This is my code:
MailMessage m = new MailMessage(from, to, subject, body);
SmtpClient s = new SmtpClient("...");
s.Send(m);
Only subject
and body
are user input.
This is my code:
MailMessage m = new MailMessage(from, to, subject, body);
SmtpClient s = new SmtpClient("...");
s.Send(m);
Only subject
and body
are user input.
The code's fine, but it depends on where "subject" and "body" are coming from. If (as you note) they are user-supplied, you want to make sure you are encoding it (HttpServerUtility.HtmlEncode)
You should validate subject and body then.
I am attempting to write up a test project to investigate this real fast, but from my look at Reflector and my reading of the documentation, the Subject and Body are strictly treated as System.Strings - this is to the point where you are welcome to explicitly set the encoding on the strings if you want (MailMessage.BodyEncoding).
Unless there is a major bug in how this class is put together, there should be no greater chance of code injection than there would be with any other string; especially if you explicitly set the BodyEncoding to be some manner of plain text, like UTF-8.
EDIT: Alternately, if you really really want to make sure that HTML isn't a part of the body you could use the regex
@"<[^>]*>"
to naively strip out anything inside a bunch of angle brackets, either with Regex.Replace(regex, string.empty) or Regex.Match and throwing on a return that indicated a match was found.
From the link @DavidHall posted of Is .NET MailMessage class injection-safe?, @Slaks mentions that to/from is validated, but your body content is not. So you would need to validate the subject and body.
Make sure you encode the subject and body before sending it to the user; that should be enough to handle in most scenarios.