Allows to inject something into the default content policy. This is for
example useful when you're injecting Javascript code into a view belonging
to another controller and cannot modify its Content-Security-Policy itself.
Note that the adjustment is only applied to applications that use AppFramework
controllers.
To use this from your `app.php` use `\OC::$server->getContentSecurityPolicyManager()->addDefaultPolicy($policy)`,
$policy has to be of type `\OCP\AppFramework\Http\ContentSecurityPolicy`.
To test this add something like the following into an `app.php` of any enabled app:
```
$manager = \OC::$server->getContentSecurityPolicyManager();
$policy = new \OCP\AppFramework\Http\ContentSecurityPolicy(false);
$policy->addAllowedFrameDomain('asdf');
$policy->addAllowedScriptDomain('yolo.com');
$policy->allowInlineScript(false);
$manager->addDefaultPolicy($policy);
$policy = new \OCP\AppFramework\Http\ContentSecurityPolicy(false);
$policy->addAllowedFontDomain('yolo.com');
$manager->addDefaultPolicy($policy);
$policy = new \OCP\AppFramework\Http\ContentSecurityPolicy(false);
$policy->addAllowedFrameDomain('banana.com');
$manager->addDefaultPolicy($policy);
```
If you now open the files app the policy should be:
```
Content-Security-Policy:default-src 'none';script-src yolo.com 'self' 'unsafe-eval';style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline';img-src 'self' data: blob:;font-src yolo.com 'self';connect-src 'self';media-src 'self';frame-src asdf banana.com 'self'
```
For enhanced security it is important that there is also a way to disallow domains, including the default ones.
With this commit every method gets added a new "disallow" function.
This is required when working with stuff such as PDF.js in the files_pdfviewer application. Opt-in only.
Master change only because the stable CSP policies has a failback that allows nearly anything 🙈
This change allows AppFramework applications to specify a custom CSP header for example when the default policy is too strict. Furthermore this allows us to partially migrate away from CSS and allowed eval() in our JavaScript components.
Legacy ownCloud components will still use the previous policy. Application developers can use this as following in their controllers:
```php
$response = new TemplateResponse('activity', 'list', []);
$cspHelper = new ContentSecurityPolicyHelper();
$cspHelper->addAllowedScriptDomain('www.owncloud.org');
$response->addHeader('Content-Security-Policy', $cspHelper->getPolicy());
return $response;
```
Fixes https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/11857 which is a pre-requisite for https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13458 and https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/11925