I'm making an API call using Axios in a React Web app. However, I'm getting this error in Chrome:
XMLHttpRequest cannot load
https://example.restdb.io/rest/mock-data. No
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested
resource. Origin 'http://localhost:8080' is therefore not allowed
access.
{
axios
.get("https://example.restdb.io/rest/mock-data", {
headers: {
"x-apikey": "API_KEY",
},
responseType: "json",
})
.then((response) => {
this.setState({ tableData: response.data });
});
}
I have also read several answers on Stack Overflow about the same issue, titled Access-Control-Allow-Origin but still couldn't figure out how to solve this. I don't want to use an extension in Chrome or use a temporary hack to solve this. Please suggest the standard way of solving the above issue.
After trying out few answers I have tried with this,
headers: {
'x-apikey': '59a7ad19f5a9fa0808f11931',
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' : '*',
'Access-Control-Allow-Methods':'GET,PUT,POST,DELETE,PATCH,OPTIONS',
},
Now I get the error as,
Request header field Access-Control-Allow-Origin is not
allowed by Access-Control-Allow-Headers in preflight response
I'll have a go at this complicated subject.
What is origin?
The origin itself is the name of a host (scheme, hostname, and port) i.g. https://www.google.com or could be a locally opened file file:// etc.. It is where something (i.g. a web page) originated from. When you open your web browser and go to https://www.google.com, the origin of the web page that is displayed to you is https://www.google.com. You can see this in Chrome Dev Tools under Security:
The same applies for if you open a local HTML file via your file explorer (which is not served via a server):
What has this got to do with CORS issues?
When you open your browser and go to https://website.example, that website will have the origin of https://website.example. This website will most likely only fetch images, icons, js files and do API calls towards https://website.example, basically it is calling the same server as it was served from. It is doing calls to the same origin.
If you open your web browser and open a local HTML file and in that HTML file there is JavaScript which wants to do a request to Google for example, you get the following error:
The same-origin policy tells the browser to block cross-origin requests. In this instance origin null is trying to do a request to https://www.google.com (a cross-origin request). The browser will not allow this because of the CORS Policy which is set and that policy is that cross-origin requests is not allowed.
Same applies for if my page was served from a server on localhost:
Localhost server example
If we host our own localhost API server running on localhost:3000 with the following code:
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
app.use(express.static('public'))
app.get('/hello', function (req, res) {
// res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
res.send('Hello World');
})
app.listen(3000, () => {
console.log('alive');
})
And open a HTML file (that does a request to the localhost:3000 server) directory from the file explorer the following error will happen:
Since the web page was not served from the localhost server on localhost:3000 and via the file explorer the origin is not the same as the server API origin, hence a cross-origin request is being attempted. The browser is stopping this attempt due to CORS Policy.
But if we uncomment the commented line:
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
app.use(express.static('public'))
app.get('/hello', function (req, res) {
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
res.send('Hello World');
})
app.listen(3000, () => {
console.log('alive');
})
And now try again:
It works, because the server which sends the HTTP response included now a header stating that it is OK for cross-origin requests to happen to the server, this means the browser will let it happen, hence no error.
Just to be clear, CORS policies are security features of modern day browsers, to protect people from harmful and malicious code.
How to fix things (One of the following)
Serve the page from the same origin as where the requests you are making reside (same host).
Allow the server to receive cross-origin requests by explicitly stating it in the response headers.
If using a reverse proxy such as Nginx, configure Nginx to send response headers that allow CORS.
Don't use a browser. Use cURL for example, it doesn't care about CORS Policies like browsers do and will get you what you want.
Example flow
Following is taken from: Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)
Remember, the same-origin policy tells the browser to block
cross-origin requests. When you want to get a public resource from a
different origin, the resource-providing server needs to tell the
browser "This origin where the request is coming from can access my
resource". The browser remembers that and allows cross-origin resource
sharing.
Step 1: client (browser) request When the browser is making a cross-origin request, the browser adds an Origin header with the
current origin (scheme, host, and port).
Step 2: server response On the server side, when a server sees this header, and wants to allow access, it needs to add an
Access-Control-Allow-Origin header to the response specifying the
requesting origin (or * to allow any origin.)
Step 3: browser receives response When the browser sees this response with an appropriate Access-Control-Allow-Origin header, the
browser allows the response data to be shared with the client site.
