Control browser features with Permissions Policy

Manage how your page and third-party iframes on your page have access to browser features.

Kevin K. Lee
Kevin K. Lee

Permissions Policy, formerly known as Feature Policy, allows the developer to control the browser features available to a page, its iframes, and subresources, by declaring a set of policies for the browser to enforce. These policies are applied to origins provided in a response header origin list. The origin list can contain same-origins and/or cross-origins, and it allows the developer to control first-party and third-party access to browser features.

The user has the final decision to allow access to more powerful features, and needs to provide explicit permission by accepting a prompt.

Permissions Policy allows the top-level site to define what it and its third parties intend to use, and removes the burden from the user of determining whether the feature access request is legitimate or not. For example, by using Permissions Policy to block the geolocation feature for all third parties, the developer can be certain that no third party will gain access to the user's geolocation.

Changes to Permissions Policy

Permissions Policy was previously known as Feature Policy. The key concepts remain the same, but there are some important changes along with the name.

Structured Fields usage

Structured Fields provide a set of common data structures to standardize parsing and serialization of HTTP header field values. Learn more about Structured Fields from Fastly's blog post, "Improving HTTP with structured header fields".

Old
  geolocation 'self' https://example.com; camera 'none'

Before with Feature Policy.

New
  geolocation=(self "https://example.com"), camera=()

Now with Permissions Policy.

Combine headers with the iframe allow attribute

With Feature Policy, you could add the feature to a cross-origin frame by either adding the origin to the header origin list or adding an allow attribute to the iframe tag. With Permissions Policy, if you add a cross-origin frame to the origin list, the iframe tag for that origin must include the allow attribute. If the response does not contain a Permissions Policy header, the origin list is considered to have the default value of *. Adding the allow attribute to the iframe allows access to the feature.

Therefore, we recommend developers explicitly set the Permissions Policy header in the response, so that cross-origin iframes which aren't listed in the origin list are blocked from accessing this feature, even if allow is present.

Feature Policy can still be used after Chrome 88, but it acts as an alias for Permissions Policy. Other than the syntax, there is no difference in logic. If both Permissions Policy and Feature Policy headers are used together, the Permissions-Policy header will have higher priority, and will overwrite the value provided by the Feature-Policy header.

How do I use Permissions Policy?

Quick overview

Before we dive deep, let's take a quick look at a common scenario where you are the owner of a website and you want to control how your site and third-party code use browser features.

  • Your site is https://your-site.example.
  • Your site embeds an iframe from same-origin (https://your-site.example).
  • Your site embeds an iframe from https://trusted-site.example that you trust.
  • Your site also displays ads served by https://ad.example.
  • You want to allow geolocation only for your site and the trusted site, not for the ad.

In this case, use the following header:

Permissions-Policy: geolocation=(self "https://trusted-site.example")

And explicitly set the allow attribute to the iframe tag for the trusted site:

<iframe src="https://trusted-site.example" allow="geolocation">

Quick overview of Permissions Policy usage.

In this example, the header origin list lets only your site (self) and trusted-site.example to use the geolocation feature. ad.example is not allowed to use geolocation.

  1. Your site your-site.example is allowed to use the geolocation feature with the user's consent.
  2. A same-origin iframe (your-site.example) is allowed to use the feature without the usage of the allow attribute.
  3. An iframe served from a different subdomain (subdomain.your-site-example) that was not added to the origin list, and has the allow attribute set on the iframe tag, is blocked from using the feature. Different subdomains are considered same-site but cross-origin.
  4. A cross-origin iframe (trusted-site.example) that was added to the origin list and has the allow attribute set on the iframe tag is allowed to use the feature.
  5. A cross-origin iframe (trusted-site.example) added to the origin list, without the allow attribute, is blocked from using the feature.
  6. A cross-origin iframe (ad.example) which wasn't added to the origin list is blocked from using the feature, even if the allow attribute is included in the iframe tag.

Permissions-Policy HTTP response header

The user makes a request, the server responds with the Permissions Policy header, and then the browser grants access based on that header.

Permissions-Policy: <feature>=(<token>|<origin(s)>)

Use a Permissions-Policy header in the response from the server to set the allowed origins for a feature. The header value can take a combination of tokens and strings of origins. The available tokens are * for all origins and self for same-origin.

If your header is for multiple features, separate the features with a comma. If you list multiple origins, separate each origin in the origin list with a space. For headers which list an origin that's a cross-origin request, the iframe tag must include the allow attribute.

