809

Is there some way I can show custom exception messages as an alert in my jQuery AJAX error message?

For example, if I want to throw an exception on the server side via Struts by throw new ApplicationException("User name already exists");, I want to catch this message ('user name already exists') in the jQuery AJAX error message.

jQuery("#save").click(function () {
  if (jQuery('#form').jVal()) {
    jQuery.ajax({
      type: "POST",
      url: "saveuser.do",
      dataType: "html",
      data: "userId=" + encodeURIComponent(trim(document.forms[0].userId.value)),
      success: function (response) {
        jQuery("#usergrid").trigger("reloadGrid");
        clear();
        alert("Details saved successfully!!!");
      },
      error: function (xhr, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
        alert(xhr.status);
        alert(thrownError);
      }
    });
  }
});

On the second alert in the error callback, where I alert thrownError, I am getting undefined and the xhr.status code is 500.

I am not sure where I am going wrong. What can I do to fix this problem?

0

21 Answers 21

386

Make sure you're setting Response.StatusCode to something other than 200. Write your exception's message using Response.Write, then use...

xhr.responseText

..in your javascript.

4
  • 9
    This is still the correct way of doing this after 2 years and a half... :) I went a little further and actually return my own error JSON object that can handle single or multiple errors, quite good for server-side form validation.
    – AlexCode
    Jul 19, 2011 at 19:28
  • @Wilson It was as shown in the other high-rated answers here.
    – Sprintstar
    Jun 19, 2014 at 13:21
  • 4
    Am now in 2014. JSON dominated era. So i use xhr.responseJSON. :D
    – Ravi
    Dec 18, 2014 at 20:09
  • 6
    xhr.responseJSON is only set if you ensure, that the meta-type is set (e.g. "Content-type: application/json"). That's a problem I just encountered; responseText was set - responseJSON was not.
    – Igor
    Dec 30, 2014 at 23:55
259

Controller:

public class ClientErrorHandler : FilterAttribute, IExceptionFilter
{
    public void OnException(ExceptionContext filterContext)
    {
        var response = filterContext.RequestContext.HttpContext.Response;
        response.Write(filterContext.Exception.Message);
        response.ContentType = MediaTypeNames.Text.Plain;
        filterContext.ExceptionHandled = true;
    }
}

[ClientErrorHandler]
public class SomeController : Controller
{
    [HttpPost]
    public ActionResult SomeAction()
    {
        throw new Exception("Error message");
    }
}

View script:

$.ajax({
    type: "post", url: "/SomeController/SomeAction",
    success: function (data, text) {
        //...
    },
    error: function (request, status, error) {
        alert(request.responseText);
    }
});
10
  • 16
    This isn't a "correct" answer to the question but it most certainly shows a higher level solution to the problem... Nice! Sep 8, 2010 at 21:21
  • 3
    I'm doing something similar. It works fine if everything's done on the development box. If I try connecting from a different box on the network, the xhr.responseText contains the generic error page html and not my custom message, see stackoverflow.com/questions/3882752/… Oct 7, 2010 at 15:25
  • 6
    I believe you should also add response.StatusCode = 500; line to OnException method. Apr 27, 2011 at 12:19
  • 5
    I adapted this - since I wanted the 500 statuscode, but to have the exception message in the status description (rather than "Internal server error") - response.StatusCode = (int)HttpStatusCode.InternalServerError; and response.StatusDescription = filterContext.Exception.Message;
    – Kram
    Aug 10, 2011 at 11:28
  • 5
    If you're using IIS7 or above you may need to add: response.TrySkipIisCustomErrors = true; Jan 30, 2013 at 18:37
103

ServerSide:

     doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response){ 
            try{ //logic
            }catch(ApplicationException exception){ 
               response.setStatus(400);
               response.getWriter().write(exception.getMessage());
               //just added semicolon to end of line

           }
 }

ClientSide:

 jQuery.ajax({// just showing error property
           error: function(jqXHR,error, errorThrown) {  
               if(jqXHR.status&&jqXHR.status==400){
                    alert(jqXHR.responseText); 
               }else{
                   alert("Something went wrong");
               }
          }
    }); 

Generic Ajax Error Handling

If I need to do some generic error handling for all the ajax requests. I will set the ajaxError handler and display the error on a div named errorcontainer on the top of html content.

