Written by Luigi Montanez of Sunlight Labs, with contributions from Luc Castera and Daniel Schierbeck. Copyright 2009-2011.
This middleware acts as a spam trap. It inserts, into every outputted <form>
, a text field that a spambot will really want to fill in, but is actually not used by the app. The field is hidden to humans via CSS, and includes a warning label for screenreading software.
In the <body>
:
<form>
<div class='phonetoy'>
<label for='email'>Don't fill in this field</label>
<input type='text' name='email' value=''/>
</div>
[...]
In the <head>
:
<style type='text/css' media='all'>
div.phonetoy {
display:none;
}
</style>
Then, for incoming requests, the middleware will check if the text field has been set to an unexpected value. If it has, that means a spambot has altered the field, and the spambot is booted to a dead end blank page.
You will need to install these RubyGems:
- unindentable: https://github.com/sunlightlabs/ruby-unindentable/tree/master
- rack-test: https://github.com/brynary/rack-test/tree/master
To use in your Rails app, place honeypot.rb
in lib/rack
or add rack-honeypot
to your Gemfile.
Then in environment.rb
:
config.middleware.use "Rack::Honeypot"
That's all there is to it. Fire up your app, View Source on a page with a form, and see the magic.
There are a few options you can pass in:
:class_name
is the class assigned to the parent div of the honeypot. Defaults to "phonetoy", an anagram of honeypot.:label
is the warning label displayed to those with CSS disabled. Defaults to "Don't fill in this field".:input_name
is the name of the form field. Ensure that this is tempting to a spambot if you modify it. Defaults to "email".:input_value
is the value of the form field that would only be modified by a spambot. Defaults to blank.
If you want to modify the options used, simply do:
config.middleware.use "Rack::Honeypot", :input_name => "firstname"
To run the tests:
sudo gem install rack-test
cd test
ruby test_honeypot.rb
Based on django-honeypot by James Turk.
Credit to Geoff Buesing for a first stab at this idea in Rack.
See LICENSE.md for proper reuse guidelines.