naiveproxy/url/origin.h

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2018-01-28 19:30:36 +03:00
// Copyright 2015 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#ifndef URL_ORIGIN_H_
#define URL_ORIGIN_H_
#include <stdint.h>
#include <string>
#include "base/strings/string16.h"
#include "base/strings/string_piece.h"
#include "url/scheme_host_port.h"
#include "url/third_party/mozilla/url_parse.h"
#include "url/url_canon.h"
#include "url/url_constants.h"
#include "url/url_export.h"
class GURL;
namespace url {
// An Origin is a tuple of (scheme, host, port), as described in RFC 6454.
//
// TL;DR: If you need to make a security-relevant decision, use 'url::Origin'.
// If you only need to extract the bits of a URL which are relevant for a
// network connection, use 'url::SchemeHostPort'.
//
// STL;SDR: If you aren't making actual network connections, use 'url::Origin'.
//
// 'Origin', like 'SchemeHostPort', is composed of a tuple of (scheme, host,
// port), but contains a number of additional concepts which make it appropriate
// for use as a security boundary and access control mechanism between contexts.
//
// This class ought to be used when code needs to determine if two resources
// are "same-origin", and when a canonical serialization of an origin is
// required. Note that some origins are "unique", meaning that they are not
// same-origin with any other origin (including themselves).
//
// There are a few subtleties to note:
//
// * Invalid and non-standard GURLs are parsed as unique origins. This includes
// non-hierarchical URLs like 'data:text/html,...' and 'javascript:alert(1)'.
//
// * GURLs with schemes of 'filesystem' or 'blob' parse the origin out of the
// internals of the URL. That is, 'filesystem:https://example.com/temporary/f'
// is parsed as ('https', 'example.com', 443).
//
// * Unique origins all serialize to the string "null"; this means that the
// serializations of two unique origins are identical to each other, though
// the origins themselves are not "the same". This means that origins'
// serializations must not be relied upon for security checks.
//
// * GURLs with a 'file' scheme are tricky. They are parsed as ('file', '', 0),
// but their behavior may differ from embedder to embedder.
//
// * The host component of an IPv6 address includes brackets, just like the URL
// representation.
//
// Usage:
//
// * Origins are generally constructed from an already-canonicalized GURL:
//
// GURL url("https://example.com/");
// url::Origin origin(url);
// origin.scheme(); // "https"
// origin.host(); // "example.com"
// origin.port(); // 443
// origin.unique(); // false
//
// * To answer the question "Are |this| and |that| "same-origin" with each
// other?", use |Origin::IsSameOriginWith|:
//
// if (this.IsSameOriginWith(that)) {
// // Amazingness goes here.
// }
class URL_EXPORT Origin {
public:
// Creates a unique Origin.
Origin();
// Creates an Origin from |url|, as described at
// https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#origin, with the following additions:
//
// 1. If |url| is invalid or non-standard, a unique Origin is constructed.
// 2. 'filesystem' URLs behave as 'blob' URLs (that is, the origin is parsed
// out of everything in the URL which follows the scheme).
// 3. 'file' URLs all parse as ("file", "", 0).
static Origin Create(const GURL& url);
// TODO(dcheng): Deprecated. Please use the factory helper above.
explicit Origin(const GURL& url);
// Copyable and movable.
Origin(const Origin&) = default;
Origin& operator=(const Origin&) = default;
Origin(Origin&&) = default;
Origin& operator=(Origin&&) = default;
// Creates an Origin from a |scheme|, |host|, |port| and |suborigin|. All the
// parameters must be valid and canonicalized. Do not use this method to
// create unique origins. Use Origin() for that.
//
// This constructor should be used in order to pass 'Origin' objects back and
// forth over IPC (as transitioning through GURL would risk potentially
// dangerous recanonicalization); other potential callers should prefer the
// 'GURL'-based constructor.
static Origin UnsafelyCreateOriginWithoutNormalization(
base::StringPiece scheme,
base::StringPiece host,
uint16_t port,
base::StringPiece suborigin);
// Creates an origin without sanity checking that the host is canonicalized.
// This should only be used when converting between already normalized types,
// and should NOT be used for IPC. Method takes std::strings for use with move
// operators to avoid copies.
static Origin CreateFromNormalizedTupleWithSuborigin(
std::string scheme,
std::string host,
uint16_t port,
std::string suborigin);
~Origin();
// For unique origins, these return ("", "", 0).
const std::string& scheme() const { return tuple_.scheme(); }
const std::string& host() const { return tuple_.host(); }
uint16_t port() const { return tuple_.port(); }
// Note that an origin without a suborgin will return the empty string.
const std::string& suborigin() const { return suborigin_; }
bool unique() const { return unique_; }
// An ASCII serialization of the Origin as per Section 6.2 of RFC 6454, with
// the addition that all Origins with a 'file' scheme serialize to "file://".
// If the Origin has a suborigin, it will be serialized per
// https://w3c.github.io/webappsec-suborigins/#serializing.
std::string Serialize() const;
// Returns the physical origin for Origin. If the suborigin is empty, this
// will just return a copy of the Origin. If it has a suborigin, will return
// the Origin of just the scheme/host/port tuple, without the suborigin. See
// https://w3c.github.io/webappsec-suborigins/.
Origin GetPhysicalOrigin() const;
// Two Origins are "same-origin" if their schemes, hosts, and ports are exact
// matches; and neither is unique. If either of the origins have suborigins,
// the suborigins also must be exact matches.
bool IsSameOriginWith(const Origin& other) const;
bool operator==(const Origin& other) const {
return IsSameOriginWith(other);
}
// Same as above, but ignores suborigins if they exist.
bool IsSamePhysicalOriginWith(const Origin& other) const;
// Efficiently returns what GURL(Serialize()) would without re-parsing the
// URL. This can be used for the (rare) times a GURL representation is needed
// for an Origin.
// Note: The returned URL will not necessarily be serialized to the same value
// as the Origin would. The GURL will have an added "/" path for Origins with
// valid SchemeHostPorts and file Origins.
//
// Try not to use this method under normal circumstances, as it loses type
// information. Downstream consumers can mistake the returned GURL with a full
// URL (e.g. with a path component).
GURL GetURL() const;
// Same as GURL::DomainIs. If |this| origin is unique, then returns false.
bool DomainIs(base::StringPiece canonical_domain) const;
// Allows Origin to be used as a key in STL (for example, a std::set or
// std::map).
bool operator<(const Origin& other) const;
private:
Origin(base::StringPiece scheme,
base::StringPiece host,
uint16_t port,
base::StringPiece suborigin,
SchemeHostPort::ConstructPolicy policy);
Origin(std::string scheme,
std::string host,
uint16_t port,
std::string suborigin,
SchemeHostPort::ConstructPolicy policy);
SchemeHostPort tuple_;
bool unique_;
std::string suborigin_;
};
URL_EXPORT std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, const Origin& origin);
URL_EXPORT bool IsSameOriginWith(const GURL& a, const GURL& b);
URL_EXPORT bool IsSamePhysicalOriginWith(const GURL& a, const GURL& b);
} // namespace url
#endif // URL_ORIGIN_H_