The Sanitizer API is a proposed new browser API to bring a safe and easy-to-use capability to sanitize HTML into the web platform.
Status:
- The Sanitizer API is currently being incubated in the Sanitizer API WICG, with the goal of bringing this to the WHATWG.
- The API is not finalized and still subject to change.
Here you can find additional information:
- Implementation Status:
- An early W3C TAG review.
The API is still being discussed. Please see the explainer for our current thinking.
Various web applications often need to work with strings of HTML on the client-side. This might take place, for instance, as part of a client-side templating solution or perhaps come to play through the process of rendering user-generated content. The key problem is that it remains difficult to perform these tasks in a safe way. This is specifically the case because the naive approach of joining strings together and stuffing them into an Element's innerHTML
is fraught with risks. A very common negative implication concerns the JavaScript execution, which can occur in a number of unexpected ways.
To address the problem, libraries like DOMPurify attempt to carefully manage the inputs and alleviate risks. This is usually accomplished through parsing and sanitizing strings before insertion and takes advantage of an allowlist for constructing a DOM and handling its components. This is considerably safer than doing the same on the server-side, yet much untapped potential can still be observed when it comes the client-side sanitization.
As it stands, every browser has a fairly good idea of when and how it is going to execute code. Capitalizing on this, it is possible to improve the user-space libraries by teaching the browser how to render HTML from an arbitrary string in a safe manner. In other words, we seek to make sure that this happens in a way that is much more likely to be maintained and updated along with the browsers’ ever-changing parser implementations.
Provide a browser-maintained "ever-green", safe, and easy-to-use library for user input sanitization as part of the general web platform.
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user input sanitization: The basic functionality is to take a string, and turn it into strings that are safe to use and will not cause inadvertent execution of JavaScript.
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browser-maintained, "ever-green" / as part of the general web platform: The library is shipped with the browser, and will be updated alongside it as bugs or new attack vectors are found.
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Safe and easy-to-use: The API surface should be small, and the defaults should make sense across a wide range of use cases.
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Cover existing browser functionality, especially the sanitization of clipboard data.
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Easy things should be easy. This requires easy-to-use and safe defaults, and a small API surface for the common case.
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Cover a reasonably wide range of base requirements, but be open to more advanced use cases or future enhancements. This probably requires some sort of configuration or options, ideally in a way that both the developer and a security reviewer should be able to reason about them.
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Should be integratable into other security mechanisms, both browser built-ins and others.
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Be poly-fillable, although the polyfill would presumably have different security and performance properties.
Force the use of this library, or any other enforcement mechanism. Some applications will have sanitization requirements that are not easily met by a general purpose library. These should continue to be able to use whichever library or mechanism they prefer. However, the library should play well with other enforcement mechanisms.