You want to allow your users to directly link deeply into their favorite applications like Notion or Mail. Per default remark only supports a handful of valid protocols when parsing links from text which makes this impossible. With the remark-application-links plugin you can support all the schemes and specify a block list of potentially dangerous ones.
Turn
Here's a link to my notion: notion://notion.so/user/123
into
<p>
Here's a link to my notion:
<a href="notion://notion.so/user/123">notion://notion.so/user/123</a>
</p>
Make sure you understand the security implications before using this plugin: Security
Heavily inspired by remark-linkify-regex but different enough to justify a separate plugin.
Bootstrapped and built with tsdx.
npm install @doist/remark-application-links
# or
yarn add @doist/remark-application-links
This plugin exposes a function which you need to call with the blocked URL schemes (or with nothing to accept the default ones).
remark().use(remarkApplicationLinksPlugin())
// or with custom schemes
remark().use(remarkApplicationLinksPlugin(['javascript', 'notion']))
Since this plugin is using a block list of URL schemes instead of explictly allowing explicit ones it potentially opens up your application for attackers. The general stance in the security community is that a complete block list is hard (read: impossible) to achieve. If you want to be on the safe side it's better to rely on an explicit allow list of supported URL schemes.
Per default we're blocking these url schemes:
const blockedUrlSchemes = ['data', 'jar', 'java', 'javascript', 'vbscript', 'view-source']
In general it's recommended to not only rely on your parser to prevent inline script executions but apply a Content-Security Policy (CSP) on your page as reliable catch-all.
You're advised to thoroughly test your use cases to not open your users up to cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. You might find additional tools like rehype-sanitize helpful.
This plugin will transform this text:
[link](<javascript:alert(1)>)
into
<p><a href="javascript:alert(1)">link</a></p>
Which is dangerous as it would execute JavaScript. If you allow users to enter the text this will open you up to cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. As mentioned above a strong CSP will protect you from this and not allow the JavaScript to execute.
This plugin can be used in combination with react-markdown. In order to prevent the example above being parsed as a link you need to supply the transformLinkUri
prop.
We're maintaining a changelog in this repository. Our versioning follows semantic versioning.
A new version of remark-application-links is published both on npm and GitHub Package Registry whenever a new release on GitHub is created. A GitHub Action will automatically perform all the necessary steps.
The Action will release the version number that's specified inside the package.json
's version
field so make sure that it reflects the version you want to publish. Additionally, the Action can be triggered manually in case something went wrong in the automation.
Contributions are welcome. Check our contributing guide.
This project is distributed under the MIT License.