aiohttp_cors
library implements
Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)
support for aiohttp
asyncio-powered asynchronous HTTP server.
Jump directly to Usage part to see how to use aiohttp_cors
.
Web security model is tightly connected to Same-origin policy (SOP). In short: web pages cannot Read resources which origin doesn't match origin of requested page, but can Embed (or Execute) resources and have limited ability to Write resources.
Origin of a page is defined in the Standard as tuple
(schema, host, port)
(there is a notable exception with Internet Explorer: it doesn't use port to
define origin, but uses it's own
Security Zones).
Can Embed means that resource from other origin can be embedded into
the page,
e.g. by using <script src="...">
, <img src="...">
,
<iframe src="...">
.
Cannot Read means that resource from other origin source cannot be
obtained by page
(source — any information that would allow to reconstruct resource).
E.g. the page can Embed image with <img src="...">
,
but it can't get information about specific pixels, so page can't reconstruct
original image
(though some information from the other resource may still be leaked:
e.g. the page can read embedded image dimensions).
Limited ability to Write means, that the page can send POST requests to
other origin with limited set of Content-Type
values and headers.
Restriction to Read resource from other origin is related to authentication mechanism that is used by browsers: when browser reads (downloads) resource he automatically sends all security credentials that user previously authorized for that resource (e.g. cookies, HTTP Basic Authentication).
For example, if Read would be allowed and user is authenticated
in some internet banking,
malicious page would be able to embed internet banking page with iframe
(since authentication is done by the browser it may be embedded as if
user is directly navigated to internet banking page),
then read user private information by reading source of the embedded page
(which may be not only source code, but, for example,
screenshot of the embedded internet banking page).
Cross-origin Resource Sharing (CORS) allows to override SOP for specific resources.
In short, CORS works in the following way.
When page https://client.example.com
request (Read) resource
https://server.example.com/resource
that have other origin,
browser implicitly appends Origin: https://client.example.com
header
to the HTTP request,
effectively requesting server to give read permission for
the resource to the https://client.example.com
page:
GET /resource HTTP/1.1 Origin: https://client.example.com Host: server.example.com
If server allows access from the page to the resource, it responds with
resource with Access-Control-Allow-Origin: https://client.example.com
HTTP header
(optionally allowing exposing custom server headers to the page and
enabling use of the user credentials on the server resource):
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: https://client.example.com Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true Access-Control-Expose-Headers: X-Server-Header
Browser checks, if server responded with proper
Access-Control-Allow-Origin
header and accordingly allows or denies
access for the obtained resource to the page.
CORS specification designed in a way that servers that are not aware of CORS will not expose any additional information, except allowed by the SOP.
To request resources with custom headers or using custom HTTP methods
(e.g. PUT
, DELETE
) that are not allowed by SOP,
CORS-enabled browser first send preflight request to the
resource using OPTIONS
method, in which he queries access to the resource
with specific method and headers:
OPTIONS / HTTP/1.1 Origin: https://client.example.com Access-Control-Request-Method: PUT Access-Control-Request-Headers: X-Client-Header
CORS-enabled server responds is requested method is allowed and which of the specified headers are allowed:
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: https://client.example.com Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true Access-Control-Allow-Methods: PUT Access-Control-Allow-Headers: X-Client-Header Access-Control-Max-Age: 3600
Browser checks response to preflight request, and, if actual request allowed, does actual request.
You can install aiohttp_cors
as a typical Python library from PyPI or
from git:
$ pip install aiohttp_cors
Note that aiohttp_cors
requires versions of Python >= 3.4.1 and
aiohttp
>= 1.1.
To use aiohttp_cors
you need to configure the application and
enable CORS on
resources and routes
that you want to expose:
import asyncio
from aiohttp import web
import aiohttp_cors
@asyncio.coroutine
def handler(request):
return web.Response(
text="Hello!",
headers={
"X-Custom-Server-Header": "Custom data",
})
app = web.Application()
# `aiohttp_cors.setup` returns `aiohttp_cors.CorsConfig` instance.
# The `cors` instance will store CORS configuration for the
# application.
cors = aiohttp_cors.setup(app)
# To enable CORS processing for specific route you need to add
# that route to the CORS configuration object and specify its
# CORS options.
resource = cors.add(app.router.add_resource("/hello"))
route = cors.add(
resource.add_route("GET", handler), {
"http://client.example.org": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(
allow_credentials=True,
expose_headers=("X-Custom-Server-Header",),
allow_headers=("X-Requested-With", "Content-Type"),
max_age=3600,
)
})
Each route has it's own CORS configuration passed in CorsConfig.add()
method.