More links
Here is another good answer, more detailed as to what is happening: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10636765/1137669
If your backend support CORS, you probably need to add to your request this header:
headers: {"Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*"}
[Update] Access-Control-Allow-Origin is a response header - so in order to enable CORS - you need to add this header to the response from your server.
But for the most cases better solution would be configuring the reverse proxy, so that your server would be able to redirect requests from the frontend to backend, without enabling CORS.
You can find documentation about CORS mechanism here:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Access_control_CORS
I had a similar problem and I found that in my case the withCredentials: true in the request was activating the CORS check while issuing the same in the header would avoid the check:
Reason: expected ‘true’ in CORS header ‘Access-Control-Allow-Credentials’
Do not use
withCredentials: true
but set
'Access-Control-Allow-Credentials':true
in the headers.
For Spring Boot - React js apps I added #CrossOrigin annotation on the controller and it works:
#CrossOrigin(origins = {"http://localhost:3000"})
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/api")
But take care to add localhost correct => 'http://localhost:3000', not with '/' at the end => 'http://localhost:3000/', this was my problem.
I had the same error. I solved it by installing CORS in my backend using npm i cors. You'll then need to add this to your code:
const cors = require('cors');
app.use(cors());
This fixed it for me; now I can post my forms using AJAX and without needing to add any customized headers.
For any one who used cors package change
const cors = require('cors');
app.use(cors());
to
const cors = require('cors');
app.use(cors({credentials: true, origin: 'http://localhost:5003'}));
change http://localhost:5003 to your client domain
Using the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header to the request won't help you in that case while this header can only be used on the response...
To make it work you should probably add this header to your response.You can also try to add the header crossorigin:true to your request.
First of all, CORS is definitely a server-side problem and not client-side but I was more than sure that server code was correct in my case since other apps were working using the same server on different domains. The solution for this described in more details in other answers.
My problem started when I started using axios with my custom instance. In my case, it was a very specific problem when we use a baseURL in axios instance and then try to make GET or POST calls from anywhere, axios adds a slash / between baseURL and request URL. This makes sense too, but it was the hidden problem. My Laravel server was redirecting to remove the trailing slash which was causing this problem.
In general, the pre-flight OPTIONS request doesn't like redirects. If your server is redirecting with 301 status code, it might be cached at different levels. So, definitely check for that and avoid it.
After a long time of trying to figure out how CORS works. I tried many way to fix it in my FE and BE code. Some ways CORS errors appearance, some ways the server didn't receive body from client, and other errors...
And finally got this way. I'm hoping this can help someone:
BE code (NodeJS + Express)
var express = require("express");
const cors = require("cors");
var app = express();
app.use(
cors({
origin: "*",
})
);
app.use(function (req, res, next) {
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
next();
});
// your routers and codes
My FE code (JS):
fetch(url, {
method: 'POST',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
Connection: 'Keep-Alive',
Authorization: `Bearer test`,
},
body: JSON.stringify(data),
});
I imagine everyone knows what cors is and what it is for.
In a simple way and for example if you use nodejs and express for the management, enable it is like this
Dependency:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/cors
app.use (
cors ({
origin: "*",
... more
})
);
And for the problem of browser requests locally, it is only to install this extension of google chrome.
Name: Allow CORS: Access-Control-Allow-Origin
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/allow-cors-access-control/lhobafahddgcelffkeicbaginigeejlf?hl=es
This allows you to enable and disable cros in local, and problem solved.
npm i cors
const app = require('express')()
app.use(cors())
Above code worked for me.
You can create a new instance of axios with a custom config, and then use this new configured instance,
create a file with axios-configure.js, add this sharable exported method and use this preconfigured import, rather importing axios directly like we use traditionally,
import axios from 'axios';
import baseUrl from './data-service';
const app = axios.create({
baseURL: baseUrl,
headers: {
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': '*',
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
},
withCredentials: true
})
export default app;
use this exported function like,
import axios from '../YOUR_DIRECTORY/axios-configure';
axios.get();// wont throw cors
dont import axios from axios;
then use axios.get() it will dont throw cors worked for us,
NOTE this solution will work for them who facing CORS at local environment as local starts at 5000 and backend at 8080, but in production, build gets deployed from java 8080 no CORS in productions (Facing CORS at only local environment)
As I understand the problem is that request is sent from localhost:3000 to localhost:8080 and browser rejects such requests as CORS. So solution was to create proxy
My solution was :
import proxy from 'http-proxy-middleware'
app.use('/api/**', proxy({ target: "http://localhost:8080" }));
$ npm install cors
After installing cors from npm add the code below to your node app file. It solved my problem.
var express = require('express')
var cors = require('cors')
var app = express()
app.use(cors())
I had a similar problem when I tried to create the React Axios instance.
