oracular (1) flask-cors.1.gz

Provided by: python3-flask-cors_4.0.1-1_all bug

NAME

       flask-cors - Flask-Cors Documentation

       A Flask extension for handling Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS), making cross-origin AJAX possible.

       This  package  has  a  simple philosophy: when you want to enable CORS, you wish to enable it for all use
       cases on a domain.  This means no mucking around with different allowed headers, methods, etc.

       By default, submission of cookies across domains is disabled due to the  security  implications.   Please
       see the documentation for how to enable credential'ed requests, and please make sure you add some sort of
       CSRF protection before doing so!

INSTALLATION

       Install the extension with using pip, or easy_install.

          $ pip install -U flask-cors

USAGE

       This package exposes a Flask extension which by default enables CORS  support  on  all  routes,  for  all
       origins  and  methods.   It  allows  parameterization  of  all CORS headers on a per-resource level.  The
       package also contains a decorator, for those who prefer this approach.

   Simple Usage
       In the simplest case, initialize the Flask-Cors extension with default arguments in order to  allow  CORS
       for all domains on all routes.  See the full list of options in the documentation.

          from flask import Flask
          from flask_cors import CORS

          app = Flask(__name__)
          CORS(app)

          @app.route("/")
          def helloWorld():
            return "Hello, cross-origin-world!"

   Resource specific CORS
       Alternatively,  you  can  specify CORS options on a resource and origin level of granularity by passing a
       dictionary as the resources option, mapping paths to a set of options.  See the full list of  options  in
       the documentation.

          app = Flask(__name__)
          cors = CORS(app, resources={r"/api/*": {"origins": "*"}})

          @app.route("/api/v1/users")
          def list_users():
            return "user example"

   Route specific CORS via decorator
       This extension also exposes a simple decorator to decorate flask routes with.  Simply add @cross_origin()
       below a call to Flask's @app.route(..) to allow CORS on a given route.  See the full list of  options  in
       the decorator documentation.

          @app.route("/")
          @cross_origin()
          def helloWorld():
            return "Hello, cross-origin-world!"

DOCUMENTATION

       For a full list of options, please see the full documentation

TROUBLESHOOTING

       If  things  aren't  working  as  you expect, enable logging to help understand what is going on under the
       hood, and why.

          logging.getLogger('flask_cors').level = logging.DEBUG

TESTS

       A simple set of tests is included in test/.  To run, install nose, and simply invoke nosetests or  python
       setup.py test to exercise the tests.

       If  nosetests does not work for you, due to it no longer working with newer python versions.  You can use
       pytest to run the tests instead.

CONTRIBUTING

       Questions, comments or improvements?  Please create an issue on Github, tweet at @corydolphin or send  me
       an email.  I do my best to include every contribution proposed in any way that I can.

CREDITS

       This Flask extension is based upon the Decorator for the HTTP Access Control written by Armin Ronacher.

       This Flask extension is based upon the Decorator for the HTTP Access Control written by Armin Ronacher.

   Configuration
       Flask-CORS  can  be  configured  at four different locations.  Configuration values are determined in the
       following order:

          1. Resource level settings (e.g when passed as a dictionary)

          2. Keyword argument settings

          3. App level configuration settings (e.g. CORS_*)

          4. Default settings

       See below for more information.

   Configuration options
       Configuration options are consistently named across the various locations  where  they  can  be  set.   A
       configuration  option  called example can be set with the resource dictionary key example, as the keyword
       argument example or as the Flask app configuration key CORS_EXAMPLE.

       The configuration options recognised by Flask-CORS are:

       CORS_ALLOW_HEADERS (List or str)
              Headers to accept from the client.  Headers in the Access-Control-Request-Headers  request  header
              (usually  part of the preflight OPTIONS request) matching headers in this list will be included in
              the Access-Control-Allow-Headers response header.

       CORS_ALWAYS_SEND (bool)
              Usually, if a request doesn't include an Origin header, the client did  not  request  CORS.   This
              means we can ignore this request.

              However, if this is true, a most-likely-to-be-correct value is still set.

       CORS_AUTOMATIC_OPTIONS (bool)
              Only  applies  to  the  flask_cors.cross_origin()  decorator.   If  True, Flask-CORS will override
              Flask’s default OPTIONS handling to return CORS headers for OPTIONS requests.

       CORS_EXPOSE_HEADERS (List or str)
              The CORS spec requires the server to give explicit permissions for the client to read  headers  in
              CORS  responses  (via  the  Access-Control-Expose-Headers  header).  This specifies the headers to
              include in this header.

