blob: 19644f45bdf10fb9189c2229002c276330839f5f [file] [log] [blame]
#pragma once
#include <crow/http_request.h>
#include <crow/http_response.h>
namespace crow {
static const std::string strict_transport_security_key =
"Strict-Transport-Security";
static const std::string strict_transport_security_value =
"max-age=31536000; includeSubdomains; preload";
static const std::string ua_compatability_key = "X-UA-Compatible";
static const std::string ua_compatability_value = "IE=11";
static const std::string xframe_key = "X-Frame-Options";
static const std::string xframe_value = "DENY";
static const std::string xss_key = "X-XSS-Protection";
static const std::string xss_value = "1; mode=block";
static const std::string content_security_key = "X-Content-Security-Policy";
static const std::string content_security_value = "default-src 'self'";
struct SecurityHeadersMiddleware {
struct context {};
void before_handle(crow::request& req,
response& res,
context& ctx) {}
void after_handle(request& /*req*/,
response& res,
context& ctx) {
/*
TODO(ed) these should really check content types. for example,
X-UA-Compatible header doesn't make sense when retrieving a JSON or
javascript file. It doesn't hurt anything, it's just ugly.
*/
res.add_header(strict_transport_security_key,
strict_transport_security_value);
res.add_header(ua_compatability_key, ua_compatability_value);
res.add_header(xframe_key, xframe_value);
res.add_header(xss_key, xss_value);
res.add_header(content_security_key, content_security_value);
}
};
}