I want to be able to validate a form to check if a website/webpage exists. If it returns a 404 error then that definitely shouldn't validate. If there is a redirect...I'm open to suggestions, sometimes redirects go to an error page or homepage, sometimes they go to the page you were looking for, so I don't know. Perhaps for a redirect there could be a special notice that suggests the destination address to the user.
The best thing I found so far was like this:
$.ajax({url: webpage ,type:'HEAD',error:function(){
alert('No go.');
}});
That has no problem with 404's and 200's but if you do something like 'http://xyz'
for the url it just hangs. Also 302 and the like trigger the error handler too.
This is a generic enough question I would like a plete working code example if somebody can make one. This could be handy for lots of people to use.
I want to be able to validate a form to check if a website/webpage exists. If it returns a 404 error then that definitely shouldn't validate. If there is a redirect...I'm open to suggestions, sometimes redirects go to an error page or homepage, sometimes they go to the page you were looking for, so I don't know. Perhaps for a redirect there could be a special notice that suggests the destination address to the user.
The best thing I found so far was like this:
$.ajax({url: webpage ,type:'HEAD',error:function(){
alert('No go.');
}});
That has no problem with 404's and 200's but if you do something like 'http://xyz'
for the url it just hangs. Also 302 and the like trigger the error handler too.
This is a generic enough question I would like a plete working code example if somebody can make one. This could be handy for lots of people to use.
Share Improve this question edited Aug 21, 2010 at 3:31 Yi Jiang 50.2k16 gold badges138 silver badges136 bronze badges asked Aug 21, 2010 at 3:12 MossMoss 3,8137 gold badges44 silver badges61 bronze badges 5- I'd like to know this as well. – esqew Commented Aug 21, 2010 at 3:13
- By exist, you mean up and running, or just the domain. – Dejan Marjanović Commented Aug 21, 2010 at 3:24
- Could you redesign the interaction so that the URL could be verified serverside without having the user wait for the it? – SargeATM Commented Aug 21, 2010 at 3:40
- 1 Note that you can also risk to get 405 Method Not Allowed (you can also read: not available/implemented) for a HEAD while a GET returns perfectly fine a 200. You may want to consider to test GET only. – BalusC Commented Aug 21, 2010 at 4:18
- @Webarto the idea is to check if there is a legitimate page there so the form doesn't except "broken links". @SargeATM PHP is fine if that is the only/best way, I can always use jQuery to poll the php code. – Moss Commented Aug 21, 2010 at 9:14
4 Answers
Reset to default 4It sounds like you don't care about the web page's contents, you just want to see if it exists. Here's how I'd do it in PHP - I can stop PHP from taking up memory with the page's contents.
/*
* Returns false if the page could not be retrieved (ie., no 2xx or 3xx HTTP
* status code). On success, if $includeContents = false (default), then we
* return true - if it's true, then we return file_get_contents()'s result (a
* string of page content).
*/
function getURL($url, $includeContents = false)
{
if($includeContents)
return @file_get_contents($url);
return (@file_get_contents($url, null, null, 0, 0) !== false);
}
For less verbosity, replace the above function's contents with this.
return ($includeContents) ?
@file_get_contents($url) :
(@file_get_contents($url, null, null, 0, 0) !== false)
;
See http://www.php/file_get_contents for details on how to specify HTTP headers using a stream context.
Cheers.
First you need to check that the page exists via DNS. That's why you say it "just hangs" - it's waiting for the DNS query to time out. It's not actually hung.
After checking DNS, check that you can connect to the server. This is another long timeout if you're not careful.
Finally, perform the HTTP HEAD and check the status code. There are many, many, many special cases you have to consider here: what does a "temporary internal server error" mean for the page existing? What about "permanently moved"? Look into HTTP status codes.
I've just written a simpler version using PHP:
function url_check($url) {
$x = @fopen($url,"r");
if ($x) {
$reply = 1;
fclose($x);
} else {
$reply = 0;
}
return $reply;
}
Obviously $url
is the test URL, returns true (1) or false (0) depending on URL existence.
Maybe you could bine domain checker, and jQuery, domain checker (PHP) can respond 1 or 0 for non-existent domains.
eg. http://webarto./snajper.php?domena=stackoverflow. , will return 1, you can use input blur function to check for it instantly.