问题描述:
浏览器报错
I am loading an <iframe>
in my HTML page and trying to access the elements within it using Javascript, but when I try to execute my code, I get the following error:
SecurityError: Blocked a frame with origin "http://www.<domain>.com" from accessing a cross-origin frame.
I am using this code for testing, but in vain:
$(document).ready(function() { var iframeWindow = document.getElementById("my-iframe-id").contentWindow; iframeWindow.addEventListener("load", function() { var doc = iframe.contentDocument || iframe.contentWindow.document; var target = doc.getElementById("my-target-id"); target.innerHTML = "Found it!"; }); });
问题原因:
Same-origin security policy
You can't access an <iframe>
with Javascript, it would be a huge security flaw if you could do it. For the same-origin policy browsers block scripts trying to access a frame with a different origin.
Origin is considered different if at least one of the following parts of the address isn't maintained:
<protocol>://<hostname>:<port>/path/to/page.html
Protocol, hostname and port must be the same of your domain, if you want to access a frame.
Examples
Here's what would happen trying to access the following URLs from
http://www.example.com/home/index.html
URL RESULT http://www.example.com/home/other.html -> Success http://www.example.com/dir/inner/another.php -> Success http://www.example.com:80 -> Success (default port for HTTP) http://www.example.com:2251 -> Failure: different port http://data.example.com/dir/other.html -> Failure: different hostname https://www.example.com/home/index.html.html -> Failure: different protocol ftp://www.example.com:21 -> Failure: different protocol & port https://google.com/search?q=james+bond -> Failure: different hostname & protocol
Workaround
Even though same-origin policy blocks scripts from accessing the content of sites with a different origin, if you own both the pages, you can work around this problem using window.postMessage
and its relative message
event to send messages between the two pages, like this:
-
In your main page:
var frame = document.getElementById('your-frame-id'); frame.contentWindow.postMessage(/*any variable or object here*/, '*');
In your <iframe>
(contained in the main page):
window.addEventListener('message', function(event) { // IMPORTANT: Check the origin of the data! if (~event.origin.indexOf('http://yoursite.com')) { // The data has been sent from your site // The data sent with postMessage is stored in event.data console.log(event.data); } else { // The data hasn't been sent from your site! // Be careful! Do not use it. return; } });
This method can be applied in both directions, creating a listener in the main page too, and receiving responses from the frame. The same logic can also be implemented in pop-ups and basically any new window generated by the main page (e.g. using window.open()
) as well, without any difference.
Disabling same-origin policy in your browser
There already are some good answers about this topic (I just found them googling), so, for the browsers where this is possible, I'll link the relative answer. However, please remember thatdisabling the same-origin policy (or the CORS) will only affect your browser. Also, running a browser with same-origin security settings disabled grants any website access to cross-origin resources, so it's very unsafe and should be done for development purposes only.
the best current way of interacting between frames/iframes is using window.postMessage
, supported by all browsers
转:http://*.com/questions/25098021/securityerror-blocked-a-frame-with-origin-from-accessing-a-cross-origin-frame