Let's say normally my users access our web page via https://www.mycompany.com/go/mybusinessname
Inside this web page, we have a iframe which actually comes from https://www.mycompany.com/myapp
Everything is working fine, except that if for some reason, the users come to know about this url https://www.mycompany.com/myapp. They can start accessing it directly by typing into the address bar.
This is what I want to prevent them from doing. Is there any best practice to achieve this?
==== Update to provide more background ====
The parent page which is https://www.mycompany.com is the company's page and it's maintained by some other team. So they have all the generic header and footer, etc. so each application is rendered as an iframe inside it. (This also means we cannot change the parent page's code)
If users access https://www.mycompany.com/myapp directly, they won't be able to see the header and footer. Yes, it's not a big deal, but I just want to maintain the consistency.
Another of my concern is that, in our dev environment (aka when running the page locally) we don't have the parent-iframe thing. We access our page directly from http://localhost:port. Hence I want to find a solution that can allow us access it normally when running locally as well.
If such solution simple does not exist, please let me know as well :)
On your iframe's source, you can check the parent's window by using window.top.location and see if it's set to 'https://www.mycompany.com/go/mybusinessname'. If not, redirect the page.
var myUrl = 'https://www.mycompany.com/go/mybusinessname';
if(window.top.location.href !== myUrl) {
window.top.location.href = myUrl;
}
I realized we already had a function to determine whether the page in running under https://www.mycompany.com. So now I only need to do the below to perform the redirecting when our page is not iframe
var expectedPathname = "/go/mybusinessname";
var getLocation = function (href) {
var l = document.createElement("a");
l.href = href;
return l;
};
if (window == window.top) { // if not iframe
var link = getLocation(window.top.location.href);
if (link.pathname !== expectedPathname) {
link.pathname = expectedPathname;
window.top.location.replace(link.href);
}
}
You can use HTTP referer header on server-side. If the page is opened in IFRAME - the referer contains parent page address. Otherwise, it is empty or contains different page.
I'm trying to put a HTML code into a frame.
Out of frame I have used: document.write and into?
The frame is:
var frameTwitter = document.getElementById('FrameTwitter');
In order to write to an iFrame, you need to get its contentWindow or contentDocument.
var frameTwitter = document.getElementById('FrameTwitter'),
frameDocument = frameTwitter.contentWindow || frameTwitter.contentDocument;
frameDocument = frameDocument.document || frameDocument;
frameDocument.write('<p>Hello World!</p>');
DEMO: http://jsfiddle.net/NTICompass/8Ekrs/1/
UPDATE:
You can also use window.frames to get the iFrame's window object.
var frameDocument = window.frames.FrameTwitter.document;
frameDocument.write('<p>Hello World!</p>');
DEMO: http://jsfiddle.net/NTICompass/8Ekrs/2/
you have to use the postmessage API
see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/window.postMessage
Rocket Hazmat is also correct
Normally, scripts on different pages are only allowed to access each other if and only if the pages which executed them are at locations with the same protocol (usually both http), port number (80 being the default for http), and host (modulo document.domain being set by both pages to the same value)
Since you're using 2 files that are on the same domain this should work. It's probably ideal to use a relative path on the iframe since you've got to match domains, protocols & ports or this will stop working.
MainPage.html
<iframe src="Frame.html" id="FrameTwitter"></iframe>
<script type="text/javascript">
var frame = document.getElementById('FrameTwitter');
frame.writeInto('Some text here');
</script>
Frame.html
<script type="text/javascript">
function writeInto(str) {
document.writeln(str);
}
</script>
That way you can set up the functionality you need for Frame.html within the file, test functionality there without worrying about cross-frame development yet. Then once your features are set up you can fire them from the parent.
Can anybody explain how the following javascript variables:
document.referrer
document.location.href
or the http REFERRER header, could come to be 'javascript:window["contents"]' ?
Not only do I not understand how they could be set to a javascript uri - but window.contents isn't a standard DOM attribute in any browser that I know of... (It is window["contents"], not window["content"])
I believe I found the solution to this..
There are some javascripts in the wild which seem to create iframes using code (something) like this:
var contents = '<html>......</html>';
var ifr = document.createElement('iframe');
ifr.contentWindow.open();
ifr.contentWindow.write(contents);
some particular combination of this sometimes ends up specifying either the href of the iframe , or the referrer, as "javascript:window['contents']" - i.e. the javascript variable which temporarily holds the page data.
(still not completely finalized on the details, but that's the basic idea)
I am trying to redirect to a different page in IE9 (9.0.3).
When I try to get/set document.location, or document.location.href, or window.location/window.location.href, I'm unable to do so. It fails without giving any errors.
I've tried to check whether the document and windows objects are set, and they are, so I have no idea why the location object is "missing".
I tried getting the document.URL and that works fine, but it's read-only.
Anyone know what the problem is or how to achieve this in a cross-browser way?
