Research
Security News
Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
sanitize-html-stream
Advanced tools
Clean up user-submitted HTML, preserving whitelisted elements and whitelisted attributes on a per-element basis
NOTE: This is a fork of the excellent
sanitize-html
NPM to support streaming. It is barely modified fromsanitize-html
. For more details and the original authors, see the bottom of this file.
sanitize-html-stream
provides a simple HTML sanitizer with a clear API and the ability to process both streams and strings. To use the streaming
approach, you can substitute a nodeJS Reader. In that case, the library will return a Passthrough stream. This is intended to be suitable for uploading
possibly large HTML documents to cloud storage without reading them into memory. Unfortunately, I was unable to make the "exclusiveFilter" option work with streams (since it requires backtracking to the previous location in the result). Therefore, it has been disabled.
sanitize-html-stream
is tolerant. It is well suited for cleaning up HTML fragments such as those created by ckeditor and other rich text editors. It is especially handy for removing unwanted CSS when copying and pasting from Word.
sanitize-html-stream
allows you to specify the tags you want to permit, and the permitted attributes for each of those tags.
If a tag is not permitted, the contents of the tag are still kept, except for script
, style
and textarea
tags.
The syntax of poorly closed p
and img
elements is cleaned up.
href
attributes are validated to ensure they only contain http
, https
, ftp
and mailto
URLs. Relative URLs are also allowed. Ditto for src
attributes.
Allowing particular urls as a src
to an iframe tag by filtering hostnames is also supported.
HTML comments are not preserved.
sanitize-html-stream
is intended for use with Node. That's pretty much it. All of its npm dependencies are pure JavaScript. sanitize-html-stream
is built on the excellent htmlparser2
module.
Why would you want a node streams based library to run in the browser?
Install module from console:
npm install sanitize-html-stream
Use it in your node app:
var sanitizeHtml = require('sanitize-html-stream');
var dirty = 'some really tacky HTML';
var clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty);
That will allow our default list of allowed tags and attributes through. It's a nice set, but probably not quite what you want. So:
// Allow only a super restricted set of tags and attributes
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
allowedTags: [ 'b', 'i', 'em', 'strong', 'a' ],
allowedAttributes: {
'a': [ 'href' ]
},
allowedIframeHostnames: ['www.youtube.com']
});
Boom!
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
allowedTags: sanitizeHtml.defaults.allowedTags.concat([ 'img' ])
});
If you do not specify allowedTags
or allowedAttributes
our default list is applied. So if you really want an empty list, specify one.
allowedTags: [ 'h3', 'h4', 'h5', 'h6', 'blockquote', 'p', 'a', 'ul', 'ol',
'nl', 'li', 'b', 'i', 'strong', 'em', 'strike', 'code', 'hr', 'br', 'div',
'table', 'thead', 'caption', 'tbody', 'tr', 'th', 'td', 'pre', 'iframe' ],
allowedAttributes: {
a: [ 'href', 'name', 'target' ],
// We don't currently allow img itself by default, but this
// would make sense if we did. You could add srcset here,
// and if you do the URL is checked for safety
img: [ 'src' ]
},
// Lots of these won't come up by default because we don't allow them
selfClosing: [ 'img', 'br', 'hr', 'area', 'base', 'basefont', 'input', 'link', 'meta' ],
// URL schemes we permit
allowedSchemes: [ 'http', 'https', 'ftp', 'mailto' ],
allowedSchemesByTag: {},
allowedSchemesAppliedToAttributes: [ 'href', 'src', 'cite' ],
allowProtocolRelative: true
Simple! instead of leaving allowedTags
or allowedAttributes
out of the options, set either
one or both to false
:
allowedTags: false,
allowedAttributes: false
Also simple! Set allowedTags
to []
and allowedAttributes
to {}
.
allowedTags: [],
allowedAttributes: {}
When configuring the attribute in allowedAttributes
simply use an object with attribute name
and an allowed values
array. In the following example sandbox="allow-forms allow-modals allow-orientation-lock allow-pointer-lock allow-popups allow-popups-to-escape-sandbox allow-scripts"
would become sandbox="allow-popups allow-scripts"
:
allowedAttributes: {
iframe: [
{
name: 'sandbox',
multiple: true,
values: ['allow-popups', 'allow-same-origin', 'allow-scripts']
}
]
With multiple: true
, several allowed values may appear in the same attribute, separated by spaces. Otherwise the attribute must exactly match one and only one of the allowed values.
You can use the *
wildcard to allow all attributes with a certain prefix:
allowedAttributes: {
a: [ 'href', 'data-*' ]
}
Also you can use the *
as name for a tag, to allow listed attributes to be valid for any tag:
allowedAttributes: {
'*': [ 'href', 'align', 'alt', 'center', 'bgcolor' ]
}
santizeHtml
is built on htmlparser2
. By default the only option passed down is decodeEntities: true
You can set the options to pass by using the parser option.
