When a cookie is configured with the HttpOnly
attribute set to true, the browser guaranties that no client-side script will
be able to read it. In most cases, when a cookie is created, the default value of HttpOnly
is false and it’s up to the developer
to decide whether or not the content of the cookie can be read by the client-side script. As a majority of Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) attacks target
the theft of session-cookies, the HttpOnly
attribute can help to reduce their impact as it won’t be possible to exploit the XSS
vulnerability to steal session-cookies.
Ask Yourself Whether
- the cookie is sensitive, used to authenticate the user, for instance a session-cookie
- the
HttpOnly
attribute offer an additional protection (not the case for an XSRF-TOKEN cookie / CSRF token for example)
There is a risk if you answered yes to any of those questions.
Recommended Secure Coding Practices
- By default the
HttpOnly
flag should be set to true for most of the cookies and it’s mandatory for session /
sensitive-security cookies.
Sensitive Code Example
If you create a security-sensitive cookie in your JAVA code:
Cookie c = new Cookie(COOKIENAME, sensitivedata);
c.setHttpOnly(false); // Sensitive: this sensitive cookie is created with the httponly flag set to false and so it can be stolen easily in case of XSS vulnerability
By default the HttpOnly
flag is
set to false:
Cookie c = new Cookie(COOKIENAME, sensitivedata); // Sensitive: this sensitive cookie is created with the httponly flag not defined (by default set to false) and so it can be stolen easily in case of XSS vulnerability
Compliant Solution
Cookie c = new Cookie(COOKIENAME, sensitivedata);
c.setHttpOnly(true); // Compliant: this sensitive cookie is protected against theft (HttpOnly=true)
See