CORS has to be set up manually but as mentioned, it's not that difficult. Anything that becomes repetitive in request handler methods can usually be squirrelled away somewhere, and setting HTTP response headers is no different. These can be set via BedSheet Middleware:
using afIoc
using afBedSheet
const class CorsMiddleware : Middleware {
@Inject private const HttpRequest req
@Inject private const HttpResponse res
@Inject private const ResponseProcessors processors
new make(|This|in) { in(this) }
override Void service(MiddlewarePipeline pipeline) {
// echo back in the response, whatever was sent in the request
res.headers["Access-Control-Allow-Origin"] = req.headers["Origin"]
res.headers["Access-Control-Allow-Methods"] = req.headers["Access-Control-Request-Method"]
res.headers["Access-Control-Allow-Headers"] = req.headers["Access-Control-Request-Headers"]
// deal with any pre-flight requests
if (req.httpMethod == "OPTIONS")
processors.processResponse(Text.fromPlain("OK"))
else
pipeline.service
}
}
Note that the above will enable CORS on all requests - handy for dev, but for live code you should be more choosy and validate any given Origins, Methods, and Headers.
BedSheet Middleware
should be contributed to the MiddlewarePipeline
service:
@Contribute { serviceType=MiddlewarePipeline# }
static Void contributeMiddleware(Configuration config) {
config.set("myApp.cors", config.autobuild(CorsMiddleware#)).before("afBedSheet.routes")
}
Note that CorsMiddleware
is inserted into the pipeline before BedSheet routes to ensure it gets executed.