305

I'm writing some JavaScript code to parse user-entered functions (for spreadsheet-like functionality). Having parsed the formula I could convert it into JavaScript and run eval() on it to yield the result.

However, I've always shied away from using eval() if I can avoid it because it's evil (and, rightly or wrongly, I've always thought it is even more evil in JavaScript, because the code to be evaluated might be changed by the user).

So, when it is OK to use it?

15
  • 7
    Most JSON libraries do not, in fact use eval under the hood, exactly to protect against the security risks. Dec 14, 2009 at 17:23
  • 13
    @Sean - Both JQuery and Prototype use eval (JQuery uses it via new Function)
    – plodder
    Apr 19, 2010 at 22:53
  • 8
    @plodder - Where are you getting your info? jQuery has utilized the native JSON.parse() since 1.4 (way back in 1/2010)! See for yourself: code.jquery.com/jquery-1.4.js
    – ken
    Jan 4, 2011 at 18:38
  • 4
    "Obviously one has to use eval() to parse JSON" -- this is not true, on the contrary - one shouldn't use eval to parse JSON! Use Douglas Crockfords' (creator of JSON) json2.js script from json.org!
    – Tomas
    Apr 25, 2012 at 23:47
  • 17
    @Tomas the irony there being that json2.js uses eval to parse JSON Jun 8, 2012 at 2:01

27 Answers 27

286

I'd like to take a moment to address the premise of your question - that eval() is "evil". The word "evil", as used by programming language people, usually means "dangerous", or more precisely "able to cause lots of harm with a simple-looking command". So, when is it OK to use something dangerous? When you know what the danger is, and when you're taking the appropriate precautions.

To the point, let's look at the dangers in the use of eval(). There are probably many small hidden dangers just like everything else, but the two big risks - the reason why eval() is considered evil - are performance and code injection.

  • Performance - eval() runs the interpreter/compiler. If your code is compiled, then this is a big hit, because you need to call a possibly-heavy compiler in the middle of run-time. However, JavaScript is still mostly an interpreted language, which means that calling eval() is not a big performance hit in the general case (but see my specific remarks below).
  • Code injection - eval() potentially runs a string of code under elevated privileges. For example, a program running as administrator/root would never want to eval() user input, because that input could potentially be "rm -rf /etc/important-file" or worse. Again, JavaScript in a browser doesn't have that problem, because the program is running in the user's own account anyway. Server-side JavaScript could have that problem.

On to your specific case. From what I understand, you're generating the strings yourself, so assuming you're careful not to allow a string like "rm -rf something-important" to be generated, there's no code injection risk (but please remember, it's very very hard to ensure this in the general case). Also, if you're running in the browser then code injection is a pretty minor risk, I believe.

As for performance, you'll have to weight that against ease of coding. It is my opinion that if you're parsing the formula, you might as well compute the result during the parse rather than run another parser (the one inside eval()). But it may be easier to code using eval(), and the performance hit will probably be unnoticeable. It looks like eval() in this case is no more evil than any other function that could possibly save you some time.

23
  • 83
    You're not addressing the issue of code that uses eval being difficult to debug
    – bobobobo
    Aug 29, 2009 at 18:45
  • 57
    Code Injection is a very serious issue for javascript if you are at all concerned about your user's data. Injected code will run (in the browser) as if it came from your site, letting it do any sort of shenanigan that the user could do manually. If you allow (third-party) code to enter you page, it can order things on behalf of your customer, or change their gravatar, or whatever they could do through your site. Be very careful. Letting hackers own your customers is just as bad as letting them own your server. Dec 14, 2009 at 17:19
  • 77
    If the data is comming from your server and its something that you, the developer has generated, there is no harm in using eval(). The real harm is beliving everything you read. You see lots of people saying eval() is evil and they have no idea why except that they read it somewhere.
    – Razor
    Mar 4, 2010 at 5:38
  • 48
    @Sean McMillan: I want to believe you, but if someone is going to intercept and change javascript going to eval() from your server, they could also just change the page's source in the first place, and also take control of the user's information . . . I don't see the difference.
    – Walt W
    Apr 1, 2010 at 17:25
  • 23
    Re "Code injection - ... Again, JavaScript in a browser doesn't have that problem," & " Also, if you're running in the browser then code injection is a pretty minor risk, I believe." Are you suggesting that code-injection in the browser is not a problem? XSS has been in the top 3 vulns on OWASP's top 10 list for several years running. Aug 3, 2012 at 22:42
82

eval() isn't evil. Or, if it is, it's evil in the same way that reflection, file/network I/O, threading, and IPC are "evil" in other languages.

