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So I remember that one time, when i was trying to do an AJAX post, I had to pass in the form_authenticity_token as one of the data to rails. For some reason, not doing so will generate some kind of error and I would get logged out immediately. Is there a way to still have this this authenticity token for form submission but not for ajax post? In other words, I dont want to pass in that autheniticy token in my post data.

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  • Can you make GET requests using AJAX instead and keep the protect from forgery feature intact?
    – Teddy
    Jan 13, 2012 at 21:06
  • If you're using the Rails jQuery UJS adapter (which I'm assuming you are since you tagged jQuery), then it will always submit the authenticity token along with any ajax call. You'd have to modify that JS code to do what you are asking for. By the way, I hope this is on a website that no one is going to use since this is a bad idea.
    – iwasrobbed
    Jan 13, 2012 at 21:11
  • passing in the auth token as a part of ajax is a bad idea? how so?
    – denniss
    Jan 13, 2012 at 21:39

2 Answers 2

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Per the documentation

You can disable csrf protection on controller-by-controller basis:

skip_before_filter :verify_authenticity_token

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Rather than disabling authenticity token verification, you could just pass it to javascript like so:

<%= javascript_tag "var AUTH_TOKEN = #{form_authenticity_token.inspect};" if protect_against_forgery? %>

Then just submit AUTH_TOKEN along with any AJAX posts.

Source

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