Does anyone know how to add or create a custom HTTP header using JavaScript or jQuery?
9 Answers
There are several solutions depending on what you need...
If you want to add a custom header (or set of headers) to an individual request then just add the headers
property:
// Request with custom header
$.ajax({
url: 'foo/bar',
headers: { 'x-my-custom-header': 'some value' }
});
If you want to add a default header (or set of headers) to every request then use $.ajaxSetup()
:
$.ajaxSetup({
headers: { 'x-my-custom-header': 'some value' }
});
// Sends your custom header
$.ajax({ url: 'foo/bar' });
// Overwrites the default header with a new header
$.ajax({ url: 'foo/bar', headers: { 'x-some-other-header': 'some value' } });
If you want to add a header (or set of headers) to every request then use the beforeSend
hook with $.ajaxSetup()
:
$.ajaxSetup({
beforeSend: function(xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader('x-my-custom-header', 'some value');
}
});
// Sends your custom header
$.ajax({ url: 'foo/bar' });
// Sends both custom headers
$.ajax({ url: 'foo/bar', headers: { 'x-some-other-header': 'some value' } });
Edit (more info): One thing to be aware of is that with ajaxSetup
you can only define one set of default headers and you can only define one beforeSend
. If you call ajaxSetup
multiple times, only the last set of headers will be sent and only the last before-send callback will execute.
-
-
4You can only define one
beforeSend
callback. If you call$.ajaxSetup({ beforeSend: func... })
twice then the second callback will be the only one that fires.– PrestaulJul 15, 2013 at 15:29 -
1
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2Looks like it doesn't work with CORS Request (every browser). Is there a work around ?– svassrMay 13, 2015 at 13:54
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1@Si8, that looks like a cross domain issue to me. You can't make a request from one domain to another. Try looking into CORS and see if that helps.– PrestaulMar 28, 2017 at 20:21
Or, if you want to send the custom header for every future request, then you could use the following:
$.ajaxSetup({
headers: { "CustomHeader": "myValue" }
});
This way every future ajax request will contain the custom header, unless explicitly overridden by the options of the request. You can find more info on ajaxSetup
here
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1Where i really want to accomplish this, this doesn't seem to actually work.– TripJan 25, 2013 at 17:33
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1Well you should make sure that the ajaxSetup is called before the actual ajax call. I don't know of any other reason why this wouldn't work :) Jan 30, 2013 at 16:03
You can also do this without using jQuery. Override XMLHttpRequest's send method and add the header there:
XMLHttpRequest.prototype.realSend = XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send;
var newSend = function(vData) {
this.setRequestHeader('x-my-custom-header', 'some value');
this.realSend(vData);
};
XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send = newSend;
Assuming JQuery ajax, you can add custom headers like -
$.ajax({
url: url,
beforeSend: function(xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader("custom_header", "value");
},
success: function(data) {
}
});
Here's an example using XHR2:
function xhrToSend(){
// Attempt to creat the XHR2 object
var xhr;
try{
xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
}catch (e){
try{
xhr = new XDomainRequest();
} catch (e){
try{
xhr = new ActiveXObject('Msxml2.XMLHTTP');
}catch (e){
try{
xhr = new ActiveXObject('Microsoft.XMLHTTP');
}catch (e){
statusField('\nYour browser is not' +
' compatible with XHR2');
}
}
}
}
xhr.open('POST', 'startStopResume.aspx', true);
xhr.setRequestHeader("chunk", numberOfBLObsSent + 1);
xhr.onreadystatechange = function (e) {
if (xhr.readyState == 4 && xhr.status == 200) {
receivedChunks++;
}
};
xhr.send(chunk);
numberOfBLObsSent++;
};
Hope that helps.
If you create your object, you can use the setRequestHeader function to assign a name, and a value before you send the request.
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3While this may have been correct in 2011, it's generally a good idea to not reinvent the wheel, and instead use an AJAX library like Zepto or jQuery. Oct 11, 2014 at 5:26
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4Unless you are trying to add a header to an existing XHR2 call and don't want to start rewriting it all to use jQuery just for that... At which point, @gryzzly has the only viable answer. Nov 18, 2014 at 23:41
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@AliGajani The problem is that certain applications or libraries (like THREE.js) don't use
$.ajax*
functions b/c they don't depend on jQuery and instead use XHR so this is the only valid option in those cases.– CobertosApr 18, 2017 at 3:39 -
1@AliGajani Additionally, it's not just the network load time but the parsing time of the library. Plus, if you are not careful with what dependencies you add, you can quickly get a project with too many dependencies– OztacoNov 8, 2017 at 20:03
You should avoid the usage of $.ajaxSetup()
as described in the docs. Use the following instead:
$(document).ajaxSend(function(event, jqXHR, ajaxOptions) {
jqXHR.setRequestHeader('my-custom-header', 'my-value');
});
Assuming that you mean "When using ajax" and "An HTTP Request header", then use the headers
property in the object you pass to ajax()
headers(added 1.5)
Default:
{}
A map of additional header key/value pairs to send along with the request. This setting is set before the beforeSend function is called; therefore, any values in the headers setting can be overwritten from within the beforeSend function.
"setRequestHeader" method of XMLHttpRequest object should be used
You can use js fetch
async function send(url,data) {
let r= await fetch(url, {
method: "POST",
headers: {
"My-header": "abc"
},
body: JSON.stringify(data),
})
return await r.json()
}
// Example usage
let url='https://server.test-cors.org/server?enable=true&status=200&methods=POST&headers=my-header';
async function run()
{
let jsonObj = await send(url,{ some: 'testdata' });
console.log(jsonObj[0].request.httpMethod + ' was send - open chrome console > network to see it');
}
run();