I resolved it using the below approach.
const instance = axios.create({
baseURL: "https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/",
withCredentials: false,
headers: {
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' : '*',
'Access-Control-Allow-Methods':'GET,PUT,POST,DELETE,PATCH,OPTIONS',
}
});
try it proxy
package.json add code:
"proxy":"https://localhost:port"
and restart npm enjoy
same code
const instance = axios.create({
baseURL: "/api/list",
});
You can use cors proxy in some specific cases - https://cors.sh
In node js(backend), Use cors npm module
$ npm install cors
Then add these lines to support Access-Control-Allow-Origin,
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
app.use(cors())
app.get('/products/:id', cors(), function (req, res, next) {
res.json({msg: 'This is CORS-enabled for a Single Route'});
});
You can achieve the same, without requiring any external module
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", "Origin, X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Accept");
next();
});
},
"proxy": "http://localhost:8080",
"devDependencies": {
use proxy in package.json
Related
I am currently trying to perform a simple fetch instruction in my React application, though, the actual url always ends up being that of the React application itself.
The React app is hosted at localhost:3000, and the server I am trying to connect to is at localhost:8080.
In the package.json I have a proxy field like so:
"proxy": "http://localhost:8080"
Then I have a fetch somewhere like so:
fetch('/', { /* stuff... */ })
But when I check in my browser it says a fetch request happened to http://localhost:3000; in another application, it used to be that if you had a proxy, this would just go to localhost:8080, but not this time.
I tried stuff like deleting the node_modules folder and package-lock.json, but that did not do anything (also did a npm install afterward). If I do this:
fetch('http://localhost:8080', { /* stuff... */ })
The url seems to be the correct one, though I get all sorts of random errors which I just do not understand:
Access to fetch at 'http://localhost:8080/' from origin 'http://localhost:3000' has been blocked by CORS policy: Response to preflight request doesn't pass access control check: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. If an opaque response serves your needs, set the request's mode to 'no-cors' to fetch the resource with CORS disabled.
I have never heard of CORS, perhaps this is new? So I have two questions really:
How to get my React proxy to work?
How do I get rid of this CORS stuff? I am running both servers myself so "access control checks" is a whole load of bogus...
Cheers!
For the proxy to handle a request, the endpoint you are calling shouldn't be handled by your React development server. For example, instead of fetch('/'), which is the endpoint that sends your React index.html file, your API should be at something like fetch('/api/').
Like the doc says:
To tell the development server to proxy any unknown requests to your API server in development, add a proxy field to your package.json, for example: "proxy": "http://localhost:8080".
This way, when you fetch('/api/todos') in development, the development server will recognize that it’s not a static asset, and will proxy your request to http://localhost:8080/api/todos as a fallback. The development server will only attempt to send requests without text/html in its Accept header to the proxy.
If it's still not working, you can switch to configuring the proxy manually, which is the second way to set up a proxy that Create React App talks about.
For that, first, remove the proxy you have in package.json, keep it as it's the rule for the endpoint I talked about above, then:
npm install http-proxy-middleware --save-dev
And finally, create a src/setupProxy.js file:
const { createProxyMiddleware } = require('http-proxy-middleware');
module.exports = function(app) {
app.use(
'/api', // 👈🏽 your API endpoint goes here.
createProxyMiddleware({
target: 'http://localhost:8080', // 👈🏽 your API URL goes here.
changeOrigin: true,
})
);
};
With that, you should be good to go. And about CORS, it's not new. You can read about it on mdn if you like.
No bro, that's how it's supposed to work. Add a route listener, say "/api", to your server and then call fetch('/api') from the client.
In the browser it will show up as http://localhost:3000/api even though your server is running on 8080.
