I have some Javascript JQuery code that does an Ajax call to the server every 5 mins, it's to keep the server session alive and keep the user logged in. I'm using $.ajax()
method in JQuery. This function seems to have an 'error' property that I'm trying to use in the event that the user's internet connection goes down so that the KeepAlive script continues to run. I'm using the following code:
var keepAliveTimeout = 1000 * 10;
function keepSessionAlive()
{
$.ajax(
{
type: 'GET',
url: 'http://www.mywebapp.com/keepAlive',
success: function(data)
{
alert('Success');
setTimeout(function()
{
keepSessionAlive();
}, keepAliveTimeout);
},
error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown)
{
alert('Failure');
setTimeout(function()
{
keepSessionAlive();
}, keepAliveTimeout);
}
});
}
When I run it, I'll get 'Success' popup on the screen in an alert box every 10 seconds which is fine. However, as soon as I unplug the network cable, I get nothing, I was expecting the error function to get called and see a 'Failure' alert box, but nothing happens.
Am I correct in assuming that the 'error' function is only for non '200' status codes returned from the server? Is there a way to detect network connection problems when making an Ajax call?
// start snippet
error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {
if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 4) {
// HTTP error (can be checked by XMLHttpRequest.status and XMLHttpRequest.statusText)
}
else if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 0) {
// Network error (i.e. connection refused, access denied due to CORS, etc.)
}
else {
// something weird is happening
}
}
//end snippet
You should just add: timeout: <number of miliseconds>,
somewhere within $.ajax({})
. Also, cache: false,
might help in a few scenarios.
$.ajax is well documented, you should check options there, might find something useful.
Good luck!
Since I can't duplicate the issue I can only suggest to try with a timeout on the ajax call. In jQuery you can set it with the $.ajaxSetup (and it will be global for all your $.ajax calls) or you can set it specifically for your call like this:
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: 'http://www.mywebapp.com/keepAlive',
timeout: 15000,
success: function(data) {},
error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {}
})
JQuery will register a 15 seconds timeout on your call; after that without an http response code from the server jQuery will execute the error callback with the textStatus value set to "timeout". With this you can at least stop the ajax call but you won't be able to differentiate the real network issues from the loss of connections.
What I see in this case is that if I pull the client machine's network cable and make the call, the ajax success handler is called (why, I don't know), and the data parameter is an empty string. So if you factor out the real error handling, you can do something like this:
function handleError(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
...
}
jQuery.ajax({
...
success: function(data, textStatus, jqXHR) {
if (data == "") handleError(jqXHR, "clientNetworkError", "");
},
error: handleError
});
If you are making cross domain call the Use Jsonp. else the error is not returned.
USE
xhr.onerror = function(e){
if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 4) {
// HTTP error (can be checked by XMLHttpRequest.status and XMLHttpRequest.statusText)
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro HTTP: '+XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
else if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 0) {
// Network error (i.e. connection refused, access denied due to CORS, etc.)
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro de rede:'+XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
else {
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro desconhecido.');
}
};
(more code below - UPLOAD IMAGE EXAMPLE)
var selFoto = {
foto: null,
upload: function(){
LoadMod.show();
var arquivo = document.frmServico.fileupload.files[0];
var formData = new FormData();
if (arquivo.type.match('image.*')) {
formData.append('upload', arquivo, arquivo.name);
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('POST', 'FotoViewServlet?acao=uploadFoto', true);
xhr.responseType = 'blob';
xhr.onload = function(e){
if (this.status == 200) {
selFoto.foto = this.response;
var url = window.URL || window.webkitURL;
document.frmServico.fotoid.src = url.createObjectURL(this.response);
$('#foto-id').show();
$('#div_upload_foto').hide();
$('#div_master_upload_foto').css('background-color','transparent');
$('#div_master_upload_foto').css('border','0');
Dados.foto = document.frmServico.fotoid;
LoadMod.hide();
}
else{
erroUploadFoto(XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 4) {
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro HTTP: '+XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
else if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 0) {
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro de rede:'+XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
};
xhr.onerror = function(e){
if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 4) {
// HTTP error (can be checked by XMLHttpRequest.status and XMLHttpRequest.statusText)
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro HTTP: '+XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
else if (XMLHttpRequest.readyState == 0) {
// Network error (i.e. connection refused, access denied due to CORS, etc.)
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro de rede:'+XMLHttpRequest.statusText);
}
else {
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('Erro desconhecido.');
}
};
xhr.send(formData);
}
else{
selFoto.erroUploadFoto('');
MyCity.mensagens.push('Selecione uma imagem.');
MyCity.showMensagensAlerta();
}
},
erroUploadFoto : function(mensagem) {
selFoto.foto = null;
$('#file-upload').val('');
LoadMod.hide();
MyCity.mensagens.push('Erro ao atualizar a foto. '+mensagem);
MyCity.showMensagensAlerta();
}
};
here's what I did to alert user in case their network went down or upon page update failure:
I have a div-tag on the page where I put current time and update this tag every 10 seconds. It looks something like this:
That's it! You can replace the alert-part with anything you want, of course. Hope this helps.
Have you tried this?
$(document).ajaxError(function(){ alert('error'); }
That should handle all AjaxErrors. I´ve found it here. There you find also a possibility to write these errors to your firebug console.
Success story sharing
<form ... data-ajax-failure="YourMethod" ...></form>
and on your methodfunction YourMethod(XMLHttpRequest) { ..same code... }
XMLHttpRequest.readyState
see ajax_xmlhttprequest_response.asp