Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Este site está com funcionalidades limitadas enquanto realizamos manutenção para melhorar sua experiência de uso. Se nenhum artigo resolver seu problema e você quiser fazer uma pergunta, nossa comunidade de suporte pode te ajudar em @FirefoxSupport no Twitter e /r/firefox no Reddit.

Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

HTTPS XMLHttpRequests at localhost return no data

  • 2 respostas
  • 18 têm este problema
  • 11 visualizações
  • Última resposta de Jakub Mareda

more options

I made myself an userscript that gathers certain data from websites I browse and stores them in cache on localhost.

First I used to make standart cross-site HTTP XMLHttpRequests, however the firefox has implemented another XHR restriction that prevents me from doing so - mixed content blocking.

However, on firefox blog I saw information, that HTTPS requests are considered safe and are not blocked. So I added security exception for localhost, and changed requests to https requests. (and even https requests from localhost to localhost behave that way)

Now the requests are being sent properly, but no data are received from server. Why is that? How many security policies has firefox put in front of me?

Oh and sorry guys, I've forgotten to specify error messages upon each situation:

a) Cross-site http request: "Blocked mixed content..." Normal http request within localhost works.

b) Cross-site and normal https request: "Certificate not trusted beacuse its self signed"

c) Cross-site and normal https request with certificate exception: nothing. Not even a notice.

I made myself an userscript that gathers certain data from websites I browse and stores them in cache on localhost. First I used to make standart cross-site HTTP XMLHttpRequests, however the firefox has implemented another XHR restriction that prevents me from doing so - mixed content blocking. However, [https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/how-does-content-isnt-secure-affect-my-safety?as=u&utm_source=inproduct on firefox blog] I saw information, that HTTPS requests are considered safe and are not blocked. So I added security exception for localhost, and changed requests to https requests. (and even https requests from localhost to localhost behave that way) Now the requests are being sent properly, but no data are received from server. Why is that? How many security policies has firefox put in front of me? Oh and sorry guys, I've forgotten to specify error messages upon each situation: '''a)''' Cross-site http request: "''Blocked mixed content...''" Normal http request within localhost works. '''b)''' Cross-site and normal https request: "''Certificate not trusted beacuse its self signed''" '''c)''' Cross-site and normal https request with certificate exception: nothing. Not even a notice.''

Alterado por Jakub Mareda em

Todas as respostas (2)

more options

Could you check the Browser Console (Ctrl+Shift+j) for any specific error messages about the request.

What is the security exception for localhost?

By the way, if you are using different ports on localhost, I believe CORS headers are required in that scenario.

Also, it's not cross-browser, but if you are running your script in Greasemonkey, the GM_xmlHttpRequest method historically has been able to bypass cross-domain security restrictions. (I think it lies to the destination site and tells it that it also is the requesting host site.)

more options

About error messages: I'm sorry, I've forgotten to mention this. I'm actually posting here because I did not receive any error for the last situation.

The security exception for localhost is just standart exception that is made by hitting site with "https://" in the adress bar. If you do this for a site, evil dialog will ask you whether you know what are you doing and if you say that you do, you get that exception/

Maybe I'll try to make a demo for this problem, but I'm not ure how it's gonna behave online.

Alterado por Jakub Mareda em