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asgi-cors's Introduction

asgi-cors

PyPI CircleCI License

ASGI middleware for applying CORS headers to an ASGI application.

Installation

pip install asgi-cors

Some background on CORS

CORS stands for Cross-Origin Resource Sharing. It is a web standard that allows applications to opt-in to allowing JavaScript running on other domains to make fetch() calls that can retrieve data from the application.

See MDN's CORS article for more background.

The easiest way to allow scripts running on other domains to access data from an application is to add the following HTTP header:

Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *

This will allow scripts running on ANY domain to make fetch() calls against the application. For public data this is often fine, but there are situations where this may not be what you want to do: one example might be code that runs behind a VPN and needs to allow specific, trusted hosts to load data without opening itself up to every site on the internet.

For these cases, the server needs to inspect the Origin header from the client and return that Origin in the above header. For example, an incoming request from http://localhost:8000 might be judged as trusted - in which case the application server needs to reply like so:

Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://localhost:8000

Note that the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header can only return a single value. This means that if you want to allow requests from multiple origins you need to dynamically whitelist those origins and return a different header value depending on the incoming request.

How to use this middleware

We will assume you have an existing ASGI app, in a variable called app.

First, import the asgi_cors function:

from asgi_cors import asgi_cors

To enable CORS headers for everywhere (by adding the Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * header to every request), do this:

app = asgi_cors(app, allow_all=True)

If you wish to only allow it from a specific host, use the following:

app = asgi_cors(app, hosts=[
    "https://www.example.com"
])

Now JavaScript executing on https://www.example.com will be able to call your API. You can test this out by opening up example.com in your browser, opening your browser's devtools console and pasting in the following JavaScript:

fetch("https://your-api.com/").then(r => r.json()).then(d => console.log(d))

You can include multiple hosts in the list.

Finally, if you want to open your application up to requests from a wildcard-defined selection of hosts, use the following:

app = asgi_cors(app, host_wildcards=[
    "http://localhost:800*",
    "http://*.example.com"
])

This will enable access from any JavaScript running on a local host server on ports 8000 through 8009 - or from any subdomain of example.com.

If you need to do something more complicated that cannot be expressed using the hosts= or host_wildcards= parameters, you can use callback= to specify a custom function. For example:

def validate_origin(origin):
    return origin.startswith("https://")

app = asgi_cors(app, callback=validate_origin)

Your callback function will be passed the Origin header that was passed in by the browser.

Using the middleware as a decorator

If you are defining your ASGI application directly as a function, you can use the asgi_cors_decorator function decorator like so:

from asgi_cors import asgi_cors_decorator


@asgi_cors_decorator(allow_all=True)
async def my_asgi_app(scope, recieve, send):
    # Your app goes here

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