Monkey patch XMLHTTPRequest.onreadystatechange
To monkey-patch XMLHttpRequest
s, you need to know how an AJAX request is generally constructed:
- Constructor invocation
- Preparation the request (
setRequestHeader()
,open()
) - Sending the request (
.send
).
General-purpose patch
(function(xhr) {
function banana(xhrInstance) { // Example
console.log('Monkey RS: ' + xhrInstance.readyState);
}
// Capture request before any network activity occurs:
var send = xhr.send;
xhr.send = function(data) {
var rsc = this.onreadystatechange;
if (rsc) {
// "onreadystatechange" exists. Monkey-patch it
this.onreadystatechange = function() {
banana(this);
return rsc.apply(this, arguments);
};
}
return send.apply(this, arguments);
};
})(XMLHttpRequest.prototype);
The previous assumed that onreadystatechange
was assigned to the onreadystatechange
handler. For simplicity, I didn't include the code for other events, such as onload
. Also, I did not account for events added using addEventListener
.
The previous patch runs for all requests. But what if you want to limit the patch to a specific request only? A request with a certain URL or async flag and a specific request body?
Conditional monkey-patch
Example: Intercepting all POST
requests whose request body contains "TEST"
(function(xhr) {
function banana(xhrInstance) { // Example
console.log('Monkey RS: ' + xhrInstance.readyState);
}
//
var open = xhr.open;
xhr.open = function(method, url, async) {
// Test if method is POST
if (/^POST$/i.test(method)) {
var send = this.send;
this.send = function(data) {
// Test if request body contains "TEST"
if (typeof data === 'string' && data.indexOf('TEST') >= 0) {
var rsc = this.onreadystatechange;
if (rsc) {
// Apply monkey-patch
this.onreadystatechange = function() {
banana(this);
return rsc.apply(this, arguments);
};
}
}
return send.apply(this, arguments);
};
}
return open.apply(this, arguments);
};
})(XMLHttpRequest.prototype);
The main techniques used is the transparent rewrite using...
var original = xhr.method;
xhr.method = function(){
/*...*/;
return original.apply(this, arguments);
};
My examples are very basic, and can be extended to meet your exact wishes. That's up to you, however.