In the following code, all I am trying to do is to get the HTTP response code from a jQuery.ajax call. Then, if the code is 301 (Moved Permanently), display the 'Location' response header:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
   "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
  <title>jQuery 301 Trial</title>
  <script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.5.1.min.js"></script>

  <script type="text/javascript">
  function get_resp_status(url) {
    $.ajax({
      url: url,
      complete: function (jqxhr, txt_status) {
        console.log ("Complete: [ " + txt_status + " ] " + jqxhr);
        // if (response code is 301) {
        console.log ("Location: " + jqxhr.getResponseHeader("Location"));
        // }
      }
    });
  }
  </script>
  <script type="text/javascript">
  $(document).ready(function(){
    $('a').mouseenter(
      function () {
        get_resp_status(this.href);
      },
      function () {
      }
    );
  });
  </script>
</head>
<body>
  <a href="http://ow.ly/4etPl">Test 301 redirect</a>
  <a href="http://cnn.com/not_found">Test 404 not found</a>
</body>
</html>

Can someone point out where I am going wrong? When I check the 'jqxhr' object in Firebug, I can't find the status code, nor the 'Location' response header. I set the breakpoint on last line of 'complete'.

Thanks much.

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3 Answers

I see the status field on the jqXhr object, here is a fiddle with it working:

http://jsfiddle.net/magicaj/55HQq/3/

$.ajax({
    //...        
    success: function(data, textStatus, xhr) {
        console.log(xhr.status);
    },
    complete: function(xhr, textStatus) {
        console.log(xhr.status);
    } 
});
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It seems to be working in jsFiddle. Based on that and jQuery documentstion, xhr.status should do what I want. However, when I try the same in my original code (txt_status replaced with jqxhr.status), I keep getting jqxhr.status of 0. Here's a screenshot: twitpic.com/4alsqj – Mahesh Mar 18 '11 at 9:36
I believe the issue is you are not running against a web server but locally from the file system. I think if you fired up a local web server this would work correctly, here are some articles on the subject: pearweb.com/javascript/XMLHttpRequest.html developer.mozilla.org/En/Using_XMLHttpRequest "The key thing to note here is that the result status is being compared to 0 for success instead of 200. This is because the file and ftp schemes do not use HTTP result codes." – Adam Ayres Mar 18 '11 at 20:24
this is great. Especially when I can have my backend send out status codes. – thatmiddleway Jan 10 at 16:15
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When your XHR request returns a Redirect response (HTTP Status 301 or 302), the XMLHttpRequest automatically follows the redirected URL and returns the status code of that URL.

You can get the non-redirecting status codes (200, 302, 400, 500 etc) via the status property of the xhr object.

So you cannot get the redirected location from the response header of a 301 or 302 request.

You might have to change your server logic to respond in a way that you can handle the redirect, rather than letting the browser do it. An example implementation.

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jqxhr is a json object:

complete returns:
The jqXHR (in jQuery 1.4.x, XMLHTTPRequest) object and a string categorizing the status of the request ("success", "notmodified", "error", "timeout", "abort", or "parsererror").

see: jQuery ajax

so you would do:

jqxhr.status to get the status

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