I have a program that logs every GET
/POST
request made by a website during the page load process. I want to go through these requests one by one, execute them, and then determine if the file that was returned is a Javascript
. Given that it won't have a .js
ending (because of scripts like this, yanked from google.com a minute ago), how can I parse the file gotten from the request and identify if it is a Javascript file?
Thanks!
EDIT:
It is better to get a false positive than a false negative. That is, I would rather have some non-JS
included in the JS
-list than cut some real JS
from the list.
'hey!';
can be considered javascript if you change the extension tojs
. Basically, it's a plain text file with ajs
extension.<!DOCTYPE html>
but it does not appear to be standardized. I have also considered just parsing through all of the code as if it is JS and then when exceptions get thrown (e.g. the binary from an img would not be read properly) marking the files as not JS. This just seems a bit dangerous to me, as it could have some non-JS code in the JS list, which I need to avoid.