If, for your purpose, eval() is faster than manual interpretation, or makes your code simpler, or more clear... then you should use it. If neither, then you shouldn't. Simple as that.

4
  • 6
    One such purpose might be to generate optimized code that would either be too long or too repetitive to write by hand. The kind of stuff that, in LISP, would call for a macro.
    – wberry
    Mar 25, 2014 at 15:39
  • 9
    This is such general advice that it could be applied to literally any block of code that exists. It really doesn't add anything to this question; in particular, it doesn't help anyone coming here determine whether or not their particular usage is problematic or not.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 4, 2016 at 18:29
  • 7
    Faster, simpler, more clear... This answer does not cover the security implications well enough. Jul 14, 2019 at 20:28
  • This advice does add to the question the questioning of the premise of any tool being "evil". For that it gets my upvote.
    – capr
    Oct 16, 2022 at 8:30
65

When you trust the source.

In case of JSON, it is more or less hard to tamper with the source, because it comes from a web server you control. As long as the JSON itself contains no data a user has uploaded, there is no major drawback to use eval.

In all other cases I would go great lengths to ensure user supplied data conforms to my rules before feeding it to eval().

8
  • 14
    A json string should always be tested against the json grammar before using it in eval(). So the json string "{foo:alert('XSS')}" would not pass since “alert('XSS')” is not a proper value.
    – Gumbo
    Feb 11, 2009 at 12:52
  • Or when the environment is secure.
    – Eli Grey
    Oct 21, 2009 at 0:30
  • 3
    Well, use HTTPS, then. OTOH: man-in-the-middle is not the typical attack scenario for the garden variety web app, whereas i.e. cross-site-scripting is.
    – Tomalak
    Dec 15, 2009 at 18:50
  • 7
    eval will also not correctly parse all valid JSON strings. For example JSON.parse(' "\u2028" ') === "\u2028" but eval(' "\u2028" ') raises an exception because U+2028 is a newline in JavaScript but it is not a newline as far as JSON is concerned. Aug 3, 2012 at 22:36
  • 2
    @Justin - if the protocol is compromised, well, typically the initial page load would have been sent over that same protocol, and then it's a moot point because the client is already as compromised as it can possibly be.
    – antinome
    Nov 6, 2013 at 18:38
26

Let's get real folks:

  1. Every major browser now has a built-in console which your would-be hacker can use with abundance to invoke any function with any value - why would they bother to use an eval statement - even if they could?

  2. If it takes 0.2 seconds to compile 2000 lines of JavaScript, what is my performance degradation if I eval four lines of JSON?

Even Crockford's explanation for 'eval is evil' is weak.

eval is Evil, The eval function is the most misused feature of JavaScript. Avoid it

As Crockford himself might say "This kind of statement tends to generate irrational neurosis. Don't buy it."

Understanding eval and knowing when it might be useful is way more important. For example, eval is a sensible tool for evaluating server responses that were generated by your software.

BTW: Prototype.js calls eval directly five times (including in evalJSON() and evalResponse()). jQuery uses it in parseJSON (via Function constructor).

18
  • 10
    JQuery uses the browser's builtin JSON.parse function if available (which is much faster & safer), using eval only as a fallback mechanism. The statement "eval is evil" is a reasonably good guideline.
    – jjmontes
    Sep 12, 2011 at 13:21
  • 37
    Re "Every major browser now has a built in console...". Code injection is a problem when one user can enter code that is then run in another user's browser. Browser consoles do not by themselves allow one user to run code in another users browser so they are irrelevant when deciding whether it is worth protecting against code injection. Aug 3, 2012 at 22:29
  • 35
    "Every major browser now has a built in console ... why would they bother to use an eval statement?" - You are way off the mark. I suggest you edit the answer. Ability of one user to inject code that can run in another's browser is a major issue. And this is where you need to get really real.
    – akkishore
    Dec 27, 2012 at 8:24
  • 7
    @akkishore, I will appreciate if you come up with a real life example that supports your over stated statements.
    – Akash Kava
    Apr 19, 2013 at 10:31
  • 10
    @AkashKava What you're failing to realize, is that if I submit javascript in my comment box, and that javascript makes it to the database. When another user views that comment (that I put javascript in), eval will take that javascript when it is rendered, and evaluate it using the interpreter, causing my embedded javascript to execute on the other user's browser. By doing this, I can gleen all sorts of information. Their username, their user id in the database, their e-mail address, etc. This is not a hard answer, if you had Googled XSS, you would see in about 10 seconds why it's an issue. Aug 5, 2014 at 22:43
20

