A pure JavaScript CORS alternative. No server configuration required -
just add a proxy.html
on the domain you wish to communicate with. This
library utilizes XHook to hook all XHR, so XDomain
will work seamlessly with any library.
- Simple
- Library Agnostic
- Cross domain XHR just magically works
- No need to modify the server code
- No need to use IE's silly XDomainRequest Object
- Easy XHR access to file servers:
- Includes XHook and its features
proxy.html
files (slaves) may:- White-list domains
- White-list paths using regular expressions (e.g. only allow API calls:
/^\/api/
)
- Highly performant
- Seamless integration with FormData
- Supports RequiresJS and Browserify
-
Development xdomain.js 27KB
-
Production xdomain.min.js 12KB (5.16KB Gzip)
-
CDN (Latest version is
0.8.2
, though you can change to any release tag)<script src="//unpkg.com/xdomain@0.8.2/dist/xdomain.min.js"></script>
All except IE6/7 as they don't have postMessage
Note: It's important to include XDomain before any other library. When XDomain loads, XHook replaces the current window.XMLHttpRequest
. So if another library saves a reference to the original window.XMLHttpRequest
and uses that, XHook won't be able to intercept those requests.
-
On your slave domain (
http://xyz.example.com
), create a smallproxy.html
file:<!DOCTYPE HTML> <script src="//unpkg.com/xdomain@0.8.2/dist/xdomain.min.js" master="http://abc.example.com"></script>
-
Then, on your master domain (
http://abc.example.com
), point to your newproxy.html
:<script src="//unpkg.com/xdomain@0.8.2/dist/xdomain.min.js" slave="http://xyz.example.com/proxy.html"></script>
-
And that's it! Now, on your master domain, any XHR to
http://xyz.example.com
will automagically work://do some vanilla XHR var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); xhr.open("GET", "http://xyz.example.com/secret/file.txt"); xhr.onreadystatechange = function(e) { if (xhr.readyState === 4) console.log("got result: ", xhr.responseText); }; xhr.send(); //or if we are using jQuery... $.get("http://xyz.example.com/secret/file.txt").done(function(data) { console.log("got result: ", data); });
Tip: If you enjoy being standards compliant, you can also use data-master
and data-slave
attributes.
The following two snippets are equivalent:
<script src="//unpkg.com/xdomain@0.8.2/dist/xdomain.min.js" master="http://abc.example.com/api/*"></script>
<script src="//unpkg.com/xdomain@0.8.2/dist/xdomain.min.js"></script>
<script>
xdomain.masters({
'http://abc.example.com': '/api/*'
});
</script>
So, we can then add more masters
or (slaves
) by simply including them in the object
, see API below.
Will initialize as a master
Each of the slaves
must be defined as: origin
: proxy file
The slaves
object is used as a list slaves to force one proxy file per origin.
The Quick Usage step 2 above is equivalent to:
<script src="//unpkg.com/xdomain@0.8.2/dist/xdomain.min.js"></script>
<script>
xdomain.slaves({
"http://xyz.example.com": "/proxy.html"
});
</script>
Will initialize as a slave
Each of the masters
must be defined as: origin
: path
origin
and path
are converted to a regular expression by escaping all non-alphanumeric chars, then converting *
into .*
and finally wrapping it with ^
and $
. path
can also be a RegExp
literal.
Requests that do not match both the origin
and the path
regular
expressions will be blocked.
So you could use the following proxy.html
to allow all subdomains of example.com
:
<script src="/dist/xdomain.min.js" data-master="http://*.example.com/api/*.json"></script>
Which is equivalent to:
<script src="/dist/xdomain.min.js"></script>
<script>
xdomain.masters({
"http://*.example.com": "/api/*.json"
});
</script>
Where "/api/*.json"
becomes the RegExp /^\/api\/.*\.json$/
Therefore, you could allow ALL domains with the following proxy.html
:
<!-- BEWARE: VERY INSECURE -->
<script src="/dist/xdomain.min.js" master="*"></script>
When true
, XDomain will log actions to console
Number of milliseconds until XDomains gives up waiting for an iframe to respond
event
may be log
, warn
or timeout
. When listening for log
and warn
events, handler
with contain the message
as the first parameter. The timeout
event fires when an iframe exeeds the xdomain.timeout
time limit.
WARNING document.cookie
property. This means Slave-Cookie
s are no longer supported in some browsers.
When withCredentials
is set to true
for a given request, the cookies of the master and slave are sent to the server using these names. If one is set to null
, it will not be sent.
//defaults
xdomain.cookies = {
master: "Master-Cookie"
slave: "Slave-Cookie"
};
Note, if you use "Cookie"
as your cookie name, it will be removed by browsers with Disable 3rd Party Cookies
switched on - this includes all Safari users and many others who purposefully enable it.
- XDomain will create an iframe on the master to the slave's proxy.
- Master will communicate to slave iframe using postMessage.
- Slave will create XHRs on behalf of master then return the results.
XHR interception is done seamlessly via XHook.
Use the HTML5 document type <!DOCTYPE HTML>
to prevent your page
from going into quirks mode. If you don't do this, XDomain will warn you about
the missing JSON
and/or postMessage
globals and will exit.
If you need a CORS Polyfill and you're here because of IE, give this XHook CORS polyfill a try, however, be mindful of the restrictions listed below.
Q: But I love CORS
A: You shouldn't. You should use XDomain because:
-
IE uses a different API (XDomainRequest) for CORS, XDomain normalizes this silliness. XDomainRequest also has many restrictions:
- Requests must be
GET
orPOST
- Requests must use the same protocol as the page
http
->http
- Requests only emit
progress
,timeout
anderror
- Requests may only use the
Content-Type
header
- Requests must be
-
The CORS spec is not as simple as it seems, XDomain allows you to use plain XHR instead.
-
On a RESTful JSON API server, CORS will generate superfluous traffic by sending a preflight OPTIONS request preceding various types of requests.
-
Not everyone is able to modify HTTP headers on the server, but most can upload a
proxy.html
file. -
Google also uses iframes as postMessage proxies instead of CORS in its Google API JS SDK:
<iframe name="oauth2relay564752183" id="oauth2relay564752183" src="https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/postmessageRelay?..."> </iframe>
Q: XDomain is interfering with another library!
A: XDomain attempts to perfectly implement XMLHttpRequest2
so there should be no differences. If there is a difference, create an issue. Note however, one purposeful
difference affects some libraries under IE. Many use the presence of 'withCredentials' in new XMLHttpRequest()
to determine if the browser supports CORS.
The most notable library that does this is jQuery, so XHook purposefully defines withCredentials
to trick jQuery into thinking the browser supports
CORS, thereby allowing XDomain to function seamlessly in IE. However, this fix is detrimental to
other libraries like: MixPanel, FB SDK, Intercom as they will incorrectly attempt CORS on domains
which don't have a proxy.html
. So, if you are using any of these libraries which implement their own CORS workarounds, you can do the
following to manually disable defining withCredentials
and manually reenable CORS on jQuery:
//fix trackers
xhook.addWithCredentials = false;
//fix jquery cors
jQuery.support.cors = true;
Note: In newer browsers xhook.addWithCredentials
has no effect as they already support withCredentials
.
Q: XDomain works for a few requests and then it stops.
A: Most likely, the slave iframe was removed - this is often due to libraries like Turbolinks
Q: In IE, I'm getting an Access Denied
error
A: This is error occurs when IE attempts a CORS request. Read on.
Q: The browser is still sending CORS requests.
A: Double check your slaves configuration against the examples.
If your slaves configuration is correct, double-check that you're
including XDomain before window.XMLHttpRequest
is referenced anywhere.
The safest way to fix it is to include XDomain first, it has no dependencies,
it only modifies window.XMLHttpRequest
.
Q: The script is loads but the 'Quick Start' steps don't work
A: XDomain only searches the script tags for master
and slave
attributes if they have xdomain
in the src
. So, if you've renamed or embedded XDomain, you'll need to use the API in order to insert your masters and slaves.
Q: It's still not working!
A: Enable xdomain.debug = true;
(or add a debug="true"
attribute to the script tag) on both the master and the slave
and copy the console.logs
to a new issue. If possible, please provide a live example demonstrating your issue.
-
0.8.2
- Removed CoffeeScript
- Restructured with ES6 and Common.js
- Use
parcel
as bundler
- Saucelabs testing is broken, need to swap to BrowserStack.
npm install
- Tab 1
npm run dev
- Tab 2
npm i -g serve
serve -p 3000 .
open http://localhost:3000/example/local
npm run build
- See
dist/
BTC 1AxEWoz121JSC3rV8e9MkaN9GAc5Jxvs4
Copyright © 2016 Jaime Pillora <dev@jpillora.com>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.