A cross-site request forgery (CSRF) attack occurs when a trusted user of a web application can be forced, by an attacker, to perform sensitive actions that he didn't intend, such as updating his profile or sending a message, more generally anything that can change the state of the application.
The attacker can trick the user/victim to click on a link, corresponding to the privileged action, or to visit a malicious web site that embeds a hidden web request and as web browsers automatically include cookies, the actions can be authenticated and sensitive.
There is a risk if you answered yes to any of those questions.
GET which are designed to be
used only for information retrieval. Express.js CSURF middleware protection is not found on an unsafe HTTP method like POST method:
let csrf = require('csurf');
let express = require('express');
let csrfProtection = csrf({ cookie: true });
let app = express();
// Sensitive: this operation doesn't look like protected by CSURF middleware (csrfProtection is not used)
app.post('/money_transfer', parseForm, function (req, res) {
res.send('Money transferred');
});
Protection provided by Express.js CSURF middleware is globally disabled on unsafe methods:
let csrf = require('csurf');
let express = require('express');
app.use(csrf({ cookie: true, ignoreMethods: ["POST", "GET"] })); // Sensitive as POST is unsafe method
Express.js CSURF middleware protection is used on unsafe methods:
let csrf = require('csurf');
let express = require('express');
let csrfProtection = csrf({ cookie: true });
let app = express();
app.post('/money_transfer', parseForm, csrfProtection, function (req, res) { // Compliant
res.send('Money transferred')
});
Protection provided by Express.js CSURF middleware is enabled on unsafe methods:
let csrf = require('csurf');
let express = require('express');
app.use(csrf({ cookie: true, ignoreMethods: ["GET"] })); // Compliant