Cloudfront and CSS/JS assets - heroku

I have a cloudfront distribution set up to go to myapp.herokuapp.com
Maybe I've misunderstood Cloudfront and CDNs in general, but I thought that somehow the CDN hosted the static files instead of me just including references to the CDN URL in my HTML files stored on Heroku. What I'm seeing in my Chrome Network tab is:
Request URL:http://blah123.cloudfront.net/css/style-123.css
Request Method:GET Status Code:301 Moved Permanently
then:
Request URL:http://myapp.herokuapp.com/css/style-123.css
Request Method:GET Status Code:304 Not Modified
Is there another way to set up Cloudfront so that the requests for these static files don't hit my Heroku node at all?

Have you seen this article https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/using-amazon-cloudfront-cdn - it covers the subject in quite a lot of detail.
But it doesn't sound like you've misunderstood.
You shouldn't see requests going to your herokuapp certainly if you're looking at the inspector. Assuming you've configured all your assets to be loaded from your cloudfront URL then when an asset is requested from that URL if it's not already cached by cloudfront, cloudfront will grab the asset from your herokuapp and then serve that back but you wouldn't see this in your browser inspector. The next time a request comes in for the same asset it will be served from cloudfront.

I'm having the same problem as cookiemonster. I was able to get Cloudfront working with the asset_sync gem, https://github.com/rumblelabs/asset_sync, but not per Heroku's article, https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/using-amazon-cloudfront-cdn
I'm trying to switch away from asset_sync because (1) it adds complexity, and (2) Heroku no longer recommends it.
From my response below you can see that Amazon issues a 301 redirect for each call.
Here are some details for the staging server:
My entire site is https
My staging.rb
config.action_controller.asset_host = "https://d2gfgnx4lxlciz.cloudfront.net"
Cloudfront
I used a generic configuration, only changing the origin:
Domain Name: d2gfgnx4lxlciz.cloudfront.net
Origin: sohelpfulme-staging.herokuapp.com
Delivery Method: Web
CNAMEs: none
HTTP Headers
Request URL:https://d2gfgnx4lxlciz.cloudfront.net/assets/jquery-20129d378db54e4ede9edeafab4be2ff.js
Request Method:GET
Status Code:301 Moved Permanently
Request Headersview source
Accept:*/*
Accept-Encoding:gzip,deflate,sdch
Accept-Language:en-US,en;q=0.8,zh-CN;q=0.6,zh-TW;q=0.4
Cache-Control:no-cache
Connection:keep-alive
Cookie:optimizelyEndUserId=oeu1387769272844r0.715743659529835; optimizelySegments=%7B%7D; optimizelyBuckets=%7B%7D
Host:d2gfgnx4lxlciz.cloudfront.net
Pragma:no-cache
Referer:https://sohelpfulme-staging.herokuapp.com/testuser
User-Agent:Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_9_1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/32.0.1700.107 Safari/537.36
Response Headersview source
Age:32
Connection:keep-alive
Content-Type:text/html
Date:Mon, 17 Feb 2014 22:43:36 GMT
Location:https://sohelpfulme-staging.herokuapp.com/assets/jquery-20129d378db54e4ede9edeafab4be2ff.js
Status:301 Moved Permanently
Strict-Transport-Security:max-age=31536000
Transfer-Encoding:chunked
Via:1.1 16fab6bd7655623b4e7dcaf090973fc8.cloudfront.net (CloudFront)
X-Amz-Cf-Id:oiKeV-b3OrhbtkjXrMtyNI9EMvydfdnZ8Drp2fxojNHiveqBNsttJA==
X-Cache:Hit from cloudfront
X-Rack-Cache:miss

For me it was a matter of the distribution configuration.
A quick checklist for future googlers of this problem:
HTTPS sites: If your website is https only make sure your include the protocol on the rails config
config.action_controller.asset_host = 'https://d1fnn4c7qqjz6e.cloudfront.net/'
And in the distribution the setting Origin Protocol Policy should be set to
Match Viewer
I also have the Viewer Protocol Policy set to
Redirect HTTP to HTTPS
If you serve fonts, you'll also want to choose to forward a whitelist of headers and include these headers
Access-Control-Allow-Origin
Access-Control-Allow-Methods
Access-Control-Allow-Headers
Access-Control-Max-Age
For firefox make sure you set the Allowed HTTP Methods to
GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, PUT, POST, PATCH, DELETE
You can check a file with
curl -I https://d1fnn4c7qqjz6e.cloudfront.net/assets/rails_admin/logo-5cf7f2f8b1177213b00e5ec63a032856.png//

