102 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
102 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
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## An abstraction for opening browser windows cross domain
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Here's the scenario: You want to build a secure means of some untrusted site
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opening a window, which loads content at a trusted site. Then you want the
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untrusted dude to be able to pass in parameters. Then you want the trusted
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code to do any amount of stuff, and return a response.
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This kinda thing is what lots of services on the web do, services
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like [BrowserID][].
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[BrowserID]: https://browserid.org
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Trouble is that this is stupidly hard:
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* Mobile Firefox doesn't like it when you open windows with window options
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* IE 8 & 9 don't even allow postMessage between opener and window
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* iOS 5 has some interesting optimizations that can bite you if not careful
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* you should tightly check origins to avoid classes of attacks
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* you probably will have to add stuff in the DOM, you should make sure you
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can clean this up and avoid introducing fragile code
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WinChan is an abstraction to solve these problems and make it easy to open
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windows which take and return parameters and load content cross domain.
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## Browser Support
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WinChan is expected to work on:
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* winxp - win7 on IE8 and IE9
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* windows, linux, osx - Chrome, Firefox, Opera, and Safari
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* Android's "native" browser - 2.1, 2.2, 2.3.4, 3.2 (and presumably newer)
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* Fennec on Android
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## Usage
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For the site spawning the window, the "untrusted" or "client" code:
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WinChan.open({
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url: "http://trusted.host/dialog.html",
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relay_url: "http://trusted.host/relay.html",
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window_features: "menubar=0,location=0,resizable=0,scrollbars=0,status=0,dialog=1,width=700,height=375",
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params: {
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these: "things",
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are: "input parameters"
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}
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}, function(err, r) {
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// err is a string on failure, otherwise r is the response object
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});
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For the site providing the window, the "trusted" code:
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WinChan.onOpen(function(origin, args, cb) {
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// origin is the scheme+host+port that cause window invocation,
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// it can be trusted
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// args are the untrusted arguments provided by the calling site
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// and cb you can call within the function, or synchronously later.
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// calling it indicated the window is done and can be closed.
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cb({
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"these things": "are the response"
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});
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});
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Finally, you'll notice that the trusted code needs to host 'relay.html' somewhere (required
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for IE support).
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## Running Examples
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there's a little tiny webserver in-tree to let you run the examples. You'll need node.js and
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npm installed. Once you have these, just:
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$ npm i
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$ scripts/run_example.js
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Now load `http://127.0.0.1:8100/example` (or the more complicated example which demonstrates
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navigation away and back in window at `http://127.0.0.1:8100/complex_example`
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## Running Unit Tests
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node.js and npm are required to run the unit tests. Once installed
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$ npm i
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$ scripts/run_example.js
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And open `http://127.0.0.1:8100/test` in your favorite web browser.
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**NOTE:** You'll need to disable popup blocking for localhost to run tests!
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## Testing over the network
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the `run_example.js` script will bind whatever IP is in the `IP_ADDRESS` env var.
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So to test over the network:
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$ npm i
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$ IP_ADDRESS=<my external IP> scripts/run_example.js
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(repace `<my external IP>` with *your* IP address)
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then hit `http://<my external IP>:8100/test`
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