1 réponse
- Le plus récent
- Le plus de votes
- La plupart des commentaires
0
I have just tested this and I have same result. However, I believe you can only use a wild card to specifcy ALL and not part of a word. You cant use a wild card as as a catch all i.e. *-myhosts.example.com but you can use *.example.com
I even tried 4 Subdomains deep with *.level3.level2.level1.example.com and works fine.
I suggest you change the Paramter to All Orgins, then save, then update again with the correct values sticking to the correct standard. I am not sure why AWS let you before, however that is not supported I believe in CORS. Wildcards are *. not *something.
Contenus pertinents
- Réponse acceptéedemandé il y a 8 mois
- demandé il y a un an
- demandé il y a 8 mois
- demandé il y a 3 mois
- AWS OFFICIELA mis à jour il y a un an
- AWS OFFICIELA mis à jour il y a 2 ans
- AWS OFFICIELA mis à jour il y a 9 mois
It's not a CORS standard to wildcard anywhere (except entire thing ala "*"). Amazon matches the incoming request and if it is a match then it responds in the allow-origin with the full domain that was requested. That's part of the problem I have - it's working as desired right now. Updated question to include this, and provided screenshot of headers.
So the functionality works, but I can't enter it as a value (anymore!).