Trusted-Types Helper

I mainly wrote this in 2021 to enable TamperMonkey to continue using scripts that have `@require` dependencies on sites with a restrictive `Trusted-Types` policy, until TM v4.14 came out (milestone: https://github.com/Tampermonkey/tampermonkey/issues/1334#event-5361683856). Now it seems like some cases make it relevant again? I think that should be only temporary until the TM team get on top of what ever changed. Make sure this script is executed before the `@require`ing of any dependencies

// ==UserScript==
// @name		Trusted-Types Helper
// @version		0.1.0
// @description	I mainly wrote this in 2021 to enable TamperMonkey to continue using scripts that have `@require` dependencies on sites with a restrictive `Trusted-Types` policy, until TM v4.14 came out (milestone: https://github.com/Tampermonkey/tampermonkey/issues/1334#event-5361683856). Now it seems like some cases make it relevant again? I think that should be only temporary until the TM team get on top of what ever changed. Make sure this script is executed before the `@require`ing of any dependencies
// @namespace	bp
// @author		Benjamin Philipp <dev [at - please don't spam] benjamin-philipp.com>
// @include		*
// @run-at		document-start
// @noframes
// @grant		none
// ==/UserScript==

// How to work with Trusted Types: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Trusted_Types_API

// This is mainly to enable TamperMonkey to continue using scripts that have `@require` dependencies on sites with a restrictive `Trusted-Types` policy. At least until TM v4.14 comes out, the milestone has already been added: https://github.com/Tampermonkey/tampermonkey/issues/1334#event-5361683856
// Make sure this script is executed before the `@require`ing of any dependencies

// Although TT is still an experimental feature, Google seems quite keen to enforce it already, albeit half-assedly, where supported. Ugh! >.<

// This script provides pass-through policies to try to enable you to do what ever you want with the DOM, while trying not to disturb any defaults in place.
// Basically, if you have to create your own Trusted Types (e.g. TrustedHTML), and if the site's CSP allows for the creation of new policies, you can use a permissive policy to wrap your strings into a Trusted Type, like TrustedHTML, which the browser will then allow you to assign to the DOM.
// Best case scenario: The site has no default policy set. This allows us to specify our own, in which we can then allow everything (pass-through); this will restore all ability to modify the DOM.
// If we have to create a custom policy, all contents have to be piped through the relevant function of the TT Policy, like `TTP.createHTML("unsafe string contents")`, which will then return trusted contents.

const overwrite_default = false; // If a default policy already exists, it might be best not to overwrite it, but to try and set a custom policy and use it to manually generate trusted types. Try at your own risk
const prefix = GM_info.script.name;
var passThroughFunc = function(string, sink){
	return string; // Anything passing through this function will be returned without change
}
var TTPName = "passthrough";
var TTP_default, TTP = {createHTML: passThroughFunc, createScript: passThroughFunc, createScriptURL: passThroughFunc}; // We can use TTP.createHTML for all our assignments even if we don't need or even have Trusted Types; this should make fallbacks and polyfills easy
var needsTrustedHTML = false;
function doit(){
	try{
		if(typeof window.isSecureContext !== 'undefined' && window.isSecureContext){
			if (window.trustedTypes && window.trustedTypes.createPolicy){
				needsTrustedHTML = true;
				if(trustedTypes.defaultPolicy){
					log("TT Default Policy exists");
					if(overwrite_default)
						TTP = window.trustedTypes.createPolicy("default", TTP);
					else
						TTP = window.trustedTypes.createPolicy(TTPName, TTP); // Is the default policy permissive enough? If it already exists, best not to overwrite it
					TTP_default = trustedTypes.defaultPolicy;
					
					log("Created custom passthrough policy, in case the default policy is too restrictive: Use Policy '" + TTPName + "' in var 'TTP':", TTP);
				}
				else{
					TTP_default = TTP = window.trustedTypes.createPolicy("default", TTP);
				}
				log("Trusted-Type Policies: TTP:", TTP, "TTP_default:", TTP_default);
			}
		}
	}catch(e){
		log(e);
	}
}

function log(...args){
	if("undefined" != typeof(prefix) && !!prefix)
		args = [prefix + ":", ...args];
	if("undefined" != typeof(debugging) && !!debugging)
		args = [...args, new Error().stack.replace(/^\s*(Error|Stack trace):?\n/gi, "").replace(/^([^\n]*\n)/, "\n")];
	console.log(...args);
}

doit();