I'm attempting to implement cross-domain HTTP access control without touching any code.
I've got my Apache(2) server returning the correct Access Control headers with this block:
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*"
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Methods "POST, GET, OPTIONS"
I now need to prevent Apache from executing my code when the browser sends a HTTP OPTIONS
request (it's stored in the REQUEST_METHOD
environment variable), returning 200 OK
.
How can I configure Apache to respond "200 OK" when the request method is OPTIONS?
I've tried this mod_rewrite
block, but the Access Control headers are lost.
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_METHOD} OPTIONS
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ $1 [R=200,L]
You're adding a header to a non-success (non-2xx) response, such as a redirect, in which case only the table corresponding to always is used in the ultimate response.
Correct "Header set":
If you set a directory for authenticated access, browsers such as Chrome and Safari (maybe others too) always send an uncredentialed OPTIONS request before the XmlHttpRequest call, which always gets 401 and fails if we don't set the .htaccess file/apache configuration to allow OPTIONS method without requiring authentication. That drove me nuts for 2 days and that's the kind of "esoteric" information that webmasters keep as secret, I guess! Anyway I configured my .htaccess like this and now it works:
Then you have to set headers properly on the PHP scripts.
Sometimes this approuch can help:
It is usefull when you have apache-like server