$("div#errorcontainer")
    .ajaxError(
        function(e, x, settings, exception) {
            var message;
            var statusErrorMap = {
                '400' : "Server understood the request, but request content was invalid.",
                '401' : "Unauthorized access.",
                '403' : "Forbidden resource can't be accessed.",
                '500' : "Internal server error.",
                '503' : "Service unavailable."
            };
            if (x.status) {
                message =statusErrorMap[x.status];
                                if(!message){
                                      message="Unknown Error \n.";
                                  }
            }else if(exception=='parsererror'){
                message="Error.\nParsing JSON Request failed.";
            }else if(exception=='timeout'){
                message="Request Time out.";
            }else if(exception=='abort'){
                message="Request was aborted by the server";
            }else {
                message="Unknown Error \n.";
            }
            $(this).css("display","inline");
            $(this).html(message);
                 });
0
86

You need to convert the responseText to JSON. Using JQuery:

jsonValue = jQuery.parseJSON( jqXHR.responseText );
console.log(jsonValue.Message);
5
  • 5
    +1 'cause this is at present the only CORRECT answer to this question! You can call "jsonValue.Message" to get the exception message. Apr 29, 2011 at 12:18
  • 2
    Actually its not the correct answer because the question does not ask about JSON and the example request specifically asks for HTML as the response.
    – SingleShot
    Jul 19, 2011 at 20:21
  • +1 Correct. Note, It's common to send a JSON encoded object thru the jqXHR.responseText (string). You you can then use the jsonValue Object how you need to. Use Firebug console to review the response using console.log(jsonValue).
    – jjwdesign
    Jun 10, 2013 at 5:40
  • This gives me 'Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected number' May 24, 2014 at 15:59
  • 2
    The parsed JSON object is made available through the responseJSON property of the jqXHR object. So there's no need to parse the responseText property. You can just do: console.log( jqXHR.responseJSON.Message) Sep 7, 2018 at 23:27
43

If making a call to asp.net, this will return the error message title:

I didn't write all of formatErrorMessage myself but i find it very useful.

function formatErrorMessage(jqXHR, exception) {

    if (jqXHR.status === 0) {
        return ('Not connected.\nPlease verify your network connection.');
    } else if (jqXHR.status == 404) {
        return ('The requested page not found. [404]');
    } else if (jqXHR.status == 500) {
        return ('Internal Server Error [500].');
    } else if (exception === 'parsererror') {
        return ('Requested JSON parse failed.');
    } else if (exception === 'timeout') {
        return ('Time out error.');
    } else if (exception === 'abort') {
        return ('Ajax request aborted.');
    } else {
        return ('Uncaught Error.\n' + jqXHR.responseText);
    }
}


var jqxhr = $.post(addresshere, function() {
  alert("success");
})
.done(function() { alert("second success"); })
.fail(function(xhr, err) { 

    var responseTitle= $(xhr.responseText).filter('title').get(0);
    alert($(responseTitle).text() + "\n" + formatErrorMessage(xhr, err) ); 
})
30

If someone is here as in 2016 for the answer, use .fail() for error handling as .error() is deprecated as of jQuery 3.0

$.ajax( "example.php" )
  .done(function() {
    alert( "success" );
  })
  .fail(function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
    //handle error here
  })

I hope it helps

1
  • 4
    jqXHR.error() is deprecated (actually removed) in jQuery 3.0, but the error and success callbacks to $.ajax() are not deprecated, as far as I know. Sep 2, 2017 at 1:30
25

This is what I did and it works so far in a MVC 5 application.

Controller's return type is ContentResult.

public ContentResult DoSomething()
{
    if(somethingIsTrue)
    {
        Response.StatusCode = 500 //Anything other than 2XX HTTP status codes should work
        Response.Write("My Message");
        return new ContentResult();
    }

    //Do something in here//
    string json = "whatever json goes here";

    return new ContentResult{Content = json, ContentType = "application/json"};
}

And on client side this is what ajax function looks like

$.ajax({
    type: "POST",
    url: URL,
    data: DATA,
    dataType: "json",
    success: function (json) {
        //Do something with the returned json object.
    },
    error: function (xhr, status, errorThrown) {
        //Here the status code can be retrieved like;
        xhr.status;

        //The message added to Response object in Controller can be retrieved as following.
        xhr.responseText;
    }
});
18

A general/reusable solution

This answer is provided for future reference to all those that bump into this problem. Solution consists of two things:

  1. Custom exception ModelStateException that gets thrown when validation fails on the server (model state reports validation errors when we use data annotations and use strong typed controller action parameters)
  2. Custom controller action error filter HandleModelStateExceptionAttribute that catches custom exception and returns HTTP error status with model state error in the body

This provides the optimal infrastructure for jQuery Ajax calls to use their full potential with success and error handlers.

