42

I'm trying to prevent multiple requests when user click on login or register button. This is my code, but it doesn't work. Just the first time works fine, then return false..

$('#do-login').click(function(e) {
    e.preventDefault();

    if ( $(this).data('requestRunning') ) {
        return;
    }

    $(this).data('requestRunning', true);

    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        url: "/php/auth/login.php",
        data: $("#login-form").serialize(),
        success: function(msg) {
            //stuffs
        },
        complete: function() {
            $(this).data('requestRunning', false);
        }
    });      
}); 

Any ideas? Thanks!

10 Answers 10

63

The problem is here:

    complete: function() {
        $(this).data('requestRunning', false);
    }

this no longer points to the button.

$('#do-login').click(function(e) {
    var me = $(this);
    e.preventDefault();

    if ( me.data('requestRunning') ) {
        return;
    }

    me.data('requestRunning', true);

    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        url: "/php/auth/login.php",
        data: $("#login-form").serialize(),
        success: function(msg) {
            //stuffs
        },
        complete: function() {
            me.data('requestRunning', false);
        }
    });      
}); 
0
44

Use on() and off(), that's what they are there for :

$('#do-login').on('click', login);

function login(e) {
    e.preventDefault();
    var that = $(this);
    that.off('click'); // remove handler
    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        url: "/php/auth/login.php",
        data: $("#login-form").serialize()
    }).done(function(msg) {
        // do stuff
    }).always(function() {
        that.on('click', login); // add handler back after ajax
    });
}); 
7
  • 1
    Thanks! Joe's solution works fine. but this other way to get the same result. Which is the best solution?
    – mauriblint
    Sep 12, 2013 at 22:52
  • @adeneo's solution is better.
    – 000
    Sep 12, 2013 at 22:53
  • @JoeFrambach - thanks, but it's a matter of preference really, there's nothing wrong with setting a flag in data(), but this does seem like just what on() and off() was meant to do, add and remove event handlers ?
    – adeneo
    Sep 12, 2013 at 22:56
  • What if: user click on button (so AJAX request is send) then click another time on it (and AJAX is still not complete) : e.preventDefault() wont be called so button will submit the form (while it should just do nothing)
    – tigrou
    Dec 4, 2014 at 10:55
  • @tigrou - yes, if it's a form, that could potentially happen, but it's easy to solve, just add preventDefault to the submit event handler.
    – adeneo
    Dec 4, 2014 at 19:38
6

In your ajax callbacks the context (this) changes from the outer function, you can set it to be the same by using the context property in $.ajax

$.ajax({
    type: "POST",
    url: "/php/auth/login.php",
    data: $("#login-form").serialize(),
    context: this, //<-----
    success: function(msg) {
        //stuffs
    },
    complete: function() {
        $(this).data('requestRunning', false);
    }
});      
1
  • Thanks for explanation of option context Aug 4, 2015 at 12:14
5

You can disable the button.

$(this).prop('disabled', true);
3

I have also faced a similar problem.

Just adding $('#do-login').attr("disabled", true); gives me the solution.

$('#do-login').click(function(e) {
   e.preventDefault();
   $('#do-login').attr("disabled", true);
   .........
   .........

Here do-login is button id.

2

I've tried this and worked very fine for me, I was having trouble that $.ajax send more request until results return,

 var settings = {
    "url": "/php/auth/login.php",
    "method": "POST",
    "timeout": 0,
    "async": false,
    "headers": {
        "Content-Type": "application/json; charset=utf-8"
    },
    "data": jsondata, //data pass here is in JSON format
};
$.ajax(settings).done(function (ress) {
  try{
      console.log(ress, "Result from Ajax here");
    }
    catch(error){
      alert(error);
      console.log(ress);
    }
});

async : false worked for me. Thanks.

0

Or you can do it by $(this).addClass("disabled"); to you button or link and after click is performed, you can $(this).removeClass("disabled");.

// CSS

.disabled{
cursor: not-allowed;

}

// JQUERY

$('#do-login').click(function(e) {
   e.preventDefault();

    $(this).addClass("disabled");
    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        url: "/php/auth/login.php",
        data: $("#login-form").serialize(),
        context: this,
        success: function(msg) {
    //do more here

           $(this).removeClass("disabled");
        },
    });
});

P.S. If you use bootstrap css, you do not need the css part.

0

I found the approach useful. I've implemented it as a general purpose function for jQuery with ES6.

export default function (button, promise) {
    const $button = $(button);
    const semaphore = 'requestRunning';

    if ($button.data(semaphore)) return null;
    $button.data(semaphore, true);

    return promise().always(() => {
        $button.data(semaphore, false);
    });
}

Because $.ajax() returns a promise, you simply pass in the promise and the function takes care of the rest.

Roughly speaking, here's the usage.

import preventDoubleClick from './preventdoubleclick';

...

button.click(() => {
    preventDoubleClick(this, () => $.ajax()
        .done(() => { console.log("success") }));
});
0

This function can help you with control multi Ajax requests and it's has timeout function which can return flag status to 0 after ex. 10sec (In case the server took more than 10 seconds to respond)

var Request_Controller = function(Request_Name = '', Reactivate_Timeout = 10000)
{
    var a = this;
    a.Start_Request = function(){
        if(window.Requests == undefined){
            window.Requests = {};
        }
        window.Requests[Request_Name] = {'Status' : 1, 'Time': + new Date()};
    }

    a.End_Request = function(){
        if(window.Requests == undefined){
            window.Requests = [];
        }
        window.Requests[Request_Name] = undefined;
    }

    a.Is_Request_Running = function(){
        if(window.Requests == undefined || window.Requests[Request_Name] == undefined){
            return 0;
        }else{
            var Time = + new Date();
            // Reactivate the request flag if server take more than 10 sec to respond
            if(window.Requests[Request_Name]['Time'] < (Time - Reactivate_Timeout)) 
            {
                return 0;
            }else{
                return 1
            }
        }
    }
}

To use it:

var Request_Flag = new Request_Controller('Your_Request_Name');
if(!Request_Flag.Is_Request_Running()){

    Request_Flag.Start_Request();

    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        url: "/php/auth/login.php",
        data: $("#login-form").serialize(),
        success: function(msg) {
            //stuffs
        },
        complete: function() {
            Request_Flag.End_Request();
        }
    }); 
}
-9

for prevent multiple ajax request in whole site. For example: If use ajax request in other ajax page, Using ajax in php loop, etc, Give you multiple ajax request with one result. I have solution:

Use window.onload = function() { ...  } 

instead of

$(document).ready(function(){ ...  });

on the main index.php page. Its will be prevent all multi request. :)

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