109

I have a form with the tag ng-submit="login()

The function gets called fine in javascript.

function LoginForm($scope, $http)
{
    $http.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8';

    $scope.email    = "fsdg@sdf.com";
    $scope.password = "1234";

    $scope.login = function()
    {
        data = {
            'email' : $scope.email,
            'password' : $scope.password
        };

        $http.post('resources/curl.php', data)
        .success(function(data, status, headers, config)
        {
            console.log(status + ' - ' + data);
        })
        .error(function(data, status, headers, config)
        {
            console.log('error');
        });
    }
}

I am getting a 200 OK response back from the PHP file, however, the returned data is saying that email and password are undefined. This is all the php I have

<?php
$email = $_POST['email'];
$pass  = $_POST['password'];
echo $email;
?>

Any idea why I am getting undefined POST values?

EDIT

I wanted to point out since this seems to be a popular question (yet it is old), .success and .error have been deprecated and you should use .then as @James Gentes pointed out in the commments

11
  • 2
    Did you look at the network tab of your developer tools? What value is passed in $http? Mar 18, 2013 at 19:39
  • 1
    In the network tab, under Form-Data it says {"email":"fsdg@sdf.com","password":"1234"}
    – Ronnie
    Mar 18, 2013 at 19:43
  • @Ronnie Seems like JSON. Try print_r($_POST); and then try json_decode() on the right index
    – HamZa
    Mar 18, 2013 at 19:47
  • 1
    echo 'test'; works fine. I am certainly pointing to the right file
    – Ronnie
    Mar 18, 2013 at 19:55
  • 1
    Note that .success and .error have been deprecated and replaced with .then (docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http) Nov 24, 2015 at 20:04

9 Answers 9

228

angularjs .post() defaults the Content-type header to application/json. You are overriding this to pass form-encoded data, however you are not changing your data value to pass an appropriate query string, so PHP is not populating $_POST as you expect.

My suggestion would be to just use the default angularjs setting of application/json as header, read the raw input in PHP, and then deserialize the JSON.

That can be achieved in PHP like this:

$postdata = file_get_contents("php://input");
$request = json_decode($postdata);
$email = $request->email;
$pass = $request->password;

Alternately, if you are heavily relying on $_POST functionality, you can form a query string like email=someemail@email.com&password=somepassword and send that as data. Make sure that this query string is URL encoded. If manually built (as opposed to using something like jQuery.serialize()), Javascript's encodeURIComponent() should do the trick for you.

15
  • 7
    Not disrespecting your knowledge, but using file_get_contents("php://input"); seems kind of like a hack, no? I have never heard of this. What needs to happen so I can just reference it like $_POST['email'];
    – Ronnie
    Mar 18, 2013 at 19:59
  • 6
    @Ronnie It is not a hack. It really depends on how you want to set up your web service. If you want to send and retrieve JSON, you need to work with raw input as $_POST will not be populated.
    – Mike Brant
    Mar 18, 2013 at 20:03
  • 1
    @lepe It is not clear to me how the linked question/answer relates to my answer. There is no discussion of needing to serialize a javascript object here.
    – Mike Brant
    Mar 18, 2015 at 13:55
  • 2
    @lascort there is really not much of a difference to the solutions really. In my solution, I am not populating the data into $_POST, preferring a user-defined variable instead. In a general, this makes more sense to me in that when working with JSON-serialized data, you might be working wth objects, or numerically-indexed arrays. I wouldn't suggest adding a numerically-Indexed array to $_POST, as this would be an atypical use. I also generally shy away from putting data into any of the superglobals that are used for input data.
    – Mike Brant
    Mar 5, 2016 at 4:21
  • 1
    @ItsmeJulian there is no absolute right answer. It might really depend on how your application is architected. If your are interacting with a REST service that is consuming/delivering JSON, then I would probably stick with JSON content type. If I were working largely with an endpoint the can produce HTML or HTML fragments or uses basic form posting as fallback to AJAX, then I might be inclined to stick with form encoding.
    – Mike Brant
    Jan 2, 2017 at 15:18
41

I do it on the server side, at the begining of my init file, works like a charm and you don't have to do anything in angular or existing php code:

if ($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] == 'POST' && empty($_POST))
    $_POST = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true);
5
  • 3
    you should cast your result in case $_POST is empty : $_POST = (array) json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true). Oct 12, 2014 at 7:12
  • I don't really get why PHP guys didn't implement this themselves, They really expect url-encoded posts always??
    – azerafati
    Aug 8, 2015 at 10:40
  • @Bludream I don't get why anyone expects PHP to do what is expected. It violates the principle of least-surprise all the time.
    – doug65536
    Aug 31, 2015 at 12:00
  • This seems like a very fragile approach unless you absolutely know that the POSTed data represents an associative array (an object representation in JSON). What if the JSON contained a numerically-indexed array representation? $_POST would end up getting a numerically indexed array in this cases, something that would be very unexpected behavior in other part of the system that rely upon consistent $_POST superglobal behavior.
    – Mike Brant
    Oct 21, 2015 at 20:55
  • 1
    I only use this in angular powered applications, of course, and I validate my POST data very thoroughly, don't see how can this be a problem...
    – valmarv
    Oct 22, 2015 at 21:30
15

In the API I am developing I have a base controller and inside its __construct() method I have the following:

if(isset($_SERVER["CONTENT_TYPE"]) && strpos($_SERVER["CONTENT_TYPE"], "application/json") !== false) {
    $_POST = array_merge($_POST, (array) json_decode(trim(file_get_contents('php://input')), true));
}

This allows me to simply reference the json data as $_POST["var"] when needed. Works great.

