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I am converting an application I created using webforms to the asp.net mvc framework using vb.net. I have a problem with one of my views. I get the yellow screen of death saying "A potentially dangerous Request.Form value was detected from the client" when I submit my form. I am using tinymce as my RTE. I have set on the view itself

ValidateRequest="false"

I know that in MVC it doesn't respect it on the view from what I've read so far. So I put it on the controller action as well. I have tried different setups:

<ValidateInput(False), AcceptVerbs(HttpVerbs.Post)> _

...and...

<AcceptVerbs(HttpVerbs.Post), ValidateInput(False)> _

...and like this as well...

<ValidateInput(False)> _
<AcceptVerbs(HttpVerbs.Post)> _

Just to see if it made a difference, yet I still get the yellow screen of death. I only want to set it for this view and the specific action in my controller that my post pertains to. Am I missing something?

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4 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

Are you sure that the controller action being posted to is the one you have the attributes on?

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You are a life saver! I burnt myself on this project yesterday. This has been bugging me since last night and I thought sleeping on it would help. But yeah, my form action was empty from me testing my jQuery validation on that view and I forgot to put the Url.Action back. I feel embarassed lol. – xenosyde Apr 30 '09 at 16:22
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We all mistakes, without them no one would learn. :) – Chad Moran Apr 30 '09 at 16:27
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With asp.net 4, you'll need to configure the validation mode in the web.config as well.

Set the following as a child of the <system.web> element:

<httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0"/>

Asp.Net 4 sets the requestValidationMode to 4.0 by default, which tells the system to perform request validation before the BeginRequst phase of the HTTP request. The validation will occur before the system reaches the action attribute telling it not to validate the request, thus rendering the attribute useless. Setting requestValidationMode="2.0" will revert to the asp.net 2.0 request validation behavior, allowing the ValidateInput attribute to work as expected.

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is this going to be 'fixed' for MVC 3? – Simon_Weaver Apr 20 '10 at 3:42
Excellent, this is exactly what I needed. Thanks. – Tom Glenn Oct 11 '11 at 10:02
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Please note that these suggestions will not fix the problems caused by a bug that occurs when you have to use [ValidateInput(false)] in combination with a FormCollection.

See: ASP.NET MVC 3 ValidateRequest(false) not working with FormCollection

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When you are using your own model binders which implement the IModelBinder interface you will notice that those custom model binders always validate the data, regardless any attributes. You can add few lines of code to make the custom model binders respect the ValidateInput filter of the actions:

        // First check if request validation is required
        var shouldPerformRequestValidation = controllerContext.Controller.ValidateRequest && bindingContext.ModelMetadata.RequestValidationEnabled;

        // Get value
        var valueProviderResult = bindingContext.GetValueFromValueProvider(shouldPerformRequestValidation);
        if (valueProviderResult != null)
        {
            var theValue = valueProviderResult.AttemptedValue;

            // etc...
        }

This is explained very nicely by Martijn Boland here: http://blogs.taiga.nl/martijn/2011/09/29/custom-model-binders-and-request-validation/

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