Determine if ajax call failed due to insecure response or connection refused

@Schultzie's answer is pretty close, but clearly http - in general - will not work from https in the browser environment.

What you can do though is to use an intermediate server (proxy) to make the request on your behalf. The proxy should allow either to forward http request from https origin or to load content from self-signed origins.

Having your own server with proper certificate is probably an overkill in your case -- as you could use this setting instead of the machine with self-signed certificate -- but there is a plenty of anonymous open proxy services out there.

So two approaches that come to my mind are:

  1. ajax request -- in such a case the proxy has to use appropriate CORS settings
  2. use of an iframe -- you load your script (probably wrapped in html) inside an iframe via the proxy. Once the script loaded it sends a message to its .parentWindow. If your window received a message you can be sure the server is running (or more precisely was running a fraction of second before).

If you are only interested in your local environment you can try to run chrome with --disable-web-security flag.


Another suggestion: did you try to load an image programatically to find out if more info is present there?


There is no way to differentiate it from newest Web Browsers.

W3C Specification:

The steps below describe what user agents must do for a simple cross-origin request:

Apply the make a request steps and observe the request rules below while making the request.

If the manual redirect flag is unset and the response has an HTTP status code of 301, 302, 303, 307, or 308 Apply the redirect steps.

If the end user cancels the request Apply the abort steps.

If there is a network error In case of DNS errors, TLS negotiation failure, or other type of network errors, apply the network error steps. Do not request any kind of end user interaction.

Note: This does not include HTTP responses that indicate some type of error, such as HTTP status code 410.

Otherwise Perform a resource sharing check. If it returns fail, apply the network error steps. Otherwise, if it returns pass, terminate this algorithm and set the cross-origin request status to success. Do not actually terminate the request.

As you can read, network errors does not include HTTP response that include errors, that is why you will get always 0 as status code, and "" as error.

Source


Note: The following examples were made using Google Chrome Version 43.0.2357.130 and against an environment that I've created to emulate OP one. Code to the set it up is at the bottom of the answer.


I though that an approach To work around this would be make a secondary request over HTTP instead of HTTPS as This answer but I've remembered that is not possible due that newer versions of browsers block mixed content.

That means that the Web Browser will not allow a request over HTTP if you are using HTTPS and vice versa.

This has been like this since few years ago but older Web Browser versions like Mozilla Firefox below it versions 23 allow it.

Evidence about it:

Making a HTTP request from HTTPS usign Web Broser console

var request = new XMLHttpRequest();
request.open('GET', "http://localhost:8001", true);
request.onload = function () {
    console.log(request.responseText);
};
request.onerror = function () {
    console.log(request.responseText);
};
request.send();

will result in the following error:

Mixed Content: The page at 'https://localhost:8000/' was loaded over HTTPS, but requested an insecure XMLHttpRequest endpoint 'http://localhost:8001/'. This request has been blocked; the content must be served over HTTPS.

Same error will appear in the browser console if you try to do this in other ways as adding an Iframe.

<iframe src="http://localhost:8001"></iframe>

Using Socket connection was also Posted as an answer, I was pretty sure that the result will be the same / similar but I've give it a try.

Trying to Open a socket connection from the Web Broswer using HTTPS to a non Secure socket endpoint will end in mixed content errors.

new WebSocket("ws://localhost:8001", "protocolOne");

1) Mixed Content: The page at 'https://localhost:8000/' was loaded over HTTPS, but attempted to connect to the insecure WebSocket endpoint 'ws://localhost:8001/'. This request has been blocked; this endpoint must be available over WSS.

2) Uncaught DOMException: Failed to construct 'WebSocket': An insecure WebSocket connection may not be initiated from a page loaded over HTTPS.

Then I've tried to connect to a wss endpoint too see If I could read some information about network connection errors:

var exampleSocket = new WebSocket("wss://localhost:8001", "protocolOne");
exampleSocket.onerror = function(e) {
    console.log(e);
}

Executing snippet above with Server turned off results in:

WebSocket connection to 'wss://localhost:8001/' failed: Error in connection establishment: net::ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED

Executing snippet above with Server turned On

WebSocket connection to 'wss://localhost:8001/' failed: WebSocket opening handshake was canceled

But again, the error that the "onerror function" output to the console have not any tip to differentiate one error of the other.


Using a proxy as this answer suggest could work but only if the "target" server has public access.

This was not the case here, so trying to implement a proxy in this scenario will lead Us to the same problem.

Code to create Node.js HTTPS server:

I've created two Nodejs HTTPS servers, that use self signed certificates:

targetServer.js:

var https = require('https');
var fs = require('fs');

var options = {
    key: fs.readFileSync('./certs2/key.pem'),
    cert: fs.readFileSync('./certs2/key-cert.pem')
};

https.createServer(options, function (req, res) {
    res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', '*');
    res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Methods', 'GET,PUT,POST,DELETE');
    res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Headers', 'Content-Type');
    res.writeHead(200);
    res.end("hello world\n");
}).listen(8001);

applicationServer.js:

var https = require('https');
var fs = require('fs');

var options = {
    key: fs.readFileSync('./certs/key.pem'),
    cert: fs.readFileSync('./certs/key-cert.pem')
};

https.createServer(options, function (req, res) {
    res.writeHead(200);
    res.end("hello world\n");
}).listen(8000);

To make it work you need to have Nodejs Installed, Need to generate separated certificates for each server and store it in the folders certs and certs2 accordingly.

To Run it just execute node applicationServer.js and node targetServer.js in a terminal (ubuntu example).


As of now: There is no way to differentiate this event between browers. As the browsers do not provide an event for developers to access. (July 2015)

This answer merely seeks to provide ideas for a potential, albiet hacky and incomplete, solution.


Disclaimer: this answer is incomplete as it doesn't completely solve OP's issues (due to cross-origin policies). However the idea itself does has some merit that is further expanded upon by: @artur grzesiak here, using a proxy and ajax.


After quite a bit of research myself, there doesn't seem to be any form of error checking for the difference between connection refused and an insecure response, at least as far as javascript providing a response for the difference between the two.

The general consensus of my research being that SSL certificates are handled by the browser, so until a self-signed certificate is accepted by the user, the browser locks down all requests, including those for a status code. The browser could (if coded to) send back it's own status code for an insecure response, but that doesn't really help anything, and even then, you'd have issues with browser compatibility (chrome/firefox/IE having different standards... once again)

Since your original question was for checking the status of your server between being up versus having an unaccepted certificate, could you not make a standard HTTP request like so?

isUp = false;
isAccepted = false;

var isUpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
isUpRequest.open('GET', "http://localhost/custom/server/", true); //note non-ssl port
isUpRequest.onload = function() {
    isUp = true;
    var isAcceptedRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
    isAcceptedRequest.open('GET', "https://localhost/custom/server/", true); //note ssl port
    isAcceptedRequest.onload = function() {
        console.log("Server is up and certificate accepted");
        isAccepted = true;
    }
    isAcceptedRequest.onerror = function() {
        console.log("Server is up and certificate is not accepted");
    }
    isAcceptedRequest.send();
};
isUpRequest.onerror = function() {
    console.log("Server is down");
};
isUpRequest.send();

Granted this does require an extra request to verify server connectivity, but it should get the job done by process of elimination. Still feels hacky though, and I'm not a big fan of the doubled request.