1589

Every time a user posts something containing < or > in a page in my web application, I get this exception thrown.

I don't want to go into the discussion about the smartness of throwing an exception or crashing an entire web application because somebody entered a character in a text box, but I am looking for an elegant way to handle this.

Trapping the exception and showing

An error has occurred please go back and re-type your entire form again, but this time please do not use <

doesn't seem professional enough to me.

Disabling post validation (validateRequest="false") will definitely avoid this error, but it will leave the page vulnerable to a number of attacks.

Ideally: When a post back occurs containing HTML restricted characters, that posted value in the Form collection will be automatically HTML encoded. So the .Text property of my text-box will be something & lt; html & gt;

Is there a way I can do this from a handler?

6
  • 76
    Note that you can get this error if you have HTML entity names (&amp;) or entity numbers (&#39;) in your input too. Oct 14, 2010 at 2:50
  • 32
    Well, since it's my question I feel I can define what the point actually is: crashing an entire application process and returning a generic error message because somebody typed a '<' is overkill. Especially since you know most people will just 'validateRequest=false' to get rid of it, thus re-opening the vulnerability
    – Radu094
    Sep 18, 2014 at 17:23
  • 10
    @DrewNoakes: entity names (&amp;) do not seem to be a problem according to my tests (tested in .Net 4.0), although entity numbers (&#39;) do fail validation (as you said). If you disassemble the System.Web.CrossSiteScriptingValidation.IsDangerousString method using .Net Reflector, you'll see that the code looks specifically for html tags (starting with <) and entity numbers (starting with &#)
    – Gyum Fox
    May 6, 2015 at 15:52
  • 9
    Create a new site in VS2014 using the default MVC project and run it. Click the register link, add any email, and use "<P455-0r[!" as the password. Same error out of the box, not trying to do anything malicious, the password field won't be displayed so it won't be a XSS attack, but the only way to fix it is to completely remove validation with the ValidateInput(false)? The AllowHtml suggestion doesn't work in this situation, still blew up with the same error. A potentially dangerous Request.Form value was detected from the client (Password="<P455-0r[!"). May 26, 2015 at 22:34
  • TL;DR put <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" /> in web.config
    – user3638471
    Nov 2, 2016 at 19:15

48 Answers 48

1146

I think you are attacking it from the wrong angle by trying to encode all posted data.

Note that a "<" could also come from other outside sources, like a database field, a configuration, a file, a feed and so on.

Furthermore, "<" is not inherently dangerous. It's only dangerous in a specific context: when writing strings that haven't been encoded to HTML output (because of XSS).

In other contexts different sub-strings are dangerous, for example, if you write a user-provided URL into a link, the sub-string "javascript:" may be dangerous. The single quote character on the other hand is dangerous when interpolating strings in SQL queries, but perfectly safe if it is a part of a name submitted from a form or read from a database field.

The bottom line is: you can't filter random input for dangerous characters, because any character may be dangerous under the right circumstances. You should encode at the point where some specific characters may become dangerous because they cross into a different sub-language where they have special meaning. When you write a string to HTML, you should encode characters that have special meaning in HTML, using Server.HtmlEncode. If you pass a string to a dynamic SQL statement, you should encode different characters (or better, let the framework do it for you by using prepared statements or the like)..

When you are sure you HTML-encode everywhere you pass strings to HTML, then set ValidateRequest="false" in the <%@ Page ... %> directive in your .aspx file(s).

In .NET 4 you may need to do a little more. Sometimes it's necessary to also add <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" /> to web.config (reference).

23
  • 80
    To those coming in late: validateRequest="false" goes in the Page directive (first line of your .aspx file)
    – MGOwen
    Oct 20, 2010 at 5:28
  • 63
    Tip: Put <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" /> in a location tag to avoid killing the useful protection provided by validation from the rest of your site.
    – Brian
    May 17, 2011 at 14:05
  • 319
    In MVC3, this is [AllowHtml] on the model property. Sep 9, 2011 at 19:30
  • 6
    To disable it globally for MVC 3 you also need GlobalFilters.Filters.Add(new ValidateInputAttribute(false)); in Application_Start().
    – Alex
    Jul 18, 2012 at 11:14
  • 18
    @MGOwen you can also add the page directive to the web.config via <pages validateRequest="false" /> in <system.web />. Doing so will apply the property to all pages.
    – m-smith
    Jul 31, 2012 at 9:56
534

