I have an existing jQuery plugin which makes a lot of AJAX calls (mostly JSON). I am wondering what is the quickest to allow it to do cross-site calls i.e. the $.get and $.post URL's will not be from the same domain.
I have heard of JSONP, but was wondering if someone could give me an concrete example to go about the whole process. I want to make minimal changes if possible to my script. Should I use a proxy.php of sorts?
Thank you for your time.
JSONP will allow you to do cross-site calls. See jQuery docs on that matter.
The concept is simple: instead of doing a normal Ajax call, jQuery will append a <script>
tag to your <head>
. In order for this to work, your JSON data needs to be wrapped in a
function call.
Your server needs to send information in such way (PHP example):
$json = json_encode($data);
echo $_GET['jsonp_callback'] . '(' . $json . ');';
Then, you can use jQuery to fetch that information:
$.ajax({
dataType: 'jsonp',
jsonp: 'jsonp_callback',
url: 'http://myotherserver.com/getdata',
success: function () {
// do stuff
},
});
More information is available here: What is JSONP?
If you have control over the remote domain or the remote domain has a permissive crossdomain.xml you can drop in a library like flXHR in conjunction with its jQuery plugin.
You can also use CORS instead of JSONP, works with ff,chrome,safari. CORS is less troublesome to setup and requires only a filter in server-side.
Please go through this article.Well explained and similar. Only constraint is IE does not support this and older versions of FF,chrome also has some issues.
http://techblog.constantcontact.com/software-development/using-cors-for-cross-domain-ajax-requests/
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1197802/cross-site-ajax-using-jquery