       CORS_INTERCEPT_EXCEPTIONS (bool)
              Whether to deal with Flask exception handlers or leave them alone (with respect to CORS headers).

       CORS_MAX_AGE (timedelta, int or str)
              The maximum time for  which  this  CORS  request  may  be  cached.   This  value  is  set  as  the
              Access-Control-Max-Age header.

       CORS_METHODS (List or str)
              The  method(s)  which  the  allowed  origins  are  allowed  to  access.  These are included in the
              Access-Control-Allow-Methods response headers to the preflight OPTIONS requests.

       CORS_ORIGINS (List, str or re.Pattern)
              The origin(s) to allow requests from.  An origin configured here that matches  the  value  of  the
              Origin   header   in   a   preflight   OPTIONS   request   is   returned   as  the  value  of  the
              Access-Control-Allow-Origin response header.

       CORS_RESOURCES (Dict, List or str)
              The series of regular expression and (optionally) associated CORS options to  be  applied  to  the
              given resource path.

              If  the  value  is a dictionary, it's keys must be regular expressions matching resources, and the
              values must be another dictionary of configuration options, as described in this section.

              If the argument is a list, it is expected to be a list of regular expressions  matching  resources
              for which the app-wide configured options are applied.

              If  the  argument  is  a  string, it is expected to be a regular expression matching resources for
              which the app-wide configured options are applied.

       CORS_SEND_WILDCARD (bool)
              If CORS_ORIGINS is "*" and this is true, then the  Access-Control-Allow-Origin  response  header's
              value with be "*" as well, instead of the value of the Origin request header.

       CORS_SUPPORTS_CREDENTIALS (bool)
              Allows     users     to     make     authenticated     requests.     If    true,    injects    the
              Access-Control-Allow-Credentials header in responses.  This allows cookies and credentials  to  be
              submitted across domains.

              note   This option cannot be used in conjunction with a "*" origin

       CORS_VARY_HEADER: (bool)
              Enables  or  disables  the  injection  of the Vary response header is set to Origin.  This informs
              clients that our CORS headers are dynamic and cannot be cached.

   Default values
       • CORS_ALLOW_HEADERS: "*"

       • CORS_ALWAYS_SEND: True

       • CORS_AUTOMATIC_OPTIONS: True

       • CORS_EXPOSE_HEADERS: None

       • CORS_INTERCEPT_EXCEPTIONS: True

       • CORS_MAX_AGE: None

       • CORS_METHODS: ["GET", "HEAD", "POST", "OPTIONS", "PUT", "PATCH", "DELETE"]

       • CORS_ORIGINS: "*"

       • CORS_RESOURCES: r"/*"

       • CORS_SEND_WILDCARD: False

       • CORS_SUPPORTS_CREDENTIALS: False

       • CORS_VARY_HEADER: True

   Locations
   Resource level settings
       You can specify CORS options on a resource level of granularity by passing a dictionary as the  resources
       keyword  argument when instantiating the flask_cors.CORS object (or when calling init_app on it), mapping
       paths to a set of options.

   Keyword argument settings
       For options matching all resources, it's also possible to simply  set  the  configuration  options  using
       keyword arguments when instantiating the flask_cors.CORS object (or when calling init_app on it).

   App level configuration settings
       It's  good  practice to keep your application configuration settings in one place.  This is also possible
       with Flask-CORS using the same configuration options in the Flask application's config object.

   Default settings
       Finally, every setting has a default value as well.

   API Docs
       This package exposes a Flask extension which by default enables CORS  support  on  all  routes,  for  all
       origins and methods.  It allows parameterization of all CORS headers on a per-resource level. The package
       also contains a decorator, for those who prefer this approach.

   Extension
       This is the suggested approach to enabling CORS.  The default configuration will work well for  most  use
       cases.

       class flask_cors.CORS(app=None, **kwargs)
              Initializes  Cross  Origin  Resource  sharing  for the application. The arguments are identical to
              cross_origin(), with the addition of a resources parameter.  The  resources  parameter  defines  a
              series  of  regular expressions for resource paths to match and optionally, the associated options
              to be applied to the particular  resource.  These  options  are  identical  to  the  arguments  to
              cross_origin().

              The settings for CORS are determined in the following order

              1. Resource level settings (e.g when passed as a dictionary)

              2. Keyword argument settings

              3. App level configuration settings (e.g. CORS_*)

              4. Default settings

              Note:  as  it  is  possible for multiple regular expressions to match a resource path, the regular
              expressions are first sorted by length, from longest to shortest, in order to attempt to match the
              most  specific  regular  expression.  This  allows the definition of a number of specific resource
              options, with a wildcard fallback for all other resources.

