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Is it possible that using jQuery, I cancel/abort an Ajax request that I have not yet received the response from?

2
  • 2
    Maybe I've misunderstood the question, but couldn't you simply use $.ajaxStop? Sep 13, 2013 at 11:47
  • 17
    @LukeMadhanga; I think ajaxStop only detects when all AJAX requests are complete, it doesn't stop a request. In my experience, you would use it like this: $(document).ajaxStop(function(){alert("All done")}). Using .abort() is the best option.
    – TheCarver
    Dec 9, 2013 at 11:35

18 Answers 18

1859

Most of the jQuery Ajax methods return an XMLHttpRequest (or the equivalent) object, so you can just use abort().

See the documentation:

  • abort Method (MSDN). Cancels the current HTTP request.
  • abort() (MDN). If the request has been sent already, this method will abort the request.
var xhr = $.ajax({
    type: "POST",
    url: "some.php",
    data: "name=John&location=Boston",
    success: function(msg){
       alert( "Data Saved: " + msg );
    }
});

//kill the request
xhr.abort()

UPDATE: As of jQuery 1.5 the returned object is a wrapper for the native XMLHttpRequest object called jqXHR. This object appears to expose all of the native properties and methods so the above example still works. See The jqXHR Object (jQuery API documentation).

UPDATE 2: As of jQuery 3, the ajax method now returns a promise with extra methods (like abort), so the above code still works, though the object being returned is not an xhr any more. See the 3.0 blog here.

UPDATE 3: xhr.abort() still works on jQuery 3.x. Don't assume the update 2 is correct. More info on jQuery Github repository.

0
123

You can't recall the request but you can set a timeout value after which the response will be ignored. See this page for jquery AJAX options. I believe that your error callback will be called if the timeout period is exceeded. There is already a default timeout on every AJAX request.

You can also use the abort() method on the request object but, while it will cause the client to stop listening for the event, it may probably will not stop the server from processing it.

81

Save the calls you make in an array, then call xhr.abort() on each.

HUGE CAVEAT: You can abort a request, but that's only the client side. The server side could still be processing the request. If you are using something like PHP or ASP with session data, the session data is locked until the ajax has finished. So, to allow the user to continue browsing the website, you have to call session_write_close(). This saves the session and unlocks it so that other pages waiting to continue will proceed. Without this, several pages can be waiting for the lock to be removed.

0
77

It's an asynchronous request, meaning once it's sent it's out there.

In case your server is starting a very expensive operation due to the AJAX request, the best you can do is open your server to listen for cancel requests, and send a separate AJAX request notifying the server to stop whatever it's doing.

Otherwise, simply ignore the AJAX response.

1
  • 56
    In this context, asynchronous simply means the request doesn't interrupt the flow of the script. Browsers now have the ability to abort the request prematurely before the request is completed. Apr 10, 2012 at 19:12
70

AJAX requests may not complete in the order they were started. Instead of aborting, you can choose to ignore all AJAX responses except for the most recent one:

  • Create a counter
  • Increment the counter when you initiate AJAX request
  • Use the current value of counter to "stamp" the request
  • In the success callback compare the stamp with the counter to check if it was the most recent request

Rough outline of code:

var xhrCount = 0;
function sendXHR() {
    // sequence number for the current invocation of function
    var seqNumber = ++xhrCount;
    $.post("/echo/json/", { delay: Math.floor(Math.random() * 5) }, function() {
        // this works because of the way closures work
        if (seqNumber === xhrCount) {
            console.log("Process the response");
        } else {
            console.log("Ignore the response");
        }
    });
}
sendXHR();
sendXHR();
sendXHR();
// AJAX requests complete in any order but only the last 
// one will trigger "Process the response" message

Demo on jsFiddle

0
48

It is always best practice to do something like this.

var $request;
if ($request != null){ 
    $request.abort();
    $request = null;
}

$request = $.ajax({
    type : "POST", //TODO: Must be changed to POST
    url : "yourfile.php",
    data : "data"
    }).done(function(msg) {
        alert(msg);
    });

But it is much better if you check an if statement to check whether the ajax request is null or not.

2
  • 3
    I also check if a request is already running, but I use a boolean, as it's lighter.
    – Zesty
    Jul 29, 2015 at 5:02
  • 1
    ` var $request; if ($request != null)` Why? Here the code is creating an empty variable and then checking if it's not null without any strict check. What is the educational meaning of this useless check that it's always false? Moreover, this is a late answer that just tells to use abort() (already answered above) but without explaining it in any way. The phrase "It's always best practice to do something like this" is just a positive buzzword that entices inexperienced to vote up. Voted down for that until clarifications or improvements. Dec 10, 2021 at 8:44
47

We just had to work around this problem and tested three different approaches.

  1. does cancel the request as suggested by @meouw
  2. execute all request but only processes the result of the last submit
  3. prevents new requests as long as another one is still pending

var Ajax1 = {
  call: function() {
    if (typeof this.xhr !== 'undefined')
      this.xhr.abort();
    this.xhr = $.ajax({
      url: 'your/long/running/request/path',
      type: 'GET',
      success: function(data) {
        //process response
      }
    });
  }
};
var Ajax2 = {
  counter: 0,
  call: function() {
    var self = this,
      seq = ++this.counter;
    $.ajax({
      url: 'your/long/running/request/path',
      type: 'GET',
      success: function(data) {
        if (seq === self.counter) {
          //process response
        }
      }
    });
  }
};
var Ajax3 = {
  active: false,
  call: function() {
    if (this.active === false) {
      this.active = true;
      var self = this;
      $.ajax({
        url: 'your/long/running/request/path',
        type: 'GET',
        success: function(data) {
          //process response
        },
        complete: function() {
          self.active = false;
        }
      });
    }
  }
};
$(function() {
  $('#button').click(function(e) {
    Ajax3.call();
  });
})
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input id="button" type="button" value="click" />

In our case we decided to use approach #3 as it produces less load for the server. But I am not 100% sure if jQuery guarantees the call of the .complete()-method, this could produce a deadlock situation. In our tests we could not reproduce such a situation.

17

Just call xhr.abort() whether it's jquery ajax object or native XMLHTTPRequest object.

example:

//jQuery ajax
$(document).ready(function(){
    var xhr = $.get('/server');
    setTimeout(function(){xhr.abort();}, 2000);
});

//native XMLHTTPRequest
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET','/server',true);
xhr.send();
setTimeout(function(){xhr.abort();}, 2000);
0
17

You can abort any continuous ajax call by using this

<input id="searchbox" name="searchbox" type="text" />

<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.11.0.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
     var request = null;
        $('#searchbox').keyup(function () {
            var id = $(this).val();
            request = $.ajax({
                type: "POST", //TODO: Must be changed to POST
                url: "index.php",
                data: {'id':id},
                success: function () {
    
                },
                beforeSend: function () {
                    if (request !== null) {
                        request.abort();
                    }
                }
            });
        });
</script>
16

As many people on the thread have noted, just because the request is aborted on the client-side, the server will still process the request. This creates unnecessary load on the server because it's doing work that we've quit listening to on the front-end.

The problem I was trying to solve (that others may run in to as well) is that when the user entered information in an input field, I wanted to fire off a request for a Google Instant type of feel.

To avoid firing unnecessary requests and to maintain the snappiness of the front-end, I did the following:

var xhrQueue = [];
var xhrCount = 0;

$('#search_q').keyup(function(){

    xhrQueue.push(xhrCount);

    setTimeout(function(){

        xhrCount = ++xhrCount;

        if (xhrCount === xhrQueue.length) {
            // Fire Your XHR //
        }

    }, 150);

});

This will essentially send one request every 150ms (a variable that you can customize for your own needs). If you're having trouble understanding what exactly is happening here, log xhrCount and xhrQueue to the console just before the if block.

0
14

I was doing a live search solution and needed to cancel pending requests that may have taken longer than the latest/most current request.

In my case I used something like this:

//On document ready
var ajax_inprocess = false;

$(document).ajaxStart(function() {
ajax_inprocess = true;
});

$(document).ajaxStop(function() {
ajax_inprocess = false;
});

//Snippet from live search function
if (ajax_inprocess == true)
{
    request.abort();
}
//Call for new request 
0
12

Just use ajax.abort() for example you could abort any pending ajax request before sending another one like this

//check for existing ajax request
if(ajax){ 
 ajax.abort();
 }
//then you make another ajax request
$.ajax(
 //your code here
  );
0
10

there is no reliable way to do it, and I would not even try it, once the request is on the go; the only way to react reasonably is to ignore the response.

in most cases, it may happen in situations like: a user clicks too often on a button triggering many consecutive XHR, here you have many options, either block the button till XHR is returned, or dont even trigger new XHR while another is running hinting the user to lean back - or discard any pending XHR response but the recent.

8

The following code shows initiating as well as aborting an Ajax request:

function libAjax(){
  var req;
  function start(){

  req =    $.ajax({
              url: '1.php',
              success: function(data){
                console.log(data)
              }
            });

  }

  function stop(){
    req.abort();
  }

  return {start:start,stop:stop}
}

var obj = libAjax();

 $(".go").click(function(){


  obj.start();


 })



 $(".stop").click(function(){

  obj.stop();


 })
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="button" class="go" value="GO!" >
   <input type="button" class="stop" value="STOP!" >
1
  • 5
    Please provide an explanation of how this solves the question. This will help the OP and other future searchers.
    – SnareChops
    Jan 29, 2016 at 0:48
6

If xhr.abort(); causes page reload,

Then you can set onreadystatechange before abort to prevent:

// ↓ prevent page reload by abort()
xhr.onreadystatechange = null;
// ↓ may cause page reload
xhr.abort();
5

I had the problem of polling and once the page was closed the poll continued so in my cause a user would miss an update as a mysql value was being set for the next 50 seconds after page closing, even though I killed the ajax request, I figured away around, using $_SESSION to set a var won't update in the poll its self until its ended and a new one has started, so what I did was set a value in my database as 0 = offpage , while I'm polling I query that row and return false; when it's 0 as querying in polling will get you current values obviously...

I hope this helped

5

I have shared a demo that demonstrates how to cancel an AJAX request-- if data is not returned from the server within a predefined wait time.

HTML :

<div id="info"></div>

JS CODE:

var isDataReceived= false, waitTime= 1000; 
$(function() {
    // Ajax request sent.
     var xhr= $.ajax({
      url: 'http://api.joind.in/v2.1/talks/10889',
      data: {
         format: 'json'
      },     
      dataType: 'jsonp',
      success: function(data) {      
        isDataReceived= true;
        $('#info').text(data.talks[0].talk_title);        
      },
      type: 'GET'
   });
   // Cancel ajax request if data is not loaded within 1sec.
   setTimeout(function(){
     if(!isDataReceived)
     xhr.abort();     
   },waitTime);   
});
1
  • 2
    $.ajax provides a timeout option so you don't need to write your own. Simply use ..., data: {...}, timeout: waitTime,.... Jul 6, 2016 at 19:54
1

This is my implementation based on many answers above:

  var activeRequest = false; //global var
  var filters = {...};
  apply_filters(filters);

  //function triggering the ajax request
  function apply_filters(filters){
        //prepare data and other functionalities
        var data = {};
        //limit the ajax calls
        if (activeRequest === false){
          activeRequest = true;
        }else{
          //abort if another ajax call is pending
          $request.abort();
          //just to be sure the ajax didn't complete before and activeRequest it's already false
          activeRequest = true;        
        }

        $request = $.ajax({ 
          url : window.location.origin + '/your-url.php',
          data: data,
          type:'POST',
          beforeSend: function(){
            $('#ajax-loader-custom').show();
            $('#blur-on-loading').addClass('blur');
          },            
          success:function(data_filters){

              data_filters = $.parseJSON(data_filters);
              
              if( data_filters.posts ) {
                  $(document).find('#multiple-products ul.products li:last-child').after(data_filters.posts).fadeIn();
              }
              else{ 
                return;
              }
              $('#ajax-loader-custom').fadeOut();
          },
          complete: function() {
            activeRequest = false;
          }          
        }); 
  } 

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