149
votes

I am trying to delete data from database via ajax.

HTML:

@foreach($a as $lis)
  //some code
  <a href="#" class="delteadd" id="{{$lis['id']}}">Delete</a>
  //click action perform on this link                  
@endforeach

My ajax code:

$('body').on('click', '.delteadd', function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
//alert('am i here');
if (confirm('Are you sure you want to Delete Ad ?')) {
    var id = $(this).attr('id');
    $.ajax({
        method: "POST",
        url: "{{url()}}/delteadd",
        }).done(function( msg ) {
        if(msg.error == 0){
            //$('.sucess-status-update').html(msg.message);
            alert(msg.message);
        }else{
            alert(msg.message);
            //$('.error-favourite-message').html(msg.message);
        }
    });
} else {
    return false;
}
});

This is my query to fetch data from database...

$a = Test::with('hitsCount')->where('userid', $id)->get()->toArray();

But when i click on Delete link data not deleted and show csrf_token mismatch...

19
you should add success and error to your ajax code. the error will show the problem. stackoverflow.com/questions/45668337/…reza jafari

19 Answers

238
votes

You have to add data in your ajax request. I hope so it will be work.

data: {
        "_token": "{{ csrf_token() }}",
        "id": id
        }
234
votes

The best way to solve this problem "X-CSRF-TOKEN" is to add the following code to your main layout, and continue making your ajax calls normally:

In header

<meta name="csrf-token" content="{{ csrf_token() }}" />

In script

<script type="text/javascript">
$.ajaxSetup({
    headers: {
        'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')
    }
});
</script>
34
votes

I just added headers: in ajax call:

  headers: {'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')},

in view:

<div id = 'msg'>
     This message will be replaced using Ajax. Click the button to replace the message.
</div>

{{ Form::submit('Change', array('id' => 'ajax')) }}

ajax function:

<script>
 $(document).ready(function() {
    $(document).on('click', '#ajax', function () {
      $.ajax({
         type:'POST',
         url:'/ajax',
         headers: {'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')},
         success:function(data){
            $("#msg").html(data.msg);
         }
      });
    });
});
</script>

in controller:

public function call(){
    $msg = "This is a simple message.";
    return response()->json(array('msg'=> $msg), 200);
}

in routes.php

Route::post('ajax', 'AjaxController@call');
30
votes

I think is better put the token in the form, and get this token by id

<input type="hidden" name="_token" id="token" value="{{ csrf_token() }}">

And the JQUery :

var data = {
        "_token": $('#token').val()
    };

this way, your JS don't need to be in your blade files.

16
votes

If you are using template files, than you can put your meta tag in the head section (or whatever you name it) which contain your meta tags.

@section('head')
<meta name="csrf_token" content="{{ csrf_token() }}" />
@endsection

Next thing, you need to put the headers attribute to your ajax(in my example, I am using datatable with server-side processing:

"headers": {'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf_token"]').attr('content')}

Here is the full datatable ajax example:

$('#datatable_users').DataTable({
        "responsive": true,
        "serverSide": true,
        "processing": true,
        "paging": true,
        "searching": { "regex": true },
        "lengthMenu": [ [10, 25, 50, 100, -1], [10, 25, 50, 100, "All"] ],
        "pageLength": 10,
        "ajax": {
            "type": "POST",
            "headers": {'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf_token"]').attr('content')},
            "url": "/getUsers",
            "dataType": "json",
            "contentType": 'application/json; charset=utf-8',
            "data": function (data) {
                console.log(data);
            },
            "complete": function(response) {
                console.log(response);
           }
        }
    });

After doing this, you should get 200 status for your ajax request.

8
votes

Know that there is an X-XSRF-TOKEN cookie that is set for convenience. Framework like Angular and others set it by default. Check this in the doc https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/csrf#csrf-x-xsrf-token You may like to use it.

