Related
Edge claims to support webkitSpeechRecognition, but it doesn't work (discussion here, doesn't work on websites meant for testing, like this mozilla one, with the error "Error occurred in recognition: language-not-supported" despite my US english UI).
How can I detect if webkitSpeechRecognition is actually supported? I tried to filter out Edge by looking at the user agent, but it shows up as Chrome, and I'd prefer to just use feature detection rather than looking at the user agent anyway. I'd like to check this without requesting microphone permission (if I did request microphone permission, I'd have to wait for them to accept, and then see the language-not-supported error). Is there a simple way to check this, similar to just checking the value of window["webkitSpeechRecognition"] (which is defined in Edge, despite not working)?
If you want to check the support for webkitSpeechRecognition then you can refer to the JS code example below.
if ('SpeechRecognition' in window || 'webkitSpeechRecognition' in window)
{
console.log("speech recognition API supported");
}
else
{
console.log("speech recognition API not supported")
}
Output in MS Edge 88.0.705.56:
However, if you directly try to make a test using webkitSpeechRecognition then it will not work.
It looks like this feature is currently under development and to use it we need to enable it by passing the command line arguments.
I suggest you refer to the steps below.
Create a shortcut of the Edge chromium-browser.
Right-click the shortcut file and go to Properties.
Under Shortcut tab, in the Target textbox, add --enable-features=msSpeechRecognition after the msedge.exe path. Make sure to add 1 space between the path and command-line argument.
It should look like below.
Click on the OK button to close the properties window.
Launch the Edge browser via shortcut and visit any sample code example for SpeechRecognition. Here I am making a test with this example.
Output in MS Edge 88.0.705.56:
In addition, it's useful to check for errors (as shown in the above example source code, see below, https://www.google.com/intl/en/chrome/demos/speech.html): for instance audio might be disabled if not on a https website.
recognition.onerror = function(event) {
if (event.error == 'no-speech') {
start_img.src = '/intl/en/chrome/assets/common/images/content/mic.gif';
showInfo('info_no_speech');
ignore_onend = true;
}
if (event.error == 'audio-capture') {
start_img.src = '/intl/en/chrome/assets/common/images/content/mic.gif';
showInfo('info_no_microphone');
ignore_onend = true;
}
if (event.error == 'not-allowed') {
if (event.timeStamp - start_timestamp < 100) {
showInfo('info_blocked');
} else {
showInfo('info_denied');
}
ignore_onend = true;
}
};
I have created a custom URL protocol handler.
http://
mailto://
custom://
I have registered a WinForms application to respond accordingly. This all works great.
But I would like to be able to gracefully handle the case where the user doesn't have the custom URL protocol handler installed, yet.
In order to be able to do this I need to be able to detect the browser's registered protocol handlers, I would assume from JavaScript. But I have been unable to find a way to poll for the information. I am hoping to find a solution to this problem.
Thanks for any ideas you might be able to share.
This would be a very, very hacky way to do this... but would this work?
Put the link in as normal...
But attach an onclick handler to it, that sets a timer and adds an onblur handler for the window
(in theory) if the browser handles the link (application X) will load stealing the focus from the window...
If the onblur event fires, clear the timer...
Otherwise in 3-5seconds let your timeout fire... and notify the user "Hmm, looks like you don't have the Mega Uber Cool Application installed... would you like to install it now? (Ok) (Cancel)"
Far from bulletproof... but it might help?
There's no great cross-browser way to do this. In IE10+ on Win8+, a new msLaunchUri api enables you to launch a protocol, like so:
navigator.msLaunchUri('skype:123456',
function()
{
alert('success');
},
function()
{
alert('failed');
}
);
If the protocol is not installed, the failure callback will fire. Otherwise, the protocol will launch and the success callback will fire.
I discuss this topic a bit further here:
https://web.archive.org/web/20180308105244/https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/ieinternals/2011/07/13/understanding-protocols/
This topic is of recent (2021) interest; see https://github.com/fingerprintjs/external-protocol-flooding for discussion.
HTML5 defines Custom scheme and content handlers (to my knowledge Firefox is the only implementor so far), but unfortunately there is currently no way to check if a handler already exists—it has been proposed, but there was no follow-up. This seems like a critical feature to use custom handlers effectively and we as developers should bring attention to this issue in order to get it implemented.
There seems to be no straightforward way via javascript to detect the presence of an installed app that has registered a protocol handler.
In the iTunes model, Apple provides urls to their servers, which then provide pages that run some javascript:
http://ax.itunes.apple.com/detection/itmsCheck.js
So the iTunes installer apparently deploys plugins for the major browsers, whose presence can then be detected.
If your plugin is installed, then you can be reasonably sure that redirecting to your app-specific url will succeed.
What seams the most easy solution is to ask the user the first time.
Using a Javascript confirm dialog per example:
You need this software to be able to read this link. Did you install it ?
if yes: create a cookie to not ask next time; return false and the link applies
if false: window.location.href = '/downloadpage/'
If you have control of the program you're trying to run (the code), one way to see if the user was successful in running the application would be to:
Before trying to open the custom protocol, make an AJAX request to a server script that saves the user's intent in a database (for example, save the userid and what he wanted to do).
Try to open the program, and pass on the intent data.
Have the program make a request to the server to remove the database entry (using the intent data to find the correct row).
Make the javascript poll the server for a while to see if the database entry is gone. If the entry is gone, you'll know the user was successful in opening the application, otherwise the entry will remain (you can remove it later with cronjob).
I have not tried this method, just thought it.
I was able to finally get a cross-browser (Chrome 32, Firefox 27, IE 11, Safari 6) solution working with a combination of this and a super-simple Safari extension. Much of this solution has been mentioned in one way or another in this and this other question.
Here's the script:
function launchCustomProtocol(elem, url, callback) {
var iframe, myWindow, success = false;
if (Browser.name === "Internet Explorer") {
myWindow = window.open('', '', 'width=0,height=0');
myWindow.document.write("<iframe src='" + url + "'></iframe>");
setTimeout(function () {
try {
myWindow.location.href;
success = true;
} catch (ex) {
console.log(ex);
}
if (success) {
myWindow.setTimeout('window.close()', 100);
} else {
myWindow.close();
}
callback(success);
}, 100);
} else if (Browser.name === "Firefox") {
try {
iframe = $("<iframe />");
iframe.css({"display": "none"});
iframe.appendTo("body");
iframe[0].contentWindow.location.href = url;
success = true;
} catch (ex) {
success = false;
}
iframe.remove();
callback(success);
} else if (Browser.name === "Chrome") {
elem.css({"outline": 0});
elem.attr("tabindex", "1");
elem.focus();
elem.blur(function () {
success = true;
callback(true); // true
});
location.href = url;
setTimeout(function () {
elem.off('blur');
elem.removeAttr("tabindex");
if (!success) {
callback(false); // false
}
}, 1000);
} else if (Browser.name === "Safari") {
if (myappinstalledflag) {
location.href = url;
success = true;
} else {
success = false;
}
callback(success);
}
}
The Safari extension was easy to implement. It consisted of a single line of injection script:
myinject.js:
window.postMessage("myappinstalled", window.location.origin);
Then in the web page JavaScript, you need to first register the message event and set a flag if the message is received:
window.addEventListener('message', function (msg) {
if (msg.data === "myappinstalled") {
myappinstalledflag = true;
}
}, false);
This assumes the application which is associated with the custom protocol will manage the installation of the Safari extension.
In all cases, if the callback returns false, you know to inform the user that the application (i.e., it's custom protocol) is not installed.
You say you need to detect the browser's protocol handlers - do you really?
What if you did something like what happens when you download a file from sourceforge? Let's say you want to open myapp://something. Instead of simply creating a link to it, create a link to another HTML page accessed via HTTP. Then, on that page, say that you're attempting to open the application for them. If it doesn't work, they need to install your application, which they can do by clicking on the link you'll provide. If it does work, then you're all set.
This was a recommended approach for IE by Microsoft support
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms537503%28VS.85%29.aspx#related_topics
"If you have some control over the binaries being installed on a user’s machine, checking the UA in script seems like a relevant approach:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Internet Settings\5.0\User Agent\Post Platform
" -- By M$ support
Every web page has access to the userAgent string and if you drop a custom post platform value, detecting this in javascript using navigator.userAgent is quite simple.
Fortunately, other major browsers like Firefox and Chrome (barring Safari :( ), do not throw "page not found" errors when a link with a custom protocol is clicked and the protocol is not installed on the users machine. IE is very unforgiving here, any trick to click in a invisible frame or trap javascript errors does not work and ends up with ugly "webpage cannot be displayed" error. The trick we use in our case is to inform users with browser specific images that clicking on the custom protocol link will open an application. And if they do not find the app opening up, they can click on an "install" page. In terms of XD this wprks way better than the ActiveX approach for IE.
For FF and Chrome, just go ahead and launch the custom protocol without any detection. Let the user tell you what he sees.
