I'd say there's no simple way of doing it, where simple means "just add 1-2 lines that will write the additional header and keep the existing functionality". So, the best solution would be to subclass the SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
class and re-implement the functionality, with the addition of the new header.
The problem behind why there is no simple way of doing this can be observed by looking at the implementation of the SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
class in the Python library: http://hg.python.org/cpython/file/19c74cadea95/Lib/http/server.py#l654
Notice the send_head()
method, particularly the lines at the end of the method which send the response headers. Notice the invocation of the end_headers()
method. This method writes the headers to the output, together with a blank line which signals the end of all headers and the start of the response body: http://docs.python.org/py3k/library/http.server.html#http.server.BaseHTTPRequestHandler.end_headers
Therefore, it would not be possible to subclass the SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
handler, invoke the super-class do_GET()
method, and then just add another header -- because the sending of the headers has already finished when the call to the super-class do_GET()
method returns. And it has to work like this because the do_GET()
method has to send the body (the file that is requested), and to send the body - it has to finalize sending the headers.
So, again, I think you're stuck with sub-classing the SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
class, implementing it exactly as the code in the library (just copy-paste it?), and add another header before the call to the end_headers()
method in send_head()
:
...
self.send_header("Last-Modified", self.date_time_string(fs.st_mtime))
# this below is the new header
self.send_header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', '*')
self.end_headers()
return f
...