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Circumventing Chrome Access-control-allow-origin on the local file system?

I've read the other same origin policy topics here on SO, but I haven't seen any solutions related to the local file system.

I have a web app (In a loose sense of the word) that must be local served. I am trying to load a large amount of data in after the user has loaded the page, depending on what they are doing on the webpage. In Firefox 3.5 and IE8 I am able to use jQuery's AJAX() and GetScript() methods to do this, but in Chrome this fails due to the Same Origin Policy.

XMLHttpRequest cannot load file://test/testdir/test.js. Origin null is not allowed by Access-Control-Allow-Origin.

This happens when I do something simple like

$.getScript("test.js");

This functions perfectly well in IE & Firefox.

After reading a bunch about this, I decided to try writing directly into the head of the document. In the console in Chrome I typed the following:

var head = document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0];  
var script =document.createElement('script');   
script.id = 'uploadScript';  
script.type = 'text/javascript';  
script.src = "upload.js";   
head.appendChild(script);

This works fine when pasted in the console- the <script...test.js</script> element is added to the head, evaluated, and content loaded into the DOM.

I thought this was successful, until I put this code into a function call. The same exact code, when called from a function, adds the element to the but does not evaluate the JavaScript file. I can not figure out why. If I use Chrome's console to stop execution in the method that it is adding the element to the and run the above code, it does not evaluate it. However, if I unpause the execution and run the exact same code (pasting it in the console window) it works. I'm at a loss to explain this. Has anyone dealt with this before?

I've read up on the following SO posts, but they are not describing the problem that I have:

Ways to circumvent the same-origin policy

XMLHttpRequest Origin null is not allowed Access-Control-Allow-Origin for file:/// to file:/// (Serv开发者_Python百科erless)

Cross-site XMLHttpRequest

Again, my last resort is to load all the data at the webpage's load- This can cause up to a 10 second delay in loading the webpage that is unnecessary for 90% of the app's users.

Thanks for any suggestions/alternatives!!!


I think I've figured it out.

All I really needed to do was add a callback into my <script> tag. Final code:

I have an element named next... So, in the $("#next").click() function I have the following code. This only gets executed if they click "next".

//remove old dynamically written script tag-    
       var old = document.getElementById('uploadScript');  
   if (old != null) {  
     old.parentNode.removeChild(old);  
     delete old;  
   } 

   var head = document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0];  
   script = document.createElement('script');  
   script.id = 'uploadScript';  
   script.type = 'text/javascript';  
   script.src = 'test/' + scope_dir + '/js/list.js';  
   script.onload = refresh_page;    
   head.appendChild(script);  


function refresh_page(){  
   //perform action with data loaded from the .js file.  
}  

This seems to work, and allows Chrome to dynamically load .js files on the local file system while circumventing the access-control-allow-origin policy I ran into while trying to use jQuery functions.


Ok, done a lot of fiddling and wasted a lot of time. But I got it figured. The solution in my last answer works fine for Chrome, and for Mozilla. But it does not work for blessed IE, because IE will not fire the onload event: it thinks it has dealt with all the onloads in this file and you can't get it to do another one. However, IE is quite happy to load the file up using the JQuery getScript function (which Chrome will not permit because of the ccess-control-allow-origin policy) -- you will need the JQuery libraries for this to work. So here is what I ended up with:

function getMyText(){
    var url='mylocalfile.js';
    if (jQuery.support.scriptEval) { 
        var old = document.getElementById('uploadScript');  
        if (old != null) {  
             old.parentNode.removeChild(old);  
             delete old;  
            } 
        var head = document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0]; 
        var script = document.createElement('script');
        script.id = 'uploadScript';
        script.type = 'text/javascript';
        script.onload = refresh_page; 
        script.src = url; 
        head.appendChild(script);  
    } else {
       $.getScript(url,function(){
            refresh_page();
      });
     }
}

function refresh_page() {
    alert(mytext);
}

In all this, mylocaltext.js defines all my html as the content of a variable, mytext. Ugly, but it works. jQuery.support.scriptEval is true for intelligent browsers that fire onload events if the DOM changes. IE does not, so that sends it to .getScript; Chrome and others do, so that sends them the other way. Anyway this works on local files.


Interesting, but how can I use the same technique to load in a whole HTML file? Similar problem to yours -- I have hundreds of HTML files which I want to include within a web page, depending on what the user wants to see. It seems I can use this technique to load in a whole HTML page, something like:

script.id = 'uploadScript';
script.type = 'text/html';
script.src = url; 
script.onload = refresh_page; 
head.appendChild(script);  

ie, tell it load in HTML. I can see from the console that it is loading it into the page, and I get a message 'Resource interpreted as script but transferred with MIME type text/html'. But I cannot figure out any way to get at the HTML loaded in and held within the script

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