I was also experiencing the same problem but found that adding
window.event.returnValue = false;
above line in the javascript before the redirection resolved the problem.
See this: http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en/iewebdevelopment/thread/c864ae63-66f6-4656-bcae-86b0018d70c9
Apparently it's a caching bug, you can solve it by appending a timestamp to the destination URL (that is, using a "unique" URL every time).
Perhaps your IE9 has some security restrictions in place that prevent JavaScript from directing URL's. window.location.href = "" should work normally on IE9.
Cache may be the reason, try:
location.href='something.php?tmp=' + Date.parse(new Date())
Hope it helps
You should use an absolute URL:
var url = '/section/page/';
var host = window.location.hostname;
window.location = 'http://' + host + url;
Where url is the relative path to your page.
I have to call domain A.com (which sets the cookies with http) from domain B.com.
All I do on domain B.com is (javascript):
var head = document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0];
var script = document.createElement("script");
script.src = "A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123";
head.appendChild(script);
This sets the cookie on A.com on every browser I've tested, except Safari.
Amazingly this works in IE6, even without the P3P headers.
Is there any way to make this work in Safari?
From the Safari Developer FAQ:
Safari ships with a conservative cookie policy which limits cookie writes to only the pages chosen ("navigated to") by the user. This default conservative policy may confuse frame based sites that attempt to write cookies and fail.
I have found no way to get around this.
If it's worth anything, Chrome doesn't set the cookies either if you use the <script> appending method, but if you have a hidden <img> with the same source, Chrome works in addition to the rest of the browsers (except, again, Safari)
Here is a solution which works:
http://anantgarg.com/2010/02/18/cross-domain-cookies-in-safari/
This might not work for everyone, but I came across this issue because I was serving a React App from a different host than the API, and the solution that ultimately worked was to use DNS:
Our client was being served from www.company-name.com and our API was on company-name.herokuapp.com. By making a CNAME record api.company-name.com --> company-name.herokuapp.com, and having our client use that subdomain for API calls, Safari stopped considering it a "third-party" cookie.
The upside is that there's very little code involved, and it's all using well-established stuff... The downside is that you need some control/ownership over the API host if you're going to use https - they need a certificate that's valid for the client domain, or users will get a certificate warning - so this wouldn't work (at least not for something end-user-facing) if the API in question isn't yours or a partner's.
Working method 2014-2016:
You have to do window.open to the domain / assign a cookie / close the popup, the domain is now safelisted.
Original post # PHP multiple cookies not working on iPad / iPhone browser
There is a bit of an evil trick assuming they have flash installed.
I'm not sure if it still works or not, but Flash'es "Local Shared Objects" aka Flash Cookies could help you circumnavigate Safari's same-domain policies.
Local Shared Object Tutorial
However, it may be complicated to implement, to say the least.
Wiki Article on LSO's
Additonally, LSO's are comming into the light as being a security nightmare:
Electronic Privacy Information Centre on LSO's
Flash Cookies: The Silent Privacy Killer
So think carefully before using them.
A post to a hidden <iframe> can allow you to by-pass this restriction in Safari -- http://gist.github.com/586182:
<?php
header('P3P: CP=HONK');
setcookie('test_cookie', '1', 0, '/');
?>
<div id="test_cookie" style="position: absolute; top: -10000px"></div>
<script>
window.setTimeout(function() {
if (document.cookie.indexOf('test_cookie=1') < 0) {
var
name = 'test_cookie',
div = document.getElementById(name),
iframe = document.createElement('iframe'),
form = document.createElement('form');
iframe.name = name;
iframe.src = 'javascript:false';
div.appendChild(iframe);
form.action = location.toString();
form.method = 'POST';
form.target = name;
div.appendChild(form);
form.submit();
}
}, 10);
</script>
There is a proper workaround for this working in 2015. Let's say there is website y.com which includes iframe with site x.com. The x.com iframe wants to store a cookie. That is not permitted by Safari policy, however, y.com is able to store it. So y.com must listen to messages from x.com and then store the cookie itself.
var _cookieEvMth = window.addEventListener ? "addEventListener" : "attachEvent";
var _cookieEvAction = window[_cookieEvMth];
var _cookieEv = _cookieEvMth == "attachEvent" ? "onmessage" : "message";
_cookieEvAction(_cookieEv, function(evt){
if(evt.data.indexOf('cookieset')!=-1){
var datack = evt.data.split('|');
YOUR_CUSTOM_COOKIE_SAVE_METHOD(datack[1],datack[2],datack[3]);
}
},false);
When x.com needs to store the cookie, it must post a message to y.com:
window.parent.postMessage('cookieset|'+ckName+'|'+ckVal+'|'+days,'*');
Also you can work your way to post message to the iframe if you want to read the cookie. Or you can include it as parameter in x.com iframe url using javascript:
iframe.setAttribute('url','x.com/?cookieval='+YOUR_COOKIE_GET_METHOD('cookiename'));
A workaround we just came up with at my job was to set the cookie via a window.open() - it may not be optimal for you (as you'll have an ugly ass popup window open), but it worked well for us. We had to have a popup window open anyway for OAuth authentication.
