I would like to allow CORS requests to a common internal API from all internal websites (*.myintra.net
) and also from all localhost
ports (for when we are debugging various apps locally in IIS Express, i.e. http://localhost:12345
, http://localhost:54321
, etc).
This answer shows me how to use SetIsOriginAllowedToAllowWildcardSubdomains()
to allow all subdomains.
This answer shows me how to allow any localhost
port by using a SetIsOriginAllowed()
delegate function.
However, it seems that these options do not work together. My configuration:
private bool AllowLocalhost(string origin)
{
var uri = new Uri(origin);
return (uri.Host == "localhost");
}
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddCors(options =>
{
string[] corsList = "https://*.myintra.net,https://some.specificurl.com".Split(",");
options.AddPolicy("CorsPolicy", builder =>
{
builder
.WithOrigins(corsList.ToArray())
.SetIsOriginAllowedToAllowWildcardSubdomains()
.SetIsOriginAllowed(origin => AllowLocalhost(origin)) // disallows calls from myapp.myintra.net since it doesn't uri.Host match "localhost"
...();
});
});
...
}
I can swap the order of the configuration:
.SetIsOriginAllowed(origin => AllowLocalhost(origin))
.SetIsOriginAllowedToAllowWildcardSubdomains()
But then the AllowLocalhost()
function is never called. I suppose it makes sense that only one works at a time, since the first check may return true
, only to have the second one return false
.
Ideally, I'd like a solution that doesn't involve me having to reimplement the allow wildcard
logic inside of my AllowLocalhost()
function.
Also worth noting that I really only need this in a development environment. Production would need to allow wildcards, but disallow localhost
no matter the port.
SetIsOriginAllowedToAllowWildcardSubdomains
is hidden behind aninternal
extensions class, so there's no clean way to get to it.