Client side code

$.ajax({
    type: "POST",
    url: "some/url",
    success: function(data, status, xhr) {
        // handle success
    },
    error: function(xhr, status, error) {
        // handle error
    }
});

Server side code

[HandleModelStateException]
public ActionResult Create(User user)
{
    if (!this.ModelState.IsValid)
    {
        throw new ModelStateException(this.ModelState);
    }

    // create new user because validation was successful
}

The whole problem is detailed in this blog post where you can find all the code to run this in your application.

17

 error:function (xhr, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
        alert(xhr.status);
        alert(thrownError);
      }
in code error ajax request for catch error connect between client to server if you want show error message of your application send in success scope

such as

success: function(data){
   //   data is object  send  form server 
   //   property of data 
   //   status  type boolean 
   //   msg     type string
   //   result  type string
  if(data.status){ // true  not error 
         $('#api_text').val(data.result);
  }
  else 
  {
      $('#error_text').val(data.msg);
  }

}

16

I found this to be nice because I could parse out the message I was sending from the server and display a friendly message to the user without the stacktrace...

error: function (response) {
      var r = jQuery.parseJSON(response.responseText);
      alert("Message: " + r.Message);
      alert("StackTrace: " + r.StackTrace);
      alert("ExceptionType: " + r.ExceptionType);
}
10

This function basically generates unique random API key's and in case if it doesn't then pop-up dialog box with error message appears

In View Page:

<div class="form-group required">
    <label class="col-sm-2 control-label" for="input-storename"><?php echo $entry_storename; ?></label>
    <div class="col-sm-6">
        <input type="text" class="apivalue"  id="api_text" readonly name="API" value="<?php echo strtoupper(substr(md5(rand().microtime()), 0, 12)); ?>" class="form-control" />                                                                    
        <button type="button" class="changeKey1" value="Refresh">Re-Generate</button>
    </div>
</div>

<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
    $('.changeKey1').click(function(){
          debugger;
        $.ajax({
                url  :"index.php?route=account/apiaccess/regenerate",
                type :'POST',
                dataType: "json",
                async:false,
                contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
                success: function(data){
                  var result =  data.sync_id.toUpperCase();
                        if(result){
                          $('#api_text').val(result);
                        }
                  debugger;
                  },
                error: function(xhr, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
                  alert(thrownError + "\r\n" + xhr.statusText + "\r\n" + xhr.responseText);
                }

        });
    });
  });
</script>

From Controller:

public function regenerate(){
    $json = array();
    $api_key = substr(md5(rand(0,100).microtime()), 0, 12);
    $json['sync_id'] = $api_key; 
    $json['message'] = 'Successfully API Generated';
    $this->response->addHeader('Content-Type: application/json');
    $this->response->setOutput(json_encode($json));
}

The optional callback parameter specifies a callback function to run when the load() method is completed. The callback function can have different parameters:

Type: Function( jqXHR jqXHR, String textStatus, String errorThrown )

A function to be called if the request fails. The function receives three arguments: The jqXHR (in jQuery 1.4.x, XMLHttpRequest) object, a string describing the type of error that occurred and an optional exception object, if one occurred. Possible values for the second argument (besides null) are "timeout", "error", "abort", and "parsererror". When an HTTP error occurs, errorThrown receives the textual portion of the HTTP status, such as "Not Found" or "Internal Server Error." As of jQuery 1.5, the error setting can accept an array of functions. Each function will be called in turn. Note: This handler is not called for cross-domain script and cross-domain JSONP requests.

7

This is probably caused by the JSON field names not having quotation marks.