There's a different solution to this error if you're using ASP.NET MVC:

C# sample:

[HttpPost, ValidateInput(false)]
public ActionResult Edit(FormCollection collection)
{
    // ...
}

Visual Basic sample:

<AcceptVerbs(HttpVerbs.Post), ValidateInput(False)> _
Function Edit(ByVal collection As FormCollection) As ActionResult
    ...
End Function
4
  • the problem may be come when it's need on one page of whole application
    – Steven Spielberg
    Dec 18, 2010 at 6:03
  • 3
    You can also add the [ValidateInput(false)] attribute at the class level. If you add it to your base controller class, it will apply to all controller method actions. May 29, 2011 at 13:12
  • @Zack Thanks for the solution. On the other hand I am wondering if [AllowHtml] is better than ValidateInput(false), because [AllowHtml]is defined at once for a property i.e. Editor field and whenever it is used there is no need to use it for several actions. What do you suggest?
    – Jack
    Jul 21, 2015 at 23:44
  • 1
    @Zack Peterson Is it safe to use? No security issue?
    – shrey Pav
    Oct 30, 2017 at 7:21
442

In ASP.NET MVC (starting in version 3), you can add the AllowHtml attribute to a property on your model.

It allows a request to include HTML markup during model binding by skipping request validation for the property.

[AllowHtml]
public string Description { get; set; }
8
  • 14
    Much better to do this declarativly than in the controller!
    – Andiih
    Mar 9, 2012 at 9:03
  • Did this disappear in MVC 4? Jul 24, 2015 at 15:08
  • 1
    What is the difference between ValidateInput(false) and AllowHtml? What is the advantage of one over the other? When would i want to use AllowHtml instead of ValidateInput(false)? When would i want to use ValidateInput(false) over AllowHtml? When would i want to use both? Does it make sense to use both?
    – Ian Boyd
    Jul 29, 2016 at 13:55
  • 5
    ValidateInput is on the method, AllowHtml is on the property of the model - so you only allow the one you expect to have html - not all Aug 10, 2016 at 15:07
  • 1
    To use [AllowHtml]. Please add "using System.Web.Mvc;" This helped me stay secure as well as escaping the only field where I expected to receive dangerous unencoded html. Pro tip: "using System.Web;" //Before saving to the database please be sure to run an html encoder like this "string myEncodedString = HttpUtility.HtmlEncode(myString);" //While retrieving from the db you can similarly run a decoder like this "StringWriter myWriter = new StringWriter();" // Decode the encoded string like this. "HttpUtility.HtmlDecode(myEncodedString, myWriter);" Jun 5, 2020 at 15:47
224

If you are on .NET 4.0 make sure you add this in your web.config file inside the <system.web> tags:

<httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" />

In .NET 2.0, request validation only applied to aspx requests. In .NET 4.0 this was expanded to include all requests. You can revert to only performing XSS validation when processing .aspx by specifying:

requestValidationMode="2.0"

You can disable request validate entirely by specifying:

validateRequest="false"
4
  • 31
    Inside the <system.web> tags.
    – Hosam Aly
    Nov 4, 2010 at 11:26
  • 9
    I've put this in the web.config, but still to the error "A potentially dangerous Request.Form value "
    – Filip
    Dec 12, 2010 at 15:40
  • 21
    Looks like <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" /> works only when 2.0 framework is installed on the machine. What if 2.0 framework is not installed at all but only 4.0 framework is installed?
    – Samuel
    Jul 20, 2011 at 18:18
  • 1
    This totally worked for me. None of the steps document in the other answers were necessary (including validateRequest="false")! Oct 2, 2012 at 10:53
122

For ASP.NET 4.0, you can allow markup as input for specific pages instead of the whole site by putting it all in a <location> element. This will make sure all your other pages are safe. You do NOT need to put ValidateRequest="false" in your .aspx page.

<configuration>
...
  <location path="MyFolder/.aspx">
    <system.web>
      <pages validateRequest="false" />
      <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" />
    </system.web>
  </location>
...
</configuration>

It is safer to control this inside your web.config, because you can see at a site level which pages allow markup as input.

You still need to programmatically validate input on pages where request validation is disabled.

