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22:01
@JanDvorak use an on mouseover event, sending in this.id to grab the element and alter the background color
@PRPGFerret why not CSS?
@ThatBrazilianGuy thanks!
@PRPGFerret Why are you sending the id to select the element? You already have it, just pass the element.
What's more, this assumes every element which'll be highlighted has an id.
also, don't do in javascript what you can do in CSS
3
I did a git clone from GitHub, and immediately after that a git status. It logs that I have one modified file. How is this possible?
22:03
.highlightable:hover {background-color: red}
@ŠimeVidas Do a diff and find out what's the modified line?
Could be some newline difference.
But what if they aren't looking for pseudo classes in CSS and they want to do JS only?
You need an ID for pure JS right?
No, you already have the element
22:04
still no
@Zirak It's a Markdown file. Git does not seem to like those as it shows a "1234 lines removed, 1234 lines added" type of message. #useless
once you can reference an element, you don't need it ID in order to manipulate it
Oh oh oh you mean like onmouseover="this.backgroundColor='red'"?
Instead of something(this.id), and in something you have to re-select it, why not just pass the element directly: something(this)
22:05
Ohhh sorry, how do I format code in here?
Oh god...don't use inline js.
I usually dont
But when I do...
@Zirak especially not with jQuery
No "especially", just don't
22:06
So by sending 'this' into what's probably a function, I can easily just set the bgcolor from there
probably=most definitely lol
@PRPGFerret yes
@Zirak I'm fine with onclick = "handle(this)"
Why are you fine with that?
Oracle sucks.
@Zirak the alternative is to drop IE support or to use branching code
22:09
bah, I don't care
Sacrifice a goat to Ptah, steal a kidney from an orphan, whatever you want.
why do you think it's bad?
It's splendid
Something I've seen and used but never been actually taught.. jQuery callback functions.. say you have a $.post(URL, data, function(param) { }); Can somebody explain where param comes from and how it's handled inside the function? Is it an object??
22:17
@PRPGFerret param is what the caller (library) gives to you; it is documented by the function to which you pass your callback.
@Shmiddty did you mean: ?
pls please.
@JanDvorak I'm afraid that does not make too much sense to me. What do you mean documented by the function?
@PRPGFerret look into the documentation for $.post to know what parameters you get
I think the documentation points to the documentation of $.ajax
the first argument is the response body
the remaining two include the jqXHR object and (IIRC) the status code
I think I understand now, for example with a PHP callback, "data" would be the text echo'd correct?
Allergies suck
22:26
@PRPGFerret right
unless jQuery guesses it's JSON, in which case it parses the response for you
or HTML or XML
You're awesome, thank you
it doesn't guess but looks at the server sent header :P
which isn't always reliable
22:42
if it's your server it better be reliable
x-content-no-sniff header should be sent also
err X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff is the oone
:D
"better be reliable" does not affect novice programmers. Novice programmers mostly ignore the headers they send
right
the headers are not immediately visible and the effects are subtle
I should write down.. X-Frame-options, x-content-type, x-xss-protection, csp.. what other necessary headers
x-powered-by
22:47
hsts
I remember there are 6 security headers
cors, powered by and p3p are not security headers :P
is p3p even alive?
cors seems security-related to me
22:48
ok there is just 5 headers + httponly cookies
cors is insecurity, you are always more secure without it
cors is more secure client-side than jsonp
jsonp is a hack
I am talking from server pov
if I send cors headers then objectively I am less secure than not
how come?
cors only makes the browsers ignore your response
server-side proxies are still free reign
cors relaxes same origin policy
it's like this. You have impenetrable wall.
well, I don't
22:51
then you add small hole there so mice can come visit you (Cors header)
oracle is the worst
objectively you are less secure with that small hole than without
PHP servers can visit me even without CORS
user1596138
Somehow this one-line jsPerf just crashed IE 10?
@JanDvorak wat?
22:52
anyone but browsers can send arbitrary HTTP to arbitrary servers
SOP only lessens the effects of XSS
no it protects privacy
of whom?
without sop, public servers could access intranet they don't have access for
consider evil.com
22:54
ah, right
you go to their site, and you are connected to intranet
got it
with proxy its completely different
the proxy won't be able to access intranet
but the browser will
that's the whole point
yep. Without SOP the browser would become a proxy
OTOH, if your server is facing the internet, SOP doesn't really affect you
@Jhawins You have to micro-optimize more
Noz
Noz
22:55
Is google search down for anybody else?
well here's the other thing
user1596138
@copy ...?
for some reason browser must always send cookies
so that's again how the request would differ
when you use yahoo proxy or whatever, it isn't made with cookies
because they cannot access the cookie
22:56
ah, right, XSRF
but this is just bad design that could have been overcome
the intranet issue cannot be overcome, hence sop
sop makes sense in the intranet environment
Huh.. never seen google crash before.
but, doesn't SOP only kick in after the remote server has responded?
