ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

ASP.NET MVC A potentially dangerous Request.Form value was detected from the client when using a custom modelbinder

Getting the error here:

ValueProviderResult value = bindingContext.ValueProvider.GetValue("ConfirmationMessage");

How do I allow on a selection of values only? i.e.

[ValidateInput(false)]
public object BindModel(ControllerContext controllerContext, ModelBindingContext bindingContext)
{
    ValueProviderResult value = bindingContext.ValueProvider.GetValue("ConfirmationMessage");
    ValueProviderResult value2 = bindingContext.ValueProvider.GetValue("ConfirmationMessage2");
}
Possible duplicate of A potentially dangerous Request.Form value was detected from the client, doesn't matter if it's Webforms or MVC.
Thanks, but you havent looked at my issue as its different
Same exact root problem, the only difference is there may be MVC specific ways to deal with it.
When using EF, see bizzehdee answer here stackoverflow.com/questions/17964313/…

e
ericdc

You have a few options.

On the model add this attribute to each property that you need to allow HTML - best choice

using System.Web.Mvc;

[AllowHtml]
public string SomeProperty { get; set; }

On the controller action add this attribute to allow all HTML

[ValidateInput(false)]
public ActionResult SomeAction(MyViewModel myViewModel)

Brute force in web.config - definitely not recommended

In the web.config file, within the tags, insert the httpRuntime element with the attribute requestValidationMode="2.0". Also add the validateRequest="false" attribute in the pages element.

<configuration>
  <system.web>
   <httpRuntime requestValidationMode="2.0" />
  </system.web>
  <pages validateRequest="false">
  </pages>
</configuration>

More info: http://davidhayden.com/blog/dave/archive/2011/01/16/AllowHtmlAttributeASPNETMVC3.aspx

The above works for usages of the default modelbinder.

Custom ModelBinder

It appears that a call to bindingContext.ValueProvider.GetValue() in the code above always validates the data, regardless any attributes. Digging into the ASP.NET MVC sources reveals that the DefaultModelBinder first checks if request validation is required and then calls the bindingContext.UnvalidatedValueProvider.GetValue() method with a parameter that indicates if validation is required or not.

Unfortunately we can’t use any of the framework code because it’s sealed, private or whatever to protect ignorant devs from doing dangerous stuff, but it’s not too difficult to create a working custom model binder that respects the AllowHtml and ValidateInput attributes:

public class MyModelBinder: IModelBinder
{
    public object BindModel(ControllerContext controllerContext, ModelBindingContext bindingContext)
    {
        // First check if request validation is required
        var shouldPerformRequestValidation = controllerContext.Controller.ValidateRequest && bindingContext.ModelMetadata.RequestValidationEnabled;

        // Get value
        var valueProviderResult = bindingContext.GetValueFromValueProvider(shouldPerformRequestValidation);
        if (valueProviderResult != null)
        {
            var theValue = valueProviderResult.AttemptedValue;

            // etc...
        }
    }
}

The other required piece is a way to retrieve an unvalidated value. In this example we use an extension method for the ModelBindingContext class:

public static class ExtensionHelpers
{
    public static ValueProviderResult GetValueFromValueProvider(this ModelBindingContext bindingContext, bool performRequestValidation)
    {
        var unvalidatedValueProvider = bindingContext.ValueProvider as IUnvalidatedValueProvider;
        return (unvalidatedValueProvider != null)
          ? unvalidatedValueProvider.GetValue(bindingContext.ModelName, !performRequestValidation)
          : bindingContext.ValueProvider.GetValue(bindingContext.ModelName);
    }
}

More info on this at http://blogs.taiga.nl/martijn/2011/09/29/custom-model-binders-and-request-validation/


i have this on the controller [HttpPost, ValidateInput(false)] and i still get the error
See my revised answer with a way around this when using a custom modelbinder
Thanks, but it does not like this line bindingContext.GetValueFromValueProvider
GetValueFromValueProvider needs to be in a public static class. Check out the edits above.
Ta, valueProviderResult reutrns null tho? var valueProviderResult = bindingContext.GetValueFromValueProvider(shouldPerformRequestValidation);
D
DaveD

Try:

HttpRequestBase request = controllerContext.HttpContext.Request;
string re = request.Unvalidated.Form.Get("ConfirmationMessage")

When I try this, I get an exception which says: Non-invocable member 'System.web.HttpRequestBase.Unvalidated' cannot be used like a method. Has this thing changed?
The second line should really be var re = request.Unvalidated.Form["ConfirmationMessage"];
M
Mike Godin

Expanding upon the answer from @D-W, in my Edit controller, in iterating over form values, I had to replace all instances of Request.Params.AllKeys with Request.Unvalidated.Form.AllKeys and all instances of Request[key] with Request.Unvalidated.Form[key].

This was the only solution that worked for me.


R
Ryozzo

As Mike Godin wrote, even if you set [ValidateInput(false)] attribute, you have to use Request.Unvalidated.Form instead of Request.Form This worked for me with ASP.NET MVC 5


This was actually a useful advice, as accessing data from a base controller (i.e. for log or debug purposes) any access to Request.Form throws exception even if the model has this attribute.
v
vard

Here are the steps to encode at client level and decode it at server level:

Post the form using jquery submit method. In jquery button click event method encode field that you want to post to server. Example: $("#field").val(encodeURIComponent($("#field").val())) $("#formid").submit(); In Controller Level access all form id value using HttpUtility.UrlDecode(Request["fieldid"])

Sample example:

Controller level: public ActionResult Name(string id) { CheckDispose(); string start = Request["start-date"]; string end = Request["end-date"]; return View("Index", GetACPViewModel(HttpUtility.UrlDecode(Request["searchid"]), start, end)); }

Client level: <% using (Html.BeginForm("Name", "App", FormMethod.Post, new { id = "search-form" })) { %>

<%= Html.TextBox("searchid", null, new {value=searchText, id = "search-text", placeholder = "Enter Application, Name, or BEMSID" })%>
<% } %>

In Document Ready function:

$(function () {     
  $("#btnsearch").click(function () {  
    $("#search-text").val(encodeURIComponent($("#search-text").val()));
    $("#search-form").submit();
  });
});

Jquery and client-side technology has nothing to do with MVC, the validation happens at server side with MVC framework. It's not a valid answer
Given that Microsoft literally ignores the AllowHtml attribute, and given that the only workable solution server-side is to replace the functionality of the default model binder, I would argue that client-side encoding is a perfectly valid option.