103

I have a web app which uses localStorage. Now we want to embed this web app on other (third-party) sites via iframe. We want to provide an iframe embed similar to youtube so that other websites can embed our web app in an iframe. Functionally it is the same as if it wouldn't be embedded. But it does not work. Chrome prints the error message:

Uncaught SecurityError: Failed to read the 'localStorage' property from 'Window': Access is denied for this document.

I just do the following check (in the iframe):

if (typeof window.localStorage !== 'undefined') {
    // SETUP SESSION, AUHT, LOCALE, SETTINGS ETC
} else {
    // PROVIDE FEEDBACK TO THE USER
}

I checked my security settings in Chrome like described in another Stackoverflow Thread but it doesn't work. Is there any change to make embedding possible without the need of adjusting (default) security settings of most modern browsers?

To give more information, we use Ember-CLI for our web app and turned on CSP (more info about the Ember-CLI CSP). Could CSP cause our web app to throw security errors?

14
  • your title mentions an iframe? is something in the iframe trying to access the local storage? that sounds like it could trigger a security warning?
    – Grapho
    May 27, 2015 at 13:21
  • 3
    if the web app uses local storage, then running it in an iframe will cause a cross-domain issue, because Window is global... it will be trying to access the local client's window.localstorage.. remember locastorage is a client browser thing.. not a hosted/server thing.. your app has no knowledge if it is being served from anywhere
    – Grapho
    May 27, 2015 at 14:07
  • 1
    not with localStorage. if you want to only store things on your domain, you will need a back-end to persist data to... utilizing ember-data or such.
    – Grapho
    May 27, 2015 at 14:18
  • 1
    I haven't had time to investigate into this issue more. I just tried it again and didn't embed the iframe in a html file which is serve from file-system. Instead I used a file served from a webserver. Magically everything works now (tested in Chrome, Firefox, IE11 and Safari). Maybe I explained my question not in the right way, but it seems to work as I expected when I first tried it. Jun 22, 2015 at 12:36
  • 1
    So, your problem was solved just by serving the embedded iframe from a web server instead of directly from the file system?
    – gaurav5430
    Jun 2, 2020 at 12:41

16 Answers 16

72

Under Chrome's Settings > Privacy > Content Settings, you have the cookie setting set to "Block sites from setting any data".

This checkbox is what is causing the exception.

8
  • 43
    if it's not default, it's mostly unusable, because users won't change settings to use some website. Jan 28, 2016 at 16:07
  • 4
    It is not about the "Block sites from setting any data" option but rather: "Block third-party cookies and site data" setting which doesn't make most sites unusable, but cuts off most of the your-searches-related adverts
    – Picard
    Feb 10, 2017 at 13:55
  • 7
    Seems quite unreasonable to expect visitors to adjust their settings for this. And I'm sure there has to be a better solution. I run into this problem trying to use the Youtube API on a site. Youtube works fine on other sites without changing any settings. There must be a better solution, or Youtube wouldn't work on other sites.
    – mcv
    Nov 23, 2017 at 13:45
  • 3
    We are loading a react app in Iframe, In Mac + Chrome, Getting this error. We cannot tell customers to use the above to fix the error. Is there any way in Javascript? Aug 5, 2020 at 0:55
  • 3
    I was testing my site with incognito when I noticed that certain features break. Seems like Chrome's incognito blocks localStorage use within iframes by default now (there's a toggle for "Block third-party cookies" when you open up a fresh incognito page).
    – joe
    Jan 14, 2021 at 3:42
29

According to this

This exception is thrown when the "Block third-party cookies and site data" checkbox is set in Content Settings.
To find the setting, open Chrome settings, type "third" in the search box, click the Content Settings button, and view the fourth item under Cookies.

enter image description here

1
  • 1
    If going in this direction, use Manage Exceptions additional configuration section rather than unchecking this feature off
    – st35ly
    May 10, 2023 at 2:37
24

On the following URL: chrome://settings/content/cookies uncheck "Block third-party cookies".

1
  • New URL: chrome://settings/cookies . You can also just search in the settings for "cookies". chrome://settings/?search=cookies
    – CoperNick
    Jun 29, 2023 at 8:51
21

If you're using incognito mode, make sure you turn off "Block third-party cookies".

