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Ephemeral Storage Design
Third-party frames which get or set navigation cookies, use document.cookie
,
and DOM storage will be given a special ephemeral storage area. This ephemeral
storage area is only given to third-party frames which otherwise have cookies
or storage blocked on them. This determination is made based all other checks,
including those by Chromium content settings and Brave Shields. If any of these
systems block third-party storage, then that storage is a candidate for
ephemeral storage.
The ephemeral storage area is unique for every top-level frame origin. When the last top-level frame with a particular origin is closed or navigated to a new origin, the ephemeral storage area for that origin is destroyed. Navigating back to the original top-level origin creates a new, empty ephemeral storage area. Although an ephemeral storage area is unique to a top-level origin, cookies and DOM storage in the ephemeral storage still follow typical same-origin restrictions within that area. This means that two third-party iframes from different origins will not share cookies or DOM storage even though they exist in the same ephemeral storage area.
DOM Storage is composed of both localStorage
and sessionStorage
. These
two APIs have different scopes and lifetimes, but are provided via an
identical API to JavaScript.
sessionStorage
is a per-origin and per-tab transient storage database. In
Brave, each tab has a unique storage area id which ensures that normal
sessionStorage
is not shared between tabs. The implementation of ephemeral
storage creates a special ephemeral version of this id when a situation
requiring ephemeral storage is detected. This storage area is cleared when the
top-level frame navigates to a new origin.
localStorage is a persistent storage database that is partitioned per-origin.
The implementation of ephemeral localStorage
detects when a situation requiring
ephemeral localStorage
is required and provides the JavaScript environment with
a specially keyed sessionStorage
database instead of the typical localStorage
one. This sessionStorage
database (acting as localStorage
) is shared between
all third-party frames using ephemeral storage under the same top-frame origin.
This storage area is cleared when no more top-frames are navigated to
pages with that origin.
Cookies in Brave are ultimately stored in the CookieMonster
. To implement cookie
support for ephemeral storage, we create a new subclass class of CookieMonster
which contains a map of ephemeral CookieMonster
s in additional to the default
storage provided by the parent class. When the CookieMonster
gets or sets a
cookie with a top_frame_url_
set in the CookieOptions
argument, it search for the
appropriate ephemeral CookieMonster
for that URL's origin. RestrictedCookieManager
(used for document.cookie
) and URLRequestHttpJob (used for navigation cookies)
set the top_frame_url_
CookieOption member when detecting a situation needing
ephemeral storage.
Ephemeral storage is only enabled when the corresponding Feature
flag is turned
on.
Note: The initial PRs for ephemeral storage are not dependent on whether or not storage is blocked. Instead ephemeral storage is used for all third-party storage that is not blocked. This changes in PR #4, which brings ephemeral storage in line with the final design.
- Stage 1: Add ephemeral storage support for DOM Storage
- Stage 2: Add ephemeral storage support for
document.cookie
- Stage 3: Add ephemeral storage support for navigation cookies
- Stage 4: For all types of ephemeral storage, only use ephemeral storage when a cookie or storage is otherwise blocked
- Stage 5: Enable ephemeral storage by default