Resize a Crossdomain iFrame

When it comes to crossdomain quirks with frames and Ajax, there’s not usually a “good” solution — there’s just one that works. Something I was working on the other week had a “well it works” moment, although the solution was far from ideal.

The Problem

The page in question is the Sponsored These Tweeters page at SponsoredTweets. It’s a pretty basic Wordpress page with an iFrame that contains the list of Tweeters. Real easy way of adding a dynamic touch to a Wordpress site. The issue is that the iframe contains a dynamic amount of content, and could potentially grow or shrink based on the length of amount of tweeters being shown. The kicker? The page with the list of tweeters is at a subdomain, and under https.

Monitoring with Jquery

My first idea with anything like this is “Can I just listen for a jquery event on the element?”. Well, sure, but the height of the iframe won’t change. You’ll only be able to get the height/width of the iframe itself, not the content within it from the page itself, so watching for a resize or load event on the iframe won’t work. What you’re really wanting to listen for is a change in the height of the content

Works? No.

Reaching into the frame with contentWindow

If your frame and the page containing it both exist on the same domain, you can reach into DOM of the frame and get the height that way. At anytime you can do something like this to get the height of the page:

document.getElementById("iframeid")
         .contentWindow.document.body.scrollHeight

This bit of code will return an integer — the height of the content of the frame in pixels. Even if the iframe has a height of (for example) 300px, the content itself could be smaller or larger. Unfortunately you can’t set a jQuery event watcher on document.getElementById("iframeid").contentWindow.document.body either (at least from what I’ve seen), so I can’t see a way to watch for a change in height.

The “not-so-nice” fix for this is to make a really fast function that repeatedly checks a change in the height, and resizes the iframe accordingly. Here’s some sample code for this using jQuery.

var $iframe = $("#iframeid");
function resize_iframe() {
  var current_height = $iframe.css("height");
  if(current_height != $iframe[0].contentWindow.document.body.scrollHeight) {
    $iframe.css("height", $iframe[0].contentWindow.document.body.scrollHeight);
  }
}
setInterval("resize_iframe();", 100);

Everytime I use setTimeout() or setInterval() in Javascript, it’s immediately a red flag. These (along with the evil-eval) can be an obvious code smell, but also a trigger that the code itself isn’t designed in the best way.

The problem with this though is that it won’t quite be realtime. Also the contentWindow.document object is not available cross-domain. Even doing things like contentWindow.document.location.href to get the current location of the frame doesn’t work if the calling page and the frame are on different domains/subdomains. This might work for some cases, but not if your iframe is on a different domain.

Works? Yes.
Works on the same domain? Yes.
Works on different subdomains on the same domain? No.

The document.domain hack

If both your frame and your calling page exist on the same parent domain, there’s a little hack you can do to get this to work. Each page has a document.domain variable that contains the domain from which ajax calls can be made to. If you rails application is up at https://app.sponsoredtweets.com, then your document domain will be set to app.sponsoredtweets.com. Of course your main website sitting at http://sponsoredtweets.com will have a document.domain ot sponsoredtweets.com. Because of this they won’t be able to talk to each other. What you can do is manually change the document.domain value.

Surprisingly enough, you can tweak this value as long as you only get broader in your domain. For instance, if document.domain is app.sponsoredtweets.com, then you’ll be able to manually set this using something like this: document.domain = "sponsoredtweets.com" From that point on, that page will be treated as those requests were coming/going to that domain. Using this, you could set your iframe and the page containing the iframe to be on the same root domain, then reach into it’s contentHeight as described above. After you’ve set this to “sponsoredtweets.com” though, you won’t be able to change it again, as that’s the most general a document.domain can get.

Works on the same domain? Yep.
Works on different subdomains on the same domain? Yes.
Works crossdomain? No.
Works across https? No.

Frame within a Frame within a Frame

Unfortunately, none of this works across domain, of from http connections to https. Here’s how it works for SponsoredTweets:

The main page is http://sponsoredtweets.com/tweeters/sponsor-these-tweeters/, aka, the parent page.
Which has a frame to https://app.sponsoredtweets.com/tweeters, aka, the content page.
Which has a frame to http://sponsoredtweets.com/iframe.html, aka, the placeholder page.

