Server-Side Access Control

Firefox 3.5 implements the W3C Access Control specification.  As a result, Firefox 3.5 sends specific HTTP headers for cross-site requests initiated from withinXMLHttpRequest (which in Firefox 3.5 and beyond can be used to invoke different domains) and for cross-site font downloads.  It also expects to see specific HTTP headers sent back with cross-site responses.  An overview of these headers, including sample JavaScript code that initiates requests and processes responses from the server, as well as a discussion of each header, can be found here (HTTP Access Control).  The HTTP Access Control article should be read as a companion article to this one.  This article covers processing Access Control Requests and formulating Access Control Responses in PHP.  The target audience for this article are server programmers or administrators.  Although the code samples shown here are in PHP, similar concepts apply for ASP.net, Perl, Python, Java, etc.; in general, these concepts can be applied to any server-side programming environment that processes HTTP requests and dynamically formulates HTTP responses.

Discussion of HTTP headers

The article covering the HTTP headers used by both clients (such as Firefox 3.5 and beyond) and servers is here, and should be considered prerequisite reading.

Working code samples

The PHP snippets (and the JavaScript invocations to the server) in subsequent sections are taken from the working code samples posted here.  These will work in browsers that implement cross-site XMLHttpRequest such as Firefox 3.5 and above.

Simple cross-site requests

Simple Access Control Requests are initiated when:

  • An HTTP/1.1 GET or a POST is used as request method.  In the case of a POST, the Content-Type of the request body is one of application/x-www-form-urlencodedmultipart/form-data, or text/plain.
  • No custom headers are sent with the HTTP Request (such as X-Modified, etc.)

In this case, responses can be sent back based on some considerations.

  • If the resource in question is meant to be widely accessed (just like any HTTP resource accessed by GET), than sending back the Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * header will be sufficient, unless the resource needs credentials such as Cookies and HTTP Authentication information.
  • If the resource should be kept restricted based on requester domain, OR if the resource needs to be accessed with credentials (or sets credentials), then filtering by the request‘s ORIGIN header may be necessary, or at least echoing back the requester‘s ORIGIN (e.g. Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com).  Additionally, the Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true header will have to be sent.  This is discussed in asubsequent section.

The section on Simple Access Control Requests shows you the header exchanges between client and server.  Here is a PHP code segment that handles a Simple Request:

<?php

// We‘ll be granting access to only the arunranga.com domain which we think is safe to access this resource as application/xml

if($_SERVER[‘HTTP_ORIGIN‘] == "http://arunranga.com")
{
 
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com‘);
    header(‘Content-type: application/xml‘);
    readfile(‘arunerDotNetResource.xml‘);
}
else
{    
header(‘Content-Type: text/html‘);
echo "<html>";
echo "<head>";
echo "   <title>Another Resource</title>";
echo "</head>";
echo "<body>",
    "<p>This resource behaves two-fold:";
echo "<ul>",
        "<li>If accessed from <code>http://arunranga.com</code> it returns an XML document</li>";
echo " <li>If accessed from any other origin including from simply typing in the URL into the browser‘s address bar,";
echo "you get this HTML document</li>", 
    "</ul>",
"</body>",
"</html>";
}
?>

 The above checks to see if the ORIGIN header sent by the browser (obtained through $_SERVER[‘HTTP_ORIGIN‘]) matches ‘http://arunranga.com‘.  If yes, it returns Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com .  This example can be seen running here if you have a browser that implements Access Control (such as Firefox 3.5).

Preflighted requests

Preflighted Access Control Requests occur when:

  • A method other than GET or POST is used, or if POST is used with a Content-Type other than one of application/x-www-form-urlencoded,multipart/form-data, or text/plain.  For instance, if the Content-Type of the POST body is application/xml, a request is preflighted.
  • A custom header is (such as X-PINGARUNER) is sent with the request.

The section on Preflighted Access Control Requests shows a header exchange between client and server.  A server resource responding to a preflight requests needs to be able to make the following determinations:

  • Filtration based on ORIGIN, if any at all
  • Response to an OPTIONS request (which is the preflight request), including sending necessary values with Access-Control-Allow-MethodsAccess-Control-Allow-Headers (if any additional headers are needed in order for the application to work), and, if credentials are necessary for this resource,Access-Control-Allow-Credentials
  • Response to the actual request, including handling POST data, etc.

