JSON allows you to retrieve data in multiple formats from an AJAX call. For example:
$.get(sourceUrl, data, callBack, 'json');
could be used to get and parse JSON code from sourceUrl
.
JSON is the simply JavaScript code used to describe data. This could be evaled by a JavaScript interpreter to get a data structure back.
It's generally a bad idea to evaluate code from remote sources. I know the JSON spec doesn't specifically allow for function declarations, but there's no reason you couldn't include one in code and have an unsafe and naive consumer compile/execute the code.
How does jQuery handle the parsing? Does it evaluate this code? What safeguards are in place to stop someone from hacking sourceUrl
and distributing malicious code?
The last time I looked (late 2008) the JQuery functions get() getJSON() etc internally eval the JSon string and so are exposed to the same security issue as eval.
Therefore it is a very good idea to use a parsing function that validates the JSON string to ensure it contains no dodgy non-JSON javascript code, before using eval() in any form.
You can find such a function at https://github.com/douglascrockford/JSON-js/blob/master/json2.js.
See JSON and Broswer Security for a good discussion of this area.
In summary, using JQuery's JSON functions without parsing the input JSON (using the above linked function or similar) is not 100% safe.
NB: If this sort of parsing is still missing from getJSON (might have recently been added) it is even more important to understand this risk due to the cross domain capability, from the JQuery reference docs:
As of jQuery 1.2, you can load JSON
data located on another domain if you
specify a JSONP callback, which can be
done like so: "myurl?callback=?".
jQuery automatically replaces the ?
with the correct method name to call,
calling your specified callback.
$.getJSON()
is used to execute (rather than using eval
) javascript code from remote sources (using the JSONP idiom if a callback is specified). When using this method, it is totally up to you to trust the source, because they will have control to your entire page (they can even be sending cookies around).
From Douglas Crockford site about The Script Tag Hack (jsonp):
So the script can access and use
its cookies. It can access the
originating server using the user's
authorization. It can inspect the DOM
and the JavaScript global object, and
send any information it finds anywhere
in the world. The Script Tag Hack is
not secure and should be avoided.
Both IE 8 and Firefox 3.1 will have native JSON support, which will provide a safe alternative to eval(). I would expect other browsers to follow suit. I would also expect jQuery to change its implementation to use these native methods.
All browsers I know of disable cross-site requests through Ajax. That is, if your page sits on my.example.com, you can't load anything using Ajax unless its URL is also at my.example.com.
This actually can be something of a nuisance, and there are ways for an attacker to inject source in other ways, but ostensibly this restriction is in place to address exactly the concern you mention.