XmlHttpRequest error: Origin null is not allowed b

2018-12-31 00:26发布

I'm developing a page that pulls images from Flickr and Panoramio via jQuery's AJAX support.

The Flickr side is working fine, but when I try to $.get(url, callback) from Panoramio, I see an error in Chrome's console:

XMLHttpRequest cannot load http://www.panoramio.com/wapi/data/get_photos?v=1&key=dummykey&tag=test&offset=0&length=20&callback=processImages&minx=-30&miny=0&maxx=0&maxy=150. Origin null is not allowed by Access-Control-Allow-Origin.

If I query that URL from a browser directly it works fine. What is going on, and can I get around this? Am I composing my query incorrectly, or is this something that Panoramio does to hinder what I'm trying to do?

Google didn't turn up any useful matches on the error message.

EDIT

Here's some sample code that shows the problem:

$().ready(function () {
  var url = 'http://www.panoramio.com/wapi/data/get_photos?v=1&key=dummykey&tag=test&offset=0&length=20&callback=processImages&minx=-30&miny=0&maxx=0&maxy=150';

  $.get(url, function (jsonp) {
    var processImages = function (data) {
      alert('ok');
    };

    eval(jsonp);
  });
});

You can run the example online.

EDIT 2

Thanks to Darin for his help with this. THE ABOVE CODE IS WRONG. Use this instead:

$().ready(function () {
  var url = 'http://www.panoramio.com/wapi/data/get_photos?v=1&key=dummykey&tag=test&offset=0&length=20&minx=-30&miny=0&maxx=0&maxy=150&callback=?';

  $.get(url, function (data) {
    // can use 'data' in here...
  });
});

16条回答
倾城一夜雪
2楼-- · 2018-12-31 00:31

Works for me on Google Chrome v5.0.375.127 (I get the alert):

$.get('http://www.panoramio.com/wapi/data/get_photos?v=1&key=dummykey&tag=test&offset=0&length=20&callback=?&minx=-30&miny=0&maxx=0&maxy=150',
function(json) {
    alert(json.photos[1].photoUrl);
});

Also I would recommend you using the $.getJSON() method instead as the previous doesn't work on IE8 (at least on my machine):

$.getJSON('http://www.panoramio.com/wapi/data/get_photos?v=1&key=dummykey&tag=test&offset=0&length=20&callback=?&minx=-30&miny=0&maxx=0&maxy=150', 
function(json) {
    alert(json.photos[1].photoUrl);
});

You may try it online from here.


UPDATE:

Now that you have shown your code I can see the problem with it. You are having both an anonymous function and inline function but both will be called processImages. That's how jQuery's JSONP support works. Notice how I am defining the callback=? so that you can use an anonymous function. You may read more about it in the documentation.

Another remark is that you shouldn't call eval. The parameter passed to your anonymous function will already be parsed into JSON by jQuery.

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查无此人
3楼-- · 2018-12-31 00:31

We managed it via the http.conf file (edited and then restarted the HTTP service):

<Directory "/home/the directory_where_your_serverside_pages_is">
    Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*"
    AllowOverride all
    Order allow,deny
    Allow from all
</Directory>

In the Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*", you can put a precise URL.

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忆尘夕之涩
4楼-- · 2018-12-31 00:33

You need to maybe add a HEADER in your called script, here is what I had to do in PHP:

header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *');

More details in Cross domain AJAX ou services WEB (in French).

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荒废的爱情
5楼-- · 2018-12-31 00:33

For a simple HTML project:

cd project
python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000

Then browse your file.

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谁念西风独自凉
6楼-- · 2018-12-31 00:35

For the record, as far as I can tell, you had two problems:

  1. You weren't passing a "jsonp" type specifier to your $.get, so it was using an ordinary XMLHttpRequest. However, your browser supported CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing) to allow cross-domain XMLHttpRequest if the server OKed it. That's where the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header came in.

  2. I believe you mentioned you were running it from a file:// URL. There are two ways for CORS headers to signal that a cross-domain XHR is OK. One is to send Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * (which, if you were reaching Flickr via $.get, they must have been doing) while the other was to echo back the contents of the Origin header. However, file:// URLs produce a null Origin which can't be authorized via echo-back.

The first was solved in a roundabout way by Darin's suggestion to use $.getJSON. It does a little magic to change the request type from its default of "json" to "jsonp" if it sees the substring callback=? in the URL.

That solved the second by no longer trying to perform a CORS request from a file:// URL.

To clarify for other people, here are the simple troubleshooting instructions:

  1. If you're trying to use JSONP, make sure one of the following is the case:
    • You're using $.get and set dataType to jsonp.
    • You're using $.getJSON and included callback=? in the URL.
  2. If you're trying to do a cross-domain XMLHttpRequest via CORS...
    1. Make sure you're testing via http://. Scripts running via file:// have limited support for CORS.
    2. Make sure the browser actually supports CORS. (Opera and Internet Explorer are late to the party)
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孤独寂梦人
7楼-- · 2018-12-31 00:40

It's the same origin policy, you have to use a JSON-P interface or a proxy running on the same host.

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