Passing csrftoken with python Requests
If you are going to set the referrer header, then for that specific site you need to set the referrer to the same URL as the login page:
import sys
import requests
URL = 'https://portal.bitcasa.com/login'
client = requests.session()
# Retrieve the CSRF token first
client.get(URL) # sets cookie
if 'csrftoken' in client.cookies:
# Django 1.6 and up
csrftoken = client.cookies['csrftoken']
else:
# older versions
csrftoken = client.cookies['csrf']
login_data = dict(username=EMAIL, password=PASSWORD, csrfmiddlewaretoken=csrftoken, next='/')
r = client.post(URL, data=login_data, headers=dict(Referer=URL))
When using unsecured http
, the Referer
header is often filtered out and otherwise easily spoofable anyway, so most sites no longer require the header to be set. However, when using an SSL connection and if it is set, it does make sense for the site to validate that it at least references something that could logically have initiated the request. Django does this when the connection is encrypted (uses https://
), and actively requires it then.
Similarly, using django's csrf_client note the primary difference is using csrftoken.value in the login_data. Tested with Django 1.10.5 --
import sys
import django
from django.middleware.csrf import CsrfViewMiddleware, get_token
from django.test import Client
django.setup()
csrf_client = Client(enforce_csrf_checks=True)
URL = 'http://127.0.0.1/auth/login'
EMAIL= '[email protected]'
PASSWORD= 'XXXX'
# Retrieve the CSRF token first
csrf_client.get(URL) # sets cookie
csrftoken = csrf_client.cookies['csrftoken']
login_data = dict(username=EMAIL, password=PASSWORD, csrfmiddlewaretoken=csrftoken.value, next='/')
r = csrf_client.post(URL, data=login_data, headers=dict(Referer=URL))