I tend to follow Crockford's advice for eval(), and avoid it altogether. Even ways that appear to require it do not. For example, the setTimeout() allows you to pass a function rather than eval.

setTimeout(function() {
  alert('hi');
}, 1000);

Even if it's a trusted source, I don't use it, because the code returned by JSON might be garbled, which could at best do something wonky, at worst, expose something bad.

7
  • 3
    I think that bugs in the JSON formatter on the server side are certainly an issue. Does the response from the server depend on any kind of user submitted text? Then you gotta watch for XSS.
    – swilliams
    Oct 13, 2008 at 15:06
  • 4
    If your webserver isn't authenticated via HTTPS, then you could suffer some sort of man-in-the-middle attack where another host intercepts the request and sends its own data.
    – Ben Combee
    Dec 21, 2008 at 0:18
  • 12
    If someone can perform man-in-the-middle attack, he can easily inject anything to your scripts. May 5, 2010 at 17:11
  • 12
    You should not rely on your javascript code at all... You not rely on anything that runs on the client side... If someone does man-in-the-middle attack why would he mess with your json objects? He can serve a different webpage to you and different js files...
    – Calmarius
    Jul 1, 2010 at 13:24
  • 7
    I personally dislike the argument "there are always other ways to do it." For example, you could also say there's always ways to avoid object oriented programming. That doesn't mean it's not a great option. If you understand eval and it's dangers, it can be a great tool to use in the right situations.
    – dallin
    May 13, 2013 at 18:20
8

Eval is complementary to compilation which is used in templating the code. By templating I mean that you write a simplified template generator that generates useful template code which increases development speed.

I have written a framework, where developers don't use EVAL, but they use our framework and in turn that framework has to use EVAL to generate templates.

Performance of EVAL can be increased by using the following method; instead of executing the script, you must return a function.

var a = eval("3 + 5");

It should be organized as

var f = eval("(function(a,b) { return a + b; })");

var a = f(3,5);

Caching f will certainly improve the speed.

Also Chrome allows debugging of such functions very easily.

Regarding security, using eval or not will hardly make any difference,

  1. First of all, the browser invokes the entire script in a sandbox.
  2. Any code that is evil in EVAL, is evil in the browser itself. The attacker or anyone can easily inject a script node in DOM and do anything if he/she can eval anything. Not using EVAL will not make any difference.
  3. It is mostly poor server-side security that is harmful. Poor cookies validation or poor ACL implementation on the server causes most attacks.
  4. A recent Java vulnerability, etc. was there in Java's native code. JavaScript was and is designed to run in a sandbox, whereas applets were designed to run outside a sandbox with certificates, etc. that lead to vulnerabilities and many other things.
  5. Writing code for imitating a browser is not difficult. All you have to do is make a HTTP request to the server with your favourite user agent string. All testing tools mock browsers anyway; if an attacker want to harm you, EVAL is their last resort. They have many other ways to deal with your server-side security.
  6. The browser DOM does not have access to files and not a user name. In fact nothing on the machine that eval can give access to.

If your server-side security is solid enough for anyone to attack from anywhere, you should not worry about EVAL. As I mentioned, if EVAL would not exist, attackers have many tools to hack into your server irrespective of your browser's EVAL capability.

Eval is only good for generating some templates to do complex string processing based on something that is not used in advance. For example, I will prefer

"FirstName + ' ' + LastName"

As opposed to

"LastName + ' ' + FirstName"

As my display name, which can come from a database and which is not hardcoded.

