ComfyUI-Manager/comfyui_manager/common/manager_security.py
SAMSECTOR 6a47c7344c
Handle None request in manager_security.py
Add a check for None request in manager_security.py
2026-05-27 18:51:10 +03:00

139 lines
4.7 KiB
Python

"""Security helpers for CSRF protection and Content-Type gating.
reject_simple_form_post() is applied ONLY to POST handlers that do not consume
a request body (e.g., snapshot/save, queue/reset, queue/start, reboot). These
are vulnerable to cross-origin <form method=POST> attacks because the server
accepts the request without parsing any body — the attacker needs no ability
to forge a valid payload, only to point a hidden form at the URL.
Handlers that DO read a body via ``await request.json()`` (install/git_url,
install/pip, queue/install_model, db_mode POST, policy/update POST,
channel_url_list POST, queue/batch, queue/task, import_fail_info, etc.) are
NOT gated here — a cross-origin <form method=POST> cannot forge a valid JSON
body because the browser refuses to send ``application/json`` without a CORS
preflight, which this server rejects by not responding with an appropriate
Access-Control-Allow-Origin.
DO NOT add the gate to body-reading handlers (redundant + UX-breaking).
DO NOT remove the gate from no-body handlers (this is the bypass vector).
"""
import os
from enum import Enum
from typing import Optional
from aiohttp import web
is_personal_cloud_mode = False
handler_policy = {}
# CORS "simple request" Content-Type set per Fetch spec §3.2.3. Browsers send
# <form method=POST> submissions with one of these three MIME types and do NOT
# trigger a CORS preflight, so a malicious cross-origin page can silently POST
# into state-changing endpoints if we only gate on HTTP method. Blocking these
# three Content-Types on our mutation endpoints forces any non-same-origin POST
# to use a non-simple Content-Type (e.g. application/json), which triggers a
# preflight that this server rejects (no Access-Control-Allow-Origin response).
_SIMPLE_FORM_CONTENT_TYPES = frozenset({
'application/x-www-form-urlencoded',
'multipart/form-data',
'text/plain',
})
def reject_simple_form_post(request) -> Optional[web.Response]:
"""Reject Content-Types that enable preflight-less <form method=POST> CSRF.
These 3 MIME types are the complete CORS "simple request" Content-Type set
(Fetch spec §3.2.3 "CORS-safelisted request-header"). Blocking them
eliminates the <form method=POST> cross-origin CSRF vector, because any
other Content-Type triggers a browser-enforced CORS preflight — and this
server does not answer preflights with ``Access-Control-Allow-Origin``,
effectively blocking cross-origin requests that use non-simple types.
Returns:
web.Response(status=400) when the request has a simple-form
Content-Type that must be rejected. None when the request is allowed
to proceed (no body, application/json, or any non-simple Content-Type).
Note:
aiohttp's ``request.content_type`` normalizes the header (lower-cases,
strips parameters), so a ``multipart/form-data; boundary=----X`` header
is compared as ``multipart/form-data``.
"""
# Fix for Legacy UI internal calls where request can be None
if request is None:
return None
if request.content_type in _SIMPLE_FORM_CONTENT_TYPES:
return web.Response(
status=400,
text='Invalid Content-Type for this endpoint. Use application/json or omit body.',
)
return None
class HANDLER_POLICY(Enum):
MULTIPLE_REMOTE_BAN_NON_LOCAL = 1
MULTIPLE_REMOTE_BAN_NOT_PERSONAL_CLOUD = 2
BANNED = 3
def is_loopback(address):
import ipaddress
try:
return ipaddress.ip_address(address).is_loopback
except ValueError:
return False
def do_nothing():
pass
def get_handler_policy(x):
return handler_policy.get(x) or set()
def add_handler_policy(x, policy):
s = handler_policy.get(x)
if s is None:
s = set()
handler_policy[x] = s
s.add(policy)
multiple_remote_alert = do_nothing
def is_safe_path_target(target: str) -> bool:
"""
Check if target string is safe from path traversal attacks.
Args:
target: User-provided filename or identifier
Returns:
True if safe, False if contains path traversal characters
"""
if '/' in target or '\\' in target or '..' in target or '\x00' in target:
return False
return True
def get_safe_file_path(target: str, base_dir: str, extension: str = ".json") -> Optional[str]:
"""
Safely construct a file path, preventing path traversal attacks.
Args:
target: User-provided filename (without extension)
base_dir: Base directory path
extension: File extension to append (default: ".json")
Returns:
Safe file path or None if input contains path traversal attempts
"""
if not is_safe_path_target(target):
return None
return os.path.join(base_dir, f"{target}{extension}")