include antiforgerytoken in ajax post ASP.NET MVC
I am having trouble with the AntiForgeryToken with ajax. I'm using ASP.NET MVC 3. I tried the solution in jQuery Ajax calls and the Html.AntiForgeryToken(). Using that solution, the token is now being passed:
var data = { ... } // with token, key is '__RequestVerificationToken'
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
data: data,
datatype: "json",
traditional: true,
contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
url: myURL,
success: function (response) {
...
},
error: function (response) {
...
}
});
When I remove the [ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
attribute just to see if the data (with the token) is being passed as parameters to the controller, I can see that they are being passed. But for some reason, the A required anti-forgery token was not supplied or was invalid.
message still pops up when I put the attribute back.
Any ideas?
EDIT
The antiforgerytoken is being generated inside a form, but I'm not using a submit action to submit it. Instead, I'm just getting the token's value using jquery and then trying to ajax post that.
Here is the form that contains the token, and is located at the top master page:
<form id="__AjaxAntiForgeryForm" action="#" method="post">
@Html.AntiForgeryToken()
</form>
You have incorrectly specified the contentType
to application/json
.
Here's an example of how this might work.
Controller:
public class HomeController : Controller
{
public ActionResult Index()
{
return View();
}
[HttpPost]
[ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
public ActionResult Index(string someValue)
{
return Json(new { someValue = someValue });
}
}
View:
@using (Html.BeginForm(null, null, FormMethod.Post, new { id = "__AjaxAntiForgeryForm" }))
{
@Html.AntiForgeryToken()
}
<div id="myDiv" data-url="@Url.Action("Index", "Home")">
Click me to send an AJAX request to a controller action
decorated with the [ValidateAntiForgeryToken] attribute
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
$('#myDiv').submit(function () {
var form = $('#__AjaxAntiForgeryForm');
var token = $('input[name="__RequestVerificationToken"]', form).val();
$.ajax({
url: $(this).data('url'),
type: 'POST',
data: {
__RequestVerificationToken: token,
someValue: 'some value'
},
success: function (result) {
alert(result.someValue);
}
});
return false;
});
</script>
Another (less javascriptish) approach, that I did, goes something like this:
First, an Html helper
public static MvcHtmlString AntiForgeryTokenForAjaxPost(this HtmlHelper helper)
{
var antiForgeryInputTag = helper.AntiForgeryToken().ToString();
// Above gets the following: <input name="__RequestVerificationToken" type="hidden" value="PnQE7R0MIBBAzC7SqtVvwrJpGbRvPgzWHo5dSyoSaZoabRjf9pCyzjujYBU_qKDJmwIOiPRDwBV1TNVdXFVgzAvN9_l2yt9-nf4Owif0qIDz7WRAmydVPIm6_pmJAI--wvvFQO7g0VvoFArFtAR2v6Ch1wmXCZ89v0-lNOGZLZc1" />
var removedStart = antiForgeryInputTag.Replace(@"<input name=""__RequestVerificationToken"" type=""hidden"" value=""", "");
var tokenValue = removedStart.Replace(@""" />", "");
if (antiForgeryInputTag == removedStart || removedStart == tokenValue)
throw new InvalidOperationException("Oops! The Html.AntiForgeryToken() method seems to return something I did not expect.");
return new MvcHtmlString(string.Format(@"{0}:""{1}""", "__RequestVerificationToken", tokenValue));
}
that will return a string
__RequestVerificationToken:"P5g2D8vRyE3aBn7qQKfVVVAsQc853s-naENvpUAPZLipuw0pa_ffBf9cINzFgIRPwsf7Ykjt46ttJy5ox5r3mzpqvmgNYdnKc1125jphQV0NnM5nGFtcXXqoY3RpusTH_WcHPzH4S4l1PmB8Uu7ubZBftqFdxCLC5n-xT0fHcAY1"
so we can use it like this
$(function () {
$("#submit-list").click(function () {
$.ajax({
url: '@Url.Action("SortDataSourceLibraries")',
data: { items: $(".sortable").sortable('toArray'), @Html.AntiForgeryTokenForAjaxPost() },
type: 'post',
traditional: true
});
});
});
And it seems to work!
it is so simple! when you use @Html.AntiForgeryToken()
in your html code it means that server has signed this page and each request that is sent to server from this particular page has a sign that is prevented to send a fake request by hackers. so for this page to be authenticated by the server you should go through two steps:
1.send a parameter named __RequestVerificationToken
and to gets its value use codes below:
<script type="text/javascript">
function gettoken() {
var token = '@Html.AntiForgeryToken()';
token = $(token).val();
return token;
}
</script>
for example take an ajax call
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "/Account/Login",
data: {
__RequestVerificationToken: gettoken(),
uname: uname,
pass: pass
},
dataType: 'json',
contentType: 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=utf-8',
success: successFu,
});
and step 2 just decorate your action method by [ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
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