@Noz works for me
yes
read the other half of this answer stackoverflow.com/a/17970482/995876
the SOP prevents any reading of data so it's not a problem
if an actual request was made
23:01
so SOP prevents leaking information, but it doesn't protect the servers themselves from spurious requests?
of course not... just visit this jsfiddle jsfiddle.net/dEGuP
verify with wireshark or developer tools or whatever that the request is made
if your concern is DDoSsing the intranet from this jsfiddle then that could happen yeah.. but you need all the employees keep the jsfiddle open :D
I could add setInterval there
I am wondering about destructive posts
too much trust in the employee machines
that's just your standard CSRF
it will not work if the intranet servers are protected from CSRF
unfortunately some developers throw caution into the wind if they know program will be used only from intranet
but the point is that even intranet servers need CSRF protection
exactly
23:06
an alternative would be disabling javascript
forcing employees to browse with js disabled you mean?
just like they are forced to use ie6.... lol
yeah, IE6 should suffice
ie6 doesn't even try to make a request?
it could be plausible that it doesn't since it doesn't support cors
so it is in fact more secure in that sense
23:07
IE6 doesn't have XHR
it does
You can always do new Image().src = ...
@copy that's just GET request
@copy damn
destructive actions from GET is an order of magnitude bigger fuck up than not having CSRF protection
23:08
@Esailija still...
@Esailija very true
the HTTP spec says that a server must not do anything of the sort
when it's a GET request
@Esailija Oh, right
IIRC the wording is must
GETs should be nilpotent
PUTs should be idempotent
not the wussy "should"
23:10
I haven't seen a PUT in ages
document.getElementsByTagName("form")[0].submit() ?
@copy yea that's how u do CSRF
make a form dynamically and post it
there is no SOP for that.. it will post the form
but it's much harder to pull off since you can't just place that code on common websites
Neither can you XHR
@Esailija you could make a super-sop custom browser
that blocks every resource from a foreign domain
(it'd break most websites, though)
in other words, not a single website would work in it? :D
23:12
my test page would not break
chrome already has this, with CSP header
@copy difference is that you cannot read the response from the CSRF form
you can just blindly submit it and hope it breaks something
@Esailija You also can't do that if the destiantion server isn't misconfigured
CSP is author-driven, I want something my-boss-driven
holy shit this would be hilarious jsfiddle jsfiddle.net/dEGuP/1
though a custom proxy would do
23:15
basically make it so that it causes people to do something with their dev phpmyadmin if they have it :D
@copy what do you mean? you can always POST to any domain from any domain
@Esailija But not read the response
yea no you can't.. don't make jsfiddle and read my responses :P
6 mins ago, by Esailija
@copy difference is that you cannot read the response from the CSRF form
Now you're just confusing me
what I mean is, you could even GET CSRF me right now in this chat
because pretty much any website allows dynamic images
if facebook had destructive actions from GET you could do them right now because I am logged in
but to make a POST, you would need this chat be able to run your javascript
so that's why it's much harder to pull off
Oh, right
Of course this chat checks if the images is actually an image first
23:23
err, it does? :P
GET facebook.com/foo.png 404 (Not Found)
imagine if that was
Okay it doesn't :P
GET http://facebook.com/profile.php?delete=1 404 (Not Found)
you would have deleted my profile
:D
it checks the extension before oneboxing
23:24
Yeah
btw here are websites that do destructive GET homakov.blogspot.com/2012/03/…
you can delete presentations on slidershare with GET... at least in 2012
lol
@JanDvorak lol that's clever
but it's stupid of facebook
anyway I can image it being pretty hard for a novice to figure out and respect that GET should not be destructive
@JanDvorak it was hypothetical, of course facebook doesn't have that
I know :-)
23:29
@JanDvorak you can also prefix the url with ! to force image oneboxing regardless of the extension
It's still hypothetically stupid of facebook
@ThiefMaster thanks
didn't know that
phpMyAdmin would have CSRF protection though since it's run on websites too
so my fantasy of deleting people's development databases through jsfiddle is broken
@copy shouldn't we make meta post though? since destructive GETs are reality
how would you determine which URLs are legit?
Make a request, check Content-Type
@JanDvorak the chat would just check them server side
23:38
Does anyone have any good feature suggestions for a advanced website builder?
it is the client-side checking that is the problem-- it is already too late after that
there is no problem checking if delete=1 is an image on the server side
@Connor Eclipse, Netbeans
@Esailija For them it's programming and server work without apparent advantage - rejected (just a guess)
@Esailija assuming the checker is a dedicated machine, ofc
well I mean no problem from security pov
23:42
...
@JanDvorak I mean a online website builder, features that would be good.
does anyone know a good video on javascript testing?
How to get started?
@MichielDral Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
Thanks :)

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