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CGI::Application::PlugUserLContributCGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity(3)

NAME
       CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity - Make tamper-resisistent links
       in CGI::Application

VERSION
       Version 0.06

SYNOPSIS
       In your application:

	   use base 'CGI::Application';
	   use CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity;

	   sub setup {
	       my $self = shift;
	       $self->link_integrity_config(
		   secret => 'some secret string known only to you and me',
	       );
	   }

	   sub account_info {
	       my $self = shift;

	       my $account_id = get_user_account_id();

	       my $template = $self->load_tmpl('account.html');

	       $template->param(
		   'balance'	=> $self->link("/account.cgi?rm=balance&acct_id=$account_id");
		   'transfer'	=> $self->link("/account.cgi?rm=transfer&acct_id=$account_id");
		   'withdrawal' => $self->link("/account.cgi?rm=withdrawl&acct_id=$account_id");
	       );
	   }

       In your template:

	   <h1>Welcome to The Faceless Banking Corp.</h1>
	   <h3>Actions:</h3>
	   <br /><a href="<TMPL_VAR NAME="balance">">Show Balance</a>
	   <br /><a href="<TMPL_VAR NAME="transfer">">Make a Transfer</a>
	   <br /><a href="<TMPL_VAR NAME="withdrawal">">Get Cash</a>

       This will send the following HTML to the browser:

	   <h1>Welcome to The Faceless Banking Corp.</h1>
	   <h3>Actions:</h3>
	   <br /><a href="/account.cgi?rm=balance&acct_id=73&_checksum=1d7c4b82d075785de04fa6b98b572691">Show Balance</a>
	   <br /><a href="/account.cgi?rm=transfer&acct_id=73&_checksum=d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e">Make a Transfer</a>
	   <br /><a href="/account.cgi?rm=withdrawl&acct_id=73&_checksum=3c5ad17bdeef3c4281abd39c6386cfd6">Get Cash</a>

       The URLs created are now tamper-resistent.  If the user changes
       "acct_id" from 73 to 74, the "_checksum" will not match, and the system
       will treat it as an intrusion attempt.

   Calling link and self_link directly from the template
       If you use "Template::Toolkit|Template" or
       "HTML::Template::Plugin::Dot", you can pass the "CGI::Application"
       $self object into the template and call "link" and "self_link" directly
       from the template.  In your app:

	   $template->param(
	       'app'	 => $self,
	       'name'	 => 'gordon',
	       'email'	 => 'gordon@example.com',
	   );

       And in your template you can use

	   # Template::Toolkit syntax
	   <a href="[% app.self_link('name', name, 'email', email %]">...</a>

	   # HTML::Template::Plugin::Dot syntax
	   <a href="<TMPL_VAR NAME="app.self_link('name', name, 'email', email">">...</a>

	   # Petal syntax
	   <a href="http://www.example.com"
	      tal:attributes="href app/self_link('name', name, 'email', email)">...</a>

       Note that in the parameters of the call to << link >>, items enclosed
       in quotes are treated as literal parameters and barewords are treated
       as template params.  So 'email' is the literal string, and "email" is
       the template paramter named email (in this case 'gordon@example.com').

DESCRIPTION
       "CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity" lets you create tamper-
       resistent links within your CGI::Application project.  When you create
       an URL with "link", a "_checksum" is added to the URL:

	   my $link = $self->link("/account.cgi?rm=balance&acct_id=73");
	   print $link; # /account.cgi?rm=balance&acct_id=73&_checksum=1d7c4b82d075785de04fa6b98b572691

       The checksum is a (cryptographic) hash of the URL, plus a secret string
       known only to the server.

       If the user attempts to change part of the URL (e.g. a query string
       parameter, or the PATH_INFO), then the checksum will not match.	The
       run mode will be changed to "link_tampered", and the "invalid_checksum"
       hook will be called.

       You can define the "link_tampered" run mode yourself, or you can use
       the default "link_tampered" run mode built into
       CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity.

