Chrome Extension - How to get HTTP Response Body?

This is definitely something that is not provided out of the box by the Chrome Extension ecosystem. But, I could find a couple of ways to get around this but both come with their own set of drawbacks.

The first way is:

  1. Use a content script to inject our own custom script.
  2. Use the custom script to extend XHR's native methods to read the response.
  3. Add the response to the web page's DOM inside a hidden (not display: none) element.
  4. Use the content script to read the hidden response.

The second way is to create a DevTools extension which is the only extension that provides an API to read each request.

I have penned down both the methods in a detailed manner in a blog post here.

Let me know if you face any issues! :)


There is now a way in a Chrome Developer Tools extension, and sample code can be seen here: blog post.

In short, here is an adaptation of his sample code:

chrome.devtools.network.onRequestFinished.addListener(request => {
  request.getContent((body) => {
    if (request.request && request.request.url) {
      if (request.request.url.includes('facebook.com')) {

         //continue with custom code
         var bodyObj = JSON.parse(body);//etc.
      }
}
});
});

I can't find better way then this anwser.

Chrome extension to read HTTP response

The answer told how to get response headers and display in another page.But there is no body info in the response obj(see event-responseReceived). If you want to get response body without another page, try this.

var currentTab;
var version = "1.0";

chrome.tabs.query( //get current Tab
    {
        currentWindow: true,
        active: true
    },
    function(tabArray) {
        currentTab = tabArray[0];
        chrome.debugger.attach({ //debug at current tab
            tabId: currentTab.id
        }, version, onAttach.bind(null, currentTab.id));
    }
)


function onAttach(tabId) {

    chrome.debugger.sendCommand({ //first enable the Network
        tabId: tabId
    }, "Network.enable");

    chrome.debugger.onEvent.addListener(allEventHandler);

}


function allEventHandler(debuggeeId, message, params) {

    if (currentTab.id != debuggeeId.tabId) {
        return;
    }

    if (message == "Network.responseReceived") { //response return 
        chrome.debugger.sendCommand({
            tabId: debuggeeId.tabId
        }, "Network.getResponseBody", {
            "requestId": params.requestId
        }, function(response) {
            // you get the response body here!
            // you can close the debugger tips by:
            chrome.debugger.detach(debuggeeId);
        });
    }

}

I think it's useful enough for me and you can use chrome.debugger.detach(debuggeeId)to close the ugly tip.

sorry, mabye not helpful... ^ ^