The http module from browserify, but supporting browsers that can only do cross-origin requests with XDomainRequest (IE8 & IE9).
The out-of-the-box [http-browserify] does not work for cross-origin requests with XDomainRequest, and an open issue has gone unresponded to for almost 3 years.
Use this in your browserify project by adding the following to your package.json:
"browser": {
"http": "http-browserify-xdr"
}
I intend to have version numbers here mirror http-browserify changes (>= 1.4.1) until @substack merges my pull request.
Note: XDomainRequests cannot send cookies, so 'withCredentials' options will be ignored. The way to do cross-origin requests withCredentials in these browsers is, well, you can't. You have to open an iframe serving a src on the origin you want to request, then postMessage into it, have it make the request, then postMessage the response out. See sockjs-client for a referenc eimplementation of that.
The following is the original http-browserify README because the API is the same.
var http = require('http');
http.get({ host: 'anotherorigin.com', path : '/beep' }, function (res) {
var div = document.getElementById('result');
div.innerHTML += 'GET /beep<br>';
res.on('data', function (buf) {
div.innerHTML += buf;
});
res.on('end', function () {
div.innerHTML += '<br>__END__';
});
});
var http = require('http');
where opts
are:
opts.method='GET'
- http method verbopts.path
- path string, example:'/foo/bar?baz=555'
opts.headers={}
- as an object mapping key names to string or Array valuesopts.host=window.location.host
- http hostopts.port=window.location.port
- http portopts.responseType
- response type to set on the underlying xhr object
The callback will be called with the response object.
A shortcut for
options.method = 'GET';
var req = http.request(options, cb);
req.end();
Set an http header.
Get an http header.
Remove an http header.
Write some data to the request body.
Close and send the request body, optionally with additional data
to append.
Return an http header, if set. key
is case-insensitive.
- res.statusCode, the numeric http response code
- res.headers, an object with all lowercase keys
This module has been tested and works with:
- Internet Explorer 5.5, 6, 7, 8, 9
- Firefox 3.5
- Chrome 7.0
- Opera 10.6
- Safari 5.0
Multipart streaming responses are buffered in all versions of Internet Explorer
and are somewhat buffered in Opera. In all the other browsers you get a nice
unbuffered stream of "data"
events when you send down a content-type of
multipart/octet-stream
or similar.
You can do:
var bundle = browserify({
require : { http : 'http-browserify-xdr' }
});
in order to map "http-browserify-xdr" over require('http')
in your browserified
source.
With npm do:
npm install http-browserify-xdr
MIT