8
  • You can use function instead of eval - function (first, last) { return last + ' ' + first }.
    – 0..
    Oct 15, 2013 at 19:10
  • Names of columns come from database.
    – Akash Kava
    Oct 15, 2013 at 19:49
  • 4
    The threat of eval is mostly other users. Let's say you have a settings page, and it lets you set how your name appears to others. Let's also say you weren't thinking very clearly when you wrote it, so your select box has options like <option value="LastName + ' ' + FirstName">Last First</option>. I open my dev tools, change the value of an option to alert('PWNED!'), select the changed option, and submit the form. Now, any time some other person can see my display name, that code runs.
    – cHao
    Jan 15, 2014 at 15:05
  • 2
    @cHao, The one you are talking about is example of poor server side security, server should never accept a data that can be executed as code in anyone's browser. Once again, you have failed to understand concept of poor server side security.
    – Akash Kava
    Jun 9, 2016 at 6:01
  • "If your server-side security is solid enough for anyone to attack from anywhere, you should not worry about EVAL." Exactly why you should worry. No server is 100% secure. Password leaks, social engineering, bitter employees, security bugs. Not enough to ransack a system. But if I could update just one record in your database, I would go for the source table of your string processor. Potential XSS attack! That's how hackers work. They don't have the admin password. They find tiny weaknesses, none of which have any real impact. But combined, they may be just enough to do some real damage. Jul 14, 2019 at 18:34
8

Bottom Line

If you created or sanitized the code you eval, it is never evil.

Slightly More Detailed

eval is evil if running on the server using input submitted by a client that was not created by the developer or that was not sanitized by the developer.

eval is not evil if running on the client, even if using unsanitized input crafted by the client.

Obviously you should always sanitize the input, as to have some control over what your code consumes.

Reasoning

The client can run any arbitrary code they want to, even if the developer did not code it; This is true not only for what is evaled, but the call to eval itself.

3
  • 1
    "eval is not evil if running on the client, even if using unsanitized input crafted by the client" This is not true. If person A crafts a script that gets eval'd on person B's client, they can do something like send person B's cookies to person A's remote server. Oct 18, 2021 at 17:02
  • Any person can run any code they choose on the client, regardless of what the developer codes. Even sanitation checks can be removed by browser plugins and manual changes. Oct 18, 2021 at 19:12
  • 2
    That is simply not true. Otherwise XSS wouldn't be a security vulnerability. Really what I'm saying is that eval is as much of a security vulnerability as setting innerHTML. As long as you know what you're doing you're fine, but it may open the door to some attacks (ie cookie stealing) if you aren't careful. Oct 22, 2021 at 17:46
6

When debugging in Chrome (v28.0.1500.72), I found that variables are not bound to closures if they are not used in a nested function that produces the closure. I guess, that's an optimization of the JavaScript engine.

BUT: when eval() is used inside a function that causes a closure, ALL the variables of outer functions are bound to the closure, even if they are not used at all. If someone has the time to test if memory leaks can be produced by that, please leave me a comment below.

Here's my test code:

(function () {
    var eval = function (arg) {
    };

    function evalTest() {
        var used = "used";
        var unused = "not used";

        (function () {
            used.toString();   // Variable "unused" is visible in debugger
            eval("1");
        })();
    }

    evalTest();
})();

(function () {
    var eval = function (arg) {
    };

    function evalTest() {
        var used = "used";
        var unused = "not used";

        (function () {
            used.toString();   // Variable "unused" is NOT visible in debugger
            var noval = eval;
            noval("1");
        })();
    }

    evalTest();
})();

(function () {
    var noval = function (arg) {
    };

    function evalTest() {
        var used = "used";
        var unused = "not used";

        (function () {
            used.toString();    // Variable "unused" is NOT visible in debugger
            noval("1");
        })();
    }

    evalTest();
})();

What I like to point out here is, that eval() must not necessarily refer to the native eval() function. It all depends on the name of the function. So when calling the native eval() with an alias name (say var noval = eval; and then in an inner function noval(expression);) then the evaluation of expression may fail when it refers to variables that should be part of the closure, but is actually not.

5

I saw people advocate to not use eval, because is evil, but I saw the same people use Function and setTimeout dynamically, so they use eval under the hoods :D

BTW, if your sandbox is not sure enough (for example, if you're working on a site that allow code injection) eval is the last of your problems. The basic rule of security is that all input is evil, but in case of JavaScript even JavaScript itself could be evil, because in JavaScript you can overwrite any function and you just can't be sure you're using the real one, so, if a malicious code start before you, you can't trust any JavaScript built-in function :D

Now the epilogue to this post is:

If you REALLY need it (80% of the time eval is NOT needed) and you're sure of what you' re doing, just use eval (or better Function ;) ), closures and OOP cover the 80/90% of the case where eval can be replaced using another kind of logic, the rest is dynamically generated code (for example, if you're writing an interpreter) and as you already said evaluating JSON (here you can use the Crockford safe evaluation ;) )

1
3

The only instance when you should be using eval() is when you need to run dynamic JS on the fly. I'm talking about JS that you download asynchronously from the server...

...And 9 times of 10 you could easily avoid doing that by refactoring.

1
2

eval is rarely the right choice. While there may be numerous instances where you can accomplish what you need to accomplish by concatenating a script together and running it on the fly, you typically have much more powerful and maintainable techniques at your disposal: associative-array notation (obj["prop"] is the same as obj.prop), closures, object-oriented techniques, functional techniques - use them instead.

2

As far as client script goes, I think the issue of security is a moot point. Everything loaded into the browser is subject to manipulation and should be treated as such. There is zero risk in using an eval() statement when there are much easier ways to execute JavaScript code and/or manipulate objects in the DOM, such as the URL bar in your browser.

javascript:alert("hello");

If someone wants to manipulate their DOM, I say swing away. Security to prevent any type of attack should always be the responsibility of the server application, period.

From a pragmatic standpoint, there's no benefit to using an eval() in a situation where things can be done otherwise. However, there are specific cases where an eval SHOULD be used. When so, it can definitely be done without any risk of blowing up the page.

<html>
    <body>
        <textarea id="output"></textarea><br/>
        <input type="text" id="input" />
        <button id="button" onclick="execute()">eval</button>

        <script type="text/javascript">
            var execute = function(){
                var inputEl = document.getElementById('input');
                var toEval = inputEl.value;
                var outputEl = document.getElementById('output');
                var output = "";

                try {
                    output = eval(toEval);
                }
                catch(err){
                    for(var key in err){
                        output += key + ": " + err[key] + "\r\n";
                    }
                }
                outputEl.value = output;
            }
        </script>
    <body>
</html>
3
  • 6
    Re "There is zero risk in using an eval() statement when there are much easier ways to execute javascript and/or manipulate objects in the DOM". Code injection is a problem when one user can enter code that is then run in another user's browser. Browser consoles do not by themselves allow one user to run code in another users browser so they are irrelevant when deciding whether it is worth protecting against code injection. Aug 3, 2012 at 22:30
  • Isn't <head></head> required, even if empty? Jan 13, 2017 at 22:57
  • 2
    This answer completely ignores the risks of XSS. Jul 14, 2019 at 14:56
2

On the server side eval is useful when dealing with external scripts such as sql or influxdb or mongo. Where custom validation at runtime can be made without re-deploying your services.

For example an achievement service with following metadata

{
  "568ff113-abcd-f123-84c5-871fe2007cf0": {
    "msg_enum": "quest/registration",
    "timely": "all_times",
    "scope": [
      "quest/daily-active"
    ],
    "query": "`SELECT COUNT(point) AS valid from \"${userId}/dump/quest/daily-active\" LIMIT 1`",
    "validator": "valid > 0",
    "reward_external": "ewallet",
    "reward_external_payload": "`{\"token\": \"${token}\", \"userId\": \"${userId}\", \"amountIn\": 1, \"conversionType\": \"quest/registration:silver\", \"exchangeProvider\":\"provider/achievement\",\"exchangeType\":\"payment/quest/registration\"}`"
  },
  "efdfb506-1234-abcd-9d4a-7d624c564332": {
    "msg_enum": "quest/daily-active",
    "timely": "daily",
    "scope": [
      "quest/daily-active"
    ],
    "query": "`SELECT COUNT(point) AS valid from \"${userId}/dump/quest/daily-active\" WHERE time >= '${today}' ${ENV.DAILY_OFFSET} LIMIT 1`",
    "validator": "valid > 0",
    "reward_external": "ewallet",
    "reward_external_payload": "`{\"token\": \"${token}\", \"userId\": \"${userId}\", \"amountIn\": 1, \"conversionType\": \"quest/daily-active:silver\", \"exchangeProvider\":\"provider/achievement\",\"exchangeType\":\"payment/quest/daily-active\"}`"
  }
}

Which then allow,

  • Direct injection of object/values thru literal string in a json, useful for templating texts

  • Can be use as a comparator, say we make rules how to validate quest or events in CMS

Con of this:

  • Can be errors in the code and break up things in the service, if not fully tested.

