A Django App that adds CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing) headers to responses.
Although JSON-P is useful, it is strictly limited to GET requests. CORS builds on top of XmlHttpRequest to allow developers to make cross-domain requests, similar to same-domain requests. Read more about it here: http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/cors/
This is a fork of [https://github.com/ottoyiu/django-cors-headers/](django-cors-headers by ottoyiu) because of inactivity.
Supported versions of Python and Django :
Py 2.7 | Py 3.3 | Py 3.4 | Py 3.5 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Django 1.8 | YES | YES | YES | YES |
Django 1.9 | YES | YES | YES |
Install by downloading the source and running:
python setup.py install
or
pip install django-cors-middleware
and then add it to your installed apps:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'corsheaders',
...
)
You will also need to add a middleware class to listen in on responses:
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
...
'corsheaders.middleware.CorsMiddleware',
'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
...
)
Note that CorsMiddleware
needs to come before Django's CommonMiddleware
if you are using Django's USE_ETAGS = True
setting, otherwise the CORS headers will be lost from the 304 not-modified responses, causing errors in some browsers.
Add hosts that are allowed to do cross-site requests to CORS_ORIGIN_WHITELIST
or set CORS_ORIGIN_ALLOW_ALL
to True
to allow all hosts.
If True, the whitelist will not be used and all origins will be accepted
Default:
CORS_ORIGIN_ALLOW_ALL = False
Specify a list of origin hostnames that are authorized to make a cross-site HTTP request
Example:
CORS_ORIGIN_WHITELIST = (
'google.com',
'hostname.example.com'
)
Default:
CORS_ORIGIN_WHITELIST = ()
Specify a regex list of origin hostnames that are authorized to make a cross-site HTTP request; Useful when you have a large amount of subdomains for instance.
Example:
CORS_ORIGIN_REGEX_WHITELIST = ('^(https?://)?(\w+\.)?google\.com$', )
Default:
CORS_ORIGIN_REGEX_WHITELIST = ()
You may optionally specify these options in settings.py to override the defaults. Defaults are shown below:
Specify a URL regex for which to enable the sending of CORS headers; Useful when you only want to enable CORS for specific URLs, e. g. for a REST API under /api/
.
Example:
CORS_URLS_REGEX = r'^/api/.*$'
Default:
CORS_URLS_REGEX = '^.*$'
Specify the allowed HTTP methods that can be used when making the actual request
Default:
CORS_ALLOW_METHODS = (
'GET',
'POST',
'PUT',
'PATCH',
'DELETE',
'OPTIONS'
)
Specify which non-standard HTTP headers can be used when making the actual request
Default:
CORS_ALLOW_HEADERS = (
'x-requested-with',
'content-type',
'accept',
'origin',
'authorization',
'x-csrftoken'
)
Specify which HTTP headers are to be exposed to the browser
Default:
CORS_EXPOSE_HEADERS = ()
Specify the number of seconds a client/browser can cache the preflight response
Note: A preflight request is an extra request that is made when making a "not-so-simple" request (eg. content-type is not application/x-www-form-urlencoded) to determine what requests the server actually accepts. Read more about it here: http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/cors/
Default:
CORS_PREFLIGHT_MAX_AGE = 86400
Specify whether or not cookies are allowed to be included in cross-site HTTP requests (CORS).
Default:
CORS_ALLOW_CREDENTIALS = False
Specify whether to replace the HTTP_REFERER header if CORS checks pass so that CSRF django middleware checks will work with https
Note: With this feature enabled, you also need to add the corsheaders.middleware.CorsPostCsrfMiddleware after django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware to undo the header replacement
Default:
CORS_REPLACE_HTTPS_REFERER = False
Specify a list of URL regex for which to allow all origins
Example:
CORS_URLS_ALLOW_ALL_REGEX = (r'^/api/users$', )
Default:
CORS_URLS_ALLOW_ALL_REGEX = ()