3
  • More info on requestValidationMode=2|4 here: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…
    – GlennG
    Feb 13, 2015 at 8:30
  • Sadly this won't work with ASP.net 2.0 as is. Remove the httpRuntime line and it will work.
    – Fandango68
    Mar 11, 2015 at 5:48
  • I added a warning reminding people to manually validate input when validation is disabled. Jun 17, 2015 at 0:35
75

The previous answers are great, but nobody said how to exclude a single field from being validated for HTML/JavaScript injections. I don't know about previous versions, but in MVC3 Beta you can do this:

[HttpPost, ValidateInput(true, Exclude = "YourFieldName")]
public virtual ActionResult Edit(int id, FormCollection collection)
{
    ...
}

This still validates all the fields except for the excluded one. The nice thing about this is that your validation attributes still validate the field, but you just don't get the "A potentially dangerous Request.Form value was detected from the client" exceptions.

I've used this for validating a regular expression. I've made my own ValidationAttribute to see if the regular expression is valid or not. As regular expressions can contain something that looks like a script I applied the above code - the regular expression is still being checked if it's valid or not, but not if it contains scripts or HTML.

7
  • 11
    Sadly it looks like the Exclude feature was removed from MVC 3 RTW :(
    – Matt Greer
    Mar 23, 2011 at 16:18
  • 3
    Nor was it included in MVC 4
    – wilsjd
    Jun 27, 2013 at 19:41
  • 10
    Use [AllowHtml] on the model's properties instead of [ValidateInput] on the Action to achieve the same end result.
    – Mrchief
    Mar 25, 2014 at 17:07
  • 2
    @Christof Note that my answer is 5 years old. I haven't come across this problem in a really long while, so there might be a lot better ways of dealing with it. Regarding this two options I think it depends on your situation. Maybe you expose that model in more than one actions and in some places HTML is allowed or not. In such a case [AllowHtml] isn't an options. I recommend checking out this article: weblogs.asp.net/imranbaloch/…, but it too is somewhat old and might be out of date.
    – gligoran
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:13
  • 1
    There's still a a way to exclude particular method parameters from validation, check out my answer here: stackoverflow.com/a/50796666/56621 Nov 14, 2018 at 22:07
55

In ASP.NET MVC you need to set requestValidationMode="2.0" and validateRequest="false" in web.config, and apply a ValidateInput attribute to your controller action:

<httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0"/>

<configuration>
    <system.web>
        <pages validateRequest="false" />
    </system.web>
</configuration>

and

[Post, ValidateInput(false)]
public ActionResult Edit(string message) {
    ...
}
2
  • 3
    For me, validateRequest="false" was not necessary, only requestValidationMode="2.0" Oct 2, 2012 at 10:54
  • requestValidationMode="2.0" still generates the error with HTMLencoded data. No solution except to base64 encode everything, then send it along.
    – MC9000
    Jun 13, 2015 at 7:35
51

You can HTML encode text box content, but unfortunately that won't stop the exception from happening. In my experience there is no way around, and you have to disable page validation. By doing that you're saying: "I'll be careful, I promise."

0
50

The answer to this question is simple:

var varname = Request.Unvalidated["parameter_name"];

This would disable validation for the particular request.

6
  • 1
    Only applicable for ASP.NET 4.5 (and, presumably, whatever will come after it.) Pre 4.5 does not support this.
    – Beska
    Nov 4, 2014 at 20:00
  • 3
    I wish I could bump this way up. I'm using .NET 4.5 and this is exactly what I needed since I'm not using MVC and I cannot change the web.config. Nov 18, 2014 at 19:26
  • 1
    Yeah but what if you're using .Net 2? Some of us have no choice
    – Fandango68
    Mar 18, 2015 at 4:12
  • this gets POST or GET parameters?
    – max4ever
    Apr 15, 2015 at 9:58
  • Are you saying this prevents an exception that was already thrown? Or does .net 4.5 delay the exception and validation until data is actually read from the Request?
    – ebyrob
    Mar 8, 2017 at 14:49
46

You can catch that error in Global.asax. I still want to validate, but show an appropriate message. On the blog listed below, a sample like this was available.

void Application_Error(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    Exception ex = Server.GetLastError();

    if (ex is HttpRequestValidationException)
    {
        Response.Clear();
        Response.StatusCode = 200;
        Response.Write(@"[html]");
        Response.End();
    }
}

Redirecting to another page also seems like a reasonable response to the exception.

http://www.romsteady.net/blog/2007/06/how-to-catch-httprequestvalidationexcep.html

1
43

For MVC, ignore input validation by adding

[ValidateInput(false)]

above each Action in the Controller.

