My server has a manual authorization. I need to put the username/password of my server to my backbone request inorder for it to go through. How may i do this? Any ideas? Thank you
10 Answers
Models in Backbone retrieve, update, and destroy data using the methods fetch
, save
, and destroy
. These methods delegate the actual request portion to Backbone.sync. Under the hood, all Backbone.sync
is doing is creating an ajax request using jQuery. In order to incorporate your Basic HTTP authentication you have a couple of options.
fetch
, save
, and destroy
all accept an additional parameter [options]
. These [options]
are simply a dictionary of jQuery request options that get included into jQuery ajax call that is made. This means you can easily define a simple method which appends the authentication:
sendAuthentication = function (xhr) {
var user = "myusername";// your actual username
var pass = "mypassword";// your actual password
var token = user.concat(":", pass);
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', ("Basic ".concat(btoa(token))));
}
And include it in each fetch
, save
, and destroy
call you make. Like so:
fetch({
beforeSend: sendAuthentication
});
This can create quite a bit of repetition. Another option could be to override the Backbone.sync
method, copy the original code and just include the beforeSend
option into each jQuery ajax request that is made.
Hope this helps!
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tried your code. but there's no response. it doesn't call the service.– n0minalApr 10, 2012 at 3:21
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1nope. anyways. can you give me a sample code on how to override the backbone.sync to headers?– n0minalApr 10, 2012 at 5:12
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Can you provide an example of the backbone.js code that you wrote for this implementation? I'm having a problem getting it to work. You can see my progress in this question Feb 21, 2013 at 14:30
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2I wouldn't copy the original Backbone.sync method. You can do something like what's suggested in japhr.blogspot.com/2011/10/…, but basically just override
options
, and callBackbone.Model.prototype.fetch.call(this, options)
.– chug2kOct 10, 2013 at 0:10
The easiest way to add request header in Backbone.js is to just pass them over to the fetch method as parameters, e.g.
MyCollection.fetch( { headers: {'Authorization' :'Basic USERNAME:PASSWORD'} } );
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This worked for me, surprisingly! And it's not in the docs by the time I'm typing just if anyone wondered. Extremely simple way to handle it ;) amazing. >thanks! Jun 20, 2013 at 12:28
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1that works unless username has a : in it, you really should base64 encode username:password– dstarhAug 16, 2013 at 20:43
One option might be to use the jQuery ajaxSetup, All Backbone requests will eventually use the underlying jQuery ajax. The benefit of this approach is that you only have to add it one place.
$.ajaxSetup({
headers: { 'Authorization' :'Basic USERNAME:PASSWORD' }
});
Edit 2nd Jan 2018 For complex web applications this may not be the best approach, see comments below. Leaving the answer here for references sake.
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1While it looks like it could work, don't use this for the reasons I described in another answer. Dec 22, 2017 at 6:19
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1I'd be inclined to agree, my answer is pretty old now. The only thing I would say is if you are working on a simple experiment with one data source this would be a quick way of getting going. So I might leave it here for reference. Jan 2, 2018 at 13:07
You could override Backbone sync method.
#coffeescript
_sync = Backbone.sync
Backbone.sync = (method, model, options) ->
options.beforeSend = (xhr) ->
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-Auth-Token_or_other_header' , your_hash_key)
#make sure your server accepts X-Auth-Token_or_other_header!!
#calling the original sync function so we only overriding what we need
_sync.call( this, method, model, options )
Backbone.$.ajaxSetup({
headers: {'Authorization' :'Basic USERNAME:PASSWORD'}
});
This code set headers to Backbone ajax, so they will be sent with every Backbone.sync. You will be able to send headers without using xhr.setRequestHeader
with every sync call.
So you don't need to do the following every time:
MyCollection.fetch({ headers: {'Authorization' :'Basic USERNAME:PASSWORD'} } );
You can just do
MyCollection.fetch();
Maybe it's kind of hack but it works perfectly for my system.
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Perhaps you could give an explanation as to how this answers the question? Jun 5, 2015 at 2:01
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It is a hack that shouldn't be used for reasons explained in another answer of mine. It's also the same answer as the
$.ajaxSetup
one above. Dec 22, 2017 at 6:24 -
Is there a way to define the response interceptor? Something like ajaxError?– ZikoSep 6, 2019 at 17:41
My approach to something like this would be overwrite the sync method in order to add the header before doing the request.
In the example you could see that I'm creating a Backbone.AuthenticatedModel
, which extends from Backbone.Model
.
This will impact all methods (GET, POST, DELETE, etc)
Backbone.AuthenticatedModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
sync: function(method, collection, options){
options = options || {};
options.beforeSend = function (xhr) {
var user = "myusername";// your actual username
var pass = "mypassword";// your actual password
var token = user.concat(":", pass);
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', ("Basic ".concat(btoa(token))));
};
return Backbone.Model.prototype.sync.apply(this, arguments);
}
});
Then you have to simple extend the model you need to have authentication, from the Backbone.AuthenticatedModel
you have created:
var Process = Backbone.AuthenticatedModel.extend({
url: '/api/process',
});
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1I like your solution! But in the return line I would call
Backbone.Model.prototype.sync.apply(this, arguments)
instead. Apr 5, 2016 at 11:59 -
@cristian-conedera You are right, that would be a more elegant and correct way. Changed the code as you suggested Apr 5, 2016 at 12:04
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1I would just add a call to the original
beforeSend
option (if passed) inside the new beforeSend callback. See the annotated source for reference: backbonejs.org/docs/backbone.html#section-179 Jul 6, 2016 at 17:07
Object.save(
{'used': true}
{headers: {'Access-Token': 'access_token'}}
)
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That's the same answer as the
fetch
example above, but without any explanation. Dec 22, 2017 at 6:29
Create a custom sync method that intercepts the calls to Backbone.sync and stuffs your authorization headers in and passes everything else through:
REPORTING_API_KEY = 'secretKeyHere';
CustomSync = function(method, model, options) {
options.headers = {
'Authorization' : 'Bearer ' + REPORTING_API_KEY
};
return Backbone.sync(method, model, options);
};
Then overwrite your model's sync with that one:
MyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
urlRoot: '/api/',
sync: CustomSync
});
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That's a good way, but instead of overwriting the
sync
function, you should override it and call the parent one which is not guaranteed to beBackbone.sync
. Dec 22, 2017 at 6:28
Try to use it. We can use either
beforeSend: function(xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-CSRFToken', csrf_token);
},
or
headers: {
"X-CSRFToken": csrf_token
},
But I would recomment the first option(beforeSend).
Here is the working code snippet in my case.
var csrf_token = this.getCSRFToken();
self.collection.fetch(
{
beforeSend: function(xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-CSRFToken', csrf_token);
},
// headers: {
// "X-CSRFToken": csrf_token
// },
data: {
"mark_as": "read"
},
type: 'POST',
success: function () {
if (clickLink) {
window.location.href = clickLink;
} else {
self.unreadNotificationsClicked(e);
// fetch the latest notification count
self.counter_icon_view.refresh();
}
},
error: function(){
alert('erorr');
}
});
In the client side, add this before any server communication:
$.ajaxSetup({ xhrFields: { withCredentials: true }, async: true });
In the server side add these headers (PHP):
header('Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://your-client-app-domain'); header("Access-Control-Allow-Methods: PUT, GET, POST, DELETE, OPTIONS"); header("Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type, Authorization, X-Requested-With"); header('Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true');