Purify is an HTML input sanitizer for Laravel.
It utilizes HTMLPurifier by ezyang.
To install Purify, insert the following require in your composer.json
file:
"stevebauman/purify": "2.0.*"
Now run a composer update
on your project source.
Note: If you're using Laravel 5.5, ignore the below service provider and facade setup.
These are registered automatically.
Then, insert the service provider in your config/app.php
:
Stevebauman\Purify\PurifyServiceProvider::class
You can also use the facade if you wish:
'Purify' => 'Stevebauman\Purify\Facades\Purify'
Then, publish the configuration file using:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Stevebauman\Purify\PurifyServiceProvider"
If you are using Lumen, you should copy the config file purify.php
by hand, and add this line to your bootstrap/app.php:
$app->register(Stevebauman\Purify\PurifyServiceProvider::class);
To clean a users input, simply use the clean method:
$input = '<script>alert("Harmful Script");</script> <p style="a style" class="a-different-class">Test</p>';
$cleaned = Purify::clean($input);
echo $cleaned; // Returns '<p class="a-different-class">Test</p>'
Need to purify an array of user input? Just pass in an array:
$array = [
'<script>alert("Harmful Script");</script> <p style="a style" class="a-different-class">Test</p>',
'<script>alert("Harmful Script");</script> <p style="a style" class="a-different-class">Test</p>',
];
$cleaned = Purify::clean($array);
var_dump($cleaned); // Returns [0] => '<p class="a-different-class">Test</p>' [1] => '<p class="a-different-class">Test</p>'
Need a different configuration for a single input? Pass in a configuration array into the second parameter:
$config = ['HTML.Allowed' => 'div,b,a[href]'];
$cleaned = Purify::clean($input, $config);
Note: Configuration passed into the second parameter is not merged with your current configuration.
$config = ['HTML.Allowed' => 'div,b,a[href]'];
$cleaned = Purify::clean($input, $config);
Need to replace the HTML Purifier instance with your own? Call the setPurifier()
method:
$purifier = new HTMLPurifier();
Purify::setPurifier($purifier);
If you're looking into sanitization, you're likely wanting to sanitize inputted user HTML content that is then stored in your database to be rendered onto your application.
In this scenario, it's likely best practice to sanitize on the way out instead of the on the way in. Remember, the database doesn't care what text it contains.
This way you can allow anything to be inserted in the database, and have strong sanization rules on the way out.
This helps tremendously if you change your sanization requirements later down the line, then all rendered content will follow these sanization rules.
Inside the configuration file, the entire settings array is passed directly to the HTML Purifier configuration, so feel free to customize it however you wish. For the configuration documentation, please visit the HTML Purifier Website:
http://htmlpurifier.org/live/configdoc/plain.html
There's mutliple ways of creating custom rules on the HTML Purifier instance.
Below is an example service provider you can use as a starting point to add rules to the instance. This provider gives compatibility with Basecamp's Trix WYSIWYG editor:
Credit to Antonio Primera for resolving some HTML Purifier configuration issues with trix.
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use HTMLPurifier_HTMLDefinition;
use Stevebauman\Purify\Facades\Purify;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class PurifySetupProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
const DEFINITION_ID = 'trix-editor';
const DEFINITION_REV = 1;
/**
* Bootstrap the application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
/** @var \HTMLPurifier $purifier */
$purifier = Purify::getPurifier();
/** @var \HTMLPurifier_Config $config */
$config = $purifier->config;
$config->set('HTML.DefinitionID', static::DEFINITION_ID);
$config->set('HTML.DefinitionRev', static::DEFINITION_REV);
if ($def = $config->maybeGetRawHTMLDefinition()) {
$this->setupDefinitions($def);
}
$purifier->config = $config;
}
/**
* Register the application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function register()
{
//
}
/**
* Adds elements and attributes to the HTML purifier
* definition required by the trix editor.
*
* @param HTMLPurifier_HTMLDefinition $def
*/
protected function setupDefinitions(HTMLPurifier_HTMLDefinition $def)
{
$def->addElement('figure', 'Inline', 'Inline', 'Common');
$def->addAttribute('figure', 'class', 'Text');
$def->addElement('figcaption', 'Inline', 'Inline', 'Common');
$def->addAttribute('figcaption', 'class', 'Text');
$def->addAttribute('figcaption', 'data-trix-placeholder', 'Text');
$def->addAttribute('a', 'rel', 'Text');
$def->addAttribute('a', 'tabindex', 'Text');
$def->addAttribute('a', 'contenteditable', 'Enum#true,false');
$def->addAttribute('a', 'data-trix-attachment', 'Text');
$def->addAttribute('a', 'data-trix-content-type', 'Text');
$def->addAttribute('a', 'data-trix-id', 'Number');
$def->addElement('span', 'Block', 'Flow', 'Common');
$def->addAttribute('span', 'data-trix-cursor-target', 'Enum#right,left');
$def->addAttribute('span', 'data-trix-serialize', 'Enum#true,false');
$def->addAttribute('img', 'data-trix-mutable', 'Enum#true,false');
$def->addAttribute('img', 'data-trix-store-key', 'Text');
}
}
After this service provider is created, make sure you insert it into your providers
array in the app/config.php
file, and update your HTML.Allowed
string in the config/purify.php
file.
Note: Remember that after this definition is created, and you have ran
Purify::clean()
, the definition will be cached, and you will have to clear it from yourstorage/app/purify
folder if you want to make changes to the definition.Otherwise, you will have to change the definition version number or ID for it to be re-cached.