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<?php
/*
* This file is part of the Symfony package.
*
* (c) Fabien Potencier <fabien@symfony.com>
*
* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE
* file that was distributed with this source code.
*/
namespace Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Csrf\CsrfProvider;
/**
* Marks classes able to provide CSRF protection
*
* You can generate a CSRF token by using the method generateCsrfToken(). To
* this method you should pass a value that is unique to the page that should
* be secured against CSRF attacks. This value doesn't necessarily have to be
* secret. Implementations of this interface are responsible for adding more
* secret information.
*
* If you want to secure a form submission against CSRF attacks, you could
* supply an "intention" string. This way you make sure that the form can only
* be submitted to pages that are designed to handle the form, that is, that use
* the same intention string to validate the CSRF token with isCsrfTokenValid().
*
* @author Bernhard Schussek <bschussek@gmail.com>
*/
interface CsrfProviderInterface
{
/**
* Generates a CSRF token for a page of your application.
*
* @param string $intention Some value that identifies the action intention
* (i.e. "authenticate"). Doesn't have to be a secret value.
*/
public function generateCsrfToken($intention);
/**
* Validates a CSRF token.
*
* @param string $intention The intention used when generating the CSRF token
* @param string $token The token supplied by the browser
*
* @return Boolean Whether the token supplied by the browser is correct
*/
public function isCsrfTokenValid($intention, $token);
}
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