The middle frame is the one that will change in height of course. For the same reasons as above, the middle frame cannot reach into it’s parent frame and call methods there either. It can, however, control it’s own iframe in a very limited sense. For instance, take this line from the

$("#parent_domain")[0].contentWindow.location = 'http://sponsoredtweets.com/iframe.html#' + height;

Whenever the height of the content page changes, it updates the location of it’s frame to include a hash tag followed by the current height of the content. By itself this won’t do anything, but if that iframe.html page is watching for changes to it’s location, we can start from there.

The placeholder page is what makes this all possible. All it has to do is monitor for changes to it’s hash, and when it sees them, send them up to the parent page (that is, the top level page). Now, although the content page can’t talk to it’s parent page, the placeholder page can talk to it since they are both on the same domain. Is it a hack? Oh yeah, and of the worst kind.

<html>
<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
  function sendHash() {
    var location = window.location.href.split("#")
    if(location.length != 2) { return; }
    parent.parent.receiveHash(location[1]);
  }
  setInterval("sendHash();", 100);
-->
</script>
<body></body>
</html>

parent.parent…? Yeah, thanks HTML. All the receiveHash() function on the parent page does is take a number and set it as the height of it’s iframe. Real simple implementation, it’s just the craziness that is cross-domain security that makes it difficult to grasp.

Works across https? Yes!

Got a Better Solution?

I can’t believe this would be the ideal way to do something as simple as resize an iframe. Do you know of a better way of doing this given that the pages exist on separate domains? I’d love to hear about it.

New Languages for a New Year?

As some others have mentioned, it’s that time of year where most people with blogs make their public announcements on what languages they’ll be concentrating on for the upcoming year. Last year I think my top focus was Ruby on Rails and Javascript; so safe to say I’ve gotten a little experience in those. Things have taken a bit of a turn though, and I’m going to switch things up for 2009 and concentrate a little on my weaknesses and a little on new growth.

Weaknesses? Yeah, everyone has them. Those areas where when you have to implement something you bite your lip and find a way to get through it — usually with a 10ft poll. If they’re something that ties into your daily routine in some way, this is kind of task that can be holding you back from potentially getting more work done, or higher quality work.

One of my weaknesses has always been testing. Maybe I’ve been surrounded by too many testers, but its definitely something I could improve on. I wouldn’t consider myself fully proficient in a language to the point where I’d feel confident teaching someone else until I was proficient testing in it. Some languages don’t make this easy of course. Testing Javascript isn’t the most common thing, but it’s important, especially with such a Javascript heavy application as CloudShout. There are some great new tools like FireUnit for testing in Javascript too. Testing in Python, especially within Django has to have great support — as long as you actually do it. With Rails there’s a million different ways to test; but I’d like to concentrate mostly on mochs and stubs for a swiftly running test suite. No point in having a test suite that takes so long to run that no one has the time to run it after all.

There are a few other topics of interest for the new year. Things I’d love to look into and play around with at least a least a little. XMPP and especially bosh look extreme interesting to me, and I look forward to cramming together the little I’ve learned so far into an Adogo presentation in a little over a week.

Collective intelligence looks like another interesting topic that I’ve always wanted to dig a little deeper into. The Netflix prize looks an great way to experiment a little with it in some different language — Python, C and Erlang seem to be the most commonly used for it. There’s at least one active Rails plugin for collective intelligence, acts_as_recommendable, that uses a C implementation for the heavy lifting and might be worth checking out as well.

Last year git took over in a lot of programming world thanks to an amazing killer app, Github. Getting familiar with git isn’t a big thing, but it’s worth it to have a little more shared language with your peers. Moving from CVS to Subversion wasn’t something that most people did overnight, but after the switch no one ever went back. Git is shaping up to be same, but has a long road of public support and client side tools ahead of it before it makes it that far. People that like git, really really like git. I’m ashamed to say I’ve made improvements to a few projects I’ve cloned from Github, but never got around to branching and committing my changes (or writing tests for my changes of course). This is something I’d love to get better at — more for fun and familiarity with git than anything else. That’s the goal for this year — work on projects that are fun!