Reputation: 27058
I am trying to create a basic authentication through the browser, but I can't really get there.
If this script won't be here the browser authentication will take over, but I want to tell the browser that the user is about to make the authentication.
The address should be something like:
http://username:[email protected]/
I have a form:
<form name="cookieform" id="login" method="post">
<input type="text" name="username" id="username" class="text"/>
<input type="password" name="password" id="password" class="text"/>
<input type="submit" name="sub" value="Submit" class="page"/>
</form>
And a script:
var username = $("input#username").val();
var password = $("input#password").val();
function make_base_auth(user, password) {
var tok = user + ':' + password;
var hash = Base64.encode(tok);
return "Basic " + hash;
}
$.ajax
({
type: "GET",
url: "index1.php",
dataType: 'json',
async: false,
data: '{"username": "' + username + '", "password" : "' + password + '"}',
success: function (){
alert('Thanks for your comment!');
}
});
Upvotes: 467
Views: 878902
Reputation: 9478
How things change in a year. In addition to the header attribute in place of xhr.setRequestHeader
, current jQuery (1.7.2+) includes a username and password attribute with the $.ajax
call.
$.ajax
({
type: "GET",
url: "index1.php",
dataType: 'json',
username: username,
password: password,
data: '{ "comment" }',
success: function (){
alert('Thanks for your comment!');
}
});
EDIT from comments and other answers: To be clear - in order to preemptively send authentication without a 401 Unauthorized
response, instead of setRequestHeader
(pre -1.7) use 'headers'
:
$.ajax
({
type: "GET",
url: "index1.php",
dataType: 'json',
headers: {
"Authorization": "Basic " + btoa(USERNAME + ":" + PASSWORD)
},
data: '{ "comment" }',
success: function (){
alert('Thanks for your comment!');
}
});
Upvotes: 391
Reputation: 766
According to SharkAlley answer it works with nginx too.
I was search for a solution to get data by jQuery from a server behind nginx and restricted by Base Auth. This works for me:
server {
server_name example.com;
location / {
if ($request_method = OPTIONS ) {
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*";
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Methods "GET, OPTIONS";
add_header Access-Control-Allow-Headers "Authorization";
# Not necessary
# add_header Access-Control-Allow-Credentials "true";
# add_header Content-Length 0;
# add_header Content-Type text/plain;
return 200;
}
auth_basic "Restricted";
auth_basic_user_file /var/.htpasswd;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8100;
}
}
And the JavaScript code is:
var auth = btoa('username:password');
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: 'http://example.com',
headers: {
"Authorization": "Basic " + auth
},
success : function(data) {
},
});
Article that I find useful:
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 11659
As others have suggested, you can set the username and password directly in the Ajax call:
$.ajax({
username: username,
password: password,
// ... other parameters.
});
OR use the headers property if you would rather not store your credentials in plain text:
$.ajax({
headers: {"Authorization": "Basic xxxx"},
// ... other parameters.
});
Whichever way you send it, the server has to be very polite. For Apache, your .htaccess file should look something like this:
<LimitExcept OPTIONS>
AuthUserFile /path/to/.htpasswd
AuthType Basic
AuthName "Whatever"
Require valid-user
</LimitExcept>
Header always set Access-Control-Allow-Headers Authorization
Header always set Access-Control-Allow-Credentials true
SetEnvIf Origin "^(.*?)$" origin_is=$0
Header always set Access-Control-Allow-Origin %{origin_is}e env=origin_is
For some cross domain requests, the browser sends a preflight OPTIONS request that is missing your authentication headers. Wrap your authentication directives inside the LimitExcept tag to respond properly to the preflight.
Then send a few headers to tell the browser that it is allowed to authenticate, and the Access-Control-Allow-Origin to grant permission for the cross-site request.
In some cases, the * wildcard doesn't work as a value for Access-Control-Allow-Origin: You need to return the exact domain of the callee. Use SetEnvIf to capture this value.
Upvotes: 32
Reputation: 4534
The examples above are a bit confusing, and this is probably the best way:
$.ajaxSetup({
headers: {
'Authorization': "Basic " + btoa(USERNAME + ":" + PASSWORD)
}
});
I took the above from a combination of Rico and Yossi's answer.
The btoa function Base64 encodes a string.
Upvotes: 35
Reputation: 141
JSONP does not work with basic authentication so the jQuery beforeSend callback won't work with JSONP/Script.
I managed to work around this limitation by adding the user and password to the request (e.g. user:[email protected]). This works with pretty much any browser except Internet Explorer where authentication through URLs is not supported (the call will simply not be executed).
See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/834489.
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 5483
There are 3 ways to achieve this as shown below
Method 1:
var uName="abc";
var passwrd="pqr";
$.ajax({
type: '{GET/POST}',
url: '{urlpath}',
headers: {
"Authorization": "Basic " + btoa(uName+":"+passwrd);
},
success : function(data) {
//Success block
},
error: function (xhr,ajaxOptions,throwError){
//Error block
},
});
Method 2:
var uName="abc";
var passwrd="pqr";
$.ajax({
type: '{GET/POST}',
url: '{urlpath}',
beforeSend: function (xhr){
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', "Basic " + btoa(uName+":"+passwrd));
},
success : function(data) {
//Success block
},
error: function (xhr,ajaxOptions,throwError){
//Error block
},
});
Method 3:
var uName="abc";
var passwrd="pqr";
$.ajax({
type: '{GET/POST}',
url: '{urlpath}',
username:uName,
password:passwrd,
success : function(data) {
//Success block
},
error: function (xhr,ajaxOptions,throwError){
//Error block
},
});
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 8360
Use jQuery's beforeSend
callback to add an HTTP header with the authentication information:
beforeSend: function (xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader ("Authorization", "Basic " + btoa(username + ":" + password));
},
Upvotes: 525
Reputation: 3640
Use the jQuery ajaxSetup function, that can set up default values for all ajax requests.
$.ajaxSetup({
headers: {
'Authorization': "Basic XXXXX"
}
});
Upvotes: 23
Reputation: 887
Or, simply use the headers property introduced in 1.5:
headers: {"Authorization": "Basic xxxx"}
Reference: jQuery Ajax API
Upvotes: 42
Reputation: 11486
Use the beforeSend callback to add a HTTP header with the authentication information like so:
var username = $("input#username").val();
var password = $("input#password").val();
function make_base_auth(user, password) {
var tok = user + ':' + password;
var hash = btoa(tok);
return "Basic " + hash;
}
$.ajax
({
type: "GET",
url: "index1.php",
dataType: 'json',
async: false,
data: '{}',
beforeSend: function (xhr){
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', make_base_auth(username, password));
},
success: function (){
alert('Thanks for your comment!');
}
});
Upvotes: 65