Book Image

CORS Essentials

By : Rajesh Gunasundaram
Book Image

CORS Essentials

By: Rajesh Gunasundaram

Overview of this book

This book explains how to use CORS, including specific implementations for platforms such as Drupal, WordPress, IIS Server, ASP.NET, JBoss, Windows Azure, and Salesforce, as well as how to use CORS in the Cloud on Amazon AWS, YouTube, Mulesoft, and others. It examines limitations, security risks, and alternatives to CORS. It explores the W3C Specification and major developer documentation sources about CORS. It attempts to predict what kinds of extension to the CORS specification, or completely new techniques, will come in the future to address the limitations of CORS Web developers will learn how to share code and assets across domains with CORS. They will learn a variety of techniques that are rather similar in their method and syntax. The book is organized by similar types of framework and application, so it can be used as a reference. Developers will learn about special cases, such as when a proxy is necessary. And they will learn about some alternative techniques that achieve similar goals, and when they may be preferable to using CORS
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
CORS Essentials
Credits
About the Authors
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Summary


We looked at the same-origin policy, which limits cross-origin resource sharing. We covered a lot of the basics needed to work around the same-origin policy with CORS, including the header and request.

We saw how a script tag on a local domain can retrieve resources from a target domain as responseText request and how we can then do things with the responseText request on the local domain.

We have learned when preflight is helpful, and when it is required.

We have learned how to enable the crossorigin attribute in the script tag for troubleshooting.

We have looked at CORS with jQuery and its limitations.

We have compared CORS with other cross-origin methods: JSON-P, WebSockets, and window.postMessage. We have learned why CORS can be better and more secure than these methods.

In the next chapter, we will learn how to use proxies for CORS, for example, using the CORS plugin for jQuery with corsproxy.io.