       You can disable link checking during development by passing a true
       value to the "disable" parameter of "$self->link_integrity_config".

METHODS
   link_integrity_config
       Configure the CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity.  Usually, it
       makes sense to configure this in the "setup" method of your
       application's base class:

	   use CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity;
	   use base 'CGI::Application';
	   package My::Project;

	   sub setup {
	       my $self = shift;

	       $self->run_modes(['bad_user_no_biscuit']);
	       $self->link_integrity_config(
		   secret		  => 'some secret string known only to you and me',
		   link_tampered_run_mode => 'bad_user_no_biscuit',
		   digest_module	  => 'Digest::MD5',
		   disable		  => 1,
	       );
	   }

       Or you can pull in this configuration info from a config file.  For
       instance, with using CGI::Application::Config::Context:

	   use CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity;
	   use CGI::Application::Plugin::Config::Context;

	   use base 'CGI::Application';
	   package My::Project;

	   sub setup {
	       my $self = shift;

	       $self->conf->init(
		   file	  => 'app.conf',
		   driver => 'ConfigGeneral',
	       );

	       my $config = $self->conf->context;

	       $self->link_integrity_config(
		   $config->{'LinkIntegrity'},
		   additional_data => sub {
		       my $self = shift;
		       return $self->session->id;
		   },
	       );

	       my $link_tampered_rm = $config->{'LinkIntegrity'}{'link_tampered_run_mode'} || 'link_tampered';

	       $self->run_modes([$link_tampered_rm]);
	   }

       Then in your configuration file:

	   <LinkIntegrity>
	       secret		      = some REALLY secret string
	       link_tampered_run_mode = bad_user_no_biscuit
	       hash_algorithm	      = SHA1
	       disable		      = 1
	   </LinkIntegrity>

       This strategy allows you to enable and disable link checking on the fly
       by changing the value of "disable" in the config file.

       The following configuration parameters are available:

       secret
	   A string known only to your application.  At a commandline, you can
	   generate a secret string with md5:

	    $ perl -MDigest::MD5 -le"print Digest::MD5::md5_hex($$, time, rand(42));"

	   Or you can use Data::UUID:

	    $ perl -MData::UUID -le"$ug = new Data::UUID; $uuid = $ug->create; print $ug->to_string($uuid)"

	   If someone knows your secret string, then they can generate their
	   own checksums on arbitrary data that will always pass the integrity
	   check in your application.  That's a Bad Thing, so don't let other
	   people know your secret string, and don't use the default secret
	   string if you can help it.

       additional_data
	   You can pass constant additional data to the checksum generator for
	   every link.

	       $self->link_integrity_config(
		   secret	   => 'really secret',
		   additional_data => 'some other secret data',
	       }

	   For instance, to stop one user from following a second user's link,
	   you can add a user-specific component to the session, such as the
	   user's session id:

	       $self->link_integrity_config(
		   secret	   => 'really secret',
		   additional_data => sub {
		       my $self = shift;
		       return $self->session->id;
		   }
	       }

	   You can pass a string instead of a subroutine.  But in the case of
	   the user's session, a subroutine is useful so that you get the
	   value of the user's session at the time when the checksum is
	   generated, not at the time when the link integrity system is
	   configured.

       checksum_param
	   The name of the checksum parameter, which is added to the query
	   string and contains the cryptographic checksum of link. By default,
	   this parameter is named "_checksum".

       link_tampered_run_mode
	   The run mode to go to when it has been detected that the user has
	   tampered with the link.  The default is "link_tampered".

	   See "The link_tampered Run Mode", below.

       digest_module
	   Which digest module to use to create the checksum.  Typically, this
	   will be either "Digest::MD5" or "Digest::SHA1".  However any module
	   supported by "Digest::HMAC" will work.

