I have a javascript app that sends ajax POST requests to a certain URL. Response might be a JSON string or it might be a file (as an attachment). I can easily detect Content
What server-side language are you using? In my app I can easily download a file from an AJAX call by setting the correct headers in PHP's response:
header("HTTP/1.1 200 OK");
header("Pragma: public");
header("Cache-Control: must-revalidate, post-check=0, pre-check=0");
// The optional second 'replace' parameter indicates whether the header
// should replace a previous similar header, or add a second header of
// the same type. By default it will replace, but if you pass in FALSE
// as the second argument you can force multiple headers of the same type.
header("Cache-Control: private", false);
header("Content-type: " . $mimeType);
// $strFileName is, of course, the filename of the file being downloaded.
// This won't have to be the same name as the actual file.
header("Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=\"{$strFileName}\"");
header("Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary");
header("Content-Length: " . mb_strlen($strFile));
// $strFile is a binary representation of the file that is being downloaded.
echo $strFile;
This will in fact 'redirect' the browser to this download page, but as @ahren alread said in his comment, it won't navigate away from the current page.
It's all about setting the correct headers so I'm sure you'll find a suitable solution for the server-side language you're using if it's not PHP.
Assuming you already know how to make an AJAX call, on the client side you execute an AJAX request to the server. The server then generates a link from where this file can be downloaded, e.g. the 'forward' URL where you want to point to. For example, the server responds with:
{
status: 1, // ok
// unique one-time download token, not required of course
message: 'http://yourwebsite.com/getdownload/ska08912dsa'
}
When processing the response, you inject an iframe
in your body and set the iframe
's SRC to the URL you just received like this (using jQuery for the ease of this example):
$("body").append("");
If you've set the correct headers as shown above, the iframe will force a download dialog without navigating the browser away from the current page.
Extra addition in relation to your question; I think it's best to always return JSON when requesting stuff with AJAX technology. After you've received the JSON response, you can then decide client-side what to do with it. Maybe, for example, later on you want the user to click a download link to the URL instead of forcing the download directly, in your current setup you would have to update both client and server-side to do so.