The best way is to use the meta, case the cookies are deactivated.

    var xsrfToken = decodeURIComponent(readCookie('XSRF-TOKEN'));
    if (xsrfToken) {
        $.ajaxSetup({
            headers: {
                'X-XSRF-TOKEN': xsrfToken
            }
        });
    } else console.error('....');

Here the recommended meta way (you can put the field any way, but meta is quiet nice):

$.ajaxSetup({
    headers: {
        'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')
    }
});   

Note the use of decodeURIComponent(), it's decode from uri format which is used to store the cookie. [otherwise you will get an invalid payload exception in laravel].

Here the section about the csrf cookie in the doc to check : https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/csrf#csrf-x-csrf-token

Also here how laravel (bootstrap.js) is setting it for axios by default:

let token = document.head.querySelector('meta[name="csrf-token"]');

if (token) {
    window.axios.defaults.headers.common['X-CSRF-TOKEN'] = token.content;
} else {
    console.error('CSRF token not found: https://laravel.com/docs/csrf#csrf-x-csrf-token');
} 

you can go check resources/js/bootstrap.js.

And here read cookie function:

   function readCookie(name) {
        var nameEQ = name + "=";
        var ca = document.cookie.split(';');
        for (var i = 0; i < ca.length; i++) {
            var c = ca[i];
            while (c.charAt(0) == ' ') c = c.substring(1, c.length);
            if (c.indexOf(nameEQ) == 0) return c.substring(nameEQ.length, c.length);
       }
        return null;
    }
7
votes

Add an id to the meta element that holds the token

<meta name="csrf-token" id="csrf-token" content="{{ csrf_token() }}">

And then you can get it in your Javascript

$.ajax({
  url : "your_url",
  method:"post",
  data : {
    "_token": $('#csrf-token')[0].content  //pass the CSRF_TOKEN()
  },  
  ...
});

EDIT: Easier way without changing the meta line.

data : { 
    _token: "{{ csrf_token() }}" 
}

Or

data : { 
    _token: @json(csrf_token()), 
}

Thanks to @martin-hartmann

3
votes

if you are using jQuery to send AJAX Posts, add this code to all views:

$( document ).on( 'ajaxSend', addLaravelCSRF );

function addLaravelCSRF( event, jqxhr, settings ) {
    jqxhr.setRequestHeader( 'X-XSRF-TOKEN', getCookie( 'XSRF-TOKEN' ) );
}

function getCookie(name) {
    function escape(s) { return s.replace(/([.*+?\^${}()|\[\]\/\\])/g, '\\$1'); };
    var match = document.cookie.match(RegExp('(?:^|;\\s*)' + escape(name) + '=([^;]*)'));
    return match ? match[1] : null;
}

Laravel adds a XSRF cookie to all requests, and we automatically append it to all AJAX requests just before submit.

You may replace getCookie function if there is another function or jQuery plugin to do the same thing.

2
votes

who ever is getting problem with the accepted answer @Deepak saini, try to remove

cache:false,
processData:false,
contentType:false,

for ajax call.

use

dataType:"json",
2
votes

In case your session expires, you can use this, to login again

$(document).ajaxComplete(function(e, xhr, opt){
  if(xhr.status===419){
    if(xhr.responseJSON && xhr.responseJSON.message=='CSRF token mismatch.') window.location.reload();
  }
});
1
votes

For Laravel 5.8, setting the csrf meta tag for your layout and setting the request header for csrf in ajax settings won't work if you are using ajax to submit a form that already includes a _token input field generated by the Laravel blade templating engine.

You must include the already generated csrf token from the form with your ajax request because the server would be expecting it and not the one in your meta tag.

For instance, this is how the _token input field generated by Blade looks like:

<form>
    <input name="_token" type="hidden" value="cf54ty6y7yuuyyygytfggfd56667DfrSH8i">
    <input name="my_data" type="text" value="">
    <!-- other input fields -->
</form>

You then submit your form with ajax like this:

<script> 
    $(document).ready(function() { 
        let token = $('form').find('input[name="_token"]').val();
        let myData = $('form').find('input[name="my_data"]').val();
        $('form').submit(function() { 
            $.ajax({ 
                type:'POST', 
                url:'/ajax', 
                data: {_token: token, my_data: myData}
                // headers: {'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')}, // unnecessary 
                // other ajax settings
            }); 
            return false;
        }); 
    }); 
</script>

The csrf token in the meta header is only useful when you are submitting a form without a Blade generated _token input field.

