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httpxmlhttprequestcors

How to make XMLHttpRequest cross-domain withCredentials, HTTP Authorization (CORS)?


I'm unable to make a cross-domain request with an Authorization header (testing with Firefox). I have requests working without authentication, but once I set withCredentials to true I am no longer able to read the response from the server.

On the server I send back these headers (using an after_request method in Flask):

resp.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Origin'] = '*'
resp.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Credentials'] = 'true'
resp.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Methods'] = 'POST, OPTIONS'
resp.headers['Access-Control-Allow-Headers'] = 'Authorization'

No OPTIONS call is ever actually made by Firefox. On the client I make an XMLHttpRequest call:

var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest()
xhr.open( 'POST', 'http://test.local:8002/test/upload', true)
xhr.withCredentials = true
xhr.onreadystatechange = function() {
    console.log( xhr.status, xhr.statusText )
}
xhr.send(fd)

Without withCredentials set the log statement will log the expecting information to the console. Once I set the value however the xhr doesn't allow access and I just write a 0 value and an empty string. I haven't set the authorization header here, but that shouldn't affect my ability to read the result.

If I attempt to add a username/password to the "open" command I get a NS_ERROR_DOM_BAD_URI: Access to restricted URI denied error.

What am I doing wrong?


Solution

  • I've written an article with a complete CORS setup.

    I found several issues that can result in this problem:

    1. The Access-Control-Allow-Origin cannot be a wildcard if credentials are being used. It's easiest just to copy the Origin header of the request to this field. It's entirely unclear why the standard would disallow a wildcard.
    2. Firefox caches the Access-Control results even if you clear the cache (perhaps for the session). Restarting forced it to do a new OPTIONS request. To aid in debugging I added the header Access-Control-Max-Age: 1
    3. The username/password of the open command is apparently not usable as the credentials. You must add an Authorization header yourself. xhr.setRequestHeader( 'Authorization', 'Basic ' + btoa( user + ':' + pass ) )

    Overall the withCredentials system is rather braindead. It's easier to simply write a server that accepts the authorization as part of the body of the request.