That way if an authenticated user connects with a library such a jQuery that sends post data with a default of Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded or Content-Type: application/json the API will respond without error and will make the API a little more developer friendly.

Hope this helps.

0
11

Because PHP does not natively accept JSON 'application/json' One approach is to update your headers and parameters from angular so that your api can use the data directly.

First, Parameterize your data:

data: $.param({ "foo": $scope.fooValue })

Then, add the following to your $http

 headers: {
     'Content-Type' : 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8'
 }, 

If all of your requests are going to PHP the parameters can be set globaly in the configuration as follows:

myApp.config(function($httpProvider) {
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8';
});
0
8

Angular Js Demo Code :-

angular.module('ModuleName',[]).controller('main', ['$http', function($http){

                var formData = { password: 'test pwd', email : 'test email' };
                var postData = 'myData='+JSON.stringify(formData);
                $http({
                        method : 'POST',
                        url : 'resources/curl.php',
                        data: postData,
                        headers : {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}  

                }).success(function(res){
                        console.log(res);
                }).error(function(error){
                        console.log(error);
        });

        }]);

Server Side Code :-

<?php


// it will print whole json string, which you access after json_decocde in php
$myData = json_decode($_POST['myData']);
print_r($myData);

?>

Due to angular behaviour there is no direct method for normal post behaviour at PHP server, so you have to manage it in json objects.

2
  • 1
    This is incorrect. See answers above where JSON is read directly from PHP raw input. This is much more straightforward than mixing JSON into query string.
    – Mike Brant
    Mar 5, 2016 at 4:25
  • The .success and .error methods are deprecated and have been removed from the AngularJS framework.
    – georgeawg
    May 5, 2019 at 5:09
6

You need to deserialize your form data before passing it as the second parameter to .post (). You can achieve this using jQuery's $.param (data) method. Then you will be able to on server side to reference it like $.POST ['email'];

0
6

This is the best solution (IMO) as it requires no jQuery and no JSON decode:

Source: https://wordpress.stackexchange.com/a/179373 and: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1714899/196507

Summary:

//Replacement of jQuery.param
var serialize = function(obj, prefix) {
  var str = [];
  for(var p in obj) {
    if (obj.hasOwnProperty(p)) {
      var k = prefix ? prefix + "[" + p + "]" : p, v = obj[p];
      str.push(typeof v == "object" ?
        serialize(v, k) :
        encodeURIComponent(k) + "=" + encodeURIComponent(v));
    }
  }
  return str.join("&");
};

//Your AngularJS application:
var app = angular.module('foo', []);

app.config(function ($httpProvider) {
    // send all requests payload as query string
    $httpProvider.defaults.transformRequest = function(data){
        if (data === undefined) {
            return data;
        }
        return serialize(data);
    };

    // set all post requests content type
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8';
});

Example:

...
   var data = { id: 'some_id', name : 'some_name' };
   $http.post(my_php_url,data).success(function(data){
        // It works!
   }).error(function() {
        // :(
   });

PHP code:

<?php
    $id = $_POST["id"];
?>
1
  • What about: JSON.stringify('{ id: 'some_id', name : 'some_name' }') or $httpParamSerializer for client-side conversion?
    – droid192
    Dec 30, 2016 at 11:00
5

It's an old question but it worth to mention that in Angular 1.4 $httpParamSerializer is added and when using $http.post, if we use $httpParamSerializer(params) to pass the parameters, everything works like a regular post request and no JSON deserializing is needed on server side.

https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$httpParamSerializer

1

It took me hours to understand that while working with Angular and PHP. Post data was not going to PHP in $_POST

in PHP code do the following. - Create a variable $angular_post_params - Then do the following $angular_http_params = (array)json_decode(trim(file_get_contents('php://input')));

now you can access your parameters like you do from $_POST

$angular_http_params["key"]

in case you were wondering about javascript....this is what i used

    var myApp = angular.module('appUsers', []);
    //var post_params = $.param({ request_type: "getListOfUsersWithRolesInfo" });
    var dataObj = {
        task_to_perform: 'getListOfUsersWithRolesInfo'
    };

    myApp.controller('ctrlListOfUsers', function ($scope, $http) {
        $http({
            method: 'POST',
            dataType: 'json',
            url: ajax_processor_url,
            headers: {
                'Content-Type': 'application/json'
            },
            data: dataObj,
            //transformRequest: function(){},
            timeout: 30000,
            cache: false
        }).
        success(function (rsp) {
            console.log("success");
            console.log(rsp);
        }).
        error(function (rsp) {
            console.log("error");
        });
    });
2
  • for newbies ... dont forget to have ng-app and ng-controller directives added to your content holder container on the page :)
    – Talha
    Jul 14, 2016 at 8:06
  • The .success and .error methods are deprecated and have been removed from the AngularJS framework.
    – georgeawg
    May 5, 2019 at 5:14

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