19

I have this Chrome extension that modifies the header of requests before sending them. I now would like to be able, within the same extension, to check the header of the response. I searched throughout the Chrome Extension APIs but I couldn't find anything of interest.

This is the code I use for modifying the header of the request, maybe it's useful for you to know how I do it.

chrome.webRequest.onBeforeSendHeaders.addListener(
      function(details) {/*do something*/},
      {urls: ["<all_urls>"]},
      ["blocking", "requestHeaders"]);

Does anyone knows how to do that, or can point me to an interesting source? Thanks

2
  • I am currently looking for a Chrome extension (I do not know how to write my own) which can modify a response header. Specifically I would like to dynamically change Content-Type image/x-png to image/png because Chrome does not understand x-png (an old bug from early days, still unfixed). Have you succeeded in creating your extension, and if so, can it do what I need?
    – kriegaex
    Sep 2, 2012 at 11:38
  • Update: Chrome extension "Redirector" does what I need. Thanks.
    – kriegaex
    Sep 2, 2012 at 12:10

2 Answers 2

50

I achieved capturing all HTTP requests and responses made by a website, by injecting a script to DOM. There are several methods of doing it depending on your needs and environment e.g. ManifestV3/V2. Here's the one I've used:

inject.js:

var s = document.createElement('script');
// must be listed in web_accessible_resources in manifest.json
s.src = chrome.runtime.getURL('injected.js');
s.onload = function() {
    this.remove();
};
(document.head || document.documentElement).appendChild(s);

This would inject injected.js in website(s) that match "content_scripts" "matches" in manifest.json. Mention contentscript.js and inject.js in "js". See manifest.json at the end of answer.

Now, the code in injected.js which does the actual capturing of requests and responses is inspired from How we captured AJAX requests from a website tab with a Chrome Extension. Also see the comment section in that article.

injected.js:

(function(xhr) {

    var XHR = XMLHttpRequest.prototype;

    var open = XHR.open;
    var send = XHR.send;
    var setRequestHeader = XHR.setRequestHeader;

    XHR.open = function(method, url) {
        this._method = method;
        this._url = url;
        this._requestHeaders = {};
        this._startTime = (new Date()).toISOString();

        return open.apply(this, arguments);
    };

    XHR.setRequestHeader = function(header, value) {
        this._requestHeaders[header] = value;
        return setRequestHeader.apply(this, arguments);
    };

    XHR.send = function(postData) {

        this.addEventListener('load', function() {
            var endTime = (new Date()).toISOString();

            var myUrl = this._url ? this._url.toLowerCase() : this._url;
            if(myUrl) {

                if (postData) {
                    if (typeof postData === 'string') {
                        try {
                            // here you get the REQUEST HEADERS, in JSON format, so you can also use JSON.parse
                            this._requestHeaders = postData;    
                        } catch(err) {
                            console.log('Request Header JSON decode failed, transfer_encoding field could be base64');
                            console.log(err);
                        }
                    } else if (typeof postData === 'object' || typeof postData === 'array' || typeof postData === 'number' || typeof postData === 'boolean') {
                            // do something if you need
                    }
                }

                // here you get the RESPONSE HEADERS
                var responseHeaders = this.getAllResponseHeaders();

                if ( this.responseType != 'blob' && this.responseText) {
                    // responseText is string or null
                    try {

                        // here you get RESPONSE TEXT (BODY), in JSON format, so you can use JSON.parse
                        var arr = this.responseText;

                        // printing url, request headers, response headers, response body, to console

                        console.log(this._url);
                        console.log(JSON.parse(this._requestHeaders));
                        console.log(responseHeaders);
                        console.log(JSON.parse(arr));                        

                    } catch(err) {
                        console.log("Error in responseType try catch");
                        console.log(err);
                    }
                }

            }
        });

        return send.apply(this, arguments);
    };

})(XMLHttpRequest);

manifest.json:

{
  "manifest_version": 3,
  "name": "Extension Name",
  "description": "Some Desc.",
  "version": "1.1",
  "content_scripts": [{
      "matches": ["*://website.com/*"],
      "run_at": "document_start",
      "js": ["contentscript.js", "inject.js"]
  }],
  "web_accessible_resources": [{
      "resources": ["injected.js"],
      "matches": ["*://website.com/*"]
  }]
}

For MV2 the last block is simply "web_accessible_resources": ["injected.js"]

12
  • Hi, what's about inject.js?
    – Nammen8
    Oct 5, 2018 at 15:57
  • 1
    @user5155835 thanks, so now what is contentscript.js? Can you help me here: stackoverflow.com/questions/52669328/… ? Thanks
    – Nammen8
    Oct 8, 2018 at 7:47
  • Content Script is used to communicate with your injected.js. I've also added this as the answer in your asked question. Oct 8, 2018 at 9:51
  • 1
    @user5155835 what about contentscript.js file ? Dec 8, 2019 at 10:28
  • 1
    Thanks! This was helpful but I corrected some issues and simplified this. Here's the summary of my changes and there's a link to my full example: stackoverflow.com/a/67390377/1226799 May 4, 2021 at 18:43
1

See the live-headers example.

http://code.google.com/chrome/extensions/examples/api/debugger/live-headers.zip

EDIT: For posterity you can find a version of live-headers.zip on their archived bug/patch site https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/9289057

With the latest revision (2021) no longer including the zip, but here's the dir https://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/api/debugger/live-headers/?pathrev=226223

7
  • Correct me if I'm wrong, I should use chrome.experimental.debugger.onEvent.addListener(aFunction); and then in aFunction use params.response in which I have everything, right?
    – Masiar
    Jan 20, 2012 at 10:16
  • 1
    Or if your using the web request api couldnt you record the requestId when you modify the headers and then check for that requestId in a onHeadersReceived event.
    – PAEz
    Jan 20, 2012 at 16:55
  • I used the same thing but the returned params response doesnt have the body. It has the headers and other information but the content itself is not accessible.
    – Milo Cabs
    Apr 25, 2013 at 3:23
  • I'm trying to accomplish the same thing here, and just seeing the live-headers example I couldn't understand what I should do.
    – fiatjaf
    May 6, 2016 at 19:19
  • 1
    @OroshiX - Fixed
    – A T
    Mar 30, 2021 at 3:23

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