	   The default "digest_module" is "Digest::MD5".

       checksum_generator
	   If you want to provide a custom subroutine to make your own
	   checksums, you can define your own subroutine do it via the
	   "make_checksum" param.  Here's an example of one that uses
	   Digest::SHA2:

		   $self->link_integrity_config(
		       checksum_generator => sub {
			   my ($url, $secret) = @_;
			   require Digest::SHA2;

			   my $ctx = Digest::SHA2->new();
			   $ctx->add($url . $secret);

			   return $ctx->hexdigest;
		       },
		   );

       disable
	   You can disable link checking entirely by setting "disable" to a
	   true value.	This can be useful when you are developing or
	   debugging the application and you want the ability to tweak URL
	   params without getting busted.

   link
       Create a link, and add a checksum to it.

       You can add parameters to the link directly in the URL:

	   my $link = $self->link('/cgi-bin/app.cgi?var=value&var2=value2');

       Or you can add them as a hash of parameters after the URL:

	   my $link = $self->link(
	       '/cgi-bin/app.cgi',
	       'param1'	 => 'value',
	       'param2' => 'value2',
	   );

   self_link
       Make a link to the current application, with optional parameters, and
       add a checksum to the URL.

	   my $link = $self->self_link(
	       'param1' => 'value1',
	       'param2' => 'value2',
	   );

       "self_link" preserves the value of the current application's
       "PATH_INFO".  For instance if the current URL is:

	   /cgi-bin/app.cgi/some/path?foo=bar # PATH_INFO is 'some/path'

       Calling:

	   $self->self_link('bar' => 'baz');

       Will produce the URL:

	   /cgi-bin/app.cgi/some/path?bar=baz

       If you want to remove the "PATH_INFO" value or replace it with a new
       value, use path_link.

   path_link
       Calling "path_link" is the same as calling "self_link", except the
       current value of "PATH_INFO" can be replaced.

	   my $link = $self->path_link(
	       '/new/path',
	       'param1' => 'value1',
	       'param2' => 'value2',
	   );

       For instance if the current URL is:

	   /cgi-bin/app.cgi/some/path?foo=bar # PATH_INFO is 'some/path'

       Calling:

	   $self->path_link('/new/path');

       Will produce the URL:

	   /cgi-bin/app.cgi/new/path?foo=bar

       If you want to remove "PATH_INFO" entirely, call one of the following:

	   $self->path_link;
	   $self->path_link(undef, 'param1' => 'val1', 'param2 => 'val2' ...);
	   $self->path_link('', 'param1' => 'val1', 'param2 => 'val2' ...);

       If you want to keep the existing "PATH_INFO" that was passed to the
       current application, use self_link instead.

RUN MODES
   The link_tampered Run Mode
       Your application is redirected to this run mode when it has been
       detected that the user has tampered with the link.  You can change the
       name of this run mode by changing the value of the
       "link_tampered_runmode" param to "link_integrity_config".

       CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity provides a default
       "link_tampered" run mode, which just displays a page with some stern
       warning text.

       You can define your own as follows:

	   sub link_tampered {
	       my $self = shift;
	       my $template = $self->load_template('stern_talking_to');
	       return $template->output;
	   }

HOOKS
       When a link is followed that doesn't match the checksum, the
       "invalid_checksum" hook is called.  You can add a callback to this hook
       to do some cleanup such as deleting the user's session.	For instance:

	   sub setup {
	       my $self = shift;
	       $self->add_callback('invalid_checksum' => \&bad_user);
	   }

	   sub bad_user {
	       my $self = shift;

	       # The user has been messing with the URLs, possibly trying to
	       # break into the system.	 We don't tolerate this behaviour.
	       # So we delete the user's session:

	       $self->session->delete;
	   }

AUTHOR
       Michael Graham, "<mag-perl@occamstoothbrush.com>"

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       This module was based on the checksum feature originally built into
       Richard Dice's CGI::Application::Framework.

BUGS
       Please report any bugs or feature requests to
       "bug-cgi-application-plugin-linkintegrity@rt.cpan.org", or through the
       web interface at <http://rt.cpan.org>.  I will be notified, and then
       you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make
       changes.

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
       Copyright 2005 Michael Graham, All Rights Reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

perl v5.14.1			  20CGI::Application::Plugin::LinkIntegrity(3)
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