Here are some example key-value pairs:

  • Syntax: [FEATURE]=*
    • Policy applied to all origins
    • Example: geolocation=*
  • Syntax: [FEATURE]=(self)
    • Policy applied to same-origin
    • Example: geolocation=(self)
  • Syntax: [FEATURE]=(self [ORIGIN(s)])
    • Policy applied to same origin and the specified origins
    • Example: geolocation=(self "https://a.example" "https://b.example")
    • self is a shorthand for https://your-site.example
  • Syntax: [FEATURE]=([ORIGIN(s)])
    • Policy applied to same origin and the specified origins
    • Example: geolocation=("https://your-site.example" "https://a.example" "https://b.example")
    • When using this syntax, one of the origins should be the origin of the embedder. If the embedder page itself is not granted the permissions, the iframes embedded in that page will be also blocked even though they are added to the origin list because Permissions Policy delegates permissions. You can also use the self token.
  • Syntax: [FEATURE]=()
    • Feature blocked for all origins
    • Example: geolocation=()

Different subdomains and paths

Different subdomains, such as https://your-site.example and https://subdomain.your-site.example, are considered same-site but cross-origin. Therefore, adding a subdomain in the origin list does not allow access to another subdomain of the same site. Every embedded subdomain that wants to use the feature must be added separately to the origin list. For example, if access to the user's browsing topics is allowed to the same-origin only with the header Permissions-Policy: browsing-topics=(self), an iframe from a different subdomain of the same site, https://subdomain.your-site.example, won't have access to the topics.

Different paths, such as https://your-site.example and https://your-site.example/embed, are considered same-origin, and different paths don't have to be listed in the origin list.

Iframe allow attribute

Iframe setup

For cross-origin usage, an iframe needs the allow attribute in the tag to gain access to the feature.

Syntax: <iframe src="[ORIGIN]" allow="[FEATURE] <'src' | [ORIGIN(s)]"></iframe>

For example:

<iframe src="https://trusted-site.example" allow="geolocation">

Handle iframe navigation

Iframe navigation setup

By default, if an iframe navigates to another origin, the policy is not applied to the origin that the iframe navigates to. By listing the origin that the iframe navigates to in the allow attribute, the Permissions Policy that was applied to the original iframe will be applied to the origin the iframe navigates to.

<iframe src="https://trusted-site.example" allow="geolocation https://trusted-site.example https://trusted-navigated-site.example">

You can see it in action by visiting the iframe navigation demo.

Example Permissions Policy setups

The examples of the following setups can be found in the demo.

Feature allowed on all origins

Architecture of all origins allowed to access the feature

Permissions-Policy: geolocation=*
<iframe src="https://trusted-site.example" allow="geolocation">
<iframe src="https://ad.example" allow="geolocation">

When the origin list is set to the * token, the feature is allowed for all origins present on the page, including itself and all iframes. In this example, all code served from https://your-site.example and the codes served from https://trusted-site.example iframe and https://ad.example have access to the geolocation feature in the user's browser. Remember that the allow attribute must also be set on the iframe itself along with adding the origin to the header origin list.

This setup can be seen in the demo.

Feature allowed on same-origin only

Architecture of only same origin allowed to access the feature

Permissions-Policy: geolocation=(self)

Using the self token allows geolocation usage to the same-origin only. Cross-origins won't have access to the feature. In this example, only https://trusted-site.example (self) will have access to geolocation. Utilize this syntax if you want the feature only for your page and no one else.

This setup can be seen in the demo.

Feature allowed on same-origin and specific cross-origins

Architecture of specified origins allowed to access the feature

Permissions-Policy: geolocation=(self "https://trusted-site.example")

This syntax allows the usage of geolocation to both self (https://your-site.example) and https://trusted-site.example. Remember to explicitly add the allow attribute to the iframe tag. If there is another iframe with <iframe src="https://ad.example" allow="geolocation">, then https://ad.example won't have access to the geolocation feature. Only the original page and https://trusted-site.example that is listed in the origin list along with having the allow attribute in the iframe tag will have access to the user's feature.

This setup can be seen in the demo.

Feature blocked on all origins

Architecture of all origins blocked from accessing the feature

Permissions-Policy: geolocation=()

With an empty origin list, the feature is blocked for all origins. This setup can be seen in the demo.

Use the JavaScript API

The existing JavaScript API of Feature Policy is found as an object on either the document or the element (document.featurePolicy or element.featurePolicy). The JavaScript API for Permissions Policy has not been implemented yet.