CORS configuration is a mapping from origins to options for that origins.
In the example above CORS is configured for the resource under path /hello
and HTTP method GET
, and in the context of CORS:
- This resource will be available using CORS only to
http://client.example.org
origin. - Passing of credentials to this resource will be allowed.
- The resource will expose to the client
X-Custom-Server-Header
server header. - The client will be allowed to pass
X-Requested-With
andContent-Type
headers to the server. - Preflight requests will be allowed to be cached by client for
3600
seconds.
Resource will be available only to the explicitly specified origins.
You can specify "all other origins" using special *
origin:
cors.add(route, {
"*":
aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(allow_credentials=False),
"http://client.example.org":
aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(allow_credentials=True),
})
Here the resource specified by route
will be available to all origins with
disallowed credentials passing, and with allowed credentials passing only to
http://client.example.org
.
By default ResourceOptions
will be constructed without any allowed CORS
options.
This means, that resource will be available using CORS to specified origin,
but client will not be allowed to send either credentials,
or send non-simple headers, or read from server non-simple headers.
To enable sending or receiving all headers you can specify special value
*
instead of sequence of headers:
cors.add(route, {
"http://client.example.org":
aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(
expose_headers="*",
allow_headers="*"),
})
You can specify default CORS-enabled resource options using
aiohttp_cors.setup()
's defaults
argument:
cors = aiohttp_cors.setup(app, defaults={
# Allow all to read all CORS-enabled resources from
# http://client.example.org.
"http://client.example.org": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(),
})
# Enable CORS on routes.
# According to defaults POST and PUT will be available only to
# "http://client.example.org".
hello_resource = cors.add(app.router.add_resource("/hello"))
cors.add(hello_resource.add_route("POST", handler_post))
cors.add(hello_resource.add_route("PUT", handler_put))
# In addition to "http://client.example.org", GET request will be
# allowed from "http://other-client.example.org" origin.
cors.add(hello_resource.add_route("GET", handler), {
"http://other-client.example.org":
aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(),
})
# CORS will be enabled only on the resources added to `CorsConfig`,
# so following resource will be NOT CORS-enabled.
app.router.add_route("GET", "/private", handler)
Also you can specify default options for resources:
# Allow POST and PUT requests from "http://client.example.org" origin.
hello_resource = cors.add(app.router.add_resource("/hello"), {
"http://client.example.org": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(),
})
cors.add(hello_resource.add_route("POST", handler_post))
cors.add(hello_resource.add_route("PUT", handler_put))
Resource CORS configuration allows to use allow_methods
option that
explicitly specifies list of allowed HTTP methods for origin
(or *
for all HTTP methods).
By using this option it is not required to add all resource routes to
CORS configuration object:
# Allow POST and PUT requests from "http://client.example.org" origin.
hello_resource = cors.add(app.router.add_resource("/hello"), {
"http://client.example.org":
aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(allow_methods=["POST", "PUT"]),
})
# No need to add POST and PUT routes into CORS configuration object.
hello_resource.add_route("POST", handler_post)
hello_resource.add_route("PUT", handler_put)
# Still you can add additional methods to CORS configuration object:
cors.add(hello_resource.add_route("DELETE", handler_delete))
Here is an example of how to enable CORS for all origins with all CORS features:
cors = aiohttp_cors.setup(app, defaults={
"*": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(
allow_credentials=True,
expose_headers="*",
allow_headers="*",
)
})
