I have a system which allows users to enter HTML-reserved characters into a text area, then post that to my application. That information is then saved to a database for later retrieval and display. Alarms are (should be) going off in your head. I need to make sure that I avoid XSS attacks, because I will display this data somewhere else in the application. Here are my options as I see it:
Encode before save to DB
I can HTML-encode the data on the way in to the database, so no HTML characters ever are entered in the database.
Pros:
- Developers don't have to remember to HTML encode the data when its displayed on the web page.
Cons:
- The data now doesn't make sense for desktop-based applications (or anything other than HTML). Stuff shows up like
< > &
etc.
Don't HTML encode before saving to DB
I can HTML encode the data whenever I need to display it on a web page.
Pros:
- Feels right because it keeps the integrity of the data that was entered by the user.
- Allows non-HTML based applications to just display this data without having to worry about HTML encoding.
Cons:
- We might display this data in a lot of places, and we'll have to make sure that every developer knows that when you display this field, you'll need to HTML encode it.
- People forget things. There WILL be at least once instance when we forget to HTML encode the data.
Scrub the data before saving to DB (don't HTML encode)
I can use a well-tested third party library to remove potentially dangerous HTML and get a safe HTML fragment to save the database, not HTML encoded.
Pros:
- Preserves most of the original input so that display in a non-HTML format makes sense.
- Less catastrophic if the developer forgets to HTML encode this information for display on a web page.
Cons:
- Still messes with the data as the user originally entered it. If they really want to type a
<script>
or<object>
tag, it won't make it, and we'll get support calls and emails because of that.
My question is: What is the best option, or if there is another way of going about this, what is it?