2
  • This doesn't seem to work in the case that it gets to the controller method via a configured route.
    – PandaWood
    Mar 24, 2016 at 0:39
  • Actually, the technical explanation, is that this only works when the offending character is in the "query string"... if it's in the request path, Validation attribute does not work
    – PandaWood
    Mar 24, 2016 at 2:08
36

Please bear in mind that some .NET controls will automatically HTML encode the output. For instance, setting the .Text property on a TextBox control will automatically encode it. That specifically means converting < into &lt;, > into &gt; and & into &amp;. So be wary of doing this...

myTextBox.Text = Server.HtmlEncode(myStringFromDatabase); // Pseudo code

However, the .Text property for HyperLink, Literal and Label won't HTML encode things, so wrapping Server.HtmlEncode(); around anything being set on these properties is a must if you want to prevent <script> window.location = "http://www.google.com"; </script> from being output into your page and subsequently executed.

Do a little experimenting to see what gets encoded and what doesn't.

0
30

In the web.config file, within the tags, insert the httpRuntime element with the attribute requestValidationMode="2.0". Also add the validateRequest="false" attribute in the pages element.

Example:

<configuration>
  <system.web>
   <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" />
  </system.web>
  <pages validateRequest="false">
  </pages>
</configuration>
4
  • 1
    For me, validateRequest="false" was not necessary, only requestValidationMode="2.0" Oct 2, 2012 at 10:54
  • 3
    The "pages" section must be within the "system.web" section. Nov 27, 2012 at 17:13
  • dangerous answer, once again.
    – MC9000
    Jun 13, 2015 at 7:36
  • I needed both. Thanks
    – Jack
    Feb 23, 2016 at 2:52
25

If you don't want to disable ValidateRequest you need to implement a JavaScript function in order to avoid the exception. It is not the best option, but it works.

function AlphanumericValidation(evt)
{
    var charCode = (evt.charCode) ? evt.charCode : ((evt.keyCode) ? evt.keyCode :
        ((evt.which) ? evt.which : 0));

    // User type Enter key
    if (charCode == 13)
    {
        // Do something, set controls focus or do anything
        return false;
    }

    // User can not type non alphanumeric characters
    if ( (charCode <  48)                     ||
         (charCode > 122)                     ||
         ((charCode > 57) && (charCode < 65)) ||
         ((charCode > 90) && (charCode < 97))
       )
    {
        // Show a message or do something
        return false;
    }
}

Then in code behind, on the PageLoad event, add the attribute to your control with the next code:

Me.TextBox1.Attributes.Add("OnKeyPress", "return AlphanumericValidation(event);")
2
  • 5
    This will still leave the app vulnerable from made-up POST requests. A regular user will have problems entering characters like , : or quotes, but a regular hacker will have no problems POSTing malformed data to the server. I'd vode this waaay down.
    – Radu094
    Oct 26, 2009 at 22:21
  • 15
    @Radu094: This solution allows you to keep ValidateRequest=true, which means hackers will still hit that wall. Vote UP, since this leaves you less vulnerable than turning ValidateRequest off.
    – jbehren
    Aug 17, 2011 at 19:10
22

Another solution is:

protected void Application_Start()
{
    ...
    RequestValidator.Current = new MyRequestValidator();
}

public class MyRequestValidator: RequestValidator
{
    protected override bool IsValidRequestString(HttpContext context, string value, RequestValidationSource requestValidationSource, string collectionKey, out int validationFailureIndex)
    {
        bool result = base.IsValidRequestString(context, value, requestValidationSource, collectionKey, out validationFailureIndex);

        if (!result)
        {
            // Write your validation here
            if (requestValidationSource == RequestValidationSource.Form ||
                requestValidationSource == RequestValidationSource.QueryString)

                return true; // Suppress error message
        }
        return result;
    }
}
3
  • Nice! Wasn't aware of the ability to replace the Request Validator. Instead of just saying "ok" like you do I extended this idea to not validate fields that end in "_NoValidation" as their name. Code below. May 1, 2014 at 20:01
  • Walden Leverich, to do this see [AllowHtml] attribure
    – Sel
    Jan 28, 2015 at 9:10
  • Sel, yes in an MVC environment that would work. But in a webforms application I don't have a model to do that on. :-) Jan 29, 2015 at 23:24
22

It seems no one has mentioned the below yet, but it fixes the issue for me. And before anyone says yeah it's Visual Basic... yuck.

