221
$.ajax({
    url: "test.html",
    error: function(){
        //do something
    },
    success: function(){
        //do something
    }
});

Sometimes success function works good, sometimes not.

How do I set timeout for this ajax request? In example, 3 seconds, if time is out, then show an error.

The problem is, ajax request freezes the block until finishes. If server is down for a little time, it will never end.

3

6 Answers 6

383

Please read the $.ajax documentation, this is a covered topic.

$.ajax({
    url: "test.html",
    error: function(){
        // will fire when timeout is reached
    },
    success: function(){
        //do something
    },
    timeout: 3000 // sets timeout to 3 seconds
});

You can get see what type of error was thrown by accessing the textStatus parameter of the error: function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) option. The options are "timeout", "error", "abort", and "parsererror".

3
  • 4
    regarding catching timeout error stackoverflow.com/questions/3543683/…
    – Adriano
    Jul 2, 2014 at 7:30
  • 1
    Just doesn't seem to work for me, timeout: 1, confirmed it's being passed, just never times out
    – PandaWood
    May 13, 2016 at 6:56
  • Make sure to wrap the entire $.ajax call with a try/catch. Aborts are not caught by jQuery and will be thrown outside of the $.ajax call.
    – justdan23
    Dec 13, 2019 at 15:08
126

Here's some examples that demonstrate setting and detecting timeouts in jQuery's old and new paradigmes.

Live Demo

Promise with jQuery 1.8+

Promise.resolve(
  $.ajax({
    url: '/getData',
    timeout:3000 //3 second timeout
  })
).then(function(){
  //do something
}).catch(function(e) {
  if(e.statusText == 'timeout')
  {     
    alert('Native Promise: Failed from timeout'); 
    //do something. Try again perhaps?
  }
});

jQuery 1.8+

$.ajax({
    url: '/getData',
    timeout:3000 //3 second timeout
}).done(function(){
    //do something
}).fail(function(jqXHR, textStatus){
    if(textStatus === 'timeout')
    {     
        alert('Failed from timeout'); 
        //do something. Try again perhaps?
    }
});​

jQuery <= 1.7.2

$.ajax({
    url: '/getData',
    error: function(jqXHR, textStatus){
        if(textStatus === 'timeout')
        {     
             alert('Failed from timeout');         
            //do something. Try again perhaps?
        }
    },
    success: function(){
        //do something
    },
    timeout:3000 //3 second timeout
});

Notice that the textStatus param (or jqXHR.statusText) will let you know what the error was. This may be useful if you want to know that the failure was caused by a timeout.

error(jqXHR, textStatus, 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 JSONP requests.

src: http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/

4
  • What's the difference between $.ajax().fail() and $.ajax().error()? Feb 7, 2013 at 22:28
  • 1
    @GarciaWebDev - See Call to jquery ajax - .fail vs. :error Feb 8, 2013 at 14:18
  • 3
    +1 for including the jQuery 1.8+. Most other answers to similar questions only include success/error from <. Aug 5, 2013 at 18:19
  • I tried to copy the JQuery 1.8+ solution, but it has a invisible character at the end <0x200b>, which compiles in a syntax error on the browser. ​
    – C. Celora
    Jan 13, 2022 at 11:36
28

You could use the timeout setting in the ajax options like this:

$.ajax({
    url: "test.html",
    timeout: 3000,
    error: function(){
        //do something
    },
    success: function(){
        //do something
    }
});

Read all about the ajax options here: http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/

Remember that when a timeout occurs, the error handler is triggered and not the success handler :)

2

use the full-featured .ajax jQuery function. compare with https://stackoverflow.com/a/3543713/1689451 for an example.

without testing, just merging your code with the referenced SO question:

target = $(this).attr('data-target');

$.ajax({
    url: $(this).attr('href'),
    type: "GET",
    timeout: 2000,
    success: function(response) { $(target).modal({
        show: true
    }); },
    error: function(x, t, m) {
        if(t==="timeout") {
            alert("got timeout");
        } else {
            alert(t);
        }
    }
});​
3
  • H-Bahrami and Rudolf Mühlbauer thanks for reply but i am new in ajax so please clarify through my code...because i have already see these answer but i don't know What's going on..so please help me...
    – user1755474
    Oct 18, 2012 at 7:44
  • how I can do through .load() ? It is possible or not ?
    – user1755474
    Oct 18, 2012 at 10:02
  • @S.S, try looking for timeout in the documentation of load: api.jquery.com/load -- and i had a typo in my code, corrected. Oct 18, 2012 at 17:18
1

Don't forget to check NginX settings also if your requests are going through NginX.

Ajax options.timeout is one thing but nginx request timeout might need adjusting also.

See https://ubiq.co/tech-blog/increase-request-timeout-nginx/

1

your request should be like below.

client.ajax({
               url:'web-url',
               method: 'GET',
               headers: 'header',
               timeout: 3000
          });

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