  • If a hacker can write script on your system, then you are pretty much screwed.

  • One way to validate your script is keep the hash of your scripts somewhere safe, so you can check them before running.

0
2

Eval isn't evil, just misused.

If you created the code going into it or can trust it, it's alright. People keep talking about how user input doesn't matter with eval. Well sort of~

If there is user input that goes to the server, then comes back to the client, and that code is being used in eval without being sanitized. Congrats, you've opened pandora's box for user data to be sent to whoever.

Depending on where the eval is, many websites use SPAs, and eval could make it easier for the user to access application internals that otherwise wouldn't have been easy. Now they can make a bogus browser extension that can tape into that eval and steal data again.

Just gotta figure what's the point of you using the eval. Generating code isn't really ideal when you could simply make methods to do that sort of thing, use objects, or the like.

Now a nice example of using eval. Your server is reading the swagger file that you have created. Many of the URL params are created in the format {myParam}. So you'd like to read the URLs and then convert them to template strings without having to do complex replacements because you have many endpoints. So you may do something like this. Note this is a very simple example.

const params = { id: 5 };

const route = '/api/user/{id}';
route.replace(/{/g, '${params.');

// use eval(route); to do something

2

Since no one has mentioned it yet, let me add that eval is super useful for Webassembly-Javascript interop. While it's certainly ideal to have pre-made scripts included in your page that your WASM code can invoke directly, sometimes it's not practicable and you need to pass in dynamic Javascript from a Webassembly language like C# to really accomplish what you need to do.

It's also safe in this scenario because you have complete control over what gets passed in. Well, I should say, it's no less safe than composing SQL statements using C#, which is to say it needs to be done carefully (properly escaping strings, etc.) whenever user-supplied data is used to generate the script. But with that caveat it has a clear place in interop situations and is far from "evil".

0

It's okay to use it if you have complete control over the code that's passed to the eval function.

4
  • 3
    If you have complete control over what you're passing to eval, then the big question becomes, when does it make sense for that to be a string rather than real JS?
    – cHao
    Jan 15, 2014 at 13:59
  • @cHao For example, if you have a large Game-Application (5-10MB Javascript), its better to build first a simple fast-loading AJAX-Preloader (1kb), which loads the large Main-Script, while displaying a Loading-Bar or something similar. After downloading you can use "eval(source)" or better "new Function(source)" to run the loaded Game-Application-Script. That way the user can see visually that the Application needs time to download until the game can start. Without that the user has to wait for the whole Application to load without any visually feedback.
    – SammieFox
    Apr 11, 2017 at 18:08
  • @SammieFox There are other (and better) ways of doing this, most notably <script async="true" src="...">. See also: w3bits.com/async-javascript Jul 14, 2019 at 15:17
  • The answer is dangerous advice; too many developers have a false sense of being in control. The advice does make some sense for software that is no longer actively maintained. But such software should be considered dead. Jul 14, 2019 at 15:27
0

Code generation. I recently wrote a library called Hyperbars which bridges the gap between virtual-dom and handlebars. It does this by parsing a handlebars template and converting it to hyperscript. The hyperscript is generated as a string first and before returning it, eval() it to turn it into executable code. I have found eval() in this particular situation the exact opposite of evil.

Basically from

<div>
    {{#each names}}
        <span>{{this}}</span>
    {{/each}}
</div>

To this

(function (state) {
    var Runtime = Hyperbars.Runtime;
    var context = state;
    return h('div', {}, [Runtime.each(context['names'], context, function (context, parent, options) {
        return [h('span', {}, [options['@index'], context])]
    })])
}.bind({}))

The performance of eval() isn't an issue in a situation like this too because you only need to interpret the generated string once and then reuse the executable output many times over.

You can see how the code generation was achieved if you're curious here.

1
  • "The hyperscript is generated as a string first (...)" Makes more sense to do all code generation in the build phase, write the resulting hyperscript code to a separate executable (.js) file, then deploy that file to test and production. I love the way you use code generation. It's just that eval is a hint that some responsibility that belongs in compile time, has moved into runtime. Jul 14, 2019 at 14:11
0

There is no reason not to use eval() as long as you can be sure that the source of the code comes from you or the actual user. Even though he can manipulate what gets sent into the eval() function, that's not a security problem, because he is able to manipulate the source code of the web site and could therefore change the JavaScript code itself.