This happened to me when I setup SSL. To fix it I deleted the distribution group on cloudfront and created a new distribution group and rolled the app again with the new cloudfront subdomain. Once I did that it no longer did a 301 back to my app.

This is weird but appending a '/' to the cloudfront url fixed this for me:
config.action_controller.asset_host = "https://d2gfgnx4lxlciz.cloudfront.net/"

Related

Docker app requests blocked by CORS to another container [duplicate]

Apparently, I have completely misunderstood its semantics. I thought of something like this:
A client downloads JavaScript code MyCode.js from http://siteA - the origin.
The response header of MyCode.js contains Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://siteB, which I thought meant that MyCode.js was allowed to make cross-origin references to the site B.
The client triggers some functionality of MyCode.js, which in turn make requests to http://siteB, which should be fine, despite being cross-origin requests.
Well, I am wrong. It does not work like this at all. So, I have read Cross-origin resource sharing and attempted to read Cross-Origin Resource Sharing in w3c recommendation.
One thing is sure - I still do not understand how I am supposed to use this header.
I have full control of both site A and site B. How do I enable the JavaScript code downloaded from the site A to access resources on the site B using this header?
P.S.: I do not want to utilize JSONP.
Access-Control-Allow-Origin is a CORS (cross-origin resource sharing) header.
When Site A tries to fetch content from Site B, Site B can send an Access-Control-Allow-Origin response header to tell the browser that the content of this page is accessible to certain origins. (An origin is a domain, plus a scheme and port number.) By default, Site B's pages are not accessible to any other origin; using the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header opens a door for cross-origin access by specific requesting origins.
For each resource/page that Site B wants to make accessible to Site A, Site B should serve its pages with the response header:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://siteA.com
Modern browsers will not block cross-domain requests outright. If Site A requests a page from Site B, the browser will actually fetch the requested page on the network level and check if the response headers list Site A as a permitted requester domain. If Site B has not indicated that Site A is allowed to access this page, the browser will trigger the XMLHttpRequest's error event and deny the response data to the requesting JavaScript code.
Non-simple requests
What happens on the network level can be slightly more complex than explained above. If the request is a "non-simple" request, the browser first sends a data-less "preflight" OPTIONS request, to verify that the server will accept the request. A request is non-simple when either (or both):
using an HTTP verb other than GET or POST (e.g. PUT, DELETE)
using non-simple request headers; the only simple requests headers are:
Accept
Accept-Language
Content-Language
Content-Type (this is only simple when its value is application/x-www-form-urlencoded, multipart/form-data, or text/plain)
If the server responds to the OPTIONS preflight with appropriate response headers (Access-Control-Allow-Headers for non-simple headers, Access-Control-Allow-Methods for non-simple verbs) that match the non-simple verb and/or non-simple headers, then the browser sends the actual request.
Supposing that Site A wants to send a PUT request for /somePage, with a non-simple Content-Type value of application/json, the browser would first send a preflight request:
OPTIONS /somePage HTTP/1.1
Origin: http://siteA.com
Access-Control-Request-Method: PUT
Access-Control-Request-Headers: Content-Type
Note that Access-Control-Request-Method and Access-Control-Request-Headers are added by the browser automatically; you do not need to add them. This OPTIONS preflight gets the successful response headers:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://siteA.com
Access-Control-Allow-Methods: GET, POST, PUT
Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
When sending the actual request (after preflight is done), the behavior is identical to how a simple request is handled. In other words, a non-simple request whose preflight is successful is treated the same as a simple request (i.e., the server must still send Access-Control-Allow-Origin again for the actual response).
The browsers sends the actual request:
PUT /somePage HTTP/1.1
Origin: http://siteA.com
Content-Type: application/json
{ "myRequestContent": "JSON is so great" }
And the server sends back an Access-Control-Allow-Origin, just as it would for a simple request:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://siteA.com
See Understanding XMLHttpRequest over CORS for a little more information about non-simple requests.
Cross-Origin Resource Sharing - CORS (A.K.A. Cross-Domain AJAX request) is an issue that most web developers might encounter, according to Same-Origin-Policy, browsers restrict client JavaScript in a security sandbox, usually JS cannot directly communicate with a remote server from a different domain. In the past developers created many tricky ways to achieve Cross-Domain resource request, most commonly using ways are:
Use Flash/Silverlight or server side as a "proxy" to communicate
with remote.
JSON With Padding (JSONP).
Embeds remote server in an iframe and communicate through fragment or window.name, refer here.
Those tricky ways have more or less some issues, for example JSONP might result in security hole if developers simply "eval" it, and #3 above, although it works, both domains should build strict contract between each other, it neither flexible nor elegant IMHO:)
W3C had introduced Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) as a standard solution to provide a safe, flexible and a recommended standard way to solve this issue.
The Mechanism
From a high level we can simply deem CORS as a contract between client AJAX call from domain A and a page hosted on domain B, a typical Cross-Origin request/response would be:
DomainA AJAX request headers
Host DomainB.com
User-Agent Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:2.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/4.0
Accept text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8,application/json
Accept-Language en-us;
Accept-Encoding gzip, deflate
Keep-Alive 115
Origin http://DomainA.com
DomainB response headers
Cache-Control private
Content-Type application/json; charset=utf-8
Access-Control-Allow-Origin DomainA.com
Content-Length 87
Proxy-Connection Keep-Alive
Connection Keep-Alive
The blue parts I marked above were the kernal facts, "Origin" request header "indicates where the cross-origin request or preflight request originates from", the "Access-Control-Allow-Origin" response header indicates this page allows remote request from DomainA (if the value is * indicate allows remote requests from any domain).
As I mentioned above, W3 recommended browser to implement a "preflight request" before submiting the actually Cross-Origin HTTP request, in a nutshell it is an HTTP OPTIONS request:
OPTIONS DomainB.com/foo.aspx HTTP/1.1
If foo.aspx supports OPTIONS HTTP verb, it might return response like below:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Wed, 01 Mar 2011 15:38:19 GMT
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://DomainA.com
Access-Control-Allow-Methods: POST, GET, OPTIONS, HEAD
Access-Control-Allow-Headers: X-Requested-With
Access-Control-Max-Age: 1728000
Connection: Keep-Alive
Content-Type: application/json
Only if the response contains "Access-Control-Allow-Origin" AND its value is "*" or contain the domain who submitted the CORS request, by satisfying this mandtory condition browser will submit the actual Cross-Domain request, and cache the result in "Preflight-Result-Cache".
I blogged about CORS three years ago: AJAX Cross-Origin HTTP request
According to this Mozilla Developer Network article,
A resource makes a cross-origin HTTP request when it requests a resource from a different domain, or port than the one which the first resource itself serves.
An HTML page served from http://domain-a.com makes an <img> src request for http://domain-b.com/image.jpg.
Many pages on the web today load resources like CSS style sheets, images and scripts from separate domains (thus it should be cool).
Same-Origin Policy
For security reasons, browsers restrict cross-origin HTTP requests initiated from within scripts.
For example, XMLHttpRequest and Fetch follow the same-origin policy.
So, a web application using XMLHttpRequest or Fetch could only make HTTP requests to its own domain.
Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)
To improve web applications, developers asked browser vendors to allow cross-domain requests.
The Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) mechanism gives web servers cross-domain access controls, which enable secure cross-domain data transfers.
Modern browsers use CORS in an API container - such as XMLHttpRequest or fetch - to mitigate risks of cross-origin HTTP requests.
How CORS works (Access-Control-Allow-Origin header)
Wikipedia:
The CORS standard describes new HTTP headers which provide browsers and servers a way to request remote URLs only when they have permission.
Although some validation and authorization can be performed by the server, it is generally the browser's responsibility to support these headers and honor the restrictions they impose.
Example
The browser sends the OPTIONS request with an Origin HTTP header.
The value of this header is the domain that served the parent page. When a page from http://www.example.com attempts to access a user's data in service.example.com, the following request header would be sent to service.example.com:
Origin: http://www.example.com
The server at service.example.com may respond with:
An Access-Control-Allow-Origin (ACAO) header in its response indicating which origin sites are allowed.
For example:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://www.example.com
An error page if the server does not allow the cross-origin request
An Access-Control-Allow-Origin (ACAO) header with a wildcard that allows all domains:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
Whenever I start thinking about CORS, my intuition about which site hosts the headers is incorrect, just as you described in your question. For me, it helps to think about the purpose of the same-origin policy.
The purpose of the same-origin policy is to protect you from malicious JavaScript on siteA.com accessing private information you've chosen to share only with siteB.com. Without the same-origin policy, JavaScript written by the authors of siteA.com could have your browser make requests to siteB.com, using your authentication cookies for siteB.com. In this way, siteA.com could steal the secret information you share with siteB.com.
Sometimes you need to work cross domain, which is where CORS comes in. CORS relaxes the same-origin policy for siteB.com, using the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header to list other domains (siteA.com) that are trusted to run JavaScript that can interact with siteB.com.
To understand which domain should serve the CORS headers, consider this. You visit malicious.com, which contains some JavaScript that tries to make a cross domain request to mybank.com. It should be up to mybank.com, not malicious.com, to decide whether or not it sets CORS headers that relax the same-origin policy, allowing the JavaScript from malicious.com to interact with it. If malicous.com could set its own CORS headers allowing its own JavaScript access to mybank.com, this would completely nullify the same-origin policy.
I think the reason for my bad intuition is the point of view I have when developing a site. It's my site, with all my JavaScript. Therefore, it isn't doing anything malicious, and it should be up to me to specify which other sites my JavaScript can interact with. When in fact I should be thinking: Which other sites' JavaScript are trying to interact with my site and should I use CORS to allow them?
From my own experience, it's hard to find a simple explanation why CORS is even a concern.
Once you understand why it's there, the headers and discussion becomes a lot clearer. I'll give it a shot in a few lines.
It's all about cookies. Cookies are stored on a client by their domain.
An example story: On your computer, there's a cookie for yourbank.com. Maybe your session is in there.
Key point: When a client makes a request to the server, it will send the cookies stored under the domain for that request.
You're logged in on your browser to yourbank.com. You request to see all your accounts, and cookies are sent for yourbank.com. yourbank.com receives the pile of cookies and sends back its response (your accounts).
If another client makes a cross origin request to a server, those cookies are sent along, just as before. Ruh roh.
You browse to malicious.com. Malicious makes a bunch of requests to different banks, including yourbank.com.
Since the cookies are validated as expected, the server will authorize the response.
Those cookies get gathered up and sent along - and now, malicious.com has a response from yourbank.
Yikes.
So now, a few questions and answers become apparent:
"Why don't we just block the browser from doing that?" Yep. That's CORS.
"How do we get around it?" Have the server tell the request that CORS is OK.
1. A client downloads javascript code MyCode.js from http://siteA - the origin.
The code that does the downloading - your html script tag or xhr from javascript or whatever - came from, let's say, http://siteZ. And, when the browser requests MyCode.js, it sends an Origin: header saying "Origin: http://siteZ", because it can see that you're requesting to siteA and siteZ != siteA. (You cannot stop or interfere with this.)
2. The response header of MyCode.js contains Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://siteB, which I thought meant that MyCode.js was allowed to make cross-origin references to the site B.
no. It means, Only siteB is allowed to do this request. So your request for MyCode.js from siteZ gets an error instead, and the browser typically gives you nothing. But if you make your server return A-C-A-O: siteZ instead, you'll get MyCode.js . Or if it sends '*', that'll work, that'll let everybody in. Or if the server always sends the string from the Origin: header... but... for security, if you're afraid of hackers, your server should only allow origins on a shortlist, that are allowed to make those requests.
Then, MyCode.js comes from siteA. When it makes requests to siteB, they are all cross-origin, the browser sends Origin: siteA, and siteB has to take the siteA, recognize it's on the short list of allowed requesters, and send back A-C-A-O: siteA. Only then will the browser let your script get the result of those requests.
Using React and Axios, join a proxy link to the URL and add a header as shown below:
https://cors-anywhere.herokuapp.com/ + Your API URL
Just adding the proxy link will work, but it can also throw an error for No Access again. Hence it is better to add a header as shown below.
axios.get(`https://cors-anywhere.herokuapp.com/[YOUR_API_URL]`,{headers: {'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': '*'}})
.then(response => console.log(response:data);
}
Warning: Not to be used in production
This is just a quick fix. If you're struggling with why you're not able to get a response, you can use this.
But again it's not the best answer for production.
If you are using PHP, try adding the following code at the beginning of the php file:
If you are using localhost, try this:
header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *");
If you are using external domains such as server, try this:
header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://www.website.com");
I worked with Express.js 4, Node.js 7.4 and Angular, and I had the same problem. This helped me:
a) server side: in file app.js I add headers to all responses, like:
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', req.headers.origin);
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", "Origin, X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Accept");
next();
});
This must be before all routes.
I saw a lot of added this headers:
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers","*");
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Credentials', true);
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'GET,PUT,POST,DELETE');
But I don’t need that,
b) client side: in sending by Ajax, you need to add "withCredentials: true," like:
$http({
method: 'POST',
url: 'url',
withCredentials: true,
data : {}
}).then(function(response){
// Code
}, function (response) {
// Code
});
If you want just to test a cross-domain application in which the browser blocks your request, then you can just open your browser in unsafe mode and test your application without changing your code and without making your code unsafe.
From macOS, you can do this from the terminal line:
open -a Google\ Chrome --args --disable-web-security --user-data-dir
In Python, I have been using the Flask-CORS library with great success. It makes dealing with CORS super easy and painless. I added some code from the library's documentation below.
Installing:
pip install -U flask-cors
Simple example that allows CORS for all domains on all routes:
from flask import Flask
from flask_cors import CORS
app = Flask(__name__)
CORS(app)
#app.route("/")
def helloWorld():
return "Hello, cross-origin-world!"
For more specific examples, see the documentation. I have used the simple example above to get around the CORS issue in an Ionic application I am building that has to access a separate flask server.
Simply paste the following code in your web.config file.
Noted that, you have to paste the following code under <system.webServer> tag
<httpProtocol>
<customHeaders>
<add name="Access-Control-Allow-Origin" value="*" />
<add name="Access-Control-Allow-Headers" value="Content-Type" />
<add name="Access-Control-Allow-Methods" value="GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS" />
</customHeaders>
</httpProtocol>
I can't configure it on the back-end server, but with these extensions in the browsers, it works for me:
For Firefox:
CORS Everywhere
For Google Chrome:
Allow CORS: Access-Control-Allow-Origin
Note: CORS works for me with this configuration:
For cross origin sharing, set header: 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin':'*';
Php: header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin':'*');
Node: app.use('Access-Control-Allow-Origin':'*');
This will allow to share content for different domain.
Nginx and Apache
As an addition to apsiller's answer, I would like to add a wiki graph which shows when a request is simple or not (and OPTIONS pre-flight request is send or not)
For a simple request (e.g., hotlinking images), you don't need to change your server configuration files, but you can add headers in the application (hosted on the server, e.g., in PHP) like Melvin Guerrero mentions in his answer - but remember: if you add full CORS headers in your server (configuration) and at same time you allow simple CORS in the application (e.g., PHP), this will not work at all.
And here are configurations for two popular servers:
turn on CORS on Nginx (nginx.conf file)
location ~ ^/index\.php(/|$) {
...
add_header 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' "$http_origin" always; # if you change "$http_origin" to "*" you shoud get same result - allow all domain to CORS (but better change it to your particular domain)
add_header 'Access-Control-Allow-Credentials' 'true' always;
if ($request_method = OPTIONS) {
add_header 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' "$http_origin"; # DO NOT remove THIS LINES (doubled with outside 'if' above)
add_header 'Access-Control-Allow-Credentials' 'true';
add_header 'Access-Control-Max-Age' 1728000; # cache preflight value for 20 days
add_header 'Access-Control-Allow-Methods' 'GET, POST, OPTIONS'; # arbitrary methods
add_header 'Access-Control-Allow-Headers' 'My-First-Header,My-Second-Header,Authorization,Content-Type,Accept,Origin'; # arbitrary headers
add_header 'Content-Length' 0;
add_header 'Content-Type' 'text/plain charset=UTF-8';
return 204;
}
}
turn on CORS on Apache (.htaccess file)
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# | Cross-domain Ajax requests |
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Enable cross-origin Ajax requests.
# http://code.google.com/p/html5security/wiki/CrossOriginRequestSecurity
# http://enable-cors.org/
# change * (allow any domain) below to your domain
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*"
Header always set Access-Control-Allow-Methods "POST, GET, OPTIONS, DELETE, PUT"
Header always set Access-Control-Allow-Headers "My-First-Header,My-Second-Header,Authorization, content-type, csrf-token"
Header always set Access-Control-Allow-Credentials "true"
The Access-Control-Allow-Origin response header indicates whether the
response can be shared with requesting code from the given origin.
Header type Response header
-------------------------------------------
Forbidden header name no
A response that tells the browser to allow code from any origin to
access a resource will include the following:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
For more information, visit Access-Control-Allow-Origin...
For .NET Core 3.1 API With Angular
Startup.cs : Add CORS
//SERVICES
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services){
//CORS (Cross Origin Resource Sharing)
//=====================================
services.AddCors();
}
//MIDDLEWARES
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IWebHostEnvironment env)
{
app.UseRouting();
//ORDER: CORS -> Authentication -> Authorization)
//CORS (Cross Origin Resource Sharing)
//=====================================
app.UseCors(x=>x.AllowAnyHeader().AllowAnyMethod().WithOrigins("http://localhost:4200"));
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
}
}
Controller : Enable CORS For Authorized Controller
//Authorize all methods inside this controller
[Authorize]
[EnableCors()]
public class UsersController : ControllerBase
{
//ActionMethods
}
Note: Only a temporary solution for testing
For those who can't control the backend for Options 405 Method Not Allowed, here is a workaround for theChrome browser.
Execute in the command line:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="path_to_profile"
Example:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --disable-web-security --user-data-dir="C:\Users\vital\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Profile 2"
Most CORS issues are because you are trying to request via client side ajax from a react, angular, jquery apps that are frontend basic libs.
You must request from a backend application.
You are trying to request from a frontend API, but the API you are trying to consume is expecting this request to be made from a backend application and it will never accept client side requests.

OCI ObjectStorage -- How to enable CORS for a bucket?

I need help in figuring out how to enable CORS (https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS) on an object-storage bucket please?
At the moment, Cross-Origin-Resource sharing is enabled for OCI ObjectStorage native & Swift API.
➜ ~ git:(master) ✗ curl -I https://objectstorage.us-phoenix-1.oraclecloud.com
HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 01:52:00 GMT
Connection: keep-alive
opc-request-id: 286901e2-4180-812c-2779-18b415009904
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
Access-Control-Allow-Methods: POST,PUT,GET,HEAD,DELETE,OPTIONS
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true
Access-Control-Expose-Headers: Access-Control-Allow-Credentials,Access-Control-Allow-Methods,Access-Control-Allow-Origin,Connection,opc-client-info,opc-request-id
Sadly, it seems like Oracle's object storage does not support CORS headers (nor ACLS - shame).
If you are generating pre-signed URLs to files in the private bucket, you could use the "Sec-Fetch-Mode" request header to know if the browser will check CORS for file.
See details: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Sec-Fetch-Mode
So you can do the following:
if Sec-Fetch-Mode = cors, you should download the file to your server and then send it to the browser (that way the file origin will be the same as your application).
if it's not, then you can generate a pre-signed URL and redirect the browser to it.
One last thing, IE and Safari browsers will not send the "Sec-Fetch-Mode" header even if they still check for cors, so in their case, the solution of sending the file through your server is to be done.
More about pre-signed URLs: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/ShareObjectPreSignedURL.html

Cross Domain ajax OPTIONS error 403 (Django)

I'm developing some site aaa.com with django, which sends cross-domain ajax "GET" requests to receive json data from bbb.com which is also running on django and is using REST framework. At this point everything works pretty fine with adding crossDomain: true; withCredentials:true. And of course its configurated on server-side of aaa.com.
...-Allow-Credentials: true;
...-Allow-Origin: bbb.com
The main issue comes when aaa.com is trying to make PUT POST DELETE ajax requests.
According to CORS documentation:
[https://www.w3.org/TR/cors/#cross-origin-request-with-preflight-0], client side ajax request is correct, and
...-Allow-Headers, ...-Allow-Methods
is matched with
...-Request-Headers, ...-Request-Methods
so this request is not 'simple' and first of all browser sends preflight request from aaa.com to bbb.com to ask if some custom headers and methods are allowed.
Everything is OK But I'm still getting 403 Error. Here is the request/response:
General:
Request URL:http://bbb.com/api/someapipage/
Request Method:OPTIONS
Status Code:403 Forbidden
Remote Address:some ip:80
Response Headers:
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials:true
Access-Control-Allow-Headers:accept, content-type, x-csrftoken, x-requested-with
Access-Control-Allow-Methods:GET, POST, OPTIONS, HEAD, PUT, DELETE
Access-Control-Allow-Origin:http://aaa.com
Allow:GET, POST, HEAD, OPTIONS
Connection:Keep-Alive
Content-Language:en
Content-Type:application/json
Date:Mon, 04 Jul 2016 14:20:38 GMT
Keep-Alive:timeout=5, max=100
Server:gunicorn/19.6.0
Transfer-Encoding:chunked
Vary:Accept,Accept-Language,Cookie
X-Frame-Options:SAMEORIGIN
Request Headers:
Accept:*/*
Accept-Encoding:gzip, deflate, sdch
Accept-Language:en-US,en;q=0.8,ru;q=0.6
Access-Control-Request-Headers:accept, content-type, x-csrftoken
Access-Control-Request-Method:POST
Connection:keep-alive
Host:aaa.com
Origin:http://aaa.com
Referer:http://aaa.com/
User-Agent:Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/49.0.2623.87 Safari/537.36
After week of tries to fix this issue I realised that server wants to Vary: Cookie on pre-flighted request which is impossible because cross-domain pre-flight request cannot contain cookie in its header.
I started finding some solution to this issue and found:
https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/13217
"Enabling django.middleware.locale.LocaleMiddleware causes that django adds a 'Vary: Cookie' header to every reponse."
So localMiddleware adds header Vary: Cookie even in pre-flight OPTIONS response
There are lots of reccomendations to use djang-cors-header to fix some of this problems. But using this package function are equal to my settings on server-side.
I have also found pretty package: django-dont-vary-on which if installed can set decorators to turn off Vary:cookie, but in my case i need to turn off Vary:cookie only in OPTIONS response.
Im bit new to django and actually cannot even imagine what to do in this situation. Every my step is just like walking on a mine field.
Is there any solution or some alternatives?
You have to CORS whitelist your client to access the server.
In case their is a Cross-domain request, the request becomes preflighted if you use methods other than GET, HEAD or POST.
Also, if POST is used to send request data with a Content-Type other
than application/x-www-form-urlencoded, multipart/form-data, or
text/plain, it becomes preflighted.
Its the server that allows the cross-domain client request to be processed or deny it (default).
So if you have access to the server-side application, you could do the following to get the response.
On server-side
Install django-cors-headers on your server side and white list your client domain or IP (it is also port specific)
pip install django-cors-headers
In settings.py, add it in your INSTALLED_APPS
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'corsheaders',
...
)
Add the corsheaders.middleware.CorsMiddleware in MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
'django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware',
'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
'**corsheaders.middleware.CorsMiddleware**',
'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
....
)
and define a CORS whitelist
CORS_ORIGIN_WHITELIST = (
'aaa.com',
)
Now as you have added your client in the CORS whitelist, you will now be able to make a successful ajax request.

Does if-no-match need to be set programmatically in ajax request, if server sends Etag

My question is pretty simple. Although while searching over, I have not found a simple satisfying answer.
I am using Jquery ajax request to get the data from a server. Server
hosts a rest API that sets the Etag and Cach-control headers to the GET requests. The Server also sets CORS headers to allow the Etag.
The client of the Api is a browser web app. I am using Ajax request to call the Api. Here are the response headers from server after a simple GET request:
Status Code: 200 OK
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
Cache-Control: no-transform, max-age=86400
Connection: Keep-Alive
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Sun, 30 Aug 2015 13:23:41 GMT
Etag: "-783704964"
Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=99
Server: Apache-Coyote/1.1
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Vary: Accept-Encoding
access-control-allow-headers: X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Etag,Authorization
access-control-allow-methods: GET, POST, DELETE, PUT
All I want to know is:
Do I need to manually collect the Etag from response headers sent from the server and attach an if-no-match header to ajax request?OR the Browser sends it by-default in a conditional get request when it has an 'Etag'
I have done debugging over the network console in the browser and It
seems the browser is doing the conditional GET automatically and
sets the if-no-match header.
if it is right, Suppose, I created a new resource, and then I called the get request. It gives me the past cached data for the first time. But when I reload the page, It gives the updated one. So I am confused that, If the dataset on the server-side has changed and it sends a different Etag, Why doesn't the browser get an updated data set from the server unless I have to reload
Also in case of pagination. Suppose I have a URL /users?next=0. next is a query param where the value for the next changes for every new request. Since each response will get its own 'Etag'. Will the browser store the 'Etag' based on request or it just stores the lastest Etag of the previous get request, irrespective of the URL.
Well, I have somehow figured out the solution myself:
The browser sends the if-no-match header itself when it sees url had the e-tag header on a previous request. Browser saves the e-tag with respect to that URL, so it does not matter how many requests with different URLs happen.
Also, a trick to force the browser to fetch a conditional-get to check the e-tag:
Set the max-age header to the lowest (for me 60s works great)
once the cache expires, thebrowser will send a conditional-get to check if the expired cached resource is valid. If the if-no-match header matches with e-tag. The server sends the response back with 304: Not-Modified header. This means the expired cached resource is valid and can be used.

Web app doesn't work in Internet Explorer

My application works beautifully on Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Opera, but fails on Internet Explorer 11 (I haven't tried earlier versions yet). Basically, I find that I cannot log in. I have narrowed the problem down to an issue with cookies. On login attempt, I get through to the server fine, and the response is the exact same as with any other browser. But for whatever reason, even though the Set-Cookie header is set, the cookie is not saved and sent on the next request to the server. My application has a (mostly) RESTful backend, and so authenticates on most requests. This obviously fails because the cookie is not set!
This problem persists whether served from localhost or from a real server. I should mention that it is a cross origin request, but the proper headers are in place (and they work on other browsers)
The response headers (when served from localhost) are as follows:
Response HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials true
Access-Control-Allow-Headers accept, content-type
Access-Control-Allow-Methods POST, PATCH, DELETE
Access-Control-Allow-Origin http://localhost:8000
Cache-Control no-cache,no-store
Content-Length 68
Content-Type application/json
Date Thu, 05 Mar 2015 20:00:20 GMT
Frame-Ancestors none
Server waitress
Set-Cookie session-id=ZqANyJ4KRUFoOaVgtGs/hcX+fxjMcCVM0kdRqF4riHglfAeBJJK56X9wn0XsNdPwUg; Domain=; HttpOnly;
Strict-Transport-Security max-age=31536000;
X-Frame-Options deny
I cannot figure out why this doesn't work solely in IE11! The app is not in an iframe, and the cookie actually appears in the cookies tab in the IE developer tools when I click on the network request, but it is not subsequently sent along with the next ones.
Some of my attempted solutions were:
Adding the Cache-Control header
Removing the HttpOnly flag from the cookie
Adding the Domain flag to the cookie (set as localhost or 127.0.0.1)
Removing Headers like X-Frame-Options, Frame-Ancestors, and Strict-Transport-Security
Tried multiple computers
Changed security settings to accept all cookies
All failed. Ideas?

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