I am trying to retrieve paginated results from a 3rd party API after making an API call from my Node.js/Express server. I then want to send the data through to the client. I can retrieve the first page of results using the Request package and the following code:
var options = {
url: `https://theURL.com`,
headers: {
'authorization': `bearer ${user_token}`,
'user-agent': '***my details***'
}
}
function callback(error, response, body) {
if (!error) {
res.json({
data: body
});
} else {
res.send("an error occured")
}
}
Request(options, callback);
I understand that the response will contain a Link header which I should follow to get the next page's data and to retrieve the link header for the page after that. I repeat this process until I reach a blank link header, at which point all the pages of data have been retrieved.
Firstly, I don't know how to approach this task, should I be following all the link headers and compiling all the results on my server before transferring them to the client? Or should I send each pages worth of data to the client as I get it and then deal with it there?
Secondly, how can an appropriate solution be achieved in code?
I'm trying to use Rx.js to handle the flow of Chrome extension webrequest API.
Each webrequest addListener() call takes a mandatory callback function as the first parameter. This sends request objects to the function. However, the callback can return a webRequest.BlockingResponse that determines the further life cycle of the request.
I'm struggling to handle the blocking response as part of the observable.
This code works well for examining all image requests, for example
onBeforeRequestHandler = function() {
var filteredURLs = ["http://*/*", "https://*/*"];
var resourceTypes = ["image"];
var filter = { urls: filteredURLs, types: resourceTypes };
var options = ["blocking"];
return Rx.Observable.create(observer => {
var listener = chrome.webRequest.onBeforeRequest.addListener(
function requestHandler(obj) {
observer.next(obj);
},
filter, options);
return unsubscribe => {
chrome.webRequest.onBeforeRequest.removeListener(listener);
};
});
};
I can then use all the Rx.js operators to manipulate the requests by doing this:
var source = onBeforeRequestHandler();
source.subscribe();
etc.
However, if during the course of working the images, I wish to cancel the request, I somehow need to return a blocking response object, like this {cancel:true} to the observable that is wrapping the chrome.webRequest.onBeforeRequest.addListener callback function.
At the moment I have no clue how to do this.
Any help much appreciated.
I crate a mobile service and also a custom api for that in Azure. I use fiddler to send request and do some basic and simple testing.
At Azure side, I create a custom api for my mobile service. Let say the name is ExampleCustomApi. And in the code I have
exports.put = function(request, response) {
var tags = request.parameters.tags;
...
...
}
At fiddler side, I set http method to "PUT" and the url to my custom api.
Then I set a request body to { "tags": "tag1" }.
When I execute the request in fiddler, I receive 500 back. The log in Azure's mobile service says that parameters is undefined.
My question, then, is how to get the request body at the server side. I look at the document of request object, it seems to me that parameters is the one I should use, but it doesn't work.
request is an object in express.js library.
This is the documentation from MSDN http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/azure/jj554218.aspx
the documentation from express.js http://expressjs.com/api.html#req.body
And I can use request.body to get the body content.
After many attempts we cracked getting the content from a weburl. Hope this helps :) Jsonbody would hold your page content. This is a copy where we pulled json from one of our API's
var message = "try";
var jsonBody = "";
var request = require('request');
request.get({
url: "https://superduperwebaddress.com/api/pull"},
function(error,response,body){
if(!error)
{
var mybody = JSON.parse(body);
jsonBody = mybody;
console.warn("we are here well");
}else{
console.error(error);
}
}
);
Is it possible to create a Chrome extension that modifies HTTP response bodies?
I have looked in the Chrome Extension APIs, but I haven't found anything to do this.
In general, you cannot change the response body of a HTTP request using the standard Chrome extension APIs.
This feature is being requested at 104058: WebRequest API: allow extension to edit response body. Star the issue to get notified of updates.
If you want to edit the response body for a known XMLHttpRequest, inject code via a content script to override the default XMLHttpRequest constructor with a custom (full-featured) one that rewrites the response before triggering the real event. Make sure that your XMLHttpRequest object is fully compliant with Chrome's built-in XMLHttpRequest object, or AJAX-heavy sites will break.
In other cases, you can use the chrome.webRequest or chrome.declarativeWebRequest APIs to redirect the request to a data:-URI. Unlike the XHR-approach, you won't get the original contents of the request. Actually, the request will never hit the server because redirection can only be done before the actual request is sent. And if you redirect a main_frame request, the user will see the data:-URI instead of the requested URL.
I just released a Devtools extension that does just that :)
It's called tamper, it's based on mitmproxy and it allows you to see all requests made by the current tab, modify them and serve the modified version next time you refresh.
It's a pretty early version but it should be compatible with OS X and Windows. Let me know if it doesn't work for you.
You can get it here http://dutzi.github.io/tamper/
How this works
As #Xan commented below, the extension communicates through Native Messaging with a python script that extends mitmproxy.
The extension lists all requests using chrome.devtools.network.onRequestFinished.
