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Simple, self-contained PHP proxy for cross domain ajax requests.

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PHP Cross-Origin Proxy

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Client-side HTTP requests, are limited by browser cross-origin restrictions.

Preferably fixed by enabling CORS on the server you're trying to call, but sometimes this just isn't possible because reasons.

A simple workaround is having a server-side proxy script on the same domain as your client-side script (e.g. both at api.example.com), and let the server do these cross-domain requests on behalf of the client.

This is such a script.

Installation

Since proxy.php is completely self-contained, you can just

  1. Copy proxy.php into your web application,
  2. Define the $whitelist array,
  3. And that's pretty much it...

If using Composer, you can also add the geekality/php-cross-domain-proxy to your composer.json like this:

"require":
{
	"geekality/php-cross-domain-proxy": "1.*"
},

And then for example add a proxy.php like this to your web application:

<?php
	require 'vendor/autoload.php';

	Geekality\CrossOriginProxy::proxy([
		['host' => 'example.com'],
	]);

Usage

On the client-side, when performing cross-origin requests:

  1. Make url point to the proxy.php script.
  2. Set the HTTP header X-Proxy-URL to whatever URL you're calling, for example http://api.example.com/some/path.

All parameters and HTTP headers (except Cookie and Host) will be used to recreate the request and performed server-side by the proxy. When complete it will mirror the response, including headers, and return it to the client-side script more or less as if it had been called directly.

Usage with jQuery

Basic GET request

$.ajax({
	url: 'proxy.php',
	cache: false,
	headers: {
		'X-Proxy-URL': 'http://example.com/api/method',
	},
})

Automagic via global ajaxSend event

$(function()
{
	// Hook up the event handler
	$(document).ajaxSend(useCrossDomainProxy);
});

function useCrossDomainProxy(event, jqxhr, options)
{
	if(options.crossDomain)
	{
		// Copy URL to HTTP header
		jqxhr.setRequestHeader('X-Proxy-URL', options.url);

		// Set URL to the proxy
		options.url = 'proxy.php';

		// Since all cross-origin URLs will now look the same to the browser,
		// you can add a timestamp, which will prevent browser caching.
		options.url += '?_='+Date.now();
	}
}

// Later, somewhere else, it's now much cleaner to do a cross-origin request
$.ajax({
	method: 'POST',
	url: 'http://example.com/some-api',
	data: {name: 'Alice', age: 17},
})

Note When using cache:false jQuery adds a _ GET parameter to the URL with the current timestamp to prevent the browser from returning a cached response. This happens before the ajaxSend event, so in the above case, if you had set cache:false, that _ parameter would just be "moved" to the X-Proxy-URL header and no longer have any effect. Instead, leave cache at its default value true, and add the parameter manually to the proxy url instead, like in the example above.

Some more examples can be found in test/index.html.

Security

Although the hostname of the referer is checked, that's easily spoofed, so security-wise there's only so much one can do. What should be done though is to define the whitelist. Fill it with any number of the following types of criterias:

  • Exact paths
    ['http://example.com/api/specific-method']
  • Array with single regex key
    ['regex' => '%^http://example.com/api/%']
  • Array with any parse_url components to match
    ['host' => 'example.com']
    ['host' => 'example.com', 'scheme' => 'https']

The requested URL must match at least one of the whitelisted criterias to be accepted, otherwise a 403 will be returned. The whitelist can also be set to an empty array to allow any URLs.

Example

<?php

require 'vendor/autoload.php';

Geekality\CrossOriginProxy::proxy([

	// URL component matching
	['host' => 'localhost'],
	['host' => 'example.com', 'scheme' => 'https'],

	// Exact matching
	['http://www.yr.no/place/Sweden/Stockholm/Stockholm/forecast.xml'],

	// Regex matching
	['regex' => '%^http://www.yr.no/place/Norway/%'],

]);

Cookies

Cookies sent to the proxy will be ignored, since the browser will send the ones meant for the domain of the proxy, and not the cookies meant for the proxied resource.

If a request needs a cookie set, for example a session id, you can set the X-Proxy-Cookie header which will then be used as Cookie by the proxy.

Similarly, any Set-Cookie header in the response would be eaten by the browser and not accessible, so the proxy renames any Set-Cookie header to X-Proxy-Set-Cookie.

$.ajax({
	url: 'https://example.com',
	headers: {
		'X-Proxy-Cookie': 'jsessionid=AS348AF929FK219CKA9FK3B79870H;',
	},
	success: function(data, status, jqXHR) {
		var cookie = jqXHR.getResponseHeader('X-Proxy-Set-Cookie');
	}
})

cURL and zlib options

You can add options which will be appended to the options set when doing the request. You can also turn off zlib compression, which is enabled by default.

<?php
	require 'vendor/autoload.php';

	$whitelist = [...];
	$opts = [CURLOPT_TIMEOUT => 5];
	$zlib = 'Off';

	Geekality\CrossOriginProxy::proxy($whitelist, $opts, $zlib);

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