              Parametersresources (dict, iterable or string) --

                       The series of regular expression and (optionally) associated CORS options to  be  applied
                       to the given resource path.

                       If  the  argument  is a dictionary, it's keys must be regular expressions, and the values
                       must be a dictionary of kwargs, identical to the kwargs of this function.

                       If the argument is a list, it is expected to be a list of regular expressions, for  which
                       the app-wide configured options are applied.

                       If  the  argument  is  a  string, it is expected to be a regular expression for which the
                       app-wide configured options are applied.

                       Default : Match all and apply app-level configuration

                     • origins (list, string or regex) --

                       The origin, or list of origins to allow requests from.   The  origin(s)  may  be  regular
                       expressions, case-sensitive strings, or else an asterisk.

                       NOTE:
                          origins  must  include  the  schema  and  the  port  (if not port 80), e.g., CORS(app,
                          origins=["http://localhost:8000", "https://example.com"]).

                       Default : '*'

                     • methods (list or string) --

                       The method or list of methods which  the  allowed  origins  are  allowed  to  access  for
                       non-simple requests.

                       Default : [GET, HEAD, POST, OPTIONS, PUT, PATCH, DELETE]

                     • expose_headers (list or string) --

                       The header or list which are safe to expose to the API of a CORS API specification.

                       Default : None

                     • allow_headers (list, string or regex) --

                       The header or list of header field names which can be used when this resource is accessed
                       by allowed origins. The header(s) may be regular expressions, case-sensitive strings,  or
                       else an asterisk.

                       Default : '*', allow all headers

                     • supports_credentials (bool) --

                       Allows    users    to    make    authenticated    requests.    If   true,   injects   the
                       Access-Control-Allow-Credentials header in responses. This allows cookies and credentials
                       to be submitted across domains.

                       note   This option cannot be used in conjunction with a '*' origin

                       Default : False

                     • max_age (timedelta, integer, string or None) --

                       The  maximum  time  for  which  this  CORS request maybe cached. This value is set as the
                       Access-Control-Max-Age header.

                       Default : None

                     • send_wildcard (bool) --

                       If True, and the origins parameter is *, a wildcard Access-Control-Allow-Origin header is
                       sent, rather than the request's Origin header.

                       Default : False

                     • vary_header (bool) --

                       If  True,  the  header  Vary:  Origin  will  be  returned  as  per  the W3 implementation
                       guidelines.

                       Setting this header when the Access-Control-Allow-Origin is dynamically  generated  (e.g.
                       when  there  is more than one allowed origin, and an Origin than '*' is returned) informs
                       CDNs and other caches that the CORS headers are dynamic, and cannot be cached.

                       If False, the Vary header will never be injected or altered.

                       Default : True

   Decorator
       If the CORS extension does not satisfy your needs, you may find the decorator useful.  It shares  options
       with the extension, and should be simple to use.

       flask_cors.cross_origin(*args, **kwargs)
              This  function  is  the decorator which is used to wrap a Flask route with.  In the simplest case,
              simply use  the  default  parameters  to  allow  all  origins  in  what  is  the  most  permissive
              configuration. If this method modifies state or performs authentication which may be brute-forced,
              you should add some degree of protection, such as Cross Site Request Forgery protection.

              Parametersorigins (list, string or regex) --

                       The origin, or list of origins to allow requests from.   The  origin(s)  may  be  regular
                       expressions, case-sensitive strings, or else an asterisk

                       Default : '*'

                     • methods (list or string) --

                       The  method  or  list  of  methods  which  the  allowed origins are allowed to access for
                       non-simple requests.

                       Default : [GET, HEAD, POST, OPTIONS, PUT, PATCH, DELETE]

                     • expose_headers (list or string) --

                       The header or list which are safe to expose to the API of a CORS API specification.

                       Default : None

                     • allow_headers (list, string or regex) --

                       The header or list of header field names which can be used when this resource is accessed
                       by  allowed origins. The header(s) may be regular expressions, case-sensitive strings, or
                       else an asterisk.

                       Default : '*', allow all headers

                     • supports_credentials (bool) --

                       Allows   users   to   make    authenticated    requests.    If    true,    injects    the
                       Access-Control-Allow-Credentials header in responses. This allows cookies and credentials
                       to be submitted across domains.

                       note   This option cannot be used in conjunction with a '*' origin

                       Default : False

                     • max_age (timedelta, integer, string or None) --

                       The maximum time for which this CORS request maybe cached.  This  value  is  set  as  the
                       Access-Control-Max-Age header.

                       Default : None

                     • send_wildcard (bool) --

                       If True, and the origins parameter is *, a wildcard Access-Control-Allow-Origin header is
                       sent, rather than the request's Origin header.

                       Default : False

                     • vary_header (bool) --

                       If True, the  header  Vary:  Origin  will  be  returned  as  per  the  W3  implementation
                       guidelines.

                       Setting  this  header when the Access-Control-Allow-Origin is dynamically generated (e.g.
                       when there is more than one allowed origin, and an Origin than '*' is  returned)  informs
                       CDNs and other caches that the CORS headers are dynamic, and cannot be cached.

                       If False, the Vary header will never be injected or altered.

                       Default : True

                     • automatic_options (bool) --

                       Only  applies  to  the  cross_origin decorator. If True, Flask-CORS will override Flask's
                       default OPTIONS handling to return CORS headers for OPTIONS requests.

                       Default : True

   Using CORS with cookies
       By default, Flask-CORS does not allow cookies to be  submitted  across  sites,  since  it  has  potential
       security  implications.   If you wish to enable cross-site cookies, you may wish to add some sort of CSRF
       protection to keep you and your users safe.

       To allow cookies or authenticated requests to be made cross origins, simply set the  supports_credentials
       option to True. E.g.

          from flask import Flask, session
          from flask_cors import CORS

          app = Flask(__name__)
          CORS(app, supports_credentials=True)

          @app.route("/")
          def helloWorld():
            return "Hello, %s" % session['username']

       The  above  code enables Flask backend to accept cookies to be submitted from cross origin sites.  But if
       you are sending Xhr requests (ajax calls) to a cross-origin server,  by  default  chrome  or  any  modern
       browser  won't  send  cookies  and session with the request.  You should use withCredentials = True while
       sending Xhr request to enable that.  You should keep in  mind  about  the  necessary  security  concerns.
       Related MDN doc: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest/withCredentials

   Using CORS with Blueprints
       Flask-CORS  supports  blueprints out of the box.  Simply pass a blueprint instance to the CORS extension,
       and everything will just work.

          api_v1 = Blueprint('API_v1', __name__)

          CORS(api_v1) # enable CORS on the API_v1 blue print

          @api_v1.route("/api/v1/users/")
          def list_users():
              '''
                  Since the path matches the regular expression r'/api/*', this resource
                  automatically has CORS headers set. The expected result is as follows:

                  $ curl --include -X GET http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/ \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com
                  HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Content-Length: 21
                  Content-Type: application/json
                  Date: Sat, 09 Aug 2014 00:26:41 GMT
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.4 Python/2.7.8

                  {
                      "success": true
                  }

              '''
              return jsonify(user="joe")

          @api_v1.route("/api/v1/users/create", methods=['POST'])
          def create_user():
              '''
                  Since the path matches the regular expression r'/api/*', this resource
                  automatically has CORS headers set.

                  Browsers will first make a preflight request to verify that the resource
                  allows cross-origin POSTs with a JSON Content-Type, which can be simulated
                  as:
                  $ curl --include -X OPTIONS http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/create \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Method:POST \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Headers:Content-Type \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com
                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
                  Allow: POST, OPTIONS
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
                  Access-Control-Allow-Methods: DELETE, GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, PATCH, POST, PUT
                  Content-Length: 0
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:22 GMT

                  $ curl --include -X POST http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/create \
                      --header Content-Type:application/json \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com

                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: application/json
                  Content-Length: 21
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:04 GMT

                  {
                    "success": true
                  }

              '''
              return jsonify(success=True)

          public_routes = Blueprint('public', __name__)

          @public_routes.route("/")
          def helloWorld():
              '''
                  Since the path '/' does not match the regular expression r'/api/*',
                  this route does not have CORS headers set.
              '''
              return '''<h1>Hello CORS!</h1> Read about my spec at the
          <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/">W3</a> Or, checkout my documentation
          on <a href="https://github.com/corydolphin/flask-cors">Github</a>'''

          logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO)
          app = Flask('FlaskCorsBlueprintBasedExample')
          app.register_blueprint(api_v1)
          app.register_blueprint(public_routes)

          if __name__ == "__main__":
              app.run(debug=True)

   Examples
   Using the CORS extension
          # One of the simplest configurations. Exposes all resources matching /api/* to
          # CORS and allows the Content-Type header, which is necessary to POST JSON
          # cross origin.
          CORS(app, resources=r'/api/*')

          @app.route("/")
          def helloWorld():
              """
                  Since the path '/' does not match the regular expression r'/api/*',
                  this route does not have CORS headers set.
              """
              return '''
          <html>
              <h1>Hello CORS!</h1>
              <h3> End to end editable example with jquery! </h3>
              <a class="jsbin-embed" href="http://jsbin.com/zazitas/embed?js,console">JS Bin on jsbin.com</a>
              <script src="//static.jsbin.com/js/embed.min.js?3.35.12"></script>

          </html>
          '''

          @app.route("/api/v1/users/")
          def list_users():
              """
                  Since the path matches the regular expression r'/api/*', this resource
                  automatically has CORS headers set. The expected result is as follows:

                  $ curl --include -X GET http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/ \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com
                  HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Content-Length: 21
                  Content-Type: application/json
                  Date: Sat, 09 Aug 2014 00:26:41 GMT
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.4 Python/2.7.8

                  {
                      "success": true
                  }

              """
              return jsonify(user="joe")

          @app.route("/api/v1/users/create", methods=['POST'])
          def create_user():
              """
                  Since the path matches the regular expression r'/api/*', this resource
                  automatically has CORS headers set.

                  Browsers will first make a preflight request to verify that the resource
                  allows cross-origin POSTs with a JSON Content-Type, which can be simulated
                  as:
                  $ curl --include -X OPTIONS http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/create \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Method:POST \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Headers:Content-Type \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com
                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
                  Allow: POST, OPTIONS
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
                  Access-Control-Allow-Methods: DELETE, GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, PATCH, POST, PUT
                  Content-Length: 0
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:22 GMT

                  $ curl --include -X POST http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/create \
                      --header Content-Type:application/json \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com

                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: application/json
                  Content-Length: 21
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:04 GMT

                  {
                    "success": true
                  }

              """
              return jsonify(success=True)

          @app.route("/api/exception")
          def get_exception():
              """
                  Since the path matches the regular expression r'/api/*', this resource
                  automatically has CORS headers set.

                  Browsers will first make a preflight request to verify that the resource
                  allows cross-origin POSTs with a JSON Content-Type, which can be simulated
                  as:
                  $ curl --include -X OPTIONS http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/exception \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Method:POST \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Headers:Content-Type \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com
                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
                  Allow: POST, OPTIONS
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
                  Access-Control-Allow-Methods: DELETE, GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, PATCH, POST, PUT
                  Content-Length: 0
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:22 GMT
              """
              raise Exception("example")

          @app.errorhandler(500)
          def server_error(e):
              logging.exception('An error occurred during a request. %s', e)
              return "An internal error occurred", 500

          if __name__ == "__main__":
              app.run(debug=True)

   Using the cross_origin decorator
          @app.route("/", methods=['GET'])
          @cross_origin()
          def helloWorld():
              '''
                  This view has CORS enabled for all domains, representing the simplest
                  configuration of view-based decoration. The expected result is as
                  follows:

                  $ curl --include -X GET http://127.0.0.1:5000/ \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com

                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
                  Content-Length: 184
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:29:56 GMT

                  <h1>Hello CORS!</h1> Read about my spec at the
                  <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/">W3</a> Or, checkout my documentation
                  on <a href="https://github.com/corydolphin/flask-cors">Github</a>

              '''
              return '''<h1>Hello CORS!</h1> Read about my spec at the
          <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/">W3</a> Or, checkout my documentation
          on <a href="https://github.com/corydolphin/flask-cors">Github</a>'''

          @app.route("/api/v1/users/create", methods=['GET', 'POST'])
          @cross_origin(allow_headers=['Content-Type'])
          def cross_origin_json_post():
              '''
                  This view has CORS enabled for all domains, and allows browsers
                  to send the Content-Type header, allowing cross domain AJAX POST
                  requests.

           Browsers will first make a preflight request to verify that the resource
                  allows cross-origin POSTs with a JSON Content-Type, which can be simulated
                  as:
                  $ curl --include -X OPTIONS http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/create \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Method:POST \
                      --header Access-Control-Request-Headers:Content-Type \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com
                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
                  Allow: POST, OPTIONS
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
                  Access-Control-Allow-Methods: DELETE, GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, PATCH, POST, PUT
                  Content-Length: 0
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:22 GMT

                  $ curl --include -X POST http://127.0.0.1:5000/api/v1/users/create \
                      --header Content-Type:application/json \
                      --header Origin:www.examplesite.com

                  >> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
                  Content-Type: application/json
                  Content-Length: 21
                  Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
                  Server: Werkzeug/0.9.6 Python/2.7.9
                  Date: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 22:25:04 GMT

                  {
                    "success": true
                  }

              '''

              return jsonify(success=True)

          if __name__ == "__main__":
              app.run(debug=True)

AUTHOR

       Cory Dolphin

       2024, Cory Dolphin