I recently got into this issue and found this solution.
You can use a filter to add these headers :
import java.io.IOException;
import javax.servlet.FilterChain;
import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse;
import org.springframework.web.filter.OncePerRequestFilter;
public class CorsFilter extends OncePerRequestFilter {
@Override
protected void doFilterInternal(HttpServletRequest request,
HttpServletResponse response, FilterChain filterChain)
throws ServletException, IOException {
response.addHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
if (request.getHeader("Access-Control-Request-Method") != null
&& "OPTIONS".equals(request.getMethod())) {
// CORS "pre-flight" request
response.addHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Methods",
"GET, POST, PUT, DELETE");
response.addHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Headers",
"X-Requested-With,Origin,Content-Type, Accept");
}
filterChain.doFilter(request, response);
}
}
Don't forget add the filter to your spring context:
<bean id="corsFilter" class="my.package.CorsFilter" />
and the mapping in the web.xml:
<filter>
<filter-name>corsFilter</filter-name>
<filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.DelegatingFilterProxy</filter-class>
</filter>
<filter-mapping>
<filter-name>corsFilter</filter-name>
<url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>
To go a little further you can specify a Spring profile to enable or disable this filter with something like that:
<beans profile="!cors">
<bean id="corsFilter" class="my.package.FilterChainDoFilter" />
</beans>
<beans profile="cors">
<bean id="corsFilter" class="my.package.CorsFilter" />
</beans>
(providing the FilterChainDoFilter similar to the CorsFilter but which only does filterChain.doFilter(request, response);
in the doFilterInternal(..))
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