A Sanic extension for handling Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS), making cross-origin AJAX possible. Based on flask-cors by Cory Dolphin.
This package has a simple philosophy, when you want to enable CORS, you wish to enable it for all use cases on a domain. This means no mucking around with different allowed headers, methods, etc. By default, submission of cookies across domains is disabled due to the security implications, please see the documentation for how to enable credential'ed requests, and please make sure you add some sort of CSRF protection before doing so!
Sept 2022 Notice: If you are having unexpected results in Sanic v22.9+, upgrade to Sanic-CORS v2.2.0
December 2021 Notice: If you need compatibility with Sanic v21.12+, upgrade to Sanic-CORS v2.0
Sept 2021 Notice: Please upgrade to Sanic-CORS v1.0.1 if you need compatibility with Sanic v21.9,<21.12
Install the extension with using pip, or easy_install.
$ pip install -U sanic-cors
This package exposes a Sanic extension which by default enables CORS support on all routes, for all origins and methods. It allows parameterization of all CORS headers on a per-resource level. The package also contains a decorator, for those who prefer this approach.
In the simplest case, initialize the Sanic-Cors extension with default arguments in order to allow CORS for all domains on all routes.
from sanic import Sanic
from sanic.response import text
from sanic_cors import CORS, cross_origin
app = Sanic(__name__)
CORS(app)
@app.route("/", methods=['GET', 'OPTIONS'])
def hello_world(request):
return text("Hello, cross-origin-world!")
Alternatively, you can specify CORS options on a resource and origin level of granularity by passing a dictionary as the resources option, mapping paths to a set of options.
app = Sanic(__name__)
cors = CORS(app, resources={r"/api/*": {"origins": "*"}})
@app.route("/api/v1/users", methods=['GET', 'OPTIONS'])
def list_users(request):
return text("user example")
This extension also exposes a simple decorator to decorate sanic routes
with. Simply add @cross_origin(app)
below a call to Sanic's
@app.route(..)
to allow CORS on a given route.
@app.route("/", methods=['GET', 'OPTIONS'])
@cross_origin(app)
def hello_world(request):
return text("Hello, cross-origin-world!")
Sanic-CORS can use Sanic-Ext to load the plugin for you. (But you need to make sure to disable the built-in sanic-ext CORS support too)
from sanic import Sanic
from sanic.response import text
from sanic_ext import Extend
from sanic_cors.extension import CORS
app = Sanic(__name__)
CORS_OPTIONS = {"resources": r'/*', "origins": "*", "methods": ["GET", "POST", "HEAD", "OPTIONS"]}
# Disable sanic-ext built-in CORS, and add the Sanic-CORS plugin
Extend(app, extensions=[CORS], config={"CORS": False, "CORS_OPTIONS": CORS_OPTIONS})
@app.route("/", methods=['GET', 'OPTIONS'])
def hello_world(request):
return text("Hello, cross-origin-world!")
For a full list of options, please see the flask-cors documentation.
CORS requests have to send pre-flight requests
via the options method, Sanic by default only allows the GET
method, in order to
service your CORS requests you must specify OPTIONS
in the methods argument to
your routes decorator.
Sanic-CORS includes an automatic_options
configuration parameter to
allow the plugin handle the OPTIONS
response automatically for you. This is enabled by default, but you
can turn it off if you wish to do your own OPTIONS
response.
CORS(app, automatic_options=True)
@app.delete('/api/auth')
@auth.login_required
async def auth_logout(request):
auth.logout_user(request)
return json(None, status=OK)
or with the app config key:
app = Sanic(__name__)
app.config['CORS_AUTOMATIC_OPTIONS'] = True
CORS(app)
@app.delete('/api/auth')
@auth.login_required
async def auth_logout(request):
auth.logout_user(request)
return json(None, status=OK)
or directly on the route with the cross_origin
decorator:
@app.route('/api/auth', methods={'DELETE','OPTIONS'})
@auth.login_required
@cross_origin(app, automatic_options=True)
async def auth_logout(request):
auth.logout_user(request)
return json(None, status=OK)
Note: For the third example, you must use @route()
, rather than
@delete()
because you need to enable both DELETE
and OPTIONS
to
work on that route, even though the decorator is handling the OPTIONS
response.
A simple set of tests is included in test/
. To run, install nose,
and simply invoke nosetests
or python setup.py test
to exercise
the tests.
Questions, comments or improvements? Please create an issue on Github. I do my best to include every contribution proposed in any way that I can.
This Sanic extension is based upon the Decorator for the HTTP Access Control written by Armin Ronacher.