I am working on a Web application and need to pass data across HTTP redirects. For example:
http://foo.com/form.html
POSTs to
http://foo.com/form/submit.html
If there is an issue with the data, the Response is redirected back to
http://foo.com/form.html?error=Some+error+message
and the query param "error"'s value is displayed on the page.
Is there any other reliable way to pass data across redirects (ie HTTP headers, etc.).
Passing the data as query params works but isn't ideal because:
IMPORTANT: This platform is state-less and distributed across many app servers, so I can't track the data in a server-side session object.
From the client-server interaction point of view, this is a server internal dispatch issue.
Browsers are not meant to re-post the entity of the initial request automatically according to the HTTP specification: "The action required MAY be carried out by the user agent without interaction with the user if and only if the method used in the second request is GET or HEAD."
If it's not already the case, make form.html
dynamic so that it's an HTML static file. Send the POST
request to itself and pre-fill the value in case of error. Alternatively, you could make submit.html
use the same template as form.html
if there is a problem.
its cleartext (and in the query string, so SSL cant be relied on to encyrpt) so I wouldn't want to pass sensitive data
I'm not sure what the issue is here. You're submitting everything over plain HTTP anyway. Cookie, query parameters and request entity will all be visible. Using HTTPS would actually protect all this, although query parameters can still be an issue with browser history and server logs (that's not part of the connection, which is what TLS protects).