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
allowedTags: ['a'],
parser: {
lowerCaseTags: true
}
});
See the [htmlparser2 wiki] (https://github.com/fb55/htmlparser2/wiki/Parser-options) for the full list of possible options.
What if you want to add or change an attribute? What if you want to transform one tag to another? No problem, it's simple!
The easiest way (will change all ol
tags to ul
tags):
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
transformTags: {
'ol': 'ul',
}
});
The most advanced usage:
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
transformTags: {
'ol': function(tagName, attribs) {
// My own custom magic goes here
return {
tagName: 'ul',
attribs: {
class: 'foo'
}
};
}
}
});
You can specify the *
wildcard instead of a tag name to transform all tags.
There is also a helper method which should be enough for simple cases in which you want to change the tag and/or add some attributes:
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
transformTags: {
'ol': sanitizeHtml.simpleTransform('ul', {class: 'foo'}),
}
});
The simpleTransform
helper method has 3 parameters:
simpleTransform(newTag, newAttributes, shouldMerge)
The last parameter (shouldMerge
) is set to true
by default. When true
, simpleTransform
will merge the current attributes with the new ones (newAttributes
). When false
, all existing attributes are discarded.
You can also add or modify the text contents of a tag:
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
transformTags: {
'a': function(tagName, attribs) {
return {
tagName: 'a',
text: 'Some text'
};
}
}
});
For example, you could transform a link element with missing anchor text:
<a href="http://somelink.com"></a>
To a link with anchor text:
<a href="http://somelink.com">Some text</a>
Filters have been removed from the streaming version of this library as I haven't yet figured out a way to implement them without defeating the purpose of streaming. (I haven't tried very hard as I don't need them at this moment.)
If you wish to allow specific CSS styles on a particular element, you can do that with the allowedStyles
option. Simply declare your desired attributes as regular expression options within an array for the given attribute. Specific elements will inherit whitelisted attributes from the global (*) attribute. Any other CSS classes are discarded.
You must also use allowedAttributes
to activate the style
attribute for the relevant elements. Otherwise this feature will never come into play.
When constructing regular expressions, don't forget ^
and $
. It's not enough to say "the string should contain this." It must also say "and only this."
URLs in inline styles are NOT filtered by any mechanism other than your regular expression.
clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
allowedTags: ['p'],
allowedAttributes: {
'p': ["style"],
},
allowedStyles: {
'*': {
// Match HEX and RGB
'color': [/^#(0x)?[0-9a-f]+$/i, /^rgb\(\s*(\d{1,3})\s*,\s*(\d{1,3})\s*,\s*(\d{1,3})\s*\)$/],
'text-align': [/^left$/, /^right$/, /^center$/],
// Match any number with px, em, or %
'font-size': [/^\d+(?:px|em|%)$/]
},
'p': {
'font-size': [/^\d+rem$/]
}
}
});
By default we allow the following URL schemes in cases where href
, src
, etc. are allowed:
[ 'http', 'https', 'ftp', 'mailto' ]
You can override this if you want to:
sanitizeHtml(
// teeny-tiny valid transparent GIF in a data URL
'<img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==" />',
{
allowedTags: [ 'img', 'p' ],
allowedSchemes: [ 'data', 'http' ]
}
);
You can also allow a scheme for a particular tag only:
allowedSchemes: [ 'http', 'https' ],
allowedSchemesByTag: {
img: [ 'data' ]
}
And you can forbid the use of protocol-relative URLs (starting with //
) to access another site using the current protocol, which is allowed by default:
allowProtocolRelative: false
Normally, with a few exceptions, if a tag is not allowed, all of the text within it is preserved, and so are any allowed tags within it.
The exceptions are:
style
, script
, textarea
If you wish to expand this list, for instance to discard whatever is found inside a noscript
tag, use the nonTextTags
option:
nonTextTags: [ 'style', 'script', 'textarea', 'noscript' ]
Note that if you use this option you are responsible for stating the entire list. This gives you the power to retain the content of textarea
, if you want to.
The content still gets escaped properly, with the exception of the script
and style
tags. Allowing either script
or style
leaves you open to XSS attacks. Don't do that unless you have good reason to trust their origin.
sanitize-html-stream
is a streaming fork done in an afternoon of sanitize-html
, which was created at P'unk Avenue for use in ApostropheCMS, an open-source content management system built on node.js. If you like sanitize-html-stream
you should definitely check out apostrophecms.org. I've posted this to npm and github because it seems there's no other streaming html sanitizer available and I should probably give back!
FAQs
Clean up user-submitted HTML, preserving whitelisted elements and whitelisted attributes on a per-element basis
The npm package sanitize-html-stream receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, sanitize-html-stream popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that sanitize-html-stream demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Security News
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
Security News
In this segment of the Risky Business podcast, Feross Aboukhadijeh and Patrick Gray discuss the challenges of tracking malware discovered in open source softare.