When you click on of the requests it downloads its response using the request object's getContent() method, and then sends that response to the python script which saves it locally.
It then opens file in an editor (using call for OSX or subprocess.Popen for windows).
The python script uses mitmproxy to listen to all communication made through that proxy, if it detects a request for a file that was saved it serves the file that was saved instead.
I used Chrome's proxy API (specifically chrome.proxy.settings.set()) to set a PAC as the proxy setting. That PAC file redirect all communication to the python script's proxy.
One of the greatest things about mitmproxy is that it can also modify HTTPs communication. So you have that also :)
Like #Rob w said, I've override XMLHttpRequest and this is a result for modification any XHR requests in any sites (working like transparent modification proxy):
var _open = XMLHttpRequest.prototype.open;
window.XMLHttpRequest.prototype.open = function (method, URL) {
var _onreadystatechange = this.onreadystatechange,
_this = this;
_this.onreadystatechange = function () {
// catch only completed 'api/search/universal' requests
if (_this.readyState === 4 && _this.status === 200 && ~URL.indexOf('api/search/universal')) {
try {
//////////////////////////////////////
// THIS IS ACTIONS FOR YOUR REQUEST //
// EXAMPLE: //
//////////////////////////////////////
var data = JSON.parse(_this.responseText); // {"fields": ["a","b"]}
if (data.fields) {
data.fields.push('c','d');
}
// rewrite responseText
Object.defineProperty(_this, 'responseText', {value: JSON.stringify(data)});
/////////////// END //////////////////
} catch (e) {}
console.log('Caught! :)', method, URL/*, _this.responseText*/);
}
// call original callback
if (_onreadystatechange) _onreadystatechange.apply(this, arguments);
};
// detect any onreadystatechange changing
Object.defineProperty(this, "onreadystatechange", {
get: function () {
return _onreadystatechange;
},
set: function (value) {
_onreadystatechange = value;
}
});
return _open.apply(_this, arguments);
};
for example this code can be used successfully by Tampermonkey for making any modifications on any sites :)
Yes. It is possible with the chrome.debugger API, which grants extension access to the Chrome DevTools Protocol, which supports HTTP interception and modification through its Network API.
This solution was suggested by a comment on Chrome Issue 487422:
For anyone wanting an alternative which is doable at the moment, you can use chrome.debugger in a background/event page to attach to the specific tab you want to listen to (or attach to all tabs if that's possible, haven't tested all tabs personally), then use the network API of the debugging protocol.
The only problem with this is that there will be the usual yellow bar at the top of the tab's viewport, unless the user turns it off in chrome://flags.
First, attach a debugger to the target:
chrome.debugger.getTargets((targets) => {
let target = /* Find the target. */;
let debuggee = { targetId: target.id };
chrome.debugger.attach(debuggee, "1.2", () => {
// TODO
});
});
Next, send the Network.setRequestInterceptionEnabled command, which will enable interception of network requests:
chrome.debugger.getTargets((targets) => {
let target = /* Find the target. */;
let debuggee = { targetId: target.id };
chrome.debugger.attach(debuggee, "1.2", () => {
chrome.debugger.sendCommand(debuggee, "Network.setRequestInterceptionEnabled", { enabled: true });
});
});
Chrome will now begin sending Network.requestIntercepted events. Add a listener for them:
chrome.debugger.getTargets((targets) => {
let target = /* Find the target. */;
let debuggee = { targetId: target.id };
chrome.debugger.attach(debuggee, "1.2", () => {
chrome.debugger.sendCommand(debuggee, "Network.setRequestInterceptionEnabled", { enabled: true });
});
chrome.debugger.onEvent.addListener((source, method, params) => {
if(source.targetId === target.id && method === "Network.requestIntercepted") {
// TODO
}
});
});
In the listener, params.request will be the corresponding Request object.
Send the response with Network.continueInterceptedRequest:
Pass a base64 encoding of your desired HTTP raw response (including HTTP status line, headers, etc!) as rawResponse.
Pass params.interceptionId as interceptionId.
Note that I have not tested any of this, at all.
While Safari has this feature built-in, the best workaround I've found for Chrome so far is to use Cypress's intercept functionality. It cleanly allows me to stub HTTP responses in Chrome. I call cy.intercept then cy.visit(<URL>) and it intercepts and provides a stubbed response for a specific request the visited page makes. Here's an example:
cy.intercept('GET', '/myapiendpoint', {
statusCode: 200,
body: {
myexamplefield: 'Example value',
},
})
cy.visit('http://localhost:8080/mytestpage')
Note: You may also need to configure Cypress to disable some Chrome-specific security settings.
The original question was about Chrome extensions, but I notice that it has branched out into different methods, going by the upvotes on answers that have non-Chrome-extension methods.
Here's a way to kind of achieve this with Puppeteer. Note the caveat mentioned on the originalContent line - the fetched response may be different to the original response in some circumstances.