<%@ Page Language="vb" AutoEventWireup="false" CodeBehind="Example.aspx.vb" Inherits="Example.Example" **ValidateRequest="false"** %>

I don't know if there are any downsides, but for me this worked amazing.

1
  • Works for web forms c# or VB
    – TheAlbear
    Oct 22, 2014 at 13:34
15

I guess you could do it in a module; but that leaves open some questions; what if you want to save the input to a database? Suddenly because you're saving encoded data to the database you end up trusting input from it which is probably a bad idea. Ideally you store raw unencoded data in the database and the encode every time.

Disabling the protection on a per page level and then encoding each time is a better option.

Rather than using Server.HtmlEncode you should look at the newer, more complete Anti-XSS library from the Microsoft ACE team.

0
15

If you're using framework 4.0 then the entry in the web.config (<pages validateRequest="false" />)

<configuration>
    <system.web>
        <pages validateRequest="false" />
    </system.web>
</configuration>

If you're using framework 4.5 then the entry in the web.config (requestValidationMode="2.0")

<system.web>
    <compilation debug="true" targetFramework="4.5" />
    <httpRuntime targetFramework="4.5" requestValidationMode="2.0"/>
</system.web>

If you want for only single page then, In you aspx file you should put the first line as this :

<%@ Page EnableEventValidation="false" %>

if you already have something like <%@ Page so just add the rest => EnableEventValidation="false" %>

I recommend not to do it.

0
14

In ASP.NET, you can catch the exception and do something about it, such as displaying a friendly message or redirect to another page... Also there is a possibility that you can handle the validation by yourself...

Display friendly message:

protected override void OnError(EventArgs e)
{
    base.OnError(e);
    var ex = Server.GetLastError().GetBaseException();
    if (ex is System.Web.HttpRequestValidationException)
    {
        Response.Clear();
        Response.Write("Invalid characters."); //  Response.Write(HttpUtility.HtmlEncode(ex.Message));
        Response.StatusCode = 200;
        Response.End();
    }
}
0
12

I found a solution that uses JavaScript to encode the data, which is decoded in .NET (and doesn't require jQuery).

  • Make the textbox an HTML element (like textarea) instead of an ASP one.
  • Add a hidden field.
  • Add the following JavaScript function to your header.

    function boo() { targetText = document.getElementById("HiddenField1"); sourceText = document.getElementById("userbox"); targetText.value = escape(sourceText.innerText); }

In your textarea, include an onchange that calls boo():

<textarea id="userbox"  onchange="boo();"></textarea>

Finally, in .NET, use

string val = Server.UrlDecode(HiddenField1.Value);

I am aware that this is one-way - if you need two-way you'll have to get creative, but this provides a solution if you cannot edit the web.config

Here's an example I (MC9000) came up with and use via jQuery:

$(document).ready(function () {

    $("#txtHTML").change(function () {
        var currentText = $("#txtHTML").text();
        currentText = escape(currentText); // Escapes the HTML including quotations, etc
        $("#hidHTML").val(currentText); // Set the hidden field
    });

    // Intercept the postback
    $("#btnMyPostbackButton").click(function () {
        $("#txtHTML").val(""); // Clear the textarea before POSTing
                               // If you don't clear it, it will give you
                               // the error due to the HTML in the textarea.
        return true; // Post back
    });


});

And the markup:

<asp:HiddenField ID="hidHTML" runat="server" />
<textarea id="txtHTML"></textarea>
<asp:Button ID="btnMyPostbackButton" runat="server" Text="Post Form" />

This works great. If a hacker tries to post via bypassing JavaScript, they they will just see the error. You can save all this data encoded in a database as well, then unescape it (on the server side), and parse & check for attacks before displaying elsewhere.

3
  • This is a good solution. It's a proper manual way to control it yourself and not invalidate the entire website or page
    – Fandango68
    Mar 18, 2015 at 4:16
  • Make sure to use an HTML markup, not an ASP.Net control (ie no runat="server") for the textarea, then use the ASP.Net hidden control for the hidden. This is the best solution I've seen w/o compromising anything. Naturally, you want to parse your data for XSS, SQL Injection on the server side, but at least you can post HTML
    – MC9000
    Jun 13, 2015 at 7:50
  • escape(...) can take a long time. In my case, the markup was an entire (2MB) XML file. You might ask, "Why don't you just use <input type="file"... and... I agree with you :) Sep 12, 2016 at 18:18
12

Cause

ASP.NET by default validates all input controls for potentially unsafe contents that can lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) and SQL injections. Thus it disallows such content by throwing the above exception. By default it is recommended to allow this check to happen on each postback.

Solution

On many occasions you need to submit HTML content to your page through Rich TextBoxes or Rich Text Editors. In that case you can avoid this exception by setting the ValidateRequest tag in the @Page directive to false.

<%@ Page Language="C#" AutoEventWireup="true" ValidateRequest = "false" %>

This will disable the validation of requests for the page you have set the ValidateRequest flag to false. If you want to disable this, check throughout your web application; you’ll need to set it to false in your web.config <system.web> section

<pages validateRequest ="false" />

For .NET 4.0 or higher frameworks you will need to also add the following line in the <system.web> section to make the above work.

<httpRuntime requestValidationMode = "2.0" />

That’s it. I hope this helps you in getting rid of the above issue.

Reference by: ASP.Net Error: A potentially dangerous Request.Form value was detected from the client

0
10

The other solutions here are nice, however it's a bit of a royal pain in the rear to have to apply [AllowHtml] to every single Model property, especially if you have over 100 models on a decent sized site.

If like me, you want to turn this (IMHO pretty pointless) feature off site wide you can override the Execute() method in your base controller (if you don't already have a base controller I suggest you make one, they can be pretty useful for applying common functionality).

    protected override void Execute(RequestContext requestContext)
    {
        // Disable requestion validation (security) across the whole site
        ValidateRequest = false;
        base.Execute(requestContext);
    }

Just make sure that you are HTML encoding everything that is pumped out to the views that came from user input (it's default behaviour in ASP.NET MVC 3 with Razor anyway, so unless for some bizarre reason you are using Html.Raw() you shouldn't require this feature.

0
10

Disable the page validation if you really need the special characters like, >, , <, etc. Then ensure that when the user input is displayed, the data is HTML-encoded.

There is a security vulnerability with the page validation, so it can be bypassed. Also the page validation shouldn't be solely relied on.

See: http://web.archive.org/web/20080913071637/http://www.procheckup.com:80/PDFs/bypassing-dot-NET-ValidateRequest.pdf

1
9

I was getting this error too.

In my case, a user entered an accented character á in a Role Name (regarding the ASP.NET membership provider).

I pass the role name to a method to grant Users to that role and the $.ajax post request was failing miserably...

I did this to solve the problem:

Instead of

data: { roleName: '@Model.RoleName', users: users }

Do this

data: { roleName: '@Html.Raw(@Model.RoleName)', users: users }

@Html.Raw did the trick.

I was getting the Role name as HTML value roleName="Cadastro b&#225;s". This value with HTML entity &#225; was being blocked by ASP.NET MVC. Now I get the roleName parameter value the way it should be: roleName="Cadastro Básico" and ASP.NET MVC engine won't block the request anymore.

0
9

You could also use JavaScript's escape(string) function to replace the special characters. Then server side use Server.URLDecode(string) to switch it back.

This way you don't have to turn off input validation and it will be more clear to other programmers that the string may have HTML content.

0
7

I ended up using JavaScript before each postback to check for the characters you didn't want, such as:

<asp:Button runat="server" ID="saveButton" Text="Save" CssClass="saveButton" OnClientClick="return checkFields()" />

function checkFields() {
    var tbs = new Array();
    tbs = document.getElementsByTagName("input");
    var isValid = true;
    for (i=0; i<tbs.length; i++) {
        if (tbs(i).type == 'text') {
            if (tbs(i).value.indexOf('<') != -1 || tbs(i).value.indexOf('>') != -1) {
                alert('<> symbols not allowed.');
                isValid = false;
            }
        }
    }
    return isValid;
}

Granted my page is mostly data entry, and there are very few elements that do postbacks, but at least their data is retained.

1
  • There should be big brackets instead of small brackets. Like ` if (tbs[i].type == 'text') {` in place of ` if (tbs(i).type == 'text') {` Sep 12, 2014 at 5:18
6

You can use something like:

var nvc = Request.Unvalidated().Form;

Later, nvc["yourKey"] should work.

1
  • Thanks, your answer saved a lot of my time
    – habib
    May 27, 2020 at 15:33
6

You can automatically HTML encode field in custom Model Binder. My solution some different, I put error in ModelState and display error message near the field. It`s easy to modify this code for automatically encode

 public class AppModelBinder : DefaultModelBinder
    {
        protected override object CreateModel(ControllerContext controllerContext, ModelBindingContext bindingContext, Type modelType)
        {
            try
            {
                return base.CreateModel(controllerContext, bindingContext, modelType);
            }
            catch (HttpRequestValidationException e)
            {
                HandleHttpRequestValidationException(bindingContext, e);
                return null; // Encode here
            }
        }
        protected override object GetPropertyValue(ControllerContext controllerContext, ModelBindingContext bindingContext,
            PropertyDescriptor propertyDescriptor, IModelBinder propertyBinder)
        {
            try
            {
                return base.GetPropertyValue(controllerContext, bindingContext, propertyDescriptor, propertyBinder);
            }
            catch (HttpRequestValidationException e)
            {
                HandleHttpRequestValidationException(bindingContext, e);
                return null; // Encode here
            }
        }

        protected void HandleHttpRequestValidationException(ModelBindingContext bindingContext, HttpRequestValidationException ex)
        {
            var valueProviderCollection = bindingContext.ValueProvider as ValueProviderCollection;
            if (valueProviderCollection != null)
            {
                ValueProviderResult valueProviderResult = valueProviderCollection.GetValue(bindingContext.ModelName, skipValidation: true);
                bindingContext.ModelState.SetModelValue(bindingContext.ModelName, valueProviderResult);
            }

            string errorMessage = string.Format(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture, "{0} contains invalid symbols: <, &",
                     bindingContext.ModelMetadata.DisplayName);

            bindingContext.ModelState.AddModelError(bindingContext.ModelName, errorMessage);
        }
    }

In Application_Start:

ModelBinders.Binders.DefaultBinder = new AppModelBinder();

Note that it works only for form fields. Dangerous value not passed to controller model, but stored in ModelState and can be redisplayed on form with error message.

Dangerous chars in URL may be handled this way:

private void Application_Error(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    Exception exception = Server.GetLastError();
    HttpContext httpContext = HttpContext.Current;

    HttpException httpException = exception as HttpException;
    if (httpException != null)
    {
        RouteData routeData = new RouteData();
        routeData.Values.Add("controller", "Error");
        var httpCode = httpException.GetHttpCode();
        switch (httpCode)
        {
            case (int)HttpStatusCode.BadRequest /* 400 */:
                if (httpException.Message.Contains("Request.Path"))
                {
                    httpContext.Response.Clear();
                    RequestContext requestContext = new RequestContext(new HttpContextWrapper(Context), routeData);
                    requestContext.RouteData.Values["action"] ="InvalidUrl";
                    requestContext.RouteData.Values["controller"] ="Error";
                    IControllerFactory factory = ControllerBuilder.Current.GetControllerFactory();
                    IController controller = factory.CreateController(requestContext, "Error");
                    controller.Execute(requestContext);
                    httpContext.Server.ClearError();
                    Response.StatusCode = (int)HttpStatusCode.BadRequest /* 400 */;
                }
                break;
        }
    }
}

ErrorController:

public class ErrorController : Controller
 {
   public ActionResult InvalidUrl()
   {
      return View();
   }
}   
1
  • Came here just to post this. Pity it's going to remain forever buried on the second page - this is, IMHO, the best solution.
    – PJ7
    May 2, 2018 at 13:03
6

For those who are not using model binding, who are extracting each parameter from the Request.Form, who are sure the input text will cause no harm, there is another way. Not a great solution but it will do the job.

From client side, encode it as uri then send it.
e.g:

encodeURIComponent($("#MsgBody").val());  

From server side, accept it and decode it as uri.
e.g:

string temp = !string.IsNullOrEmpty(HttpContext.Current.Request.Form["MsgBody"]) ?
System.Web.HttpUtility.UrlDecode(HttpContext.Current.Request.Form["MsgBody"]) : 
null;  

or

string temp = !string.IsNullOrEmpty(HttpContext.Current.Request.Form["MsgBody"]) ?
System.Uri.UnescapeDataString(HttpContext.Current.Request.Form["MsgBody"]) : 
null; 

please look for the differences between UrlDecode and UnescapeDataString

0
5

As long as these are only "<" and ">" (and not the double quote itself) characters and you're using them in context like <input value="this" />, you're safe (while for <textarea>this one</textarea> you would be vulnerable of course). That may simplify your situation, but for anything more use one of other posted solutions.

0

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.