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I have a method in which I want to stop execution (do not return), wait on an event triggered by the UI, then continue that method.

chrome.webRequest.onBeforeSendHeaders.addListener(
    function(details) {

        var newHeaders;
        //I need to stop here, wait on some user event, update the `newHeaders` variable with
        //the content set by the user on the page

        return {requestHeaders:newHeaders};
    },
    {urls: ["<all_urls>"]},
    ["blocking", "requestHeaders"]
);

What I'm doing: Developing a chrome plugin that intercepts requests, modify them by the input of the user from html, then send the request. Based on the docs, I assumed I have to modify it directly in the method and return it.

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  • 1
    JavaScript itself has no facility to stop execution. Why not just drop out of the function and wait for the event to trigger another function call? Sep 20, 2012 at 19:01
  • @Diodeus Actually, it has some blocking functions such as alert or prompt. Sep 22, 2012 at 11:03

1 Answer 1

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I hope this points you in the right direction:

The docs at: http://developer.chrome.com/trunk/extensions/webRequest.html say:

If the optional opt_extraInfoSpec array contains the string 'blocking' (only allowed for specific events), the callback function is handled synchronously. That means that the request is blocked until the callback function returns. In this case, the callback can return a BlockingResponse that determines the further life cycle of the request. Depending on the context, this response allows cancelling or redirecting a request (onBeforeRequest), cancelling a request or modifying headers (onBeforeSendHeaders, onHeadersReceived), or providing authentication credentials (onAuthRequired).

My guess is that you can specify "blocking" and then gather information from your user.

1
  • Thank you, I read that too, but don't quite understand how to implement it as the code samples given are limited in regards to that feature Sep 21, 2012 at 0:44

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