org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.CrossOrigin Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright 2002-2019 the original author or authors.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.springframework.web.bind.annotation;
import java.lang.annotation.Documented;
import java.lang.annotation.ElementType;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;
import org.springframework.core.annotation.AliasFor;
import org.springframework.web.cors.CorsConfiguration;
/**
* Annotation for permitting cross-origin requests on specific handler classes
* and/or handler methods. Processed if an appropriate {@code HandlerMapping}
* is configured.
*
* Both Spring Web MVC and Spring WebFlux support this annotation through the
* {@code RequestMappingHandlerMapping} in their respective modules. The values
* from each type and method level pair of annotations are added to a
* {@link CorsConfiguration} and then default values are applied via
* {@link CorsConfiguration#applyPermitDefaultValues()}.
*
*
The rules for combining global and local configuration are generally
* additive -- e.g. all global and all local origins. For those attributes
* where only a single value can be accepted such as {@code allowCredentials}
* and {@code maxAge}, the local overrides the global value.
* See {@link CorsConfiguration#combine(CorsConfiguration)} for more details.
*
* @author Russell Allen
* @author Sebastien Deleuze
* @author Sam Brannen
* @since 4.2
*/
@Target({ElementType.TYPE, ElementType.METHOD})
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Documented
public @interface CrossOrigin {
/** @deprecated as of Spring 5.0, in favor of {@link CorsConfiguration#applyPermitDefaultValues} */
@Deprecated
String[] DEFAULT_ORIGINS = {"*"};
/** @deprecated as of Spring 5.0, in favor of {@link CorsConfiguration#applyPermitDefaultValues} */
@Deprecated
String[] DEFAULT_ALLOWED_HEADERS = {"*"};
/** @deprecated as of Spring 5.0, in favor of {@link CorsConfiguration#applyPermitDefaultValues} */
@Deprecated
boolean DEFAULT_ALLOW_CREDENTIALS = false;
/** @deprecated as of Spring 5.0, in favor of {@link CorsConfiguration#applyPermitDefaultValues} */
@Deprecated
long DEFAULT_MAX_AGE = 1800;
/**
* Alias for {@link #origins}.
*/
@AliasFor("origins")
String[] value() default {};
/**
* The list of allowed origins that be specific origins, e.g.
* {@code "https://domain1.com"}, or {@code "*"} for all origins.
*
A matched origin is listed in the {@code Access-Control-Allow-Origin}
* response header of preflight actual CORS requests.
*
By default all origins are allowed.
*
Note: CORS checks use values from "Forwarded"
* (RFC 7239),
* "X-Forwarded-Host", "X-Forwarded-Port", and "X-Forwarded-Proto" headers,
* if present, in order to reflect the client-originated address.
* Consider using the {@code ForwardedHeaderFilter} in order to choose from a
* central place whether to extract and use, or to discard such headers.
* See the Spring Framework reference for more on this filter.
* @see #value
*/
@AliasFor("value")
String[] origins() default {};
/**
* The list of request headers that are permitted in actual requests,
* possibly {@code "*"} to allow all headers.
*
Allowed headers are listed in the {@code Access-Control-Allow-Headers}
* response header of preflight requests.
*
A header name is not required to be listed if it is one of:
* {@code Cache-Control}, {@code Content-Language}, {@code Expires},
* {@code Last-Modified}, or {@code Pragma} as per the CORS spec.
*
By default all requested headers are allowed.
*/
String[] allowedHeaders() default {};
/**
* The List of response headers that the user-agent will allow the client
* to access on an actual response, other than "simple" headers, i.e.
* {@code Cache-Control}, {@code Content-Language}, {@code Content-Type},
* {@code Expires}, {@code Last-Modified}, or {@code Pragma},
*
Exposed headers are listed in the {@code Access-Control-Expose-Headers}
* response header of actual CORS requests.
*
By default no headers are listed as exposed.
*/
String[] exposedHeaders() default {};
/**
* The list of supported HTTP request methods.
*
By default the supported methods are the same as the ones to which a
* controller method is mapped.
*/
RequestMethod[] methods() default {};
/**
* Whether the browser should send credentials, such as cookies along with
* cross domain requests, to the annotated endpoint. The configured value is
* set on the {@code Access-Control-Allow-Credentials} response header of
* preflight requests.
*
NOTE: Be aware that this option establishes a high
* level of trust with the configured domains and also increases the surface
* attack of the web application by exposing sensitive user-specific
* information such as cookies and CSRF tokens.
*
By default this is not set in which case the
* {@code Access-Control-Allow-Credentials} header is also not set and
* credentials are therefore not allowed.
*/
String allowCredentials() default "";
/**
* The maximum age (in seconds) of the cache duration for preflight responses.
*
This property controls the value of the {@code Access-Control-Max-Age}
* response header of preflight requests.
*
Setting this to a reasonable value can reduce the number of preflight
* request/response interactions required by the browser.
* A negative value means undefined.
*
By default this is set to {@code 1800} seconds (30 minutes).
*/
long maxAge() default -1;
}