policy, storage=csrf_storage)
After initialize you can use @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_protect
for handlers, that you want to protect. Or you can
initialize aiohttp_csrf.csrf_middleware
and do not disturb about using
decorator (full middleware example here):
# ...
app.middlewares.append(aiohttp_csrf.csrf_middleware)
# ...
In this case all your handlers will be protected.
Note: we strongly recommend to use aiohttp_csrf.csrf_middleware
and @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_exempt
instead of
manually managing with @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_protect
. But if you prefer to use @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_protect
, don't forget
to use @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_protect
for both methods: GET and
POST (manual protection example)
If you want to use middleware, but need handlers without protection, you can use @aiohttp_csrf.csrf_exempt
. Mark you
handler with this decorator and this handler will not check the token:
@aiohttp_csrf.csrf_exempt
async def handler_post_not_check(request):
...
For generate token you need to call aiohttp_csrf.generate_token
in your handler:
@aiohttp_csrf.csrf_protect
async def handler_get(request):
token = await aiohttp_csrf.generate_token(request)
...
You can use different policies for check tokens. Library provides 3 types of policy:
- FormPolicy. This policy will search token in the body of your POST request (Usually use for forms) or as a GET variable of the same name. You need to specify name of field that will be checked.
- HeaderPolicy. This policy will search token in headers of your POST request (Usually use for AJAX requests). You need to specify name of header that will be checked.
- FormAndHeaderPolicy. This policy combines behavior of FormPolicy and HeaderPolicy.
You can implement your custom policies if needed. But make sure that your custom policy
implements aiohttp_csrf.policy.AbstractPolicy
interface.
You can use different types of storages for storing token. Library provides 2 types of storage:
- CookieStorage. Your token will be stored in cookie variable. You need to specify cookie name.
- SessionStorage. Your token will be stored in session. You need to specify session variable name.
Important: If you want to use session storage, you need setup aiohttp_session in your application (session storage example)
You can implement your custom storages if needed. But make sure that your custom storage
implements aiohttp_csrf.storage.AbstractStorage
interface.
You can use different token generator in your application. By default storages
using aiohttp_csrf.token_generator.SimpleTokenGenerator
But if you need more secure token generator - you can use aiohttp_csrf.token_generator.HashedTokenGenerator
And you can implement your custom token generators if needed. But make sure that your custom token generator
implements aiohttp_csrf.token_generator.AbstractTokenGenerator
interface.
By default, if token is invalid, aiohttp_csrf
will raise aiohttp.web.HTTPForbidden
exception.
You have ability to specify your custom error handler. It can be:
- callable instance. Input parameter - aiohttp request.
def custom_error_handler(request):
# do something
return aiohttp.web.Response(status=403)
# or
async def custom_async_error_handler(request):
# await do something
return aiohttp.web.Response(status=403)
It will be called instead of protected handler.
- sub class of Exception. In this case this Exception will be raised.
class CustomException(Exception):
pass
You can specify custom error handler globally, when initialize aiohttp_csrf
in your application:
...
class CustomException(Exception):
pass
...
aiohttp_csrf.setup(app, policy=csrf_policy, storage=csrf_storage, error_renderer=CustomException)
...
In this case custom error handler will be applied to all protected handlers.
Or you can specify custom error handler locally, for specific handler:
...
class CustomException(Exception):
pass
...
@aiohttp_csrf.csrf_protect(error_renderer=CustomException)
def handler_with_custom_csrf_error(request):
...
In this case custom error handler will be applied to this handler only. For all other handlers will be applied global error handler.