I'm making an ajax jsonp request, but the failure error handling wont work. If the request is 404 or 500 it won't handle the error.
I've been looking around to find an answer to this, but can't find anything. There seems to be a solution with http://code.google.com/p/jquery-jsonp/, but I can't find any examples on how to use it.
function authenticate(user, pass) {
$.ajax ({
type: "POST",
url: "url",
dataType: 'jsonp',
async: false,
//json object to sent to the authentication url
data: {"u": userid, "p": pass},
success: function (data) {
//successful authentication here
console.log(data);
},
error: function(XHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
alert("error: " + textStatus);
alert("error: " + errorThrown);
}
})
}
Two ways to handle error,
There is no error handling for cross domain JSONP requests. Use jsonp plug-in available on Github https://github.com/jaubourg/jquery-jsonp that provides support for error handling.
jQuery ajax Timeout - Timeout after a reasonable amount of time to fire the error callback because it might have failed silently. You may not know what the actual error (or error status) was but at least you get to handle the error
If you check jQuery.ajax() documentation, you can find:
error
A function to be called if the request fails (...) Note: This handler is not called for cross-domain script and cross-domain JSONP requests. This is an Ajax Event.
Because of that, you're forced to find workaround. You can specify timeout to trigger an error callback. It means that within specified time frame the request should be successfully completed. Otherwise, assume it has failed:
$.ajax({
...
timeout: 5000, // a lot of time for the request to be successfully completed
...
error: function(x, t, m) {
if(t==="timeout") {
// something went wrong (handle it)
}
}
});
Other issues in your code...
While JSONP (look here and here) can be used to overcome origin policy restriction, you can't POST using JSONP (see CORS instead) because it just doesn't work that way - it creates a element to fetch data, which has to be done via GET request. JSONP solution doesn't use XmlHttpRequest object, so it is not an AJAX request in the standard way of understanding, but the content is still accessed dynamically - no difference for the end user.
$.ajax({
url: url,
type: "GET"
dataType: "jsonp",
...
Second, you provide data incorrectly. You're pushing javascript object (created using object literals) onto the wire instead of its serialized JSON representation. Create JSON string (not manually, use e.g. JSON.stringify
converter):
$.ajax({
...
data: JSON.stringify({u: userid, p: pass}),
...
Last issue, you've set async
to false
, while documentation says:
Cross-domain requests and dataType: "jsonp" requests do not support
synchronous operation.
I've been struggling like you for a while trying to handle errors on ajax jsonp DataType requests, however I want to share you my code, hope it helps. A basic thing is to include a timeout on the ajax request, otherwise it'll never enter the error: function
$.ajax({
url: "google.com/api/doesnotexists",
dataType: "jsonp",
timeout: 5000,
success: function (parsed_json) {
console.log(parsed_json);
},
error: function (parsedjson, textStatus, errorThrown) {
console.log("parsedJson: " + JSON.stringify(parsedjson));
$('body').append(
"parsedJson status: " + parsedjson.status + '</br>' +
"errorStatus: " + textStatus + '</br>' +
"errorThrown: " + errorThrown);
}
});
jsfiddle - Handle Errors with jquery ajax call and JSONP dataType - Error 404
I'm building a fragile JS project that uses jquery-jsonp, and came up with a dual-jsonp/ajax approach that handles errors no matter which method ends up being used.
function authenticate(user, pass) {
var ajax = ($.jsonp || $.ajax)({
'url': /* your auth url */,
'data': { /* user, pass, ... */ },
'contentType': "application/javascript",
'dataType': 'jsonp',
'callbackParameter': 'callback' // $.jsonp only; $.ajax uses 'jsonpCallback'
});
ajax.done(function (data) {
// your success events
});
ajax.fail(function (jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
// $.jsonp calls this func as function (jqXHR, textStatus)
// and $.ajax calls this func with the given signature
console.error('AJAX / JSONP ' + textStatus + ': ' +
(errorThrown || jqXHR.url));
});
}
Since both jquery-jsonp and $.ajax support the jQuery Deferred specification, we can merge the two error handlers together, handling 400 and 500-series errors, as well as lookup timeouts.
Old question but I had the same problem. Here is a solution that worked for me.
If you own the domain you shoot your request at, you can set a variable in the response and check for it on the client side.
Server Side:
SERVER_RESPONSE=true; Callback(parameter1, parameter2);
Client Side:
if(typeof SERVER_RESPONSE === 'undefined'){
console.log('No Response, maybe server is down');
}
else{
console.log('Got a server response');
}