CSP: base-uri

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since August 2016.

The HTTP Content-Security-Policy base-uri directive restricts the URLs which can be used in a document's <base> element. If this value is absent, then any URI is allowed. If this directive is absent, the user agent will use the value in the <base> element.

CSP version 2
Directive type Document directive
default-src fallback No. Not setting this allows any URL.

Syntax

http
Content-Security-Policy: base-uri 'none';
Content-Security-Policy: base-uri <source-expression-list>;

This directive may have one of the following values:

'none'

No base URI may be set using a <base> element. The single quotes are mandatory.

<source-expression-list>

A space-separated list of source expression values. A <base> element may set a base URI if its value matches any of the given source expressions. For this directive, the following source expression values are applicable:

Examples

Meta tag configuration

html
<meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" content="base-uri 'self'" />

Apache configuration

apacheconf
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
Header set Content-Security-Policy "base-uri 'self'";
</IfModule>

Nginx configuration

nginx
add_header Content-Security-Policy "base-uri 'self';"

Violation case

Since your domain isn't example.com, a <base> element with its href set to https://example.com will result in a CSP violation.

html
<meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" content="base-uri 'self'" />
<base href="https://example.com/" />

<!--
// Error: Refused to set the document's base URI to 'https://example.com/'
// because it violates the following Content Security Policy
// directive: "base-uri 'self'"
-->

Specifications

Specification
Content Security Policy Level 3
# directive-base-uri

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also