So I've got this Go http handler that stores some POST content into the datastore and retrieves some other info in response. On the back-end I use:
func handleMessageQueue(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Header().Set("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*")
if r.Method == "POST" {
c := appengine.NewContext(r)
body, _ := ioutil.ReadAll(r.Body)
auth := string(body[:])
r.Body.Close()
q := datastore.NewQuery("Message").Order("-Date")
var msg []Message
key, err := q.GetAll(c, &msg)
if err != nil {
c.Errorf("fetching msg: %v", err)
return
}
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "application/json")
jsonMsg, err := json.Marshal(msg)
msgstr := string(jsonMsg)
fmt.Fprint(w, msgstr)
return
}
}
In my firefox OS app I use:
var message = "content";
request = new XMLHttpRequest();
request.open('POST', 'http://localhost:8080/msgs', true);
request.onload = function () {
if (request.status >= 200 && request.status < 400) {
// Success!
data = JSON.parse(request.responseText);
console.log(data);
} else {
// We reached our target server, but it returned an error
console.log("server error");
}
};
request.onerror = function () {
// There was a connection error of some sort
console.log("connection error");
};
request.send(message);
The incoming part all works along and such. However, my response is getting blocked. Giving me the following message:
Cross-Origin Request Blocked: The Same Origin Policy disallows reading the remote resource at http://localhost:8080/msgs. This can be fixed by moving the resource to the same domain or enabling CORS.
I tried a lot of other things but there is no way I can just get a response from the server. However when I change my Go POST method into GET and access the page through the browser I get the data that I want so bad. I can't really decide which side goes wrong and why: it might be that Go shouldn't block these kinds of requests, but it also might be that my javascript is illegal.
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