jQuery getJSON works locally, but not cross domain

亡梦爱人 提交于 2019-11-26 15:29:33

You need to look in to JSONP.

Essentially, when you try to load JSON from another domain, it fails because there is a domain boundary you can not cross. To avoid this, you have to PAD it (P in JSONP). Padding it is essentially wrapping it in a function call (where the function name resides on your client.) e.g. a "normal" JSON response (say, for example, getjson.php):

{foo:'bar'}

JSON with a callback of parseJSON becomes (Say, for example, getjson.php?callback=parseJSON):

parseJSON({foo:'bar'})

Notice how the value that was supplied in callback becomes the name of the function your JSON response is now wrapped in.

Then your client will want to pass it to parseJSON, a function that exists on your client (that you've defined). jQuery (and other libraries) try to take care of this for you by generating some "random" function and then sending the response back through your original callback (all this is done under the hood).

If you have control over the server page generating the JSON, implement a callback method so you can supply how the JSON should be wrapped so you can then work with it on your end. (This is only necessary when you're dealing with data from a domain other than the page the client is currently on).


UPDATE

To basically solve the problem you're having, you need to find a way to get your JSON information in to a JSONP call. Without knowing what language your "page.json" is in, here's the pseudo-code logic that it should contain:

if GET_VARIABLE("callback") is supplied

  print GET_VARIABLE("callback") and an open parenthesis
  print normal JSON data
  print closing parenthesis

else

  print normal JSON data

end if

If you decide to hard-code the function name instead of allow it to be supplied in the url as "callback", then you need to remember it. For the next example, let's imagine we named it MyJSONPCallback

Now, in your client code, you can go ahead of use:

$.ajax({
  url: 'http://anotherdomain.com/page.json?format=json',
  dataType: 'json',
  jsonpCallback: 'MyJSONPCallback', // specify the callback name if you're hard-coding it
  success: function(data){
    // we make a successful JSONP call!
  }
});

For those using MVC ActionResult to generate JSONP, ASP.NET MVC does not ship with JSONP support out of the box, but it is easy to add with:

http://nikcodes.com/2012/02/29/an-asp-net-mvc-jsonp-actionresult

Browsers don't let this work as a security measure. You could check out JSONP as a way to get around this, though it is a HUGE security risk since it relies on running javascript supplied by the domain you are getting the JSON text from.

I have not looked deeply into this issue, but I believe your problem relates to the same-domain-policy... you might want to look into this though : http://james.padolsey.com/javascript/cross-domain-requests-with-jquery/

See this article -- you have to supply a valid javascript object wrapped in a function.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP

You'd want to return something like:

parseResponse({"Name": "Cheeso", "Id" : 1823, "Rank": 7})

But your server-side method would need to know to return that, instead of just the JSON inside. All jQuery does is auto-generate a function name (the ? in the callback parameter) and then eval the "function" that's returned from the server. The server creates the function call with the JSON contained inside.

Brad Christie's answer helped me quickly get my code working. I am creating a new entry here since it is little simpler than the other solutions.

Following is the code that I run from http://localhost:5000 -

(function() {
        var api = "http://www.localhost:3000/auget_from_server?format=json";
        var request = $.getJSON( api, {
            secret : 'secret', 
            appId : 'app', 
            emailId : 'abc@gmail.com',
            async: false,
            dataType : 'json',
          },
          function(data, result){
            $("div.some_div").append(JSON.stringify(data));
          });

        request.complete(function(d, status){
            console.log('Complete the request and got the data - ' + JSON.stringify(d) + '/' + status, filename);
        });

        request.error(function(err){
            console.log('Error happened - ', filename);
            console.log(err);
        });

        request.success(function( data, status, jqXHR ) {
            $("div.some_div").append(data);
        });


        })();

From the location at http://localhost:3000/auget_from_server, I return the following JSON in response (this part is specific to meteor but it will work for non-meteor servers also) -

this.response.writeHead('200', {'Content-Type': 'application/json', 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': '*'});
this.response.end(JSON.stringify([{'works_or_not' : 'works', 'name' : 'akaushik', 'application' : 'Qoll', 'message' : 'hello from server', 'currentTime' : dt+''}]));

This prints the following in the logs -

Complete the request and got the data - {"readyState":4,"responseText":"[{\"works_or_not\":\"works\",\"name\":\"akaushik\",\"application\":\"Qoll\",\"message\":\"hello from server\",\"currentTime\":\"Tue Dec 15 2015 23:59:14 GMT-0500 (EST)\"}]","responseJSON":[{"works_or_not":"works","name":"akaushik","application":"Qoll","message":"hello from server","currentTime":"Tue Dec 15 2015 23:59:14 GMT-0500 (EST)"}],"status":200,"statusText":"OK"}/success
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