Change the JSON structure from:

{welcome:"Welcome"}

to:

{"welcome":"Welcome"}
2
  • 2
    This shouldn't matter unless the key is a reserved word in JS. I don't see this being the issue here.
    – John Gibb
    Feb 21, 2011 at 1:42
  • 1
    JSON.stringify({welcome:"Welcome"}) --> {"welcome":"Welcome"}
    – Thulasiram
    Oct 20, 2012 at 14:03
6

You have a JSON object of the exception thrown, in the xhr object. Just use

alert(xhr.responseJSON.Message);

The JSON object expose two other properties: 'ExceptionType' and 'StackTrace'

5

I believe the Ajax response handler uses the HTTP status code to check if there was an error.

So if you just throw a Java exception on your server side code but then the HTTP response doesn't have a 500 status code jQuery (or in this case probably the XMLHttpRequest object) will just assume that everything was fine.

I'm saying this because I had a similar problem in ASP.NET where I was throwing something like a ArgumentException("Don't know what to do...") but the error handler wasn't firing.

I then set the Response.StatusCode to either 500 or 200 whether I had an error or not.

5

jQuery.parseJSON is useful for success and error.

$.ajax({
    url: "controller/action",
    type: 'POST',
    success: function (data, textStatus, jqXHR) {
        var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(jqXHR.responseText);
        notify(data.toString());
        notify(textStatus.toString());
    },
    error: function (data, textStatus, jqXHR) { notify(textStatus); }
});
4
$("#save").click(function(){
    $("#save").ajaxError(function(event,xhr,settings,error){
        $(this).html{'error: ' (xhr ?xhr.status : '')+ ' ' + (error ? error:'unknown') + 'page: '+settings.url);
    });
});
3

Throw a new exception on server using:

Response.StatusCode = 500

Response.StatusDescription = ex.Message()

I believe that the StatusDescription is returned to the Ajax call...

Example:

        Try

            Dim file As String = Request.QueryString("file")

            If String.IsNullOrEmpty(file) Then Throw New Exception("File does not exist")

            Dim sTmpFolder As String = "Temp\" & Session.SessionID.ToString()

            sTmpFolder = IO.Path.Combine(Request.PhysicalApplicationPath(), sTmpFolder)

            file = IO.Path.Combine(sTmpFolder, file)

            If IO.File.Exists(file) Then

                IO.File.Delete(file)

            End If

        Catch ex As Exception

            Response.StatusCode = 500

            Response.StatusDescription = ex.Message()

        End Try
3

Although it has been many years since this question is asked, I still don't find xhr.responseText as the answer I was looking for. It returned me string in the following format:

"{"error":true,"message":"The user name or password is incorrect"}"

which I definitely don't want to show to the users. What I was looking for is something like below:

alert(xhr.responseJSON.message);

xhr.responseJSON.message gives me the exact message from the Json Object which can be shown to the users.

1
$("#fmlogin").submit(function(){
   $("#fmlogin").ajaxError(function(event,xhr,settings,error){
       $("#loading").fadeOut('fast');       
       $("#showdata").fadeIn('slow');   
       $("#showdata").html('Error please, try again later or reload the Page. Reason: ' + xhr.status);
       setTimeout(function() {$("#showdata").fadeOut({"opacity":"0"})} , 5500 + 1000); // delays 1 sec after the previous one
    });
});

If there is any form is submit with validate

simply use the rest of the code

$("#fmlogin").validate({...

... ... });

0

First we need to set <serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="True" /> in web.config:

<serviceBehaviors> 
 <behavior name=""> 
  <serviceMetadata httpGetEnabled="true" /> 
    **<serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="true" />** 
 </behavior> 
</serviceBehaviors>

In addition to that at jquery level in error part you need to parse error response that contains exception like:

.error(function (response, q, t) { 
  var r = jQuery.parseJSON(response.responseText); 
}); 

Then using r.Message you can actully show exception text.

Check complete code: http://www.codegateway.com/2012/04/jquery-ajax-handle-exception-thrown-by.html

0
0

In my case, I just removed HTTP VERB from controller.

    **//[HttpPost]**   ---- just removed this verb
    public JsonResult CascadeDpGetProduct(long categoryId)
    {
       
        List<ProductModel> list = new List<ProductModel>();
        list = dp.DpProductBasedOnCategoryandQty(categoryId);
        return Json(new SelectList(list, "Value", "Text", JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet));
    }