When running the following fetch request in my React project:
const options = { method: "GET", headers: { accept: "application/json", "Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*" } };
response = await fetch(
`https://api.b365api.com/v1/bet365/upcoming?league_id=${league}&sport_id=${sport.id}&token=TOKEN`,
options
).catch((err) => console.error(err));
The request returns with the error Cross-Origin Request Blocked: The Same Origin Policy disallows reading the remote resource at https://api.b365api.com/v1/bet365/upcoming?league_id=131095496&sport_id=1&token=TOKEN. (Reason: CORS header ‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin’ missing). Status code: 200.
I've searched through A LOT of different pages and haven't found an answer I can use other than using a proxy of some sort like https://cors-anywhere.herokuapp.com/ which has a limit and just doesn't work in production.
Does this or this helps you?
In my experience, there are somethings that can cause CORS errors:
For me, the most common issue is a backend function error... this happens a lot when I'm coding a new feature and happens an unhandled exception in my code. This throws CORS error.
Or maybe you have to config your backend server to use CORS:
import express from 'express'
import cors from 'cors'
const app = express()
app.use( cors() ) // - here
Hope I had helped you, good luck
I have a website that fetches some JSON data from a heroku server I set up. I'm getting a CORS error and I'm not sure how to resolve it.
I am requesting it from a url, let's say, https://www.example.com/content/?id=12345
In my heroku endpoint, I have code that looks like this:
res.set("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", ["https://www.example.com"]);
But I still get this error that says the origins don't match:
Cross-Origin Request Blocked: The Same Origin Policy disallows reading the remote resource at
https://mysterious-hamlet-72124.herokuapp.com/5iucwuFiaK1nJqWwfSHt.
(Reason: CORS header ‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin’ does not match ‘https://example.com’).
Right now, I just set it to:
res.set("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", ["*"]);
and it works, but I'd like to know how to do it right.
Edit: Thanks for catching my typo...Dang do I feel stupid. I forgot to add "www" on my server-side, like the comments below said.
can you try below code in server side and it will resolve cors issue
var allowCrossDomain = function(req, res, next) {
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', 'example.com');
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'GET,PUT,POST,DELETE');
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', 'Content-Type');
next();
}
app.configure(function() {
app.use(allowCrossDomain);
});
You can use the cors npm package
and add this code to your app.js (or whatever is your main file)
const cors = require("cors");
...
app.use(
cors({
origin: "Your front-end domain",
})
);
this works for me.
But if you want to know more about what CORS is I suggest you Mozilla developer guide
I have a React application and Nodejs(Express) in the Backend. After deploying to the host server, The function I did for updating some documents stop working properly. It gives the CORS error:
I have this line of code to handle CORS policy in my server.js:
app.use((req, res, next) => {
res.set({"Access-Control-Allow-Origin" : "*",
"Access-Control-Allow-Methods" : "HEAD, OPTIONS, GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE",
"Access-Control-Allow-Headers" : "Content-Type, Authorization, X-Requested-With"})
next();
});
It is ok for GET and POST methods but does not work for PUT (Don't know if Delete works haven't tried)
I am on this issue for plenty of time; tried this: https://stackoverflow.com/a/42463858/11896129
looked for a bunch of solutions on the net, tried to configure it from IIS web.config file, nothing resolve my problem. Which part may I miss?
As stated on MDN:
Additionally, for HTTP request methods that can cause side-effects on server's data (in particular, for HTTP methods other than GET, or for POST usage with certain MIME types), the specification mandates that browsers "preflight" the request, soliciting supported methods from the server with an HTTP OPTIONS request method, and then, upon "approval" from the server, sending the actual request with the actual HTTP request method.
So you do have to answer preflight requests:
app.options("*", (req, res) => {
res.status(200).send("Preflight request allowed");
});
Read more about preflight requests here.
This should work, I used this CORS configuration
app.use(function(req,res,next){
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET, PUT, POST, DELETE, PATCH");
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", "Accept, Content-Type, Authorization, X-Requested-With");
next();
});
Most likely the error No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present that you see is coming from the preflight OPTIONS request, which is most likely not even reaching your express backend but is being hanlded by webserver in the front.
Either arrange for OPTIONS requests also to be relayed to your express backend in your webserver configuration or instruct the webserver to respond to it with required headers.