1
votes

You should include a hidden CSRF (cross site request forgery) token field in the form so that the CSRF protection middleware can validate the request.

Laravel automatically generates a CSRF "token" for each active user session managed by the application. This token is used to verify that the authenticated user is the one actually making the requests to the application.

So when doing ajax requests, you'll need to pass the csrf token via data parameter.

Here's the sample code.

var request = $.ajax({
    url : "http://localhost/some/action",
    method:"post",
    data : {"_token":"{{ csrf_token() }}"}  //pass the CSRF_TOKEN()
  });
1
votes

guys in new laravel you just need to do this anywhere. in JS or blade file and you will have csrf token.

var csrf = document.querySelector('meta[name="csrf-token"]').content;

it is vanilla JS. For Ajax you need to do this.

var csrf = document.querySelector('meta[name="csrf-token"]').content;
    $.ajax({
        url: 'my-own-url',
        type: "POST",
        data: { 'value': value, '_token': csrf },
        success: function (response) {
            console.log(response);
        }
    });
1
votes

you have to include this line in master file

<meta name="csrf-token" content="{{ csrf_token() }}" />

and while calling ajax you have to implement csrf token ,

$.ajax({
url:url,
data:{
 _token:"{{ csrf_token() }}"
},
success:function(result){
 //success message after the controller is done..
}
})
0
votes

I actually had this error and could not find a solution. I actually ended up not doing an ajax request. I don't know if this issue was due to this being sub domain on my server or what. Here's my jquery.

            $('#deleteMeal').click(function(event) {
                var theId = $(event.currentTarget).attr("data-mealId");
                  $(function() {
                    $( "#filler" ).dialog({
                      resizable: false,
                      height:140,
                      modal: true,
                      buttons: {
                      "Are you sure you want to delete this Meal? Doing so will also delete this meal from other users Saved Meals.": function() {
                           $('#deleteMealLink').click();
//                         jQuery.ajax({
//                              url : 'http://www.mealog.com/mealtrist/meals/delete/' + theId,
//                              type : 'POST',
//                              success : function( response ) {
//                                  $("#container").replaceWith("<h1 style='color:red'>Your Meal Has Been Deleted</h1>");
//                              }
//                          });
                        // similar behavior as clicking on a link
                           window.location.href = 'http://www.mealog.com/mealtrist/meals/delete/' + theId;
                          $( this ).dialog( "close" );
                        },
                        Cancel: function() {
                          $( this ).dialog( "close" );
                        }
                      }
                    });
                  });
                });

So I actually set up an anchor to go to my API rather than doing a post request, which is what I figure most applications do.

  <p><a href="http://<?php echo $domain; ?>/mealtrist/meals/delete/{{ $meal->id }}" id="deleteMealLink" data-mealId="{{$meal->id}}" ></a></p>
0
votes

I just use @csrf inside the form and its working fine

0
votes

I always encounter this error recently. Make sure to use a more specific selector when referring to a value. for example instead of $('#firstname') use $('form').find('#firstname');

0
votes

Laravel 5.8
use the csrf in the ajax url(separate js file)

$.ajax({
    url: "/addCart" + "?_token=" + productCSRF,
    type: "POST",
    ..
})
0
votes

If you are work on laravel 7.0 project and facing this error

Adding a token as part of the parameter to be sent to the controller would solve the problem just like the answers given above. This is as a result of Laravel protecting your site against cross-site attack. which requires you to generate a unique token on every form submission.

"_token": "{{ csrf_token() }}"

You can now have;

      const postFormData = {
            'name'     : $('input[name=name]').val(),
            "_token": "{{ csrf_token() }}"
        }; 
         
      $.ajax({
          url: 'pooling'
          , type: 'post'
          , data: postFormData
          , dataType: 'json'
          , success: function(response) { consolel.log(response) }
        });