CSP: style-src
The HTTP Content-Security-Policy
(CSP) style-src
directive specifies valid sources for stylesheets.
CSP version | 1 |
---|---|
Directive type | Fetch directive |
default-src fallback |
Yes. If this directive is absent, the user agent will look for the
default-src directive.
|
Syntax
One or more sources can be allowed for the style-src
policy:
Content-Security-Policy: style-src <source>;
Content-Security-Policy: style-src <source> <source>;
Sources
<source>
can be any one of the values listed in CSP Source Values.
Note that this same set of values can be used in all fetch directives (and a number of other directives).
Examples
Violation cases
Given this CSP header:
Content-Security-Policy: style-src https://example.com/
the following stylesheets are blocked and won't load:
<link href="https://not-example.com/styles/main.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
<style>
#inline-style { background: red; }
</style>
<style>
@import url("https://not-example.com/styles/print.css") print;
</style>
as well as styles loaded using the Link
header:
Link: <https://not-example.com/styles/stylesheet.css>;rel=stylesheet
Inline style attributes are also blocked:
<div style="display:none">Foo</div>
As well as styles that are applied in JavaScript by setting the style
attribute directly, or by setting cssText
:
document.querySelector('div').setAttribute('style', 'display:none;');
document.querySelector('div').style.cssText = 'display:none;';
However, styles properties that are set directly on the element's style
property will not be blocked, allowing users to safely manipulate styles via JavaScript:
document.querySelector('div').style.display = 'none';
These types of manipulations can be prevented by disallowing Javascript via the script-src
CSP directive.
Unsafe inline styles
Note: Disallowing inline styles and inline scripts is one of the biggest security wins CSP provides. However, if you absolutely have to use it, there are a few mechanisms that will allow them.
To allow inline styles, 'unsafe-inline'
, a nonce-source or a hash-source that matches the inline block can be specified.
Content-Security-Policy: style-src 'unsafe-inline';
The above Content Security Policy will allow inline styles like the <style>
element, and the style
attribute on any element:
<style>
#inline-style { background: red; }
</style>
<div style="display:none">Foo</div>
You can use a nonce-source to only allow specific inline style blocks:
Content-Security-Policy: style-src 'nonce-2726c7f26c'
You will have to set the same nonce on the <style>
element:
<style nonce="2726c7f26c">
#inline-style { background: red; }
</style>
Alternatively, you can create hashes from your inline styles. CSP supports sha256, sha384 and sha512. The binary form of the hash has to be encoded with base64. You can obtain the hash of a string on the command line via the openssl
program:
echo -n "#inline-style { background: red; }" | openssl dgst -sha256 -binary | openssl enc -base64
You can use a hash-source to only allow specific inline style blocks:
Content-Security-Policy: style-src 'sha256-ozBpjL6dxO8fsS4u6fwG1dFDACYvpNxYeBA6tzR+FY8='
When generating the hash, don't include the <style>
tags and note that capitalization and whitespace matter, including leading or trailing whitespace.
<style>#inline-style { background: red; }</style>
Unsafe style expressions
The 'unsafe-eval'
source expression controls several style methods that create style declarations from strings. If 'unsafe-eval'
isn't specified with the style-src
directive, the following methods are blocked and won't have any effect:
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Content Security Policy Level 3 # directive-style-src |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser