163

What happens if the browser receives a redirect response to an ajax request?

2

3 Answers 3

239

What happens if the browser receives a redirect response to an ajax request?

If the server sends a redirect (aka a 302 response plus a Location: header) the redirect is automatically followed by the browser. The response to the second request (assuming it also isn't another redirect) is what is exposed to your program.

In fact, you don't have the ability to detect whether a 302 response has occurred. If the 302 redirect leads to a 200, then your program acts identically as if the original request led directly to a 200.

This has been both my experience and the behavior called out in the spec.

2016 Update: Time has passed, and the good news is that the new fetch() API is spec'd to offer finer-grained control of how redirects are handled, with default behavior similar to XHR. That said, it only works where fetch() is implemented natively. Polyfill versions of fetch()—which are based on XHR—continue to have XHR's limitations. Fortunately, native browser support seems to be rounding out nicely.

10
  • 62
    Interestingly, I arrived at this because I am experiencing a situation where the redirect is apparently not being followed... this happens when the redirect violates same origin policy.
    – Gus
    May 22, 2013 at 0:32
  • 5
    @Gus which is probably logical
    – Dmitry
    Nov 22, 2013 at 19:43
  • 1
    In the case of a redirect to a 401 (or any 4xx or 5xx error) I'd assume your program would behave as if the request led directly to a 401. Is that not what you're seeing?
    – greim
    Jan 15, 2014 at 22:16
  • 2
    A RESTful API may send 201 and a Location header after a POST request; see restapitutorial.com/lessons/httpmethods.html.
    – user1544337
    May 25, 2015 at 11:35
  • 5
    2019 update: fetch doesn't work as we were expecting 3 years ago ):
    – lcjury
    Nov 20, 2019 at 0:59
7

The ajax-request will follow that redirect afaik. The actual content (.responseText, .responseXML) will be the content from the page you are redirected to.

You might be able to intercept the redirect (status-code, location-header) on readyState 2 or 3, but not sure about it.

1
  • Nope, all those states carry the exact same status. Even the value of getAllResponseHeaders() is equal. Oct 24, 2014 at 12:03
1

TLDR: it's doable with fetch.
More info here: https://github.com/axios/axios/issues/932#issuecomment-515229573

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.