I have multiple ajax requests some request data every minute others are initiated by the user through a ui.
$.get(\'/myurl\', data).done(function( data ){
Found this post that suggests a good solution to this problem.
The main thing is to use $.ajaxPrefilter and replace your error handler with a custom one that checks for retries and performs a retry by using the closure's 'originalOptions'.
I'm posting the code just in case it will be offline in the future. Again, the credit belongs to the original author.
// register AJAX prefilter : options, original options
$.ajaxPrefilter(function( options, originalOptions, jqXHR ) {
originalOptions._error = originalOptions.error;
// overwrite error handler for current request
options.error = function( _jqXHR, _textStatus, _errorThrown ){
if (... it should not retry ...){
if( originalOptions._error ) originalOptions._error( _jqXHR, _textStatus, _errorThrown );
return;
};
// else... Call AJAX again with original options
$.ajax( originalOptions);
};
});
The code below will keep the original request and it will try to success 3 times.
var tries = 0;
$( document ).ajaxError(function( event, jqxhr, settings, thrownError ) {
if(tries < 3){
tries++;
$.ajax(this).done(function(){tries=0;});
}
});
In this case, I would write a specific handler for the 403
status code, which means unauthorized (my server would return a 403 too). From the jquery ajax docs, you can do
$.ajax({
statusCode: {
403: function() {
relogin(onSuccess);
}
}
});
to achieve that.
In that handler, I would call a relogin
method, passing a function that captures what to do when login succeeds. In this case, you could pass in the method that contains the call you want to run again.
In the code above, relogin
should call the login code, and onSuccess
should be a function that wraps the code you execute every minute.
EDIT- based on your clarification in comment, that this scenario happens for multiple requests, I personally would create an API for your app that captures the interactions with the server.
app = {};
app.api = {};
// now define all your requests AND request callbacks, that way you can reuse them
app.api.makeRequest1 = function(..){..} // make request 1
app.api._request1Success = function(...){...}// success handler for request 1
app.api._request1Fail = function(...){...}// general fail handler for request 1
/**
A method that will construct a function that is intended to be executed
on auth failure.
@param attempted The method you were trying to execute
@param args The args you want to pass to the method on retry
@return function A function that will retry the attempted method
**/
app.api.generalAuthFail = function(attempted, args){
return function(paramsForFail){ // whatever jquery returns on fail should be the args
if (attempted) attempted(args);
}
}
so with that structure, in your request1
method you would do something like
$().ajax({
....
statusCode: {
403: app.api.generalAuthFail(app.api.request1, someArgs);
}
}}
the generalAuthFailure
will return a callback that executes the method you pass in.
You could possibly go by the option of naming each one of your functions and then recalling them as stated in hvgotcodes' answers.
Or
You can use a reusable function to setup a request while extending the defaults:
function getRequest( options ){
var // always get json
defaults = { dataType: 'json' },
settings = $.extend( defaults, options );
return // send initial ajax, if it's all good return the jqxhr object
$.ajax( settings )
// on error
.fail(function( jqxhr, e ){
// if the users autherization has failed out server responds with a 401
if( jqxhr.status === 401 ){
// Authenticate user again
resetAuthentication()
.done(function(){
// resend original ajax also triggering initial callback
$.ajax( settings );
});
}
});
};
To use the above function you would write something like this:
getRequest({
url: 'http://www.example.com/auth.php',
data: {user: 'Mike', pass: '12345'},
success: function(){ // do stuff }
});
The getRequest()
could probably be made recursive and/or converted into a jQuery plugin but this was sufficient for my needs.
Note: If the resetAutentication function might faile, getRequest()
would have to be recursive.