- From: Boris Zbarsky <bzbarsky@MIT.EDU>
- Date: Thu, 22 May 2008 11:27:00 -0500
- To: Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch>
- CC: whatwg <whatwg@whatwg.org>, HTMLWG <public-html@w3.org>, public-webapi@w3.org
Ian Hickson wrote: > - by default, content in sandboxed browsing contexts, and any > browsing contexts nested in them How do those nested browsing contexts come about, given that later you say: > - content in those browsing contexts cannot create new browsing > contexts or open modal dialogs or alerts ? > have a unique origin > (independent of the origin of their URI); this can be overriden > using the "allow-same-origin" keyword So the parent page cannot script the contents of the iframe by default, right? > - by default, script in those browsing contexts cannot run; this can > be overriden using the "allow-scripts" keyword What happens if the parent page sets window.location to a javascript: URI on the sandbox iframe? Does the script run? If so, in which browsing context? > causes the iframe to size vertically to the bounding box > of the contents, and horizontally to the width of the container I assume that the bounding box is computed after setting the width? By "the width of the container" do you mean that the iframe computed width should be equal to its containing block's computed width? Or that the display:block non-replaced width algorithm from CSS should be used? > and which causes the initial containing block of the contents to be > treated as zero height. So percentage heights would end up being 0, while the iframe would be whatever height is needed if one assumes they're auto? > and the style sheets that apply to the <iframe> > must also apply to the contents. But the ' ' and '>' combinators don't cross the iframe boundary, right? > This is all HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL. I am looking for feedback on the general > approaches taken. As someone else pointed out, this doesn't seem like it would be usable without some UA sniffing or something, as things stand. > There are various things that this doesn't address yet; e.g. there's no > way to force (or even allow) a non-seamless iframe to open links in the > parent window. This could be an @sandbox keyword value. > This attribute would > take a string which would then be interpreted as the source document > markup of an HTML document, much like the above This seems very prone to security issues (injection of the closing quote in the content) to me... The base64 approach is nice in that you can't shoot yourself in the foot with it. -Boris
Received on Thursday, 22 May 2008 16:28:00 UTC