3

Is it possible to create an iframe on the background.html page in a google-chrome extension and have it make the request to the website? I am not sure how exactly the extension works. Does chrome automatically ignore all display tags or will it run it invisibly?

3 Answers 3

6

It will load the iframe all right, but I don't think it's possible to read anything out of an iframe due to same-origin restrictions. For example, this background script fails:

<body>
<script>
var iframe = document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('iframe'));
iframe.src = 'http://www.google.com';
iframe.onload = function() {
  console.log(iframe.contentDocument.innerHTML);
};
</script>

with error: "Unsafe JavaScript attempt to access frame with URL http://www.google.com/ from frame with URL chrome-extension://elbpnmnjddamdmjmdnmhankaimaldhmf/background.html. Domains, protocols and ports must match."

2
  • Because upon installing the extension you can request permission to those other domains (ie: google.com or other) chrome extensions aren't restricted to cross-origin requests as a normal page would be. The caviot is that you have to request the permission from the user, either upon installation or subsequently.
    – frosty
    Apr 17, 2012 at 23:10
  • 2
    @aaronfrost, yes, you can request permission to e.g. "http://www.google.com/*", but at the moment it only applies to cross-origin XMLHttpRequests, injecting content scripts, and reading cookies. It does not apply to reading an iframe within a background page. Perhaps you could file a feature request. Or perhaps it's the same issue as crbug.com/20773
    – yonran
    Apr 18, 2012 at 23:43
2

My understanding is that the background page of an extension is never displayed, but it should "run" as expected (e.g. src attribute of an img tag will cause the image data to be fetched). I'm new to implementing extensions, but the architecture overview seems to imply this, as do the samples I've seen.

You can click on the link to background.html in the extensions control panel and inspect the source/dom/etc.

0

After testing myself: Apparently google-chrome does run iframes. It just wont display them.

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