Masonite 1.4+ now has out of the box CSRF protection. CSRF, or Cross-Site Request Forgery is when malicious actors attempt to send requests (primarily POST requests) on your behalf. CSRF protection typically entails setting a unique token to the user for that page request that matches the same token on the server. This prevents any person from submitting a form without the correct token. There are many online resources that teach what CSRF does and how it works but Masonite makes it really simple to use.
If you are using Masonite 1.4 already then you already have the correct middleware and Service Providers needed. You can check which version of Masonite you are using by simply running pip show masonite
and looking at the version number.
If you are running a version of Masonite before 1.4 then check the upgrade guide for Masonite 1.3 to 1.4 for learning how to upgrade.
The CSRF features for Masonite are located in the CsrfProvider
Service Provider and the CsrfMiddleware
. If you do not wish to have CSRF protection then you can safely remove both of these.
The CsrfProvider
simply loads the CSRF features into the container and the CsrfMiddleware
is what actually generates the keys and checks if they are valid.
By default, all POST
requests require a CSRF token. We can simply add a CSRF token in our forms by adding the {{ csrf_field|safe }}
tag to our form like so:
This will add a hidden field that looks like:
If this token is changed or manipulated, Masonite will throw an InvalidCsrfToken
exception from inside the middleware.
If you attempt a POST
request without the {{ csrf_field|safe }}
then you will receive a KeyError: 'csrf_token'
exception. This just means you are either missing the Jinja2 tag or you are missing that route from the exempt
class attribute in your middleware.
Not all routes may require CSRF protection such as OAuth authentication. In order to exempt routes from protection we can add it to the exempt
class attribute in the middleware located at app/http/middleware/CsrfMiddleware.py
:
Now any POST routes that are to your-domain.com/oauth/github
are not protected by CSRF. Use this sparingly as CSRF protection is crucial to application security but you may find that not all routes need it.