With Node.js:
npm install puppeteer node-fetch#2.6.7
Create this main.js:
const puppeteer = require("puppeteer");
const fetch = require("node-fetch");
(async function() {
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({headless:false});
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.setRequestInterception(true);
page.on('request', async (request) => {
let url = request.url().replace(/\/$/g, ""); // remove trailing slash from urls
console.log("REQUEST:", url);
let originalContent = await fetch(url).then(r => r.text()); // TODO: Pass request headers here for more accurate response (still not perfect, but more likely to be the same as the "actual" response)
if(url === "https://example.com") {
request.respond({
status: 200,
contentType: 'text/html; charset=utf-8', // For JS files: 'application/javascript; charset=utf-8'
body: originalContent.replace(/example/gi, "TESTING123"),
});
} else {
request.continue();
}
});
await page.goto("https://example.com");
})();
Run it:
node main.js
With Deno:
Install Deno:
curl -fsSL https://deno.land/install.sh | sh # linux, mac
irm https://deno.land/install.ps1 | iex # windows powershell
Download Chrome for Puppeteer:
PUPPETEER_PRODUCT=chrome deno run -A --unstable https://deno.land/x/puppeteer#16.2.0/install.ts
Create this main.js:
import puppeteer from "https://deno.land/x/puppeteer#16.2.0/mod.ts";
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({headless:false});
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.setRequestInterception(true);
page.on('request', async (request) => {
let url = request.url().replace(/\/$/g, ""); // remove trailing slash from urls
console.log("REQUEST:", url);
let originalContent = await fetch(url).then(r => r.text()); // TODO: Pass request headers here for more accurate response (still not perfect, but more likely to be the same as the "actual" response)
if(url === "https://example.com") {
request.respond({
status: 200,
contentType: 'text/html; charset=utf-8', // For JS files: 'application/javascript; charset=utf-8'
body: originalContent.replace(/example/gi, "TESTING123"),
});
} else {
request.continue();
}
});
await page.goto("https://example.com");
Run it:
deno run -A --unstable main.js
(I'm currently running into a TimeoutError with this that will hopefully be resolved soon: https://github.com/lucacasonato/deno-puppeteer/issues/65)
Yes, you can modify HTTP response in a Chrome extension. I built ModResponse (https://modheader.com/modresponse) that does that. It can record and replay your HTTP response, modify it, add delay, and even use the HTTP response from a different server (like from your localhost)
The way it works is to use the chrome.debugger API (https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/reference/debugger/), which gives you access to Chrome DevTools Protocol (https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/). You can then intercept the request and response using the Fetch Domain API (https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/tot/Fetch/), then override the response you want. (You can also use the Network Domain, though it is deprecated in favor of the Fetch Domain)
The nice thing about this approach is that it will just work out of box. No desktop app installation required. No extra proxy setup. However, it will show a debugging banner in Chrome (which you can add an argument to Chrome to hide), and it is significantly more complicated to setup than other APIs.
For examples on how to use the debugger API, take a look at the chrome-extensions-samples: https://github.com/GoogleChrome/chrome-extensions-samples/tree/main/mv2-archive/api/debugger/live-headers
I've just found this extension and it does a lot of other things but modifying api responses in the browser works really well: https://requestly.io/
Follow these steps to get it working:
Install the extension
Go to HttpRules
Add a new rule and add a url and a response
Enable the rule with the radio button
Go to Chrome and you should see the response is modified
You can have multiple rules with different responses and enable/disable as required. I've not found out how you can have a different response per request though if the url is the same unfortunately.
I'd like to read (not modify) the response body for all requests that match some pattern in a Chrome extension. I'm currently using chrome.devtools.network.onRequestFinished, which gives you a Request object with a getContent() method. This works just fine, but of course requires the devtools to be open for the extension to work. Ideally the extension would be a popup, but chrome.webRequest.onCompleted doesn't seem to give access to the response body. There is a feature request to allow the webRequest API to edit response bodies - but can webRequest even read them? If not, is there any other way to read response bodies outside of devtools extensions?
The feature request you linked to implies that there is no support for reading either:
Unfortunately, this request is not trivial. (...) Regarding reading the Response Body: This is challenging from a performance perspective. (...) So overall, this is just not easy to achieve...
So, no, there doesn't seem to be a way for an extension to access network response bodies, except for devtools.
Here is what I did
I used the chrome.webRequest & requestBody to get the post requests body
I used a decoder the parse the body into a string
Here is an example
chrome.webRequest.onBeforeRequest.addListener(
function(details) {
if(details.method == "POST")
// Use this to decode the body of your post
var postedString = decodeURIComponent(String.fromCharCode.apply(null,
new Uint8Array(details.requestBody.raw[0].bytes)));
console.log(postedString)
},
{urls: ["<all_urls>"]},
["blocking", "requestBody"]
);
If you have the this pattern of requests you can run something like that in your background.html file:
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("GET", "http://example.com/" + yourStringForPattern, true);
xhr.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (xhr.readyState == 4) {
var body = xhr.responseText;
// call some function to do something with the html body
}
}
xhr.send();