问题
I have a site with two https servers. One (frontend) serves up a UI made of static pages. The other (backend) serves up a microservice. Both of them happen to be using the same (test) X509 certificate to identify themselves. Individually, I can connect to them both over https requiring the client certificate "tester".
We were hiding CORS issues until now by going through an nginx setup that makes the frontend and backend appear that they are same Origin. I have implemented the headers 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin', 'Access-Control-Allow-Credentials' for all requests; with methods, headers for preflight check requests (OPTIONS).
In Chrome, cross-site like this works just fine. I can see that front-end URLs and backend URLs are different sites. I see the OPTIONS requests being made before backend requests are made.
Even though Chrome doesn't seem to need it, I did find the xmlhttprequest object that will be used to perform the request and did a
xhr.withCredentials = true
on it, because that seems to be what fetch.js does under the hood when it gets"credentials":"include"
. I noticed that there is anxhr.setRequestHeader
function available that I might need to use to make Firefox happy.- Firefox behaves identically for the UI calls. But for all backend calls, I get a 405. When it does this, there is no network connection being made to the server. The browser just decided that this is a 405 without executing any https request. Even though this is different behavior from Chrome, it kind of makes sense. Both the front-end UI and backend service need a client certificate to be chosen. I chose the certificate "tester" when I connected to the UI. When it goes to make a backend request, it could assume that the same client certificate should be used to reach the back-end. But maybe it assumes that it could be different, and there is something else I need to tell Firefox.
Is anybody here using CORS in combination with 2 way SSL certificates like this, and had this Firefox problem and fixed it somewhere. I suspect that it's not a server-side fix, but something that the client needs to do.
回答1:
I haven't actually tested this using client certificates, but I seem to recall that Firefox will not send credentials if Access-Control-Allow-Origin
is set to the *
wildcard instead of an actual domain. See this page on MDN.
Also there's an issue with Firefox sending a CORS request to a server that expects the client certificate to be presented in the TLS handshake. Basically, Firefox will not send the certificate during the preflight, creating a chicken and the egg problem. See this bug on bugzilla.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40663641/cors-with-client-https-certificates