So... when to not use eval()? Eval() should only not be used when there is a chance that a third party could change it. Like intercepting the connection between the client and your server (but if that is a problem use HTTPS). You shouldn't eval() for parsing code that is written by others like in a forum.

7
  • Re "There is no reason not to use eval() as long as you can be sure that the source of the code comes from you or the actual user." This assumes that there is a single user. That premise is not stated in the OP. When there are multiple users, careless eval of a string composed from content from one user can allow that user to execute code in the other user's browser. Aug 3, 2012 at 22:33
  • @MikeSamuel, eval can execute code in other user's browser, I havent heard this, have you tried this? This never happened in history of browsing, can you show us an example?
    – Akash Kava
    Apr 19, 2013 at 10:20
  • @AkashKava, A string can originate with one user-agent, be stored in a database, and then served to another browser which evals it. It happens all the time. Apr 19, 2013 at 15:10
  • @MikeSamuel database? where? who serves wrong string? isnt it database on server side to blame? first of all EVAL is not to be blamed for poorly written server side code. Use jsfiddle and show the world a real world example where it can cause harm.
    – Akash Kava
    Apr 19, 2013 at 16:10
  • 2
    @AkashKava, I don't understand your question. We aren't talking about a specific application, but reasons not to use eval. How is it useful to blame the server? If anyone should be blamed, it should be the attacker. Regardless of blame, a client that is not vulnerable to XSS despite bugs in the server is better than a client that is vulnerable, all else being equal. Apr 19, 2013 at 16:18
0

If it's really needed eval is not evil. But 99.9% of the uses of eval that I stumble across are not needed (not including setTimeout stuff).

For me the evil is not a performance or even a security issue (well, indirectly it's both). All such unnecessary uses of eval add to a maintenance hell. Refactoring tools are thrown off. Searching for code is hard. Unanticipated effects of those evals are legion.

1
  • 5
    eval isn't necessary for setTimeout. You can use a function reference there too. Dec 20, 2008 at 19:50
0

My belief is that eval is a very powerful function for client-side web applications and safe... As safe as JavaScript, which are not. :-) The security issues are essentially a server-side problem because, now, with tool like Firebug, you can attack any JavaScript application.

1
  • 1
    The use of eval needs to be secured against XSS attacks, which is not always easy to get right.
    – Benjamin
    Sep 19, 2016 at 9:52
0

My example of using eval: import.

How it's usually done.

var components = require('components');
var Button = components.Button;
var ComboBox = components.ComboBox;
var CheckBox = components.CheckBox;
...
// That quickly gets very boring

But with the help of eval and a little helper function it gets a much better look:

var components = require('components');
eval(importable('components', 'Button', 'ComboBox', 'CheckBox', ...));

importable might look like (this version doesn't support importing concrete members).

function importable(path) {
    var name;
    var pkg = eval(path);
    var result = '\n';

    for (name in pkg) {
        result += 'if (name !== undefined) throw "import error: name already exists";\n'.replace(/name/g, name);
    }

    for (name in pkg) {
        result += 'var name = path.name;\n'.replace(/name/g, name).replace('path', path);
    }
    return result;
}
2
  • 2
    +1 for the idea, but you have a bug here: .replace(/name/g, name).replace('path', path). If name contains the string "path" then you could get surprises.
    – wberry
    Mar 25, 2014 at 15:36
  • 1
    Declaring one variable for each property of components is a possible code smell; refactoring your code might eliminate the 'problem' altogether. Your current solution is just syntactic sugar. If you insist on doing that, then I would recommend writing your own preprocessor, to be executed prior to deployment. That should keep eval away from production code. Jul 14, 2019 at 14:40
0

I think any cases of eval being justified would be rare. You're more likely to use it thinking that it's justified than you are to use it when it's actually justified.

The security issues are the most well known. But also be aware that JavaScript uses JIT compilation and this works very poorly with eval. Eval is somewhat like a blackbox to the compiler, and JavaScript needs to be able to predict code ahead of time (to some extent) in order to safely and correctly apply performance optimisations and scoping. In some cases, the performance impact can even affect other code outside eval.

