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https://github.com/ezyang/htmlpurifier.git
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c5e3796202
git-svn-id: http://htmlpurifier.org/svnroot/htmlpurifier/trunk@808 48356398-32a2-884e-a903-53898d9a118a
188 lines
7.0 KiB
HTML
188 lines
7.0 KiB
HTML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
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"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
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<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"><head>
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
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<meta name="description" content="Functional specification for HTML Purifier's advanced API for defining custom filtering behavior." />
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<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css" />
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<title>Advanced API - HTML Purifier</title>
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</head><body>
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<h1>Advanced API</h1>
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<div id="filing">Filed under Development</div>
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<div id="index">Return to the <a href="index.html">index</a>.</div>
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<div id="home"><a href="http://hp.jpsband.org/">HTML Purifier</a> End-User Documentation</div>
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<p>It makes no sense to adopt a <q>one-size-fits-all</q> approach to
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filtersets: therefore, users must be able to define their own sets of
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<q>allowed</q> elements, as well as switch in-between doctypes of HTML.</p>
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<p>Our goals are to let the user:</p>
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<dl>
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<dt>Select</dt>
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<dd><ul>
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<li>Doctype</li>
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<li>Filtersets: Rich / Plain / Full ...</li>
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<li>Mode: Lenient / Correctional</li>
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<li>Collections (?): Safe / Unsafe</li>
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<li>Modules / Tags / Attributes</li>
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</ul></dd>
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<dt>Customize</dt>
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<dd><ul>
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<li>Tags / Attributes / Attribute Types</li>
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<li>Filtersets</li>
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<li>Root Node</li>
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</ul></dd>
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<dt>Create</dt>
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<dd><ul>
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<li>Modules / Tags / Attributes / Attribute Types</li>
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<li>Filtersets</li>
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<li>Doctype</li>
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</ul></dd>
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</dl>
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<h2>Select</h2>
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<h3>Selecting a Doctype</h3>
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<p>By default, users will use a doctype-based, permissive but secure
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whitelist. They must define a <strong>doctype</strong>, and this serves
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as the first method of determining a filterset.</p>
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<p class="technical">This identifier is based
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on the name the W3C has given to the document type and <em>not</em>
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the DTD identifier.</p>
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<p>This parameter is set via the configuration object:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Doctype', 'XHTML 1.0 Transitional');</pre>
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<h3>Selecting a Filterset</h3>
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<p>However, selecting this doctype doesn't mean much, because if we
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adhered exactly to the definition we would be letting XSS and other
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nasties through. HTML Purifier must, in its filterset, allow a subset
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of the doctype, which we shall call a <strong>filterset</strong>.</p>
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<p>By default, HTML Purifier will use the <strong>Rich</strong>
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filterset, which allows as many elements as possible with untrusted
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sources. Other possible filtersets could be:</p>
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<dl>
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<dt>Full</dt>
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<dd>Allows the full span of elements in the doctype, good if you want
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HTML Purifier to work as a Tidy substitute but not to strip
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anything out.</dd>
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<dt>Plain</dt>
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<dd>Provides a minimum set of tags for semantic markup of things
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like blog comments.</dd>
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</dl>
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<p>Extension-authors would be able to define custom filtersets for
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other users to use.</p>
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<p>A possible call to select a filterset would be:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Filterset', 'Rich');</pre>
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<h3>Selecting Mode</h3>
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<p>Within filtersets, there are various <strong>modes</strong> of operation.
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These indicate variant behaviors that, while not strictly changing the
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allowed set of elements and attributes, will definitely affect the output.
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Currently, we have two modes, which may be used together:</p>
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<dl>
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<dt>Lenient</dt>
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<dd>Deprecated elements and attributes will be transformed into
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standards-compliant alternatives when explicitly disallowed. For
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example, in the XHTML 1.0 Strict doctype, a <code>center</code>
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tag would be turned into a <code>div</code> with the CSS property
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<code>text-align:center;</code>, but in XHTML 1.0 Transitional
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the tag would be preserved. This mode is on by default.</dd>
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<dt>Correctional</dt>
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<dd>Deprecated elements and attributes will be transformed into
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standards-compliant alternatives whenever possible. Referring
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back to the previous example, the <code>center</code> tag would
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be transformed in both cases. However, tags without a
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reasonable standards-compliant alternative will be preserved
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in their form. This mode is on by default. It may have
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various levels of operation.</dd>
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</dl>
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<p>A possible call to select modes would be:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Mode', array('correctional', 'lenient'));</pre>
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<p>If modes have extra parameters, a hash might work well:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Mode', array(
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'correctional' => 9, // strongest level
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'lenient' => true // this one's just boolean
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));</pre>
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<p>Modes may possibly be wrapped up with the filterset declaration:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Filterset', 'Rich: correctional, lenient');</pre>
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<p>Further investigation in this field is necessary.</p>
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<h3>Selecting Modules / Tags / Attributes</h3>
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<p>If this cookie cutter approach doesn't appeal to a user, they may
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decide to roll their own filterset by selecting modules, tags and
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attributes to allow.</p>
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<p class="technical">This would make use of the same facilities
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as a filterset author would use, except that it would go under an
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<q>anonymous</q> filterset that would be auto-selected if any of the
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relevant module/tag/attribute selection configuration directives were
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non-null.</p>
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<p>On the highest level, a user will usually be most interested in
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directly specifying which elements and attributes are desired. For
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example:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'AllowedElements', 'a,b,em,p,blockquote,code,i');</pre>
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<p>Attribute declarations could be merged into this declaration as such:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Allowed', 'a[href,title],b,em,p[class],blockquote[cite],code,i');</pre>
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<p>...or be kept separate:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'AllowedAttributes', 'a.href,a.title,p.class,blockquote.cite');</pre>
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<p class="technical">Considering that, internally speaking, as mandated by
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the XHTML 1.1 Modularization specification, we have organized our
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elements around modules, considerable gymnastics will be needed to
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get this sort of functionality working.</p>
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<p>A user may also specify a module to load a class of elements and attributes
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into their filterest:</p>
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<pre>$config->set('HTML', 'Allowed', 'Hypertext,Core');</pre>
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<p class="fixme">The granularity of these modules is too coarse for
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the average user (for example, the core module loads everything from
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the essential <code>p</code> tag to the not-so-safe <code>h1</code>
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tag). How do we make this still a viable solution?</p>
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<h3>Unified selector</h3>
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<p>Because selecting each and every one of these configuration options
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is a chore, we may wish to offer a specialized configuration method
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for selecting a filterset. Possibility:</p>
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<pre>function selectFilter($doctype, $filterset, $mode)</pre>
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<p>...which is simply a light wrapper over the individual configuration
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calls. A custom config file format or text format could also be adopted.</p>
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<div id="version">$Id$</div>
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</body></html> |