Consider the very simple example of using XMLHttpRequest
.
The following posts properly ( you can see it in the network tab or by directing your browser to http://requestb.in/yckncpyc
) although it prints a warning to the console
XMLHttpRequest cannot load http://requestb.in/yckncpyc. No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'null' is therefore not allowed access.
const method = "POST"
const req = new XMLHttpRequest()
req.open(method, 'http://requestb.in/yckncpyc')
req.send("foobar")
console.log("sent")
req.addEventListener('load', function() { console.log(req.status, req.response) })
Sure. I get that. What I don't get is why merely changing the verb used to a PUT
results in something completely different. The request sent is an OPTIONS
preflight request and prints
XMLHttpRequest cannot load http://requestb.in/yckncpyc. Response to preflight request doesn't pass access control check: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'null' is therefore not allowed access.
const method = "PUT"
const req = new XMLHttpRequest()
req.open(method, 'http://requestb.in/yckncpyc')
req.send("foobar")
console.log("sent")
req.addEventListener('load', function() { console.log(req.status, req.response) })
Why does the browser* treat these differently? It seems like something that would be done for security but that really makes no sense since an attacker can always use a POST instead of a PUT.
So what is the logic here?
- Tried this in Chrome 52, Safari 9.1.2