I'm developing a javascript code to run on an embedded device using the ANT Galio browser.
Ideally, I'd like the code to make a get request to another server. After that get request is made, the page would not allow the user to submit another get request, until a response had been received from the previous get request.
For some reason sometimes I am receiving a readyState of 4 almost instantly. It is as though it is evaluating the previous XmlHttpRequest object and not the new one. What am I doing wrong?
<script type="text/javascript">
var fail= function (env, resp, stat) {
alert(resp);
};
var succ= function (env, resp) {
};
var canScan = true;
/* start scan */
function scan (name) {
if (canScan) {
//deactivate button
deactivateScanButtons();
//let server know
ajax = new XMLHttpRequest();
var scanUrl = 'http://19X.1XX.X.XX:8080/scan/' + name
ajax.open('GET', scanUrl, true);
ajax.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (ajax.readyState==4) {
//allow button to work again
activateScanButtons();
alert("ready state 4");
};
};
ajax.send();
//initiate scan
xrxScanInitiateScan(
'http://127.0.0.1',
"ftp.xst",
false,
succ,
fail);
}
}
function deactivateScanButtons () {
// canScan = false;
var indicator = document.getElementById('buttons');
indicator.style.visibility = "hidden";
}
function activateScanButtons () {
// canScan = true;
var indi开发者_开发知识库cator = document.getElementById('buttons');
indicator.style.visibility = "visible";
}
</script>
3 suggestions:
- To avoid any caching on the client side, add a randomly generated number, or the current timestamp to the request querystring.
- As Yoni said, initiate your
XMLHttpRequest
object withvar
keyword. - For each request, save the current timestamp within a global variable. In
onreadystatechange
, callactivateScanButtons
only if the global timestamp matches the corresponding timestamp of that given request. This way, only the latest request will be able to callactivateScanButtons
.
You define the ajax object in scan
function without the var
keyword before it. This means that it is a global object, not local. Afterwards, you have a closure - you refer to that variable in the onreadystate
callback function.
I find it hard to track exactly what's going on there, but I agree with you, as you say in your question, that the callback is not using the ajax object the way you expect. You say it happens sometimes - does it happen when you make two requests almost simultaneously (double-click a button or otherwise trigger the two get requests very fast)?
I suggest that you use the var
keyword before defining the ajax object. Even better, try using this
in the callback function instead of referring to the ajax object by name. If it works, you have spared yourself of one closure.
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