1

I am trying to send a HTTP GET request to a remote server and use the response on an HTML page. Below is the project/js/script.js page

    var app = angular.module('app', ['ngResource']);

    var config = {
        url:"www.myWebsite.com/discover",
        headers:  {
            "X-Object-Header" : "123456789 ",
            "Content-Type": "application/json"
        }
    };
    app.controller('discoverObjectCtrl', ['$scope', '$http', function (scope, http) {
        console.log('Everything Works!');

    http.get("/object", config).success(function (data) {
        scope.object = data;

    });
    console.log(scope.object);
}]);

In my response header, this is what I get

Remote Address:127.0.0.1:63342

Request URL:localhost:63342/object

Request Method:GET

Status Code:404 Not Found


Request Headers


Accept:application/json, text/plain, /

Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate,sdch

Accept-Language:en-US,en;q=0.8

Cache-Control:max-age=0

Connection:keep-alive

Host:localhost:63342

Referer: localhost:63342/DemoSP/index.html

User-Agent:Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.3; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/36.0.1985.125 Safari/537.36

X-Object-Header: 123456789

What I would like to do is send the http request with a customized URL. So for instance I would like my console Header to display

Request URL:www.myWebsite.com/discover/object

And not

Request URL:localhost:63342/project/www.myWebsite.com/discover/object

Please I need Help on this. Thanks

3 Answers 3

1

You should configure the get like this:

$http.get("www.myWebsite.com/discover/object", {
    headers: {
        "X-Object-Header" : "123456789",
        "Content-Type": "application/json"
    }
}).success(...);

But you will run into CORS issues since the requested domain is not the same as the one where the current script is housed. You would either need to enable www.myWebsite.com to be queried in your server environment through the Access-Control-Allow-Origin headers or if you can change the www.myWebsite.com/discover/object endpoint then make it a JSONP endpoint which you can query through $http.jsonp.

See also this answer.

4
  • Thanks Artjom B. for your comment. First of all when I changed the url from www.myWebsite.com/discover/object to https://www.myWebsite.com/discover/object, it solves some of the problems I mentioned earlier, but the status code is still 404. I used your code to try to see if it will work, but it still doesn't. I also want to keep the root url seperated from the path because I plan to have multiple paths in my requests to the server. That is why I didn't want to have the full URL in the url section of the request.
    – AllJs
    Aug 3, 2014 at 20:21
  • What does the developer tools console print when you try to do the request? If it displays a sercurity error, then you need to set Access-Control-Allow-Origin headers in the application server that delivers your angular app. Are you sure that the request goes to the correct object?
    – Artjom B.
    Aug 3, 2014 at 20:35
  • Here is what the console displays. <br/> XMLHttpRequest cannot load https://www.myWebsite.com/discover/object. No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'null' is therefore not allowed access. So how do I set Access-Control-Allow-origin headers
    – AllJs
    Aug 3, 2014 at 23:19
  • It's just a header that you can set on the server. If you use PHP you can use header. If you are using apache then mod_headers is probably the way to go. If you cannot change this in the server, you will have to implement a JSONP endpoint in www.myWebsite.com/discover/object.
    – Artjom B.
    Aug 4, 2014 at 6:33
1

What you are actually doing is cross domain Ajax call. There are some typical solutions you can choose:

0

HttpIntercepter can be used for adding common headers as well as common parameters.

Add this in your config :

$httpProvider.interceptors.push('UtimfHttpIntercepter');

and create factory with name UtimfHttpIntercepter

    angular.module('utimf.services', ['ngResource', 'ng.deviceDetector'])
    .factory('UtimfHttpIntercepter', UtimfHttpIntercepter)

    UtimfHttpIntercepter.$inject = ['$q', '$cookieStore', '$location', '$timeout', '$rootScope',  'appConfig', 'Encrypt', 'appText', 'myDevice'];
    function UtimfHttpIntercepter($q, $cookieStore, $location, $timeout, $rootScope, appConfig, Encrypt, appText, myDevice) {
    var authFactory = {};

    var _request = function (config) {
        config.headers = config.headers || {}; // change/add hearders
        config.data = config.data || {}; // change/add post data
        config.params = config.params || {}; //change/add querystring params            

        return config || $q.when(config);
    }

    var _requestError = function (rejection) {
        // handle if there is a request error
        return $q.reject(rejection);
    }

    var _response = function(response){
        // handle your response
        return response || $q.when(response);
    }

    var _responseError = function (rejection) {
        // handle if there is a request error
        return $q.reject(rejection);
    }

    authFactory.request = _request;
    authFactory.requestError = _requestError;
    authFactory.response = _response;
    authFactory.responseError = _responseError;
    return authFactory;
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.