2

Ok so AJAX POST requests work fine in Mozilla and Chromium, but fail in Opera. I get the standard CSRF error (403). I tried different versions of Opera and they failed in every one I tried. Btw, I'm using the jquery/django snippet that sets X-CSRFToken in the header, as verified in the "bad Opera request" below.

I made a view in a different project that was very simple and ajax post requests worked fine in Opera. I looked at the request details and see differences. The good request doesn't set any weird X-Opera-Info and other opera params even thought I'm using the same browser. If this is the issue, is there a way to remove those extra params? Or does anyone have any other advice or ideas on what the issue may be? I know it's not my view function because I tried just returning an HttpResponse immediately and even that gets 403'd. Thanks a million guys.

####################
OPERA GOOD REQUEST
##############
Request details
POST /test HTTP/1.1 
User-Agent: Opera/9.80 (X11; Linux i686; U; en) Presto/2.7.62 Version/11.00
Host: 127.0.0.1:8000
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.9
Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1, utf-8, utf-16, *;q=0.1
Accept-Encoding: deflate, gzip, x-gzip, identity, *;q=0
Referer: http://127.0.0.1:8000/test
Cookie: csrftoken=1c6441404c991f7ae3b6d7d49f91f280
Cookie2: $Version=1
Connection: Keep-Alive, TE
TE: deflate, gzip, chunked, identity, trailers
Content-Length: 6
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Accept: */*
X-CSRFToken: 1c6441404c991f7ae3b6d7d49f91f280
X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest
Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary

###################
OPERA BAD REQUEST
####################
Request details
POST http://facebook.example.com/remove-person HTTP/1.1 
User-Agent: Opera/9.80 (X11; Linux i686; U; en) Presto/2.7.62 Version/11.00
Host: facebook.example.com
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.9
Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1, utf-8, utf-16, *;q=0.1
Accept-Encoding: deflate, gzip, x-gzip, identity, *;q=0
Referer: http://facebook.example.com/
Cookie: signed_request=5-f0_7pZLILrp6MLocsdMoNYAaZr-wCnU2cPbLC1bZg.eyJhbGdvcml0aG0iOiJITUFDLVNIQTI1NiIsImV4cGlyZXMiOjEzMDg4MTYwMDAsImlzc3VlZF9hdCI6MTMwODgxMTQyNywib2F1dGhfdG9rZW4iOiIyMjMyNDY5NDEwMjc3MTR8Mi5BUURVRGM2ZFFLSElnN1h3LjM2MDAuMTMwODgxNjAwMC4xLTU0MDIwMjZ8b2QtX1diNTh3aG1wTnNHYUh4cTNtOVBpWkswIiwidXNlciI6eyJjb3VudHJ5IjoidXMiLCJsb2NhbGUiOiJlbl9VUyIsImFnZSI6eyJtaW4iOjIxfX0sInVzZXJfaWQiOiI1NDAyMDI2In0; csrftoken=d4cdc6a75ed264d295a410dd98982c42; fbs_223246941027714="access_token=223246941027714%7C2.AQBlhzavZjzd8c7J.3600.1308819600.1-5402026%7CdsD6VESpGJb3m0EdD1mhFZtDI24&base_domain=example.com&expires=1308819600&secret=QaTNS988wl0FU6A0LG9qDQ__&session_key=2.AQBlhzavZjzd8c7J.3600.1308819600.1-5402026&sig=61e7e13091501f35793d3cda8c20835b&uid=5402026"
Cookie2: $Version=1
Connection: Keep-Alive, TE
TE: deflate, gzip, chunked, identity, trailers
Content-Length: 14
X-Opera-Info: ID=448, p=4, f=15, sw=1440, sh=900
X-Opera-ID: e79c37b56a58510d26b56882453bddb6d2c2dae858129139113f6346ea23ca6b
X-Opera-Host: r18-02:12420
X-OA: 1322 b5834cb13259fbd50b87b576b5e8b9a8bcc1384478c2ea79cc65614dc1b67c27
X-OB: evenes
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Accept: */*
X-CSRFToken: d4cdc6a75ed264d295a410dd98982c42
X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest
Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary

3 Answers 3

0

I recently ran into a similar problem. I was trying to do, for the first time, a post from AJAX on a view where Django wasn't sending a CSRF cookie. For reasons I can't explain, this was working on all browsers I tried except Opera.

This scenario is described in the Django docs, and they suggest using the ensure_csrf_cookie decorator.

Another thing you can do if it is too burdensome to wrap all the potential views with that decorator is to add something like this to your base template:

<script>
var csrf_token = "{{ csrf_token }}";
</script>

And then whenever you do an AJAX post, always include the key pair csrfmiddlewaretoken: csrf_token with your POST data.

Once I did the above, my posts with Opera started working.

0

Does it work if you disable Opera Turbo? These extra headers seem to be Turbo-related and perhaps this makes some kind of difference.

0
X-CSRFToken: {{ csrf_token }}}

value should be send from client in AJAX request HTTP headers to be recognized by Django

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