Questions about this topic? Sign up to ask in the talk tab.
Difference between revisions of "XSRF"
From NetSec
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{expand}} or Merge/Redir to XSS | ||
+ | |||
<b>X</b>(cross) <b>S</b>ite <b>R</b>equest <b>F</b>orgery | <b>X</b>(cross) <b>S</b>ite <b>R</b>equest <b>F</b>orgery | ||
Revision as of 11:04, 11 April 2012
This article contains too little information, it should be expanded or updated. |
---|
Things you can do to help:
|
X(cross) Site Request Forgery
This is a combination of an XSS attack and a CSRF attack. Typically the XSS contains code which would manipulate the user's browser in the context of an authenticated session with the actual appropriate http referrer in the HTTP request. This will bypass many form validation techniques. The XSS is usually just something small, e.g. a script tag to include a javascript file with an automated form submission.
See CSRF and XSS for more information. |
XSRF Visit the Web Exploitation Portal for complete coverage.
|