15

Let's say that our script is included in a web-page, and a prior script (that already executed) did this:

String.prototype.split = function () {
    return 'U MAD BRO?';
};

So, the split string method has been overwritten.

We would like to use this method, so we need to recover it somehow. Of course, we could just define our own implementation of this method and use that instead. However, for the sake of this question, let's just say that we really wanted to recover the browser's implementation of that method.

So, the browser has an implementation of the split method (in native code, I believe), and this implementation is assigned to String.prototype.split whenever a new web-page is loaded.

We want that implementation! We want it back in String.prototype.split.

Now, I already came up with one solution - it's a hack, and it appears to be working, but it may have flaws, I would have to test a bit... So, in the meantime, can you come up with a solution to this problem?

1
  • @ЖΞЖ Using an iframe, as posted by Raynos. The inspiration for this question was this answer to one of my past questions... Dec 20, 2011 at 19:10

1 Answer 1

28
var iframe = document.createElement("iframe");
document.documentElement.appendChild(iframe);
var _window = iframe.contentWindow;
String.prototype.split = _window.String.prototype.split;
document.documentElement.removeChild(iframe);

Use iframes to recover methods from host objects.

Note there are traps with this method.

"foo".split("") instanceof Array // false
"foo".split("") instanceof _window.Array // true

The best way to fix this is to not use instanceof, ever.

Also note that var _split = String.prototype.split as a <script> tag before the naughty script or not including the naughty script is obvouisly a far better solution.

4
  • Can you think of any flaws with this method? Could there be issues, like with the instanceof operator, since the methods "belong" to foreign constructors... ? Dec 20, 2011 at 19:08
  • @ŠimeVidas flaws are implementation specific. .split returns an Array that's either an instance of window.Array or _window.Array
    – Raynos
    Dec 20, 2011 at 19:09
  • According to this test, the resulting array is an instance of window.Array in Firefox and Safari, but an instance of _window.Array in the other browsers. Dec 20, 2011 at 19:37
  • 3
    I guess there's no way to access the original versions of functions, namely Object.defineProperty and/or Object.freeze, in a potentially hostile environment where anything writeable might have been patched—including document.createElement, window.open, etc?
    – eggyal
    Feb 11, 2016 at 8:20

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