I had a project where I needed to exchange data between two domains using AJAX. All major browsers don't allow cross-domain requests for security reasons. If you control both domains, you could use HTTP headers as described in Cross-Origin Resource Sharing. I tried it, and found that not all browsers support this standard. The good thing is that you can still do it by following this simple idea.
Consider two domains consumer.com and producer.com. Obviously, consumer.com needs to get some data from producer.com.
First, we call producer.com from a hidden iframe
:
<iframe src="http://producer.com/request.html?request_params=data",
style="width:0;height:0;border:0px solid #fff;">
</iframe>
<script>
function proxy_done(reply)
{
alert(reply);
... process reply from producer.com
}
</script>
The 'style' attribute hides the iframe
. The ‘proxy_done
’ function is called when the reply is ready. The iframe
element with producer.com is not allowed to communicate with the parent page (consumer.com). We just need to redirect it back to consumer.com.
Simple...
On producer.com, create request.html with something like the following.
<html>
<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
var reply = ... process the request and get reply
self.location.href="consumer.com/proxy_page.php?reply=" + reply;
</script>
</html>
The script redirects the iframe
along with the reply data back to a proxy page (see below) that resides at consumer.com.
At this time, the original iframe
element on consumer.com contains proxy_page.html with the reply from producer.com. Because proxy_page.html is on consumer.com it can now access its parent page. Now, we can call the 'proxy_done
' function, and pass it the reply.
<?php
echo '<script> var reply="'.$_GET['reply'].'"; </script>';
?>
<script>
window.top.window.proxy_done(reply);
</script>
That's it. Most likely you'd want to be able to call producer.com dynamically from your JavaScript application at consumer.com. To do that, just create the iframe
element dynamically... document.createElement("iframe")
... all this DOM stuff follows...