autoHtml
This is a module containing a function to automatically encode Javascript ES6
template strings into HTML safely. This lets you assemble HTML strings yourself
but still with automatic safety from XSS attacks!
import autoHtml from "auto-html";
const username = "Bob the XSS guy <script>alert(1)</script>";
const userFormHtml = autoHtml `<div>Username: ${username}</div>`;
console.log(userFormHtml);
If you really want to substitute in HTML, then use an object with an __html
property. Be careful that the html is properly encoded! This syntax is inspired
by
React.
const username = "Bob the XSS guy <script>alert(1)</script>";
const comment = "Some **markdown** text";
const commentHtml = markdownToHtml(comment);
const postHtml = autoHtml `<div class="post">
<div>Username: ${username}</div>
<div>${{__html: commentHtml}}</div>
</div>`;
console.log(postHtml);
Miscellaneous
This module is built for use with template strings, a feature of ES6, the next
version of Javascript. If you are targeting platforms that don't support
template strings natively yet, you may want to use an ES6 compiler like
Babel.
This module can be used in browsers via a CommonJS bundler such as
Browserify or Webpack.
The HTML encoding is done by
Lodash's escape function. Text encoded into
HTML by this function is safe to be placed in HTML element attributes and as
an element's children.
Use of
Content Security Policy
headers is highly recommended to prevent XSS attacks! You'll still want to
bother to encode your HTML correctly, but CSP headers stop that from being
a remote-code-execution security issue at least.
Types
Both TypeScript and
Flow type definitions for this module are included!
The type definitions won't require any configuration to use.