Here is an example in PHP of handling a preflighted request:

<?php 
if($_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD‘] == "GET")
{
    header(‘Content-Type: text/plain‘);
    echo "This HTTP resource is designed to handle POSTed XML input from arunranga.com and not be retrieved with GET";
   
}
elseif($_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD‘] == "OPTIONS")
{
    // Tell the Client we support invocations from arunranga.com and that this preflight holds good for only 20 days
    if($_SERVER[‘HTTP_ORIGIN‘] == "http://arunranga.com")
    {
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Methods: POST, GET, OPTIONS‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Headers: X-PINGARUNER‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Max-Age: 1728000‘);
    header("Content-Length: 0");
    header("Content-Type: text/plain");
    //exit(0);
    }
    else
    {
    header("HTTP/1.1 403 Access Forbidden");
    header("Content-Type: text/plain");
    echo "You cannot repeat this request";
   
    }
}
elseif($_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD‘] == "POST")
{
    /* Handle POST by first getting the XML POST blob, and then doing something to it, and then sending results to the client
    */
    if($_SERVER[‘HTTP_ORIGIN‘] == "http://arunranga.com")
    {
            $postData = file_get_contents(‘php://input‘);
            $document = simplexml_load_string($postData);
            
            // do something with POST data

            $ping = $_SERVER[‘HTTP_X_PINGARUNER‘];
           
                       
            header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com‘);
            header(‘Content-Type: text/plain‘);
            echo // some string response after processing
    }
    else
        die("POSTing Only Allowed from arunranga.com");
}
else
    die("No Other Methods Allowed");

?>

Note the appropriate headers being sent back in response to the OPTIONS preflight as well as to the POST data.  One resource thus handles the preflight as well as the actual request. In the response to the OPTIONS request, the server notifies the client that the actual request can indeed be made with the POSTmethod, and header fields such as X-PINGARUNER can be sent with the actual request.  This example can be seen running here if you have a browser that implements Access Control (such as Firefox 3.5).

Credentialed requests

Credentialed Access Control Requests -- that is, requests that are accompanied by Cookies or HTTP Authentication information (and which expect Cookies to be sent with responses) -- can be either Simple or Preflighted, depending on the request methods used.

In a Simple Request scenario, Firefox 3.5 (and above) will send the request with Cookies (e.g. if the withCredentials flag is set on  XMLHttpRequest).  If the server responds with Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true attached to the credentialed response, then the response is accepted by the client and exposed to web content.  In a Preflighted Request, the server can respond with Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true to the OPTIONS request.

Here is some PHP that handles credentialed requests:

<?php

if($_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD‘] == "GET")
{
    
    // First See if There Is a Cookie   
    //$pageAccess = $_COOKIE[‘pageAccess‘];
    if (!isset($_COOKIE["pageAccess"])) {
    
    setcookie("pageAccess", 1, time()+2592000);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com‘);
    header(‘Cache-Control: no-cache‘);
    header(‘Pragma: no-cache‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true‘);
    header(‘Content-Type: text/plain‘);
    echo ‘I do not know you or anyone like you so I am going to mark you with a Cookie :-)‘;
    
    }
    else
    {
        
    $accesses = $_COOKIE[‘pageAccess‘];
    setcookie(‘pageAccess‘, ++$accesses, time()+2592000);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true‘);
    header(‘Cache-Control: no-cache‘);
    header(‘Pragma: no-cache‘);
    header(‘Content-Type: text/plain‘);
    echo ‘Hello -- I know you or something a lot like you!  You have been to ‘, $_SERVER[‘SERVER_NAME‘], ‘ at least ‘, $accesses-1, ‘ time(s) before!‘;
    }
    
}
elseif($_SERVER[‘REQUEST_METHOD‘] == "OPTIONS")
{
    // Tell the Client this preflight holds good for only 20 days
    if($_SERVER[‘HTTP_ORIGIN‘] == "http://arunranga.com")
    {
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://arunranga.com‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Methods: GET, OPTIONS‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true‘);
    header(‘Access-Control-Max-Age: 1728000‘);
    header("Content-Length: 0");
    header("Content-Type: text/plain");
    //exit(0);
    }
    else
    {
    header("HTTP/1.1 403 Access Forbidden");
    header("Content-Type: text/plain");
    echo "You cannot repeat this request";
    
    }
}
else
    die("This HTTP Resource can ONLY be accessed with GET or OPTIONS");



?>

 Note that in the case of credentialed requests, the Access-Control-Allow-Origin: header must not have a wildcard value of "*".   It must mention a valid origin domain.  The example above can be seen running here if you have a browser that implements Access Control (such as Firefox 3.5).

Apache examples

Restrict access to certain URIs

One helpful trick is to use an Apache rewrite, environment variable, and headers to apply Access-Control-Allow-* to certain URIs. This is useful, for example, to constrain cross-origin requests to GET /api(.*).json requests without credentials:

RewriteRule ^/api(.*)\.json$ /api$1.json [CORS=True]
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*" env=CORS
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Methods "GET" env=CORS
Header set Access-Control-Allow-Credentials "false" env=CORS
 

See also

 

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Server-Side_Access_Control

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