Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
3 KiB
Permissions
Deno is secure by default. Therefore, unless you specifically enable it, a deno module has no file, network, or environment access for example. Access to security-sensitive areas or functions requires the use of permissions to be granted to a deno process on the command line.
For the following example, mod.ts
has been granted read-only access to the
file system. It cannot write to it, or perform any other security-sensitive
functions.
deno run --allow-read mod.ts
Permissions list
The following permissions are available:
- -A, --allow-all Allow all permissions. This disables all security.
- --allow-env Allow environment access for things like getting and setting of environment variables.
- --allow-hrtime Allow high-resolution time measurement. High-resolution time can be used in timing attacks and fingerprinting.
- --allow-net=<allow-net> Allow network access. You can specify an optional, comma-separated list of domains to provide an allow-list of allowed domains.
- --allow-plugin Allow loading plugins. Please note that --allow-plugin is an unstable feature.
- --allow-read=<allow-read> Allow file system read access. You can specify an optional, comma-separated list of directories or files to provide an allow-list of allowed file system access.
- --allow-run Allow running subprocesses. Be aware that subprocesses are not run in a sandbox and therefore do not have the same security restrictions as the deno process. Therefore, use with caution.
- --allow-write=<allow-write> Allow file system write access. You can specify an optional, comma-separated list of directories or files to provide an allow-list of allowed file system access.
Permissions allow-list
Deno also allows you to control the granularity of some permissions with allow-lists.
This example restricts file system access by allow-listing only the /usr
directory, however the execution fails as the process was attempting to access a
file in the /etc
directory:
$ deno run --allow-read=/usr https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/examples/cat.ts /etc/passwd
error: Uncaught PermissionDenied: read access to "/etc/passwd", run again with the --allow-read flag
► $deno$/dispatch_json.ts:40:11
at DenoError ($deno$/errors.ts:20:5)
...
Try it out again with the correct permissions by allow-listing /etc
instead:
deno run --allow-read=/etc https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/examples/cat.ts /etc/passwd
--allow-write
works the same as --allow-read
.
Network access:
fetch.ts:
const result = await fetch("https://deno.land/");
This is an example of how to allow-list hosts/urls:
deno run --allow-net=github.com,deno.land fetch.ts
If fetch.ts
tries to establish network connections to any other domain, the
process will fail.
Allow net calls to any host/url:
deno run --allow-net fetch.ts
Conference
Ryan Dahl. (September 25, 2020). The Deno security model. Speakeasy JS.