Check these:
https://support.plesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/115001338265-How-to-set-up-CORS-cross-origin-resource-sharing-in-Plesk-for-Linux-
https://support.plesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360005431913-Is-it-possible-to-enable-CORS-cross-origin-resource-sharing-on-Plesk-for-Windows
https://talk.plesk.com/threads/iis-cors-configuration-problem-for-node-js-backend.355677/
You can use npm package cors (https://www.npmjs.com/package/cors) in your project. Install it and then configure it as a middleware. And put it before your application routes.
const cors = require("cors");
const corsOptions = { origin: "*", methods:
"GET,HEAD,PUT,PATCH,POST,DELETE", allowedHeaders:
"Access-Control-Allow-Headers,Access-Control-Allow-Origin,Access-Control-Request-Method,Access-Control-Request-Headers,Origin,Cache-Control,Content-Type,X-Token,X-Refresh-Token", credentials: true, preflightContinue: false,
optionsSuccessStatus: 204 };
app.use(cors(corsOptions));
Please try with below configuration
const cors = require('cors');
app.use(cors())
Please let me know if works for you or not.
See the Github repo for more info: https://github.com/expressjs/cors
We can use npm package to enable this too
npm install --save cors
After package is in place, use it as middleware as follows.
var express = require('express');
var cors = require('cors');
var app = express();
app.use(cors());
If you have requirement to confine your resource access to single application, that can be done as following
app.use(cors({
origin: 'http://yourapp.com'
}));
If you have requirement to add access to multiple applications, that can be done as follows
var allowedOrigins = ['http://localhost:3000',
'http://yourapp.com'];
app.use(cors({
origin: function(origin, callback){
// allow requests with no origin
// (like mobile apps or curl requests)
if(!origin) return callback(null, true);
if(allowedOrigins.indexOf(origin) === -1){
var msg = 'The CORS policy for this site does not ' +
'allow access from the specified Origin.';
return callback(new Error(msg), false);
}
return callback(null, true);
}
}));
Did you write middleware that attaches header before the line of code that handles PUT request? I have a similar code but it worked for me.
Another approach is to use npm 'cors' module.
For testing purpose, you can attach below test (you can attach the specific headers/methods later):
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', '*');
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', '*');
res.header('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', '*');
I am deploying a simple node server and a React app to Netlify. The React App makes an API request to the server, and uses cors via const cors = require("cors"); in version 2.8.5.
At first I specified the following (server.js)
app.use(
cors({
origin: CLIENT_ORIGIN
})
);
which only seems to tell the server "I am using CORS," but does not specifically set any headers or permit any whitelisted websites to access the server. I then set the CLIENT_ORIGIN in a .env file in my dev environment, and via the Build environment variables on Netlify. I deployed a new built for both the server and front-end, however I must have gotten it wrong somewhere:
Access to fetch at 'https://serverUrl.com/example/get' from origin
'https://react-app-example.com' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-
Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. If an
opaque response serves your needs, set the request's mode to 'no-cors' to
fetch the resource with CORS disabled.
I then tried setting:
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
res.header(
"Access-Control-Allow-Origin",
"https://react-app-example.com"
);
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers", "Content-Type,Authorization");
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET,POST,PUT,PATCH,DELETE");
if (req.method === "OPTIONS") {
return res.sendStatus(204);
}
next();
});
which also did not work. The error message remained the same. The thing that irks me is that I have a similar from from a few months ago which is built very similarly, but stays on heroku. The same methods as described above work without problem.
What am I missing?
After trying various things I finally arrived at the fact that Netlify does not support Node apps by itself (without extra tedious config).
The closest solution can be found here in another answer or via another service like Heroku.
The major issue I have with heroku is that when the dyno (in my case the server providing API routes) doesn't get called for a while it goes to sleep to save resources, and in turn takes a whole lot longer to respond on the first call. Have not found any other free solution for node/express apps that serve API routes, yet.
UPDATE: Heroku and Netlify don't play along nicely unless you add the following CORS parameters to the backend:
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", CLIENT_ORIGIN);
res.header(
"Access-Control-Allow-Headers",
"Origin, X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Accept"
);
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET,POST,PUT,PATCH,DELETE");
res.header("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials", true); <--- this is the only different line I added.
if (req.method === "OPTIONS") {
return res.sendStatus(204);
}
next();
});
And then the following to the front end request via fetch:
fetch(`${API_BASE_URL}/dept/get/`, {
method: 'GET',
credentials: 'include', <-- this is the most important change
})
.then((res) => {...}