So the jist of what we did was:
User clicks a link from B.com
Popup window opens to A.com/setCookie
A.com sets its cookie, and then redirects to B.com in the proper place
Again, not valid in all solutions, but it worked in ours. Hope this helps.
I know this question is rather old, but this helped me to solve cookies problem:
var cookieForm = document.createElement("form");
cookieForm.action = "A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123";
cookieForm.method = "post";
document.body.appendChild(cookieForm);
cookieForm.submit();
The idea to make a form post on a page that sets your cookies.
*EDIT*
This workaround has been reported closed in WebKit.
Luca,
Ok, so this answer is two years old, but... you can set a cookie from an iframe if you post a form to a hidden iframe. You can do this by creating a form:
<form id="myiframe" action="http://yourdomain.com" method="POST" target="iframe_target">
Then in Javascript, get a reference to the form and call submit:
document.getElementsByTagName('form')[0].submit();
You can listen to the iframe's onload, or you can have your iframe action page issue some javascript that signals the load. I have tested this in Safari and Chrome, and it works.
Cheers.
Perhaps pragmatically create and click a link with an href="A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123" and a target attribute pointing to a hidden iframe. That may bypass Safari's policy of user navigation for setting cookies (I don't have Safari handy to test.)
I did some extensive investigation around this when I was trying to deploy a site that used Windows Live ID, which depended on the ability to be able to set 3rd party cookies in order to log out. It just... didn't work. Nothing we could do would get it to work. The Live ID team also did extensive investigation and their answer was "can't make it work".
Note this line:
script.src = "A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123";
I could not get this working until I added the http, i.e.
script.src = "http://A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123";
I found a simple solution. You just need for first time setting cookie to check if request come from the same origin or not, if not as usual you need to return into iframe a script that will repeat this request, already having permission to assign cookie. After that you can do other request directly through iframe accessing this cookie. This helped me in my tracking system. Try, this works well.
Its worth noting that this restriction in Safari doesn't apply across subdomains. So if you directly visit sitea.com, then you can set cookies from subdomain.sitea.com without direct user interaction (iframe/JavaScript).
This was relevant for my case when developing an API. If you're visitors are arriving at mysite.com, and then you want some JavaScript to interact with your API, then if the API is hosted at api.mysite.com, then it will work on Safari.
Place this JavaScript on the page making cross-domain requests, http://example1.com/index.html:
<script>
var gup = function(name, url) {
if(!url) url = location.href;
name = name.replace(/[\[]/,"\\\[").replace(/[\]]/,"\\\]");
var regexS = "[\\?&]"+name+"=([^&#]*)";
var regex = new RegExp( regexS );
var results = regex.exec( url );
return results == null ? null : results[1];
}
var isSafari = navigator.vendor && navigator.vendor.indexOf('Apple') > -1 && navigator.userAgent && !navigator.userAgent.match('CriOS');
var n = gup("activated");
if(isSafari && n == null) {
//browser is Safari and cookies have not yet been activated
var current_url = location.protocol + '//' + location.host + location.pathname;
var query_string = '?callback=' + encodeURIComponent(current_url + '?activated=1');
var new_url = 'http://example2.com/activate.php' + query_string;
window.location.href = new_url;
}
//the rest of your code goes here, and you can now set cross-domain cookies on Safari
</script>
Then create a file on the other server, which needs to set cookies, http://example2.com/activate.php:
<?php
if(isset($_GET['callback'])) {
header('Location: '.$_GET['callback']);
exit();
} else {
//in case callback param is not set, simply go back to previous page
echo "<script>";
echo "window.history.back();";
echo "</script>";
exit();
}
?>
Here's how this works:
When http://example1.com/index.html is first visited, a check is made to see whether the browser is Safari and whether a GET parameter of the name "activated" does not exist. If both conditions are met (which will happen on the first visit for a Safari browser), then the browser is redirected to http://example2.com/activate.php with a GET parameter, "callback", containing the calling URL appended with an "activated" parameter.
http://example2.com/activate.php simply redirects back to the URL contained in the GET parameter, "callback".
When http://example1.index.html is now hit this second time after being redirected-to, the GET parameter, "activated" will now be set, so the conditional from step 1 will not execute, thus allowing the script to continue execution.
This fulfills Safari's requirement of having the browser visit the 3rd party domain at least once in order to start setting cookies.
Try something like:
var w = window.open("A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123");
w.close();
It may bypass safari's security policy.
It isn't the missing type-attribute thats annoying you ?-)
<script type="text/javascript">
var head = document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0];
var script = document.createElement("script");
script.setAttribute("type","text/javascript");
script.src = "A.com/setCookie?cache=1231213123";
head.appendChild(script);
</script>