在本地主机上运行时不执行 JSONP 回调

JSONP callback doesn#39;t execute when running at localhost(在本地主机上运行时不执行 JSONP 回调)

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问题描述

This is bizarre, I was wondering if anyone could shed some light on why this happened.

Basically, I've been pulling my hair out trying to test JSONP out so I can implement a JSON web service that other sites can use. I'm doing development on localhost--specifically, Visual Studio 2008 and Visual Studio 2008's built-in web server.

So as a JSONP test run w/ jQuery, I implemented the following:

$().ready(function() {
  debugger;
  try {
    $.getJSON("<%= new Uri(Request.Url, "/").ToString() %>XssTest?callback=?", function(data) {
        alert(data.abc);
    });
  } catch (err) {
    alert(err);
  }
});

And on the server ..

<%= Request["callback"] %>({abc : 'def'})

So what ends up happening is I set a breakpoint on the server and I get the breakpoint both on the first "debugger;" statment in the client-side script as well as on the server. The JSONP URL is indeed being invoked after the page loads. That's working great.

The problem I was having was that the callback would never execute. I tested this in both IE8 as well as Firefox 3.5. Neither one would invoke the callback. The catch(err) was never reached, either. Nothing happened at all!

I'd been stuck on this for a week, and even tested with a manually keyed HTTP request in Telnet on the specified port to be sure that the server is returning the format...

callbackfn({abc : 'def'})

.. and it is.

Then it dawned on me, what if I change the hostname from localhost to localhost with a globalizer ('.'), i.e http://localhost.:41559/ instead of http://localhost:41559/ (yes, adding a dot to any hostname is legal, it is to DNS what global:: is to C# namespaces). And then it worked! Internet Explorer and Firefox 3.5 finally showed me an alert message when I just added a dot.

So this makes me wonder, what is going on here? Why would late script tag generation work with an Internet hostname and not with plain localhost? Or is that the right question?

Clearly this is implemented for security reasons, but what are they trying to secure?? And, by getting it to work with a dot, did I just expose a security hole in this security feature?

By the way, my hosts file, while altered for other hosts, has nothing special going on with localhost; the default 127.0.0.1 / ::1 are still in place with no overrides below.

FOLLOW-UP: I got past this for local development purposes by adding:

127.0.0.1   local.mysite.com

.. to my hosts file, then adding the following code to my global.asax:

protected void Application_BeginRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    if (Request.Headers["Host"].Split(':')[0] == "localhost")
    {
        Response.Redirect(
            Request.Url.Scheme
            + "://"
            + "local.mysite.com"
            + ":" + Request.Url.Port.ToString()
            + Request.Url.PathAndQuery
            , true);
    }
}

解决方案

I'm going to throw an answer out there; after some thought I've reached my own conclusions.

It could be that this is a security feature that's implemented to try to thwart an Internet web site from invoking JSONP services running on the client machine.

A web site could just go through a list of ports and keep invoking localhost on different ports and paths. 'Localhost' is one of few DNS hostnames that are dynamic in meaning depending on when and where it's queried, making the potential targets vulnerable. And yes, the fact that appending a dot (.) to 'localhost' ('localhost.') produces a working workaround does expose a security vulnerability, but does offer a [tentative] workaround for development puposes.

A better approach is to map the loopback IP to a new hostname entry in the hosts file so that it works locally, isn't prone to be "fixed" by a browser update, and doesn't work anywhere else but on the development workstation.

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