If you want to know more: https://github.com/getify/You-Dont-Know-JS/blob/master/scope%20%26%20closures/ch2.md#eval

-1

Only during testing, if possible. Also note that eval() is much slower than other specialized JSON etc. evaluators.

-1

When is JavaScript's eval() not evil?

I'm always trying to discourage from using eval. Almost always, a more clean and maintainable solution is available. Eval is not needed even for JSON parsing. Eval adds to maintenance hell. Not without reason, it is frowned upon by masters like Douglas Crockford.

But I found one example where it should be used:

When you need to pass the expression.

For example, I have a function that constructs a general google.maps.ImageMapType object for me, but I need to tell it the recipe, how should it construct the tile URL from the zoom and coord parameters:

my_func({
    name: "OSM",
    tileURLexpr: '"http://tile.openstreetmap.org/"+b+"/"+a.x+"/"+a.y+".png"',
    ...
});

function my_func(opts)
{
    return new google.maps.ImageMapType({
        getTileUrl: function (coord, zoom) {
            var b = zoom;
            var a = coord;
            return eval(opts.tileURLexpr);
        },
        ....
    });
}
2
  • 3
    This looks like it could be refactored so that eval() isn't necessary - tileURLexpr is just a template so some judicious use of replace() would do the job. Still, it does remind me of an example I had in mind when I submitted the question, which was to do with allowing a user to specify a mathematical formula to be evaluated, similar to spreadsheet functionality. Of course I didn't mention that at the time because I didn't want to influence the answers! May 11, 2012 at 13:10
  • 9
    tileURL: function (zoom, coord) { return 'http://tile.openstreetmap.org/' + b + '/' + a.x + '/' + a.y + '.png'; },
    – Casey Chu
    Oct 30, 2013 at 9:32
-1

Eval is useful for code generation when you don't have macros.

For (a stupid) example, if you're writing a Brainfuck compiler, you'll probably want to construct a function that performs the sequence of instructions as a string, and eval it to return a function.

3
  • Either you write a compiler (which saves rather than executes the code being generated) or you write an interpreter (where each instruction has a pre-compiled implementation). Neither is a use case for eval. Jul 14, 2019 at 12:31
  • 1
    If you generated javascript code and wanted to immediately execute it (let's say for performance benefits over direct interpretation), that would be a use case for eval. Jul 16, 2019 at 22:28
  • Good point; I saw an example in this article about Blockly. I'm shocked Google recommends eval, when the alternative (Function) is both faster (as explained in MDN) and more reliable (prevents unpredictable bugs by better isolation between the generated code and other 'supportive' code on the same webpage). Jul 17, 2019 at 12:03
-1

While there may be numerous instances where you can accomplish what you need to accomplish by concatenating a script together and running it on the fly, you typically have much more powerful and maintainable techniques at your disposal. eval is rarely the right choice.: associative-array notation (obj["prop"] is the same as obj.prop), closures, object-oriented techniques, functional techniques - use them instead.

-5

When you parse a JSON structure with a parse function (for example, jQuery.parseJSON), it expects a perfect structure of the JSON file (each property name is in double quotes). However, JavaScript is more flexible. Therefore, you can use eval() to avoid it.

4
  • 4
    Don't blindly use eval, esp. when getting JSON data from a third-party source. See JSON.Stringify without quotes on properties? for the correct approach to parse "JSON without quoted key names".
    – Rob W
    Jul 20, 2012 at 20:58
  • 2
    If it doesn't use double quotes around property names, it might be a string representation of an object literal, but it is not JSON. JSON defines the property names as a string and defines a string as a sequence of zero or more Unicode characters, wrapped in double quotes, using backslash escapes. Mar 19, 2013 at 13:34
  • See article by Nikolas Zakas - "eval() isn’t evil, just misunderstood" nczonline.net/blog/2013/06/25/eval-isnt-evil-just-misunderstood
    – vitmalina
    Jul 12, 2013 at 5:16
  • @vitmalina From Zakas' article: "This can be dangerous if you’re taking user input and running it through eval(). However, if your input isn’t from the user, is there any real danger?" That's exactly the problem. Once your code grows beyond 'hello world' proportions, it quickly becomes impossible to prove you are not leaking user input into eval. In any serious multi-tenant web application, with dozens of developers working on the same code base, this is unacceptable. Jul 13, 2019 at 23:14

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