Webpack plugin for enabling Subresource Integrity.
Subresource Integrity (SRI) is a security feature that enables browsers to verify that files they fetch (for example, from a CDN) are delivered without unexpected manipulation.
- Optional integration with html-webpack-plugin
- Automatic support for code splitting (integrity for lazy-loaded chunks)
- Compatible with Webpack 1.x, 2.x, 3.x and 4.x
npm install webpack-subresource-integrity --save-dev
import SriPlugin from 'webpack-subresource-integrity';
const compiler = webpack({
output: {
crossOriginLoading: 'anonymous',
},
plugins: [
new SriPlugin({
hashFuncNames: ['sha256', 'sha384'],
enabled: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production',
}),
],
});
For the plugin to take effect it is essential that you set the
integrity
attribute for top-level assets (i.e. assets loaded by your
HTML pages.)
When html-webpack-plugin is injecting assets into the template (the
default), the integrity
attribute will be set automatically. The
crossorigin
attribute will be set as well, to the value of
output.crossOriginLoading
webpack option. There is nothing else to
be done.
When you use html-webpack-plugin with inject: false
, you are
required to set the integrity
and crossorigin
attributes in your
template as follows:
<% for (var index in htmlWebpackPlugin.files.js) { %>
<script
src="<%= htmlWebpackPlugin.files.js[index] %>"
integrity="<%= htmlWebpackPlugin.files.jsIntegrity[index] %>"
crossorigin="<%= webpackConfig.output.crossOriginLoading %>"
></script>
<% } %>
<% for (var index in htmlWebpackPlugin.files.css) { %>
<link
rel="stylesheet"
href="<%= htmlWebpackPlugin.files.css[index] %>"
integrity="<%= htmlWebpackPlugin.files.cssIntegrity[index] %>"
crossorigin="<%= webpackConfig.output.crossOriginLoading %>"
/>
<% } %>
The correct value for the integrity
attribute can be retrieved from
the integrity
property of Webpack assets. However, that property is
not copied over by Webpack's stats
module so you'll have to access
the "original" asset on the compilation
object. For example:
compiler.plugin("done", stats => {
const mainAssetName = stats.toJson().assetsByChunkName.main;
const integrity = stats.compilation.assets[mainAssetName].integrity;
});
Note that you're also required to set the crossorigin
attribute. It
is recommended to set this attribute to the same value as the webpack
output.crossOriginLoading
configuration option.
If your page can be loaded through plain HTTP (as opposed to HTTPS),
you must set the Cache-Control: no-transform
response header or your
page will break when assets are loaded through a transforming
proxy. See below for more information.
Required option, no default value.
An array of strings, each specifying the name of a hash function to be
used for calculating integrity hash values. For example, ['sha256', 'sha512']
.
See SRI: Cryptographic hash functions
Default value: true
When this value is falsy, the plugin doesn't run and no integrity values are calculated. It is recommended to disable the plugin in development mode.
By its very nature, SRI can cause your page to break when assets are modified by a proxy. This is because SRI doesn't distinguish between malicious and benevolent modifications: any modification will prevent an asset from being loaded.
Notably, this issue can arise when your page is loaded through Chrome Data Saver.
This is only a problem when your page can be loaded with plain HTTP, since proxies are incapable of modifying encrypted HTTPS responses.
Presumably, you're looking to use SRI because you're concerned about
security and thus your page is only served through HTTPS anyway.
However, if you really need to use SRI and HTTP together, you should
set the Cache-Control: no-transform
response header. This will
instruct all well-behaved proxies (including Chrome Data Saver) to
refrain from modifying the assets.
Browser support for SRI is currently patchy. Your page will still work on browsers without support for SRI, but subresources won't be protected from tampering.
See Can I use Subresource Integrity?
This plugin can interfere with hot reloading and therefore should be
disabled when using tools such as webpack-dev-server
. This shouldn't
be a problem because hot reloading is usually used only in development
mode where SRI is not normally needed.
For testing SRI without setting up a full-blown web server, consider
using a tool such as http-server
.
Copyright (c) 2015-present Waysact Pty Ltd
MIT (see LICENSE)