The Feature Policy API can be used for policies set by Permissions Policy, with some limitations. There are remaining questions regarding a JavaScript API implementation, and a proposal has been made to move the logic into the Permissions API. Join the discussion if you have any thoughts.

featurePolicy.allowsFeature(feature)

  • Returns true if the feature is allowed for the default-origin usage.
  • The behavior is the same for both policies set by Permissions Policy and the previous Feature Policy
  • When allowsFeature() is called on an iframe element (iframeEl.featurePolicy.allowsFeature('geolocation')), the returned value reflects if the allow attribute is set on the iframe

featurePolicy.allowsFeature(feature, origin)

  • Returns true if the feature is allowed for the specified origin.
  • If the method is called on document, this method no longer tells you whether the feature is allowed for the specified origin like Feature Policy did. Now, this method tells you that it's possible for the feature to be allowed to that origin. You must conduct an additional check of whether the iframe has the allow attribute set or not. The developer must conduct an additional check for the allow attribute on the iframe element to determine if the feature is allowed for the third-party origin.

Check for features in an iframe with the element object

You can use element.allowsFeature(feature) that takes the allow attribute into account unlike document.allowsFeature(feature, origin) that does not.

const someIframeEl = document.getElementById('some-iframe')
const isCameraFeatureAllowed = someIframeEl.featurePolicy.allowsFeature('camera')

featurePolicy.allowedFeatures()

  • Returns a list of features allowed for the default-origin usage.
  • The behavior is the same for both policies set by Permissions Policy and Feature Policy
  • When the associated node is an iframe, the allow attribute is taken into account.

featurePolicy.features()

  • Returns a list of features available in the browser.
  • The behavior is the same for both policies set by Permissions Policy and Feature Policy

Chrome DevTools integration

Chrome DevTools integration with Permissions Policy

Check out how Permissions Policy works in DevTools.

  1. Open Chrome DevTools.
  2. Open the Application panel to check the allowed features and disallowed features of each frame.
  3. In the sidebar, select the frame that you want to inspect. You will be presented with a list of features that the selected frame is allowed to use and a list of features that are blocked in that frame.

Migration from Feature-Policy

If you are using the Feature-Policy header, you can implement the following steps to migrate to Permissions Policy.

Replace Feature Policy headers with Permissions Policy headers

Since the Feature Policy headers are only supported in Chromium-based browsers, and Permissions Policy headers are supported since Chrome 88, it is safe to update the existing headers with Permissions Policy.

Old
Feature-Policy:
  autoplay *;
  geolocation 'self';
  camera 'self' 'https://trusted-site.example';
  fullscreen 'none';

Before with Feature Policy.

New
Permissions-Policy:
  autoplay=*,
  geolocation=(self),
  camera=(self "https://trusted-site.example"),
  fullscreen=()

Now with Permissions Policy.

Update document.allowsFeature(feature, origin) usage

If you are using document.allowsFeature(feature, origin) method to check allowed features for iframes, use allowsFeature(feature) method attached on the iframe element, and not the containing document. The method element.allowsFeature(feature) accounts for the allow attribute while document.allowsFeature(feature, origin) does not.

Check feature access with document

To continue using document as the base node, then you must conduct an additional check for the allow attribute on the iframe tag.

<iframe id="some-iframe" src="https://example.com" allow="camera"></iframe>
Permissions-Policy: camera=(self "https://example.com")
const isCameraPolicySet = document.featurePolicy.allowsFeature('camera', 'https://example.com')

const someIframeEl = document.getElementById('some-iframe')
const hasCameraAttributeValue = someIframeEl.hasAttribute('allow')
&& someIframeEl.getAttribute('allow').includes('camera')

const isCameraFeatureAllowed = isCameraPolicySet && hasCameraAttributeValue

Instead of updating the existing code using document, it's recommended to call allowsFeature() on the element object like the previous example.

Reporting API

The Reporting API provides a reporting mechanism for web applications in a consistent manner, and Reporting API for Permissions Policy violations is available as an experimental feature.

If you would like to test the experimental feature, follow the walkthrough and enable the flag in chrome://flags/#enable-experimental-web-platform-features. With the flag enabled, you can observe Permissions Policy violations in DevTools under the Application tab:

The following example shows how the Reporting API header may be constructed:

Reporting-Endpoints: main-endpoint="https://reports.example/main", default="https://reports.example/default"

Content-Security-Policy: script-src 'self'; object-src 'none'; report-to main-endpoint;
Document-Policy: document-write=?0; report-to=main-endpoint;

In the current implementation, you can receive policy violation reports from any violations occurring within that frame by configuring an endpoint named 'default' like the earlier example. Subframes will require their own reporting configuration.

Find out more

For a deeper understanding of Permissions Policy, refer to the following resources: