dompurify and sanitize-html are both widely used JavaScript libraries for sanitizing untrusted HTML to prevent cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks in web applications. They parse and clean HTML strings by removing dangerous elements, attributes, and scripts before rendering content in the DOM. dompurify leverages the browser’s native DOM parsing capabilities and is designed specifically for client-side use, while sanitize-html uses a server-friendly parser and supports both Node.js and browser environments. Both aim to produce safe, sanitized output but differ significantly in architecture, configuration model, and threat model assumptions.
When your app needs to display user-generated HTML — from rich text editors, markdown converters, or third-party feeds — you must sanitize it to avoid XSS vulnerabilities. Both dompurify and sanitize-html solve this problem, but they take fundamentally different approaches. Let’s compare them head-to-head.
dompurify relies entirely on the browser’s native DOM parser.
<div> (or <template>), injects the untrusted HTML, and walks the resulting DOM tree to strip dangerous nodes and attributes.// dompurify: browser-only, uses real DOM
import DOMPurify from 'dompurify';
const dirty = '<img src=x onerror=alert(1)>';
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty);
// Result: '<img src="x">' — onerror removed
sanitize-html uses its own HTML parser based on htmlparser2.
// sanitize-html: works everywhere, uses AST
import sanitizeHtml from 'sanitize-html';
const dirty = '<img src=x onerror=alert(1)>';
const clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty);
// Result: '<img src="x">' — onerror removed by default
dompurify is secure by default with zero config.
SAFE_FOR_JQUERY or custom hooks).beforeSanitizeElements, uponSanitizeAttribute) for advanced use cases.// dompurify: allow data-* attributes
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {
ADD_ATTR: ['data-id']
});
sanitize-html uses a whitelist-based config object.
<p>, <br>, basic formatting).// sanitize-html: explicitly allow tags/attrs
const clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
allowedTags: ['b', 'i', 'em', 'strong', 'a'],
allowedAttributes: {
'a': ['href', 'target']
}
});
dompurify has built-in, secure support for SVG and MathML.
<svg><g onload=...>).// dompurify: safely handles SVG
const svg = '<svg><circle cx="50" cy="50" r="40" /></svg>';
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(svg);
// Fully preserved — no XSS vectors
sanitize-html treats SVG as plain HTML by default.
svg, circle, etc.) and attributes.on* attributes or dangerous props like href in <use>.// sanitize-html: manual SVG config (incomplete example)
const clean = sanitizeHtml(svg, {
allowedTags: ['svg', 'circle'],
allowedAttributes: {
'svg': ['viewBox'],
'circle': ['cx', 'cy', 'r']
}
});
dompurify uses hooks for runtime modifications.
// dompurify: hook to add target="_blank"
DOMPurify.addHook('afterSanitizeAttributes', function(node) {
if (node.tagName === 'A' && node.href) {
node.setAttribute('target', '_blank');
node.setAttribute('rel', 'noopener');
}
});
sanitize-html supports transform functions.
// sanitize-html: transform function
const clean = sanitizeHtml(dirty, {
transformTags: {
'img': function(tagName, attribs) {
return {
tagName: 'img',
attribs: { ...attribs, loading: 'lazy' }
};
}
}
});
dompurify is client-first.
// In Node.js with JSDOM (not recommended for production sanitization)
import { JSDOM } from 'jsdom';
const window = new JSDOM('').window;
const DOMPurify = require('dompurify')(window);
sanitize-html is isomorphic.
// Works identically in Express.js or React
app.post('/comment', (req, res) => {
const clean = sanitizeHtml(req.body.html);
db.save(clean);
});
dompurify assumes the browser is the source of truth.
sanitize-html assumes you define the policy.
dompurify when:sanitize-html when:No sanitizer can make arbitrary HTML "safe" if your configuration is too permissive. Always:
textContent or trusted types when possible.| Feature | dompurify | sanitize-html |
|---|---|---|
| Environment | Browser-only (JSDOM for Node) | Node.js & browser |
| Parser | Native DOM | htmlparser2 (AST-based) |
| Default Security | Strict, zero-config | Safe but minimal |
| SVG/MathML | Built-in, secure | Manual config required |
| Custom Logic | Hooks | Transform functions |
| Best For | Client-side rendering | Isomorphic or backend sanitization |
If your app runs in the browser and you just need to safely render user HTML, dompurify is the safer, simpler choice. If you’re building a content pipeline that spans server and client, or need deep customization, sanitize-html gives you the control you need — just don’t relax your security posture in the process.
Choose dompurify if you're working primarily in the browser and need maximum XSS protection with minimal configuration. It’s built on the browser’s own HTML parser, which means it inherits the same security guarantees as modern browsers and automatically handles edge cases like SVG and MathML safely. It’s ideal for rich text editors, comment systems, or any scenario where you must render user-provided HTML securely without reinventing the wheel.
Choose sanitize-html if you need consistent HTML sanitization across both server (Node.js) and client environments, or if you require fine-grained control over allowed tags, attributes, and transformations via a declarative configuration object. It’s well-suited for applications that pre-sanitize content on the backend before storage or delivery, or when you need to customize allowed markup beyond basic safety (e.g., permitting specific classes or transforming URLs).
DOMPurify is a DOM-only, super-fast, uber-tolerant XSS sanitizer for HTML, MathML and SVG.
It's also very simple to use and get started with. DOMPurify was started in February 2014 and, meanwhile, has reached version v3.3.3.
DOMPurify runs as JavaScript and works in all modern browsers (Safari (10+), Opera (15+), Edge, Firefox and Chrome - as well as almost anything else using Blink, Gecko or WebKit). It doesn't break on MSIE or other legacy browsers. It simply does nothing.
Note that DOMPurify v2.5.9 is the latest version supporting MSIE. For important security updates compatible with MSIE, please use the 2.x branch.
Our automated tests cover 28 different browsers right now, more to come. We also cover Node.js v20.x, v22.x, 24.x and v25.x, running DOMPurify on jsdom. Older Node versions are known to work as well, but hey... no guarantees.
DOMPurify is written by security people who have vast background in web attacks and XSS. Fear not. For more details please also read about our Security Goals & Threat Model. Please, read it. Like, really.
DOMPurify sanitizes HTML and prevents XSS attacks. You can feed DOMPurify with string full of dirty HTML and it will return a string (unless configured otherwise) with clean HTML. DOMPurify will strip out everything that contains dangerous HTML and thereby prevent XSS attacks and other nastiness. It's also damn bloody fast. We use the technologies the browser provides and turn them into an XSS filter. The faster your browser, the faster DOMPurify will be.
It's easy. Just include DOMPurify on your website.
<script type="text/javascript" src="dist/purify.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="dist/purify.min.js"></script>
Afterwards you can sanitize strings by executing the following code:
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty);
Or maybe this, if you love working with Angular or alike:
import DOMPurify from 'dompurify';
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize('<b>hello there</b>');
The resulting HTML can be written into a DOM element using innerHTML or the DOM using document.write(). That is fully up to you.
Note that by default, we permit HTML, SVG and MathML. If you only need HTML, which might be a very common use-case, you can easily set that up as well:
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, { USE_PROFILES: { html: true } });
Well, please note, if you first sanitize HTML and then modify it afterwards, you might easily void the effects of sanitization. If you feed the sanitized markup to another library after sanitization, please be certain that the library doesn't mess around with the HTML on its own.
After sanitizing your markup, you can also have a look at the property DOMPurify.removed and find out, what elements and attributes were thrown out. Please do not use this property for making any security critical decisions. This is just a little helper for curious minds.
DOMPurify technically also works server-side with Node.js. Our support strives to follow the Node.js release cycle.
Running DOMPurify on the server requires a DOM to be present, which is probably no surprise. Usually, jsdom is the tool of choice and we strongly recommend to use the latest version of jsdom.
Why? Because older versions of jsdom are known to be buggy in ways that result in XSS even if DOMPurify does everything 100% correctly. There are known attack vectors in, e.g. jsdom v19.0.0 that are fixed in jsdom v20.0.0 - and we really recommend to keep jsdom up to date because of that.
Please also be aware that tools like happy-dom exist but are not considered safe at this point. Combining DOMPurify with happy-dom is currently not recommended and will likely lead to XSS.
Other than that, you are fine to use DOMPurify on the server. Probably. This really depends on jsdom or whatever DOM you utilize server-side. If you can live with that, this is how you get it to work:
npm install dompurify
npm install jsdom
For jsdom (please use an up-to-date version), this should do the trick:
const createDOMPurify = require('dompurify');
const { JSDOM } = require('jsdom');
const window = new JSDOM('').window;
const DOMPurify = createDOMPurify(window);
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize('<b>hello there</b>');
Or even this, if you prefer working with imports:
import { JSDOM } from 'jsdom';
import DOMPurify from 'dompurify';
const window = new JSDOM('').window;
const purify = DOMPurify(window);
const clean = purify.sanitize('<b>hello there</b>');
If you have problems making it work in your specific setup, consider looking at the amazing isomorphic-dompurify project which solves lots of problems people might run into.
npm install isomorphic-dompurify
import DOMPurify from 'isomorphic-dompurify';
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize('<s>hello</s>');
Of course there is a demo! Play with DOMPurify
First of all, please immediately contact us via email so we can work on a fix. PGP key
Also, you probably qualify for a bug bounty! The fine folks over at Fastmail use DOMPurify for their services and added our library to their bug bounty scope. So, if you find a way to bypass or weaken DOMPurify, please also have a look at their website and the bug bounty info.
How does purified markup look like? Well, the demo shows it for a big bunch of nasty elements. But let's also show some smaller examples!
DOMPurify.sanitize('<img src=x onerror=alert(1)//>'); // becomes <img src="x">
DOMPurify.sanitize('<svg><g/onload=alert(2)//<p>'); // becomes <svg><g></g></svg>
DOMPurify.sanitize('<p>abc<iframe//src=jAva	script:alert(3)>def</p>'); // becomes <p>abc</p>
DOMPurify.sanitize('<math><mi//xlink:href="data:x,<script>alert(4)</script>">'); // becomes <math><mi></mi></math>
DOMPurify.sanitize('<TABLE><tr><td>HELLO</tr></TABL>'); // becomes <table><tbody><tr><td>HELLO</td></tr></tbody></table>
DOMPurify.sanitize('<UL><li><A HREF=//google.com>click</UL>'); // becomes <ul><li><a href="//google.com">click</a></li></ul>
DOMPurify currently supports HTML5, SVG and MathML. DOMPurify per default allows CSS, HTML custom data attributes. DOMPurify also supports the Shadow DOM - and sanitizes DOM templates recursively. DOMPurify also allows you to sanitize HTML for being used with the jQuery $() and elm.html() API without any known problems.
DOMPurify does nothing at all. It simply returns exactly the string that you fed it. DOMPurify exposes a property called isSupported, which tells you whether it will be able to do its job, so you can come up with your own backup plan.
In version 1.0.9, support for Trusted Types API was added to DOMPurify. In version 2.0.0, a config flag was added to control DOMPurify's behavior regarding this.
When DOMPurify.sanitize is used in an environment where the Trusted Types API is available and RETURN_TRUSTED_TYPE is set to true, it tries to return a TrustedHTML value instead of a string (the behavior for RETURN_DOM and RETURN_DOM_FRAGMENT config options does not change).
Note that in order to create a policy in trustedTypes using DOMPurify, RETURN_TRUSTED_TYPE: false is required, as createHTML expects a normal string, not TrustedHTML. The example below shows this.
window.trustedTypes!.createPolicy('default', {
createHTML: (to_escape) =>
DOMPurify.sanitize(to_escape, { RETURN_TRUSTED_TYPE: false }),
});
Yes. The included default configuration values are pretty good already - but you can of course override them. Check out the /demos folder to see a bunch of examples on how you can customize DOMPurify.
// strip {{ ... }}, ${ ... } and <% ... %> to make output safe for template systems
// be careful please, this mode is not recommended for production usage.
// allowing template parsing in user-controlled HTML is not advised at all.
// only use this mode if there is really no alternative.
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {SAFE_FOR_TEMPLATES: true});
// change how e.g. comments containing risky HTML characters are treated.
// be very careful, this setting should only be set to `false` if you really only handle
// HTML and nothing else, no SVG, MathML or the like.
// Otherwise, changing from `true` to `false` will lead to XSS in this or some other way.
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {SAFE_FOR_XML: false});
// allow only <b> elements, very strict
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ALLOWED_TAGS: ['b']});
// allow only <b> and <q> with style attributes
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ALLOWED_TAGS: ['b', 'q'], ALLOWED_ATTR: ['style']});
// allow all safe HTML elements but neither SVG nor MathML
// note that the USE_PROFILES setting will override the ALLOWED_TAGS setting
// so don't use them together
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {USE_PROFILES: {html: true}});
// allow all safe SVG elements and SVG Filters, no HTML or MathML
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {USE_PROFILES: {svg: true, svgFilters: true}});
// allow all safe MathML elements and SVG, but no SVG Filters
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {USE_PROFILES: {mathMl: true, svg: true}});
// change the default namespace from HTML to something different
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {NAMESPACE: 'http://www.w3.org/2000/svg'});
// leave all safe HTML as it is and add <style> elements to block-list
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {FORBID_TAGS: ['style']});
// leave all safe HTML as it is and add style attributes to block-list
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {FORBID_ATTR: ['style']});
// extend the existing array of allowed tags and add <my-tag> to allow-list
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ADD_TAGS: ['my-tag']});
// extend the existing array of allowed attributes and add my-attr to allow-list
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ADD_ATTR: ['my-attr']});
// use functions to control which additional tags and attributes are allowed
const allowlist = {
'one': ['attribute-one'],
'two': ['attribute-two']
};
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(
'<one attribute-one="1" attribute-two="2"></one><two attribute-one="1" attribute-two="2"></two>',
{
ADD_TAGS: (tagName) => {
return Object.keys(allowlist).includes(tagName);
},
ADD_ATTR: (attributeName, tagName) => {
return allowlist[tagName]?.includes(attributeName) || false;
}
}
); // <one attribute-one="1"></one><two attribute-two="2"></two>
// prohibit ARIA attributes, leave other safe HTML as is (default is true)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ALLOW_ARIA_ATTR: false});
// prohibit HTML5 data attributes, leave other safe HTML as is (default is true)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ALLOW_DATA_ATTR: false});
// DOMPurify allows to define rules for Custom Elements. When using the CUSTOM_ELEMENT_HANDLING
// literal, it is possible to define exactly what elements you wish to allow (by default, none are allowed).
//
// The same goes for their attributes. By default, the built-in or configured allow.list is used.
//
// You can use a RegExp literal to specify what is allowed or a predicate, examples for both can be seen below.
// When using a predicate function for attributeNameCheck, it can optionally receive the tagName as a second parameter
// for more granular control over which attributes are allowed for specific elements.
// The default values are very restrictive to prevent accidental XSS bypasses. Handle with great care!
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(
'<foo-bar baz="foobar" forbidden="true"></foo-bar><div is="foo-baz"></div>',
{
CUSTOM_ELEMENT_HANDLING: {
tagNameCheck: null, // no custom elements are allowed
attributeNameCheck: null, // default / standard attribute allow-list is used
allowCustomizedBuiltInElements: false, // no customized built-ins allowed
},
}
); // <div is=""></div>
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(
'<foo-bar baz="foobar" forbidden="true"></foo-bar><div is="foo-baz"></div>',
{
CUSTOM_ELEMENT_HANDLING: {
tagNameCheck: /^foo-/, // allow all tags starting with "foo-"
attributeNameCheck: /baz/, // allow all attributes containing "baz"
allowCustomizedBuiltInElements: true, // customized built-ins are allowed
},
}
); // <foo-bar baz="foobar"></foo-bar><div is="foo-baz"></div>
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(
'<foo-bar baz="foobar" forbidden="true"></foo-bar><div is="foo-baz"></div>',
{
CUSTOM_ELEMENT_HANDLING: {
tagNameCheck: (tagName) => tagName.match(/^foo-/), // allow all tags starting with "foo-"
attributeNameCheck: (attr) => attr.match(/baz/), // allow all containing "baz"
allowCustomizedBuiltInElements: true, // allow customized built-ins
},
}
); // <foo-bar baz="foobar"></foo-bar><div is="foo-baz"></div>
// Example with attributeNameCheck receiving tagName as a second parameter
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(
'<element-one attribute-one="1" attribute-two="2"></element-one><element-two attribute-one="1" attribute-two="2"></element-two>',
{
CUSTOM_ELEMENT_HANDLING: {
tagNameCheck: (tagName) => tagName.match(/^element-(one|two)$/),
attributeNameCheck: (attr, tagName) => {
if (tagName === 'element-one') {
return ['attribute-one'].includes(attr);
} else if (tagName === 'element-two') {
return ['attribute-two'].includes(attr);
} else {
return false;
}
},
allowCustomizedBuiltInElements: false,
},
}
); // <element-one attribute-one="1"></element-one><element-two attribute-two="2"></element-two>
// extend the existing array of elements that can use Data URIs
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ADD_DATA_URI_TAGS: ['a', 'area']});
// extend the existing array of elements that are safe for URI-like values (be careful, XSS risk)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ADD_URI_SAFE_ATTR: ['my-attr']});
// allow external protocol handlers in URL attributes (default is false, be careful, XSS risk)
// by default only http, https, ftp, ftps, tel, mailto, callto, sms, cid and xmpp are allowed.
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ALLOW_UNKNOWN_PROTOCOLS: true});
// allow specific protocols handlers in URL attributes via regex (default is false, be careful, XSS risk)
// by default only (protocol-)relative URLs, http, https, ftp, ftps, tel, mailto, callto, sms, cid, xmpp and matrix are allowed.
// Default RegExp: /^(?:(?:(?:f|ht)tps?|mailto|tel|callto|sms|cid|xmpp):|[^a-z]|[a-z+.\-]+(?:[^a-z+.\-:]|$))/i;
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ALLOWED_URI_REGEXP: /^(?:(?:(?:f|ht)tps?|mailto|tel|callto|sms|cid|xmpp|matrix):|[^a-z]|[a-z+.\-]+(?:[^a-z+.\-:]|$))/i});
// return a DOM HTMLBodyElement instead of an HTML string (default is false)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {RETURN_DOM: true});
// return a DOM DocumentFragment instead of an HTML string (default is false)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {RETURN_DOM_FRAGMENT: true});
// use the RETURN_TRUSTED_TYPE flag to turn on Trusted Types support if available
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {RETURN_TRUSTED_TYPE: true}); // will return a TrustedHTML object instead of a string if possible
// use a provided Trusted Types policy
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {
// supplied policy must define createHTML and createScriptURL
TRUSTED_TYPES_POLICY: trustedTypes.createPolicy({
createHTML(s) { return s},
createScriptURL(s) { return s},
})
});
// return entire document including <html> tags (default is false)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {WHOLE_DOCUMENT: true});
// disable DOM Clobbering protection on output (default is true, handle with care, minor XSS risks here)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {SANITIZE_DOM: false});
// enforce strict DOM Clobbering protection via namespace isolation (default is false)
// when enabled, isolates the namespace of named properties (i.e., `id` and `name` attributes)
// from JS variables by prefixing them with the string `user-content-`
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {SANITIZE_NAMED_PROPS: true});
// keep an element's content when the element is removed (default is true)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {KEEP_CONTENT: false});
// glue elements like style, script or others to document.body and prevent unintuitive browser behavior in several edge-cases (default is false)
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {FORCE_BODY: true});
// remove all <a> elements under <p> elements that are removed
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {FORBID_CONTENTS: ['a'], FORBID_TAGS: ['p']});
// extend the default FORBID_CONTENTS list to also remove <a> elements under <p> elements
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {ADD_FORBID_CONTENTS: ['a'], FORBID_TAGS: ['p']});
// change the parser type so sanitized data is treated as XML and not as HTML, which is the default
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {PARSER_MEDIA_TYPE: 'application/xhtml+xml'});
// use the IN_PLACE mode to sanitize a node "in place", which is much faster depending on how you use DOMPurify
const dirty = document.createElement('a');
dirty.setAttribute('href', 'javascript:alert(1)');
const clean = DOMPurify.sanitize(dirty, {IN_PLACE: true}); // see https://github.com/cure53/DOMPurify/issues/288 for more info
There is even more examples here, showing how you can run, customize and configure DOMPurify to fit your needs.
Instead of repeatedly passing the same configuration to DOMPurify.sanitize, you can use the DOMPurify.setConfig method. Your configuration will persist until your next call to DOMPurify.setConfig, or until you invoke DOMPurify.clearConfig to reset it. Remember that there is only one active configuration, which means once it is set, all extra configuration parameters passed to DOMPurify.sanitize are ignored.
DOMPurify allows you to augment its functionality by attaching one or more functions with the DOMPurify.addHook method to one of the following hooks:
beforeSanitizeElementsuponSanitizeElement (No 's' - called for every element)afterSanitizeElementsbeforeSanitizeAttributesuponSanitizeAttributeafterSanitizeAttributesbeforeSanitizeShadowDOMuponSanitizeShadowNodeafterSanitizeShadowDOMIt passes the currently processed DOM node, when needed a literal with verified node and attribute data and the DOMPurify configuration to the callback. Check out the MentalJS hook demo to see how the API can be used nicely.
Example:
DOMPurify.addHook(
'uponSanitizeAttribute',
function (currentNode, hookEvent, config) {
// Do something with the current node
// You can also mutate hookEvent for current node (i.e. set hookEvent.forceKeepAttr = true)
// For other than 'uponSanitizeAttribute' hook types hookEvent equals to null
}
);
| Option | Since | Note |
|---|---|---|
| SAFE_FOR_JQUERY | 2.1.0 | No replacement required. |
We are currently using Github Actions in combination with BrowserStack. This gives us the possibility to confirm for each and every commit that all is going according to plan in all supported browsers. Check out the build logs here: https://github.com/cure53/DOMPurify/actions
You can further run local tests by executing npm run test.
All relevant commits will be signed with the key 0x24BB6BF4 for additional security (since 8th of April 2016).
npm i)We support npm officially. GitHub Actions workflow is configured to install dependencies using npm. When using deprecated version of npm we can not fully ensure the versions of installed dependencies which might lead to unanticipated problems.
We use ESLint as a pre-commit hook to ensure code consistency. Moreover, to ease formatting we use prettier while building the /dist assets happens through rollup.
These are our npm scripts:
npm run dev to start building while watching sources for changesnpm run test to run our test suite via jsdom and karma
test:jsdom to only run tests through jsdomtest:karma to only run tests through karmanpm run lint to lint the sources using ESLint (via xo)npm run format to format our sources using prettier to ease to pass ESLintnpm run build to build our distribution assets minified and unminified as a UMD module
npm run build:umd to only build an unminified UMD modulenpm run build:umd:min to only build a minified UMD moduleNote: all run scripts triggered via npm run <script>.
There are more npm scripts but they are mainly to integrate with CI or are meant to be "private" for instance to amend build distribution files with every commit.
We maintain a mailing list that notifies whenever a security-critical release of DOMPurify was published. This means, if someone found a bypass and we fixed it with a release (which always happens when a bypass was found) a mail will go out to that list. This usually happens within minutes or few hours after learning about a bypass. The list can be subscribed to here:
https://lists.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/mailman/listinfo/dompurify-security
Feature releases will not be announced to this list.
Many people helped and help DOMPurify become what it is and need to be acknowledged here!
Cybozu 💛💸, hata6502 💸, intra-mart-dh 💸, nelstrom ❤️, hash_kitten ❤️, kevin_mizu ❤️, icesfont ❤️, reduckted ❤️, dcramer 💸, JGraph 💸, baekilda 💸, Healthchecks 💸, Sentry 💸, jarrodldavis 💸, CynegeticIO, ssi02014 ❤️, GrantGryczan, Lowdefy, granlem, oreoshake, tdeekens ❤️, peernohell ❤️, is2ei, SoheilKhodayari, franktopel, NateScarlet, neilj, fhemberger, Joris-van-der-Wel, ydaniv, terjanq, filedescriptor, ConradIrwin, gibson042, choumx, 0xSobky, styfle, koto, tlau88, strugee, oparoz, mathiasbynens, edg2s, dnkolegov, dhardtke, wirehead, thorn0, styu, mozfreddyb, mikesamuel, jorangreef, jimmyhchan, jameydeorio, jameskraus, hyderali, hansottowirtz, hackvertor, freddyb, flavorjones, djfarrelly, devd, camerondunford, buu700, buildog, alabiaga, Vector919, Robbert, GreLI, FuzzySockets, ArtemBernatskyy, @garethheyes, @shafigullin, @mmrupp, @irsdl,ShikariSenpai, ansjdnakjdnajkd, @asutherland, @mathias, @cgvwzq, @robbertatwork, @giutro, @CmdEngineer_, @avr4mit, davecardwell and especially @securitymb ❤️ & @masatokinugawa ❤️
And last but not least, thanks to BrowserStack Open-Source Program for supporting this project with their services for free and delivering excellent, dedicated and very professional support on top of that.