Open a new tab in any incognito window, and turn off the option:

enter image description here

11

localStorage is per domain, per protocol. If you are trying to access localStorage from a standalone file, i.e. with file:/// protocol, there is no domain per se. Hence browsers currently would complain that your document does not have access to localStorage. If you put your file in a web server (e.g. deploy in Tomcat) and access it from localhost, you will be able to access localStorage.

2
  • 2
    my self I had the issue with an iFrame today inside a website .. hence your answer is missing something :/ still reading about it I'll let you know if I find anything.
    – M. Gara
    Jul 11, 2019 at 17:33
  • if I read comment on the question it makes complete sense : if the web app uses local storage, then running it in an iframe will cause a cross-domain issue, because Window is global... it will be trying to access the local client's window.localstorage.. remember locastorage is a client browser thing.. not a hosted/server thing.. your app has no knowledge if it is being served from anywhere
    – M. Gara
    Jul 11, 2019 at 17:35
5

I checked all the answers but ended up not finding anything. Then I realized what browser I'm using. If you're using Brave (Chromium Based), you will get this error if your shield is up. Try lowering your shield.

enter image description here

5

If disable block third-party cookies is not an option, you can use try...catch:

try {
 // SETUP SESSION, AUHT, LOCALE, SETTINGS ETC
} catch(err) {
 // PROVIDE FEEDBACK TO THE USER
}
4

A more secure way of doing this in Chrome would be to allow only the site(s) that you trust:

Chrome
  -> "Settings"
    -> "Show advanced settings..."
      -> "Privacy"
        -> "Content settings..."
          -> "Manage exceptions..."
            -> (add a pattern such as [*.]microsoft.com)
            -> be sure to hit enter
            -> "Done"
          -> "Done"
4

I ran into this problem in my phone, I couldn't open a certain site with chrome. It took me some time to find the cookies on my phone, when I found it, I saw that my cookies was blocked.

go to your Settings --> Site settings --> Cookies

and allow the site to save and read cookie data, make sure that you don't block third-party cookies! cookies in chrome browser on phone

I hope this helps you.

3

As has been pointed out in the comments, localstorage is single origin only -- the origin of the page. Attempting to access the page's localstorage from an iframe loaded from a different origin will result in an error.

The best you can do is hack it with XDM via the postMessage API. This library purports to do the heavy lifting for you, but I haven't tried it. However, I would make sure you're aware of IE's terrible support for XDM before going down this route.

3
  • 1
    As I pointed out in a comment before, everything works as expected after I embedded the iframe in a file which is served from a webserver instead from file system. So everything works fine. Maybe I just phrased my question wrongly. But thanks for all the comments and explanations. If someone is interested in more details, just ask :) Jun 22, 2015 at 12:41
  • I am facing a similar problem. Can you let me know how you solved it? Aug 23, 2015 at 2:16
  • same problem here, thinking about cookies.. :/ Jan 28, 2016 at 16:05
1

imho it has nothing to do with CSP settings on your ember cli app but to do with browser settings. Some browsers (Chrome) block localStorage content loaded into an iframe. We too are facing a similar situation for our Ember App,were we have an ember app and a plugin which loads on 3rd party websites, the user token loaded into the iframe gets blocked in Chrom,we are experimenting with some solutions, will keep this thread posted as to how it goes.

1
  • 1
    any update on this one?
    – Greg
    Oct 29, 2022 at 10:13
1

To get rid of this warning - under Chrome's Settings -> Privacy -> Content settings, you have to clear the "Block third-party cookies and site data" option

0

Secure way of doing this in Chrome top right, click on eye logo and allow the site you are on to use third-party cookies:

Check this image if you can't find the eye logo

0

Clear Cookie

Chrome->setting->privacy and Policy->Sites that can never use cookies In turnremove cookie for local storage.

0

For all others like me who search for a Javascript solution/fix:

var storageSupported = false;

try
{ 
    storageSupported = (window.localStorage && true);
}
catch (e) {}

if (storageSupported) 
{ 
    // your code
}

Credits: https://github.com/zoomsphere/ngx-store/issues/91

0

Noticed that Chrome 113 and Chrome mobile 120 incognito seem to "Block third-party cookies and site data" while the latest Desktop version (120) only blocks "third-party cookies".

The difference was: only the former affects localStorage access. Looks like the issue should not happen anymore.

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