# Add all resources to `CorsConfig`.
resource = cors.add(app.router.add_resource("/hello"))
cors.add(resource.add_route("GET", handler_get))
cors.add(resource.add_route("PUT", handler_put))
cors.add(resource.add_route("POST", handler_put))
cors.add(resource.add_route("DELETE", handler_delete))
Old routes API is supported — you can use router.add_router
and
router.register_route
as before, though this usage is discouraged:
cors.add(
app.router.add_route("GET", "/hello", handler), {
"http://client.example.org": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(
allow_credentials=True,
expose_headers=("X-Custom-Server-Header",),
allow_headers=("X-Requested-With", "Content-Type"),
max_age=3600,
)
})
You can enable CORS for all added routes by accessing routes list in the router:
# Setup application routes.
app.router.add_route("GET", "/hello", handler_get)
app.router.add_route("PUT", "/hello", handler_put)
app.router.add_route("POST", "/hello", handler_put)
app.router.add_route("DELETE", "/hello", handler_delete)
# Configure default CORS settings.
cors = aiohttp_cors.setup(app, defaults={
"*": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(
allow_credentials=True,
expose_headers="*",
allow_headers="*",
)
})
# Configure CORS on all routes.
for route in list(app.router.routes()):
cors.add(route)
You can also use CorsViewMixin
on web.View
:
class CorsView(web.View, CorsViewMixin):
cors_config = {
"*": ResourceOption(
allow_credentials=True,
allow_headers="X-Request-ID",
)
}
@asyncio.coroutine
def get(self):
return web.Response(text="Done")
@custom_cors({
"*": ResourceOption(
allow_credentials=True,
allow_headers="*",
)
})
@asyncio.coroutine
def post(self):
return web.Response(text="Done")
cors = aiohttp_cors.setup(app, defaults={
"*": aiohttp_cors.ResourceOptions(
allow_credentials=True,
expose_headers="*",
allow_headers="*",
)
})
cors.add(
app.router.add_route("*", "/resource", CorsView),
webview=True)
TODO: fill this
To setup development environment:
# Clone sources repository:
git clone https://github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp_cors.git .
# Create and activate virtual Python environment:
python3 -m venv env
source env/bin/activate
# Install requirements and aiohttp_cors into virtual environment
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
To run tests:
tox
To run only runtime tests in current environment:
py.test
To run only static code analysis checks:
tox -e check
To run Selenium tests with Firefox web driver you need to install Firefox.
To run Selenium tests with Chromium web driver you need to:
- Install Chrome driver. On Ubuntu 14.04 it's in
chromium-chromedriver
package. - Either add
chromedriver
to PATH or setWEBDRIVER_CHROMEDRIVER_PATH
environment variable tochromedriver
, e.g. on Ubuntu 14.04WEBDRIVER_CHROMEDRIVER_PATH=/usr/lib/chromium-browser/chromedriver
.
To release version vA.B.C
from the current version of master
branch
you need to:
Create local branch
vA.B.C
.In
CHANGES.rst
set release date to today.In
aiohttp_cors/__about__.py
change version fromA.B.Ca0
toA.B.C
.Create pull request with
vA.B.C
branch, wait for all checks to successfully finish (Travis and Appveyor).Merge pull request to master.
Update and checkout
master
branch.Create and push tag for release version to GitHub:
git tag vA.B.C git push --tags
Now Travis should ran tests again, and build and deploy wheel on PyPI.
If Travis release doesn't work for some reason, use following steps for manual release upload.
Install fresh versions of setuptools and pip. Install
wheel
for building wheels. Installtwine
for uploading to PyPI.pip install -U pip setuptools twine wheel
Configure PyPI credentials in
~/.pypirc
.Build distribution:
rm -rf build dist; python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
Upload new release to PyPI:
twine upload dist/*
Edit release description on GitHub if needed.
Announce new release on the aio-libs mailing list: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/aio-libs.
Post release steps:
- In
CHANGES.rst
add template for the next release. - In
aiohttp_cors/__about__.py
change version fromA.B.C
toA.(B + 1).0a0
.
Please report bugs, issues, feature requests, etc. on GitHub.
Copyright 2015 Vladimir Rutsky <[email protected]>.
Licensed under the
Apache License, Version 2.0,
see LICENSE
file for details.