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Dealing with CORS

So you’ve encountered some CORS problems and are on the hunt for the solution? You’re in the right spot.

Here’s a good resource talking about CORS in general, in case you don’t fully understand what’s wrong.

Simple CORS — Middleware

As per the above link, “simple” requests involve GET, HEAD, or POST requests. You can CORS enable all the routes affected by some middleware by doing the following:

routes/_middleware.ts
import { FreshContext } from "$fresh/server.ts";

export async function handler(req: Request, ctx: FreshContext) {
  const origin = req.headers.get("Origin") || "*";
  const resp = await ctx.next();
  const headers = resp.headers;

  headers.set("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", origin);
  headers.set("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials", "true");
  headers.set(
    "Access-Control-Allow-Headers",
    "Content-Type, Content-Length, Accept-Encoding, X-CSRF-Token, Authorization, accept, origin, Cache-Control, X-Requested-With",
  );
  headers.set(
    "Access-Control-Allow-Methods",
    "POST, OPTIONS, GET, PUT, DELETE",
  );

  return resp;
}

Complex CORS — Middleware

What about for one of the other HTTP methods? Then you’ll need to be able to deal with “preflight requests”. Let’s imagine you’re trying to support a DELETE route. Then you’d need to do something like this:

routes/_middleware.ts
import { FreshContext } from "$fresh/server.ts";

export async function handler(req: Request, ctx: FreshContext) {
  if (req.method == "OPTIONS") {
    const resp = new Response(null, {
      status: 204,
    });
    const origin = req.headers.get("Origin") || "*";
    const headers = resp.headers;
    headers.set("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", origin);
    headers.set("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "DELETE");
    return resp;
  }
  const origin = req.headers.get("Origin") || "*";
  const resp = await ctx.next();
  const headers = resp.headers;

  headers.set("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", origin);
  headers.set("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials", "true");
  headers.set(
    "Access-Control-Allow-Headers",
    "Content-Type, Content-Length, Accept-Encoding, X-CSRF-Token, Authorization, accept, origin, Cache-Control, X-Requested-With",
  );
  headers.set(
    "Access-Control-Allow-Methods",
    "POST, OPTIONS, GET, PUT, DELETE",
  );

  return resp;
}

These complex results require a two step process:

  1. the browser makes an OPTIONS request to find out about the allowed methods
  2. the browser makes the actual request

So you can see the middleware has some special handling to deal with OPTIONS requests.

CORS in Routes

Of course there’s no reason why you need to use middleware in order to solve this. The headers can be set directly in the handler as well.