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Setting Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)

Last updated: 2024-01-06 14:59:34

    Overview

    You can set Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) for objects in buckets through the Cloud Object Storage (COS) console. COS supports configuring multiple rules to respond to OPTIONS requests. CORS is a mechanism that allows resources at one origin to be requested from another origin through HTTP requests. Origins are deemed different from each other as long as their protocols, domain names, or ports are different.
    COS supports response to OPTIONS requests for CORS, and returns specific rules set by developers to browsers, but the server does not verify whether subsequent cross-origin requests conform to the rules. For more information, please see Cross-Origin Resource Sharing and Setting Cross-Origin Access.

    Directions

    1. Log in to the COS console.
    2. Click Bucket List on the left sidebar.
    3. Locate the bucket for which you want to set CORS and click the bucket name to enter the bucket details page.
    4. Select Security Management > CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing) on the left sidebar and click Add a Rule.
    
    5. Add rule information (Fields with * are required). Configuration items are as follows:
    
    Allow-Origin: The sources from which cross-origin requests are allowed. You can add domains and IP addresses.
    The domain name does not need to end with a slash (/).
    More than one domain name can be specified, with one domain name per line.
    You can set a *, indicating that all domains and IPs are supported, which is not recommended.
    A single specific domain name is supported, such as http://www.abc.com.
    Second-level wildcard domain names, for example, http://*.abc.com, are supported. Note that each line can contain only one asterisk (*).
    Be careful not to omit the protocol name (http or https). If the port is not the default port 80, you need to add a port. An example IP address is http://10.10.10.10.
    Allow-Methods: GET, PUT, POST, DELETE, and HEAD are supported. Enumeration of one or more methods is allowed for a cross-origin request.
    Allow-Headers: notifies the server about which custom HTTP request headers are allowed for subsequent requests when an OPTIONS request is sent, such as x-cos-meta-md5.
    More than one header can be specified, with one header per line, for example, Content-Type.
    Header is easy to omit. Therefore, if there is no special requirement, you are advised to set this field to *, meaning that all headers are allowed.
    Uppercase and lowercase letters [a-z, A-Z] are supported, and no underscores (_) are allowed.
    Each header specified in Access-Control-Request-Headers must correspond to a value in Allowed-Header.
    Expose-Headers: Request headers commonly used in COS. For more information, please see Common Request Headers. Set this parameter according to the specific application requirements. ETag is recommended. Headers do not allow wildcards and are case insensitive. You can set multiple headers, with one header per line.
    Max-age: validity period (in seconds) of the results obtained by OPTIONS. The value must be a positive integer, such as 600.
    Return Vary: Origin: Set whether to return the Vary: Origin header. Enable this option if the browser has both CORS and non-CORS requests; otherwise, cross-origin access issues will occur.
    Note:
    If Return Vary: Origin is selected, browser access or CDN origin-pull requests may increase.
    6. After configuration, click Save and you will see the CORS rule added. To modify it, click Edit.
    
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