HTTP headers in the request are always included by the client. A client can be a shell script, a browser or an Ajax call fired by Javascript or a Javascript framework.
The "j" in Ajax stands for Javascript, but the HTTP request of thus can be created with any other script or program.
From Common non-standard request headers:
X-Requested-With: mainly used to identify Ajax requests. Most JavaScript frameworks send this header with value of XMLHttpRequest XMLHttpRequest
.
All headers starting with X-
are non standard headers, which means there is no official document defining their values.
From https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc6648:
Historically, designers and implementers of application protocols
have often distinguished between standardized and unstandardized
parameters by prefixing the names of unstandardized parameters with
the string "X-" or similar constructs.
The HTTP protocol is not fixed or static, there are just standards you should follow.
You can even create your own HTTP request and put individual headers in, for example:
X-Requested-With: MySuperCURLScript
X-MyOwnHeader: Cool!
To answer your question, if one client sends the header X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest
, the other sends X-Requested-With: xmlHttpRequest
, you can simply lowercase 'em all and be sure not to miss different notations. Simple as that!
Security aspect: The headers and its contents are only information, not something you should 100% rely on. If you have a deep look into CURL, or Google results for "send http header with php", you'll quickly find out that any information can be sent and faked easily. HTTP headers have often been abused to hack servers, by sending manipulated cookies (- a cookie is a header, simple as that: Cookie: ...
), manipulated file information (upload a fake gif which is an exe file and so on), manipulating session data, POST / request data.
HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH
. Where does this value come from and at what point(s) might it be modified?