• Stars
    star
    146
  • Rank 252,769 (Top 5 %)
  • Language
    Ruby
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 14 years ago
  • Updated 5 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

A simple way to add honeypot captchas in your Rails forms.

Honeypot Captcha

The simplest way to add honeypot captchas in your Rails forms.

Honeypot captchas work off the premise that you can present different form fields to a spam bot than you do to a real user. Spam bots will typically try to fill all fields in a form and will not take into account CSS styles.

We add bogus fields to a form and then check to see if those fields are submitted with values. If they are, we assume that we encountered a spam bot.

Requirements

  • Rails >= 2.3.8

Installation

In your Gemfile, simply add

gem 'honeypot-captcha'

Usage

I've tried to make it pretty simple to add a honeypot captcha, but I'm open to any suggestions you may have. By default, create and update actions are protected. For other actions, see below.

form_for

Simply specify that the form has a honeypot in the HTML options hash:

<%= form_for Comment.new, :html => { :honeypot => true } do |form| -%>
  ...
<% end -%>

form_tag with block

Simply specify that the form has a honeypot in the options hash:

<%= form_tag comments_path, :honeypot => true do -%>
  ...
<% end -%>

form_tag without block

Simply specify that the form has a honeypot in the options hash:

<%= form_tag comments_path, :honeypot => true -%>
  ...
</form>

simple_form_for

Simply specify that the form has a honeypot in the HTML options hash:

<%= simple_form_for Comment.new, :html => { :honeypot => true } do |form| -%>
  ...
<% end -%>

Protection for actions other than create and update

If you are submitting a form to a non-RESTful action and require honeypot protection, simply add the before filter for that action in your controller. For example:

class NewsletterController < ApplicationController
  prepend_before_action :protect_from_spam, :only => [:subscribe]
  ...
end

Customizing the honeypot fields

Override the honeypot_fields method within ApplicationController to add your own custom field names and values. For example:

def honeypot_fields
  {
    :my_custom_comment_body => 'Do not fill in this field, sucka!',
    :another_thingy => 'Really... do not fill out!'
  }
end

NOTE: honeypot_fields hash keys are used at the beginning of the generated HTML id attributes. The HTML 4.01 spec states that ids must start with a letter ([A-Za-z]), so be aware of this when creating the hash keys. HTML5 is much less strict.

Override the honeypot_string method within ApplicationController to disguise the string that will be included in the honeypot name. For example:

def honeypot_string
  'im-not-a-honeypot-at-all'
end

Override the honeypot_style_class method within ApplicationController to provide a non-inline CSS class that will be applied to hide honeypot fields (if nil, the style will be applied inline). For example:

def honeypot_style_class
  'display-none'
end

... assigns an HTML class for styling purposes:

<div id="login_hp_1464171481" class="display-none">

... which can be styled by a CSS style within app/assets/stylesheets:

.display-none {
  display: none;
}

Note on Patches/Pull Requests

  • Fork the project.
  • Make your feature addition or bug fix.
  • Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
  • Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
  • Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.

Author

Created by Curtis Miller of Velocity Labs, a Ruby on Rails development company.

Collaborators

Contributors

Thank you to all contributors!

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2010-2019 Curtis Miller. See LICENSE for details.