This page does not represent the most current semester of this course; it is present merely as an archive.
To improve security and reduce information leaks and spyware, HTTP
(the protocol used to share most web resources) have a set of rules
about cross-origin
resource sharing
. For our purposes there are two broad ideas to
consider here.
fetch
during
developmentIf you run your page using the file://
scheme,
fetch
and its friends are unlikely to work. Instead, you’ll
need to run a local webserver.
This involves two parts:
Run a local webserver. You’ll need to do this from the command line from directory that contains your HTML file.
Pick one of the following:
With Python 3
python -m http.server
With Python 2
python -m SimpleHTTPServer
With PHP
php -S [::1]:8080
With Node.js
Install once with npm install -g httpserver
.
Once installed, run
httpserver 8000 localhost
Use the local server to view your files.
For example, if your file is named myfile.html
, in your
browser go to one of the following:
Depending on your OS and browser and which tool you used to start the server, it may be that only one of the above URLs works.
If needed, test in private/incognito mode and force-refresh
Some combinations of operating system, browser, and server may result in excessive caching. This results in edits you make to local files not being visible in the browser: the old versions of the files are still served.
Opening the page in a private/incognito broswer window bypasses most caching and may be all you need to do.
If the browser still caches, there is a forced reload
option
that bypasses the cache; on Windows and most Linux installs this is
achieved with Ctrl+F5; on MacOS Opt+R is more common. Holding Shift
while pressing the reload button may also work.
Servers can be configured to refuse javascript-based requests to load files. For example, the images on the https://illinois.edu homepage are set up this way; if you try to load them as a texture map of the like you’ll get a CORS error.
Because this is a configuration setting of the server, you can’t directly bypass it. Instead you’ll have to work around it, e.g. by loading the image in the HTML of the page or copying the image to a directory you control.