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SSL requirement adds a declarative way of specifying that certain actions should only be allowed to run under SSL, and if they're accessed without it, they should be redirected.
Example:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
include SslRequirement
end
class AccountController < ApplicationController
ssl_required :signup, :payment
ssl_allowed :index
def signup
# Non-SSL access will be redirected to SSL
end
def payment
# Non-SSL access will be redirected to SSL
end
def index
# This action will work either with or without SSL
end
def other
# SSL access will be redirected to non-SSL
end
end
If a majority (or all) of your actions require SSL, then use ssl_exceptions instead of ssl_required. You can list out the actions that you do NOT want to be SSL protected. Calling ssl_exceptions without any actions listed will make ALL actions SSL protected.
You can overwrite the protected method ssl_required? to rely on other things than just the declarative specification. Say, only premium accounts get SSL.
For SSL domains that differ from the domain of the redirecting site, add the following code to development.rb / test.rb / production.rb:
# Redirects to https://secure.example.com instead of the default
# https://www.example.com.
config.after_initialize do
SslRequirement.ssl_host = 'secure.example.com'
end
For non-SSL domains that differ from domain of redirecting site, add the following code to development.rb / test.rb / production.rb:
# Redirects to http://nonsecure.example.com instead of the default
# http://www.example.com.
config.after_initialize do
SslRequirement.non_ssl_host = 'nonsecure.example.com'
end
You are able to turn disable ssl redirects by adding the following environment configuration file:
SslRequirement.disable_ssl_check = true
Or you can enforce ssl across an entire site by setting:
SslRequirement.ssl_all = true
P.S.: Beware when you include the SslRequirement module. At the time of inclusion, it'll add the before_filter that validates the declarations. Some times you'll want to run other before_filters before that. They should then be declared ahead of including this module.
This plugin also adds a helper a :secure option to url_for and named_routes. This property allows you to set a url as secure or not secure. It uses the disable_ssl_check to determine if the option should be ignored or not so you can develop as normal. It also will obey if you override SslRequirement.ssl_host or SslRequirement.non_ssl_host (see above)
Here is an example of creating a secure url:
<%= url_for(:controller => "c", :action => "a", :secure => true) %>
If disable_ssl_check returns false url_for will return the following:
https://yoursite.com/c/a
Furthermore, you can use the secure option in a named route to create a secure form as follows:
<% form_tag session_path(:secure => true), :class => 'home_login' do -%>
<p>
<label for="name">Email</label>
<%= text_field_tag 'email', '', :class => 'text', :tabindex => 1 %>
</p>
<p>
<label for="password">Password</label>
<%= password_field_tag 'password', '', :class => 'text', :tabindex => 2 %>
</p>
<p>
<%= submit_tag "Login", :id => 'login_submit', :value => "", :alt => "Login" %>
</p>
<% end -%>
If you are using Shoulda, a few contexts and macros are provided:
class RegistrationsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
without_ssl_context do
context "GET to :new" do
setup do
get :new
end
should_redirect_to_ssl
end
end
with_ssl_context do
context "GET to :new" do
setup do
get :new
end
# your usual testing goes here
end
end
end
Copyright (c) 2005 David Heinemeier Hansson, released under the MIT license
FAQs
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We found that sslrequirement demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 7 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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