17

I'm using JQuery to issue an AJAX request to my own Webservice. I need to set or modify the User-Agent HTTP-Header for the HTTP-AJAX-Request, how can I do this the easiest way?

I tried the hint provided by some users to use the setRequestHeader Method to set the User-Agent, but this does not work. It does in fact work for other newly created headers (like X-Test-Header) but it does not work for User-Agent.

2

5 Answers 5

28

It is simply impossible, you are not allowed to change the user-agent for XMLHttpRequests. I'm not sure if this is valid for Internet-Explorer, but the w3c specifies here:

The setRequestHeader() method

[...]

When the setRequestHeader(header, value) method is invoked, the user agent must run these steps: [...]

Terminate these steps if header is a case-insensitive match for one of the following headers:

[...]

  • User-Agent
1
15

If you are using jQuery, set the request header in the ajaxSetup.

$.ajaxSetup({
  beforeSend: function(request) {
    request.setRequestHeader("User-Agent","InsertUserAgentStringHere");
  }
});
5
  • Have you tried this? It does not work using JQuery 1.5.2 and Firefox 4, the user-agent is still the default one. I call the ajaxSetup after the document has loaded completely (document.ready) before issuing the calls. It is a simple json-request (not jsonp)
    – theomega
    Apr 24, 2011 at 19:41
  • This does not work in Chrome with a Mac. I would say in general this doesn't work at all if it's "simply impossible".
    – Chris
    Aug 15, 2012 at 21:18
  • 8
    Works for me inside my node.js application where I can care less about w3c's rules.. You're awesome - thanks.
    – Matej
    Jan 23, 2013 at 23:52
  • 1
    Modifying the header does not work at all, however this code works if you are trying to add a new header.
    – QuakeCore
    Jul 28, 2016 at 7:42
  • It seems the code works but Chrome doesn't want to set it. Refused to set unsafe header "User-Agent" Jul 25, 2022 at 12:31
6

Well, you could always use jQuery to post to a server-side page which then in turn is able to modify the User-Agent header, and also make a request to the page which would have been directly accessed by jQuery.

2

A way to do this is to overwrite the native code in the __defineGetter__ method of the window.navigator object.

Check this out:

window.navigator.__defineGetter__('userAgent', function () {
    return "___I'M A GHOST___";
});

Run navigator.userAgent in the console before and after to check.

Works in Chrome. I haven't checked other browsers.

You can read more about it here: https://www.codeproject.com/Tips/1036762/Mocking-userAgent-with-JavaScript

1
  • Anyone seeing this: please do not use this solution (it's not the solution's fault, but it is deprecated): "Warning: This feature is deprecated in favor of defining getters using the object initializer syntax or the Object.defineProperty() API. While this feature is widely implemented, it is only described in the ECMAScript specification because of legacy usage. This method should not be used since better alternatives exist." (see MDN). Jun 12, 2021 at 19:33
0

I have done it like this: I send the ajax request to a seperate php script that acts just like a forwarder, in this php script you will then make the original request and change the user-agent as you want.

You can set the user-agent in file_get_contents like this: https://gist.github.com/vyspiansky/82f4b1ef6fcff160047d

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