Sanitizer: Sanitizer() constructor
The Sanitizer() constructor creates a new Sanitizer object, which can be used to sanitize untrusted strings of HTML, or untrusted Document or DocumentFragment objects, making them safe for insertion into a document's DOM.
The default Sanitizer() configuration causes sanitizer operations to strip out XSS-relevant input by default, including <script> tags, custom elements, and comments. The constructor config option can be used to customize the sanitizer behavior.
Syntax
new Sanitizer()
new Sanitizer(config)
Parameters
config Optional
-
A sanitizer configuration object with the following options (referred to as SanitizerConfig in the specification):
allowElements Optional
-
An Array of strings indicating elements that the sanitizer should not remove. All elements not in the array will be dropped.
blockElements Optional
-
An Array of strings indicating elements that the sanitizer should remove, but keeping their child elements.
dropElements Optional
-
An Array of strings indicating elements (including nested elements) that the sanitizer should remove.
allowAttributes Optional
-
An Object where each key is the attribute name and the value is an Array of allowed tag names. Matching attributes will not be removed. All attributes that are not in the array will be dropped.
dropAttributes Optional
-
An Object where each key is the attribute name and the value is an Array of dropped tag names. Matching attributes will be removed.
allowCustomElements Optional
-
A Boolean value set to false (default) to remove custom elements and their children. If set to true, custom elements will be subject to built-in and custom configuration checks (and will be retained or dropped based on those checks).
-
A Boolean value set to false (default) to remove HTML comments. Set to true in order to keep comments.
Note: allowElements creates a sanitizer that will drop any elements that are not in allowElements, while blockElements and dropElements create a sanitizer that will allow all elements except those in these properties.
blockElements and dropElements are processed before allowElements. If you specify both properties, the elements in blockElements or dropElements will be discarded first, followed by any elements not in allowElements. So while it is possible to specify both types of properties at the same time, the intent can always be more clearly captured using just one type.
The same applies to allowAttributes and dropAttributes.
Examples
The examples below show a sanitization operation using the Sanitizer.sanitizeFor() method. This method takes as inputs a string of HTML to sanitize and the context (tag) in which it is sanitized, and returns a sanitized node object for the specified tag. To simplify the presentation the result that is shown is actually the innerHTML of the returned object.
Using the default sanitizer
This example shows the result of sanitizing a string with disallowed script element using the default sanitizer (in a div context).
const unsanitized = "abc <script>alert(1)<" + "/script> def";
const sanitized = new Sanitizer().sanitizeFor("div", unsanitized);
Specifications
Browser compatibility
|
Desktop |
Mobile |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
Safari |
WebView Android |
Chrome Android |
Firefox for Android |
Opera Android |
Safari on IOS |
Samsung Internet |
Sanitizer |
105–119 |
105–119 |
83 |
No |
91 |
No |
105 |
105–119 |
No |
72 |
No |
20.0 |