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Preventing Cross Site Request Forgery

Written by Team SCS | Feb 28, 2014 1:47:40 AM

Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF) is an attack against web applications that forces users to execute unwanted actions within the web applications that they are currently authenticated. By sending a malicious link via email, social network post or chat, an attacker may trick users of web applications into executing actions of the attacker’s choosing. A successful CSRF exploit can compromise end user data, allow unwanted transactions to occur, redirect purchase goods to fraudulent shipping addresses and other unwanted and unexpected actions.

Microsoft ASP.Net provides a mechanism to prevent CSRF attacks in MVC architected web applications.

CSRF Prevention
To prevent CSRF attacks in Microsoft ASP.net MVC applications, code must be added to the View and Controller classes. The following two (2) sections detail the specifics of adding code to prevent CSRF attacks at the View and Controller level.

View
The View class is instantiated on the server and generates HTML to render the form to the client in the client’s browser.

To prevent a CSRF attack, a helper method, specifically @Html.AntiForgeryToken, is added to the view class.

This will add a hidden field to the form sent to the browser.

The following code is a View page written in C# and uses the Razor View Engine. This code demonstrates the insertion of the @Html.AntiForgeryToken method within the code that will generate a hidden field to the form being posted.

Upon clicking the submit button within this form from the browser, a HTTP Post request is sent to the Login Method within the Account Controller on the Server.

The hacker will not be able to generate a token that will be accepted by the controller on the server.

Controller
The Controller is run on the server and responds to events including the posting of forms from a browser.

To eliminate CSRF threats, a ValidateAntiForgeryToken attribute is added to the controller Method. This will cause the method to interpret the antiForgery token generated from the view and to generate an error if the token is missing or does not match the specific token generated by the view.

The following code shows the insertion of the ValidateAntiForgeryToken attribute in front of the Login controller method.

Impact of implementing CSFT prevention code
If the @Html.AntiForgeryToken method is added to the view, and if the method on the controller called by the view has the ValidateAntiForgeryToken attribute, the controller will process the data within the posted form, appropriately.

If the form posted to the controller does not include a token, or if the token is invalid, the controller will throw an exception and the form will not be processed, and no harm will come to the application or data.

Image courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net/Stuart Miles