react-oembed-component
v1.0.2
Published
React component for locating and injecting oembed scripts in string content. A forked version of react-oembed-container
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Readme
oEmbedContainer
This package provides a React component wrapper to handle detecting and injecting script tags within HTML string content.
Background
Content management system API endpoints like those in WordPress often return editorial content as HTML strings rather than structured data. dangerouslySetInnerHTML
is required to properly render this HTML content within a React application, or else any markup embedded in that string will not display properly.
Post content however may also include <script>
tags, which have no effect when injected via innerHTML
per the HTML5 specification. Scripts are nullified on innerHTML
to prevent cross-site scripting attacks, but this means that any content which contains a valid script as part of its HTML content will not properly render.
This issue is particularly noticeable when dealing with oEmbedded content, such as embedded Twitter or Facebook posts. Because many of these social media providers return <script>
tags as part of their oEmbed response, WordPress will produce post content HTML which works fine when loaded from an application backend but which will not properly display embedded social content when rendered from React.
For example, WordPress will let you paste in a URL like https://twitter.com/reactjs/status/964689022747475968
to the editor, then via an oEmbed request will convert it to the following rendered markup:
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-width="525" data-dnt="true">
<p lang="en" dir="ltr">We're relicensing React Native (including Fresco, Metro, and Yoga) under the MIT license to match React. <a href="https://t.co/Ypg7ozX958">https://t.co/Ypg7ozX958</a></p>
<p>— React (@reactjs) <a href="https://twitter.com/reactjs/status/964689022747475968?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 17, 2018</a></p></blockquote>
<p><script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script></p>
These oEmbed HTML responses may not contain any scripts. If so, great! React can render that easily. But if they do, they will either contain script tags with src
attributes pointing at an external JavaScript file (as in the twitter example above), or else an inline <script>
tag with code that will create & inject a script into the DOM of the page as in Facebook's example:
<div id="fb-root"></div>
<p><script>
(function(d, s, id) {
var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];
if (d.getElementById(id)) return;
js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id;
js.src = 'https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.12';
fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);
}(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk'));
</script></p>
In order to properly display inlined oEmbed content, we need to detect and inject both types of scripts.
A Note on Security
Technically what we're doing here is permitting arbitrary scripts injected into API responses to be rendered on the front-end of your site: under certain circumstances this can pose a security risk. However, these scripts would be rendered normally when loading this same markup from the server in a more traditional CMS-driven webpage rendering context.
It is up to the CMS to ensure that any scripts which make it far enough to be output on the page (or in API responses) are properly whitelisted or sanitized as necessary. Using WordPress as an example, only the responses from whitelisted oEmbed providers or content from highly authorized users may contain scripts at all; we therefore assume that any scripts inlined within the returned content are integral to the rendering of that content and should be loaded accordingly.
Installation
npm install --save react-oembed-container
This library has peerdependencies on react-dom
and react
v16. If you do not already have these in your project, run
npm install --save react react-dom
Usage
Import the container element into your React component:
import EmbedContainer from 'react-oembed-container';
Then use this container to wrap whatever JSX you would normally use to render the content:
render() {
const { post } = this.props;
return (
<EmbedContainer markup={post.content.rendered}>
{/* for example, */}
<article id={`post-${post.id}`}>
<h2>{ post.title.rendered }</h2>
<div dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: post.content.rendered }} />
</article>
</EmbedContainer>
);
}
If you set a className
on the EmbedContainer
component, that class will be passed through to the rendered <div>
container:
render() {
const { post } = this.props;
return (
<EmbedContainer
className="article-content"
markup={post.content.rendered}
>
<p>Article text here</p>
</EmbedContainer>
);
}
yields
<div class="article-content"><p>Article text here</p></div>
Local Development
Run npm install
to pull down the dependencies for local development. Linting with ESLint is handled through npm run lint
, and the Jest tests are run with npm test
.
To work on this component, either use npm link
to bring it into another project for testing or else run npm run storybook
within this repository to spin up a Storybook UI development environment. This environment should be available locally at localhost:6006.