Configure CORS
Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) ↗ is a standardized method that prevents domain X from accessing the resources of domain Y. It does so by using special headers in HTTP responses from domain Y, that allow your browser to verify that domain Y permits domain X to access these resources.
While CORS can help protect your data from malicious websites, CORS is also used to interact with objects in your bucket and configure policies on your bucket.
CORS is used when you interact with a bucket from a web browser, and you have two options:
Set a bucket to public: This option makes your bucket accessible on the Internet as read-only, which means anyone can request and load objects from your bucket in their browser or anywhere else. This option is ideal if your bucket contains images used in a public blog.
Presigned URLs: Allows anyone with access to the unique URL to perform specific actions on your bucket.
Before you configure CORS, you must have:
- An R2 bucket with at least one object. If you need to create a bucket, refer to Create a public bucket.
- A domain you can use to access the object. This can also be a
localhost
. - (Optional) Access keys. An access key is only required when creating a presigned URL.
To use CORS with a public bucket, ensure your bucket is set to allow public access.
Next, add a CORS policy to your bucket to allow the file to be shared.
Presigned URLs are an S3 concept that contain a special signature that encodes details of an S3 action, such as GetObject
or PutObject
. Presigned URLs are only used for authentication, which means they are generally safe to distribute publicly without revealing any secrets.
You will need a pair of S3-compatible credentials to use when you generate the presigned URL.
The example below shows how to generate a presigned PutObject
URL using the @aws-sdk/client-s3
↗ package for JavaScript.
Test the presigned URL by uploading an object using cURL. The example below would upload the 123
text to R2 with a Content-Type
of text/plain
.
- From the Cloudflare dashboard, select R2.
- Locate and select your bucket from the list.
- From your bucket’s page, select Settings.
- Under CORS Policy, select Add CORS policy.
- From the JSON tab, manually enter or copy and paste your policy into the text box.
- When you are done, select Save.
Your policy displays on the Settings page for your bucket.
The following fields in an R2 CORS policy map to HTTP response headers. These response headers are only returned when the incoming HTTP request is a valid CORS request.
Field Name | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
AllowedOrigins | Specifies the value for the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header R2 sets when requesting objects in a bucket from a browser. | If a website at www.test.com needs to access resources (e.g. fonts, scripts) on a custom domain of static.example.com , you would set https://www.test.com as an AllowedOrigin . |
AllowedMethods | Specifies the value for the Access-Control-Allow-Methods header R2 sets when requesting objects in a bucket from a browser. | GET , POST , PUT |
AllowedHeaders | Specifies the value for the Access-Control-Allow-Headers header R2 sets when requesting objects in this bucket from a browser.Cross-origin requests that include custom headers (e.g. x-user-id ) should specify these headers as AllowedHeaders . | x-requested-by , User-Agent |
ExposeHeaders | Specifies the headers that can be exposed back, and accessed by, the JavaScript making the cross-origin request. If you need to access headers beyond the safelisted response headers ↗, such as Content-Encoding or cf-cache-status , you must specify it here. | Content-Encoding , cf-cache-status , Date |
MaxAgeSeconds | Specifies the amount of time (in seconds) browsers are allowed to cache CORS preflight responses. Browsers may limit this to 2 hours or less, even if the maximum value (86400) is specified. | 3600 |
This example shows a CORS policy added for a bucket that contains the Roboto-Light.ttf
object, which is a font file.
The AllowedOrigins
specify the web server being used, and localhost:3000
is the hostname where the web server is running. The AllowedMethods
specify that only GET
requests are allowed and can read objects in your bucket.
In general, a good strategy for making sure you have set the correct CORS rules is to look at the network request that is being blocked by your browser.
- Make sure the rule’s
AllowedOrigins
includes the origin where the request is being made from. (likehttp://localhost:3000
orhttps://yourdomain.com
) - Make sure the rule’s
AllowedMethods
includes the blocked request’s method. - Make sure the rule’s
AllowedHeaders
includes the blocked request’s headers.
Also note that CORS rule propagation can, in rare cases, take up to 30 seconds.
- Only a cross-origin request will include CORS response headers.
- A cross-origin request is identified by the presence of an
Origin
HTTP request header, with the value of theOrigin
representing a valid, allowed origin as defined by theAllowedOrigins
field of your CORS policy. - A request without an
Origin
HTTP request header will not return any CORS response headers. Origin values must match exactly.
- A cross-origin request is identified by the presence of an
- The value(s) for
AllowedOrigins
in your CORS policy must be a valid HTTP Origin header value ↗. A validOrigin
header does not include a path component and must only be comprised of ascheme://host[:port]
(where port is optional).- Valid
AllowedOrigins
value:https://static.example.com
- includes the scheme and host. A port is optional and implied by the scheme. - Invalid
AllowedOrigins
value:https://static.example.com/
orhttps://static.example.com/fonts/Calibri.woff2
- incorrectly includes the path component.
- Valid
- If you need to access specific header values via JavaScript on the origin page, such as when using a video player, ensure you set
Access-Control-Expose-Headers
correctly and include the headers your JavaScript needs access to, such asContent-Length
.