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Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/src/guide/cookies.asciidoc | 153 |
1 files changed, 66 insertions, 87 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/guide/cookies.asciidoc b/doc/src/guide/cookies.asciidoc index 6068db3..58bd1d1 100644 --- a/doc/src/guide/cookies.asciidoc +++ b/doc/src/guide/cookies.asciidoc @@ -4,112 +4,94 @@ Cookies are a mechanism allowing applications to maintain state on top of the stateless HTTP protocol. -Cowboy provides facilities for handling cookies. It is highly -recommended to use them instead of writing your own, as the -implementation of cookies can vary greatly between clients. +Cookies are a name/value store where the names and values are +stored in plain text. They expire either after a delay +or when the browser closes. They can be configured on a +specific domain name or path, and restricted to secure +resources (sent or downloaded over HTTPS), or restricted +to the server (disallowing access from client-side scripts). + +Cookie names are de facto case sensitive. Cookies are stored client-side and sent with every subsequent request that matches the domain and path for which they were -stored, including requests for static files. For this reason -they can incur a cost which must be taken in consideration. - -Also consider that, regardless of the options used, cookies -are not to be trusted. They may be read and modified by any -program on the user's computer, but also by proxies. You -should always validate cookie values before using them. Do -not store any sensitive information in cookies either. - -When explicitly setting the domain, the cookie will be sent -for the domain and all subdomains from that domain. Otherwise -the current domain will be used. The same is true for the -path. - -When the server sets cookies, they will only be available -for requests that are sent after the client receives the -response. - -Cookies are sent in HTTP headers, therefore they must have -text values. It is your responsibility to encode any other -data type. Also note that cookie names are de facto case -sensitive. - -Cookies can be set for the client session (which generally -means until the browser is closed), or it can be set for -a number of seconds. Once it expires, or when the server -says the cookie must exist for up to 0 seconds, the cookie -is deleted by the client. To avoid this while the user -is browsing your site, you should set the cookie for -every request, essentially resetting the expiration time. - -Cookies can be restricted to secure channels. This typically -means that such a cookie will only be sent over HTTPS, -and that it will only be available by client-side scripts -that run from HTTPS webpages. - -Finally, cookies can be restricted to HTTP and HTTPS requests, -essentially disabling their access from client-side scripts. +stored, until they expire. This can create a non-negligible +cost. + +Cookies should not be considered secure. They are stored on +the user's computer in plain text, and can be read by any +program. They can also be read by proxies when using clear +connections. Always validate the value before using it, +and never store any sensitive information inside it. + +Cookies set by the server are only available in requests +following the client reception of the response containing +them. + +Cookies may be sent repeatedly. This is often useful to +update the expiration time and avoid losing a cookie. === Setting cookies -By default, cookies you set are defined for the session. +// @todo So I am not particularly happy about set_resp_cookie/4 +// having Opts as a *third* argument, instead of the *last* like +// all other functions that come with an Opts argument. We will +// probably need to change this before 2.0. + +By default cookies are defined for the duration of the session: [source,erlang] SessionID = generate_session_id(), -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, [], Req). +Req = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, Req0). -You can also make them expire at a specific point in the -future. +They can also be set for a duration in seconds: [source,erlang] ---- SessionID = generate_session_id(), -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, [ - {max_age, 3600} -], Req). +Req = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, + #{max_age => 3600}, Req0). ---- -You can delete cookies that have already been set. The value -is ignored. +To delete cookies, set `max_age` to 0: [source,erlang] ---- -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, <<>>, [ - {max_age, 0} -], Req). +SessionID = generate_session_id(), +Req = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, + #{max_age => 0}, Req0). ---- -You can restrict them to a specific domain and path. -For example, the following cookie will be set for the domain -`my.example.org` and all its subdomains, but only on the path -`/account` and all its subdirectories. +To restrict cookies to a specific domain and path, the options +of the same name can be used: [source,erlang] ---- -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"inaccount">>, <<"1">>, [ - {domain, "my.example.org"}, - {path, "/account"} -], Req). +Req = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"inaccount">>, <<"1">>, + #{domain => "my.example.org", path => "/account"}, Req0). ---- -You can restrict the cookie to secure channels, typically HTTPS. +Cookies will be sent with requests to this domain and all +its subdomains, and to resources on this path or deeper +in the path hierarchy. + +To restrict cookies to secure channels (typically resources +available over HTTPS): [source,erlang] ---- SessionID = generate_session_id(), -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, [ - {secure, true} -], Req). +Req = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, + #{secure => true}, Req0). ---- -You can restrict the cookie to client-server communication -only. Such a cookie will not be available to client-side scripts. +To prevent client-side scripts from accessing a cookie: [source,erlang] ---- SessionID = generate_session_id(), -Req2 = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, [ - {http_only, true} -], Req). +Req = cowboy_req:set_resp_cookie(<<"sessionid">>, SessionID, + #{http_only => true}, Req0). ---- Cookies may also be set client-side, for example using @@ -117,23 +99,23 @@ Javascript. === Reading cookies -As we said, the client sends cookies with every request. -But unlike the server, the client only sends the cookie -name and value. +The client only ever sends back the cookie name and value. +All other options that can be set are never sent back. -Cowboy provides two different ways to read cookies. You -can either parse them as a list of key/value pairs, or -match them into a map, optionally applying constraints -to the values or providing a default if they are missing. +Cowboy provides two functions for reading cookies. Both +involve parsing the cookie header(s) and so should not +be called repeatedly. -You can parse the cookies and then use standard library -functions to access individual values. +You can get all cookies as a key/value list: [source,erlang] Cookies = cowboy_req:parse_cookies(Req), {_, Lang} = lists:keyfind(<<"lang">>, 1, Cookies). -You can match the cookies into a map. +Or you can perform a match against cookies and retrieve +only the ones you need, while at the same time doing +any required post processing using xref:constraints[constraints]. +This function returns a map: [source,erlang] #{id := ID, lang := Lang} = cowboy_req:match_cookies([id, lang], Req). @@ -141,8 +123,7 @@ You can match the cookies into a map. You can use constraints to validate the values while matching them. The following snippet will crash if the `id` cookie is not an integer number or if the `lang` cookie is empty. Additionally -the `id` cookie value will be converted to an integer term, saving -you a conversion step. +the `id` cookie value will be converted to an integer term: [source,erlang] CookiesMap = cowboy_req:match_cookies([{id, int}, {lang, nonempty}], Req). @@ -150,14 +131,12 @@ CookiesMap = cowboy_req:match_cookies([{id, int}, {lang, nonempty}], Req). Note that if two cookies share the same name, then the map value will be a list of the two cookie values. -Read more about xref:constraints[constraints]. - A default value can be provided. The default will be used if the `lang` cookie is not found. It will not be used if -the cookie is found but has an empty value. +the cookie is found but has an empty value: [source,erlang] #{lang := Lang} = cowboy_req:match_cookies([{lang, [], <<"en-US">>}], Req). -If no default is provided and the value is missing, the -query string is deemed invalid and the process will crash. +If no default is provided and the value is missing, an +exception is thrown. |