Is there a documented max to the length of the string data you can use in the send method of an XMLHttpRequest
for the major browser implementations?
I am running into an issue with a JavaScript XMLHttpRequest
Post failing in FireFox 3 when the data is over approx 3k. I was assuming the Post would behave the same as a conventional Form Post.
The W3C docs mention the data param of the send method is a DOMString but I am not sure how the major browsers implement that.
Here is a simplified version of my JavaScript, if bigText is over about 3k it fails, otherwise it works...
var xhReq = createXMLHttpRequest();
function createXMLHttpRequest() {
try { return new ActiveXObject("Msxml2.XMLHTTP"); } catch (e) {}
try { return new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); } catch (e) {}
try { return new XMLHttpRequest(); } catch(e) {}
alert("XMLHttpRequest not supported");
return null;
}
function mySubmit(id, bigText) {
var url = "SubmitPost.cfm";
var params = "id=" + id + "&bigtext=" + encodeURI(bigText);
xhReq.open("POST", url, true);
//Send the header information along with the request
xhReq.setRequestHeader("Content-type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
xhReq.setRequestHeader("Content-length", params.length);
xhReq.setRequestHeader("Connection", "close");
xhReq.onreadystatechange = onPostSubmit;
xhReq.send(params);
}
function onPostSubmit() {
if (xhReq.readyState==4 || xhReq.readyState=="complete")
{
if (xhReq.status != 200)
{
alert('BadStatus');
return;
}
}
}
I believe the maximum length depends not only on the browser, but also on the web server. For example, the Apache HTTP server has a LimitRequestBody directive which allows anywhere from 0 bytes to 2GB worth of data.
According to the XMLRPC spec, the only real limits are on the size of integers and doubles.
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