For Safari, :( no answers yet
I'm trying to do something similar and I just discovered a trick that works with Firefox. If you combine it with the trick for IE you can have one that works on both main browsers (I'm not sure if it works in Safari and I know it doesn't work in Chrome)
if (navigator.appName=="Microsoft Internet Explorer" && document.getElementById("testprotocollink").protocolLong=="Unknown Protocol") {
alert("No handler registered");
} else {
try {
window.location = "custom://stuff";
} catch(err) {
if (err.toString().search("NS_ERROR_UNKNOWN_PROTOCOL") != -1) {
alert("No handler registered");
}
}
}
In order for this to work you also need to have a hidden link somewhere on the page, like this:
<a id="testprotocollink" href="custom://testprotocol" style="display: none;">testprotocollink</a>
It's a bit hacky but it works. The Firefox version unfortunately still pops up the default alert that comes up when you try to visit a link with an unknown protocol, but it will run your code after the alert is dismissed.
You can try something like this:
function OpenCustomLink(link) {
var w = window.open(link, 'xyz', 'status=0,toolbar=0,menubar=0,height=0,width=0,top=-10,left=-10');
if(w == null) {
//Work Fine
}
else {
w.close();
if (confirm('You Need a Custom Program. Do you want to install?')) {
window.location = 'SetupCustomProtocol.exe'; //URL for installer
}
}
}
This is not a trivial task; one option might be to use signed code, which you could leverage to access the registry and/or filesystem (please note that this is a very expensive option). There is also no unified API or specification for code signing, so you would be required to generate specific code for each target browser. A support nightmare.
Also, I know that Steam, the gaming content delivery system, doesn't seem to have this problem solved either.
Here's another hacky answer that would require (hopefully light) modification to your application to 'phone home' on launch.
User clicks link, which attempts to launch the application. A unique
identifier is put in the link, so that it's passed to the
application when it launches. Web app shows a spinner or something of that nature.
Web page then starts checking for a
'application phone home' event from an app with this same unique ID.
When launched, your application does an HTTP post to your web app
with the unique identifier, to indicate presence.
Either the web page sees that the application launched, eventually, or moves on with a 'please download' page.
I'm using the Firefox Addon SDK to build something that monitors and displays the HTTP traffic in the browser. Similar to HTTPFox or Live HTTP Headers. I am interested in identifying which tab in the browser (if any) generated the request
Using the observer-service I am monitoring for "http-on-examine-response" events. I have code like the following to identify the nsIDomWindow that generated the request:
const observer = require("observer-service"),
{Ci} = require("chrome");
function getTabFromChannel(channel) {
try {
var noteCB= channel.notificationCallbacks ? channel.notificationCallbacks : channel.loadGroup.notificationCallbacks;
if (!noteCB) { return null; }
var domWin = noteCB.getInterface(Ci.nsIDOMWindow);
return domWin.top;
} catch (e) {
dump(e + "\n");
return null;
}
}
function logHTTPTraffic(sub, data) {
sub.QueryInterface(Ci.nsIHttpChannel);
var ab = getTabFromChannel(sub);
console.log(tab);
}
observer.add("http-on-examine-response", logHTTPTraffic);
Mostly cribbed from the documentation for how to identify the browser that generated the request. Some is also taken from the Google PageSpeed Firefox addon.
Is there a recommended or preferred way to go from the nsIDOMWindow object domWin to a tab element in the SDK tabs module?
I've considered something hacky like scanning the tabs list for one with a URL that matches the URL for domWin, but then I have to worry about multiple tabs having the same URL.
You have to keep using the internal packages. From what I can tell, getTabForWindow() function in api-utils/lib/tabs/tab.js package does exactly what you want. Untested code:
var tabsLib = require("sdk/tabs/tab.js");
return tabsLib.getTabForWindow(domWin.top);
The API has changed since this was originally asked/answered...
It should now (as of 1.15) be:
return require("sdk/tabs/utils").getTabForWindow(domWin.top);
As of Addon SDK version 1.13 change:
var tabsLib = require("tabs/tab.js");
to
var tabsLib = require("sdk/tabs/helpers.js");
If anyone still cares about this:
Although the Addon SDK is being deprecated in support of the newer WebExtensions API, I want to point out that
var a_tab = require("sdk/tabs/utils").getTabForContentWindow(window)
returns a different 'tab' object than the one you would typically get by using
worker.tab in a PageMod.
For example, a_tab will not have the 'id' attribute, but would have linkedPanel property that's similar to the 'id' attribute.
Idea is to display message, which will infor muser that ajax part of application can wokr incorrectly when he used "back" button.
Yes, there is a lot of discussions, but no solutions.
Best from what I found: Store information about last page on server side, and check current page against server info by ajax.
But in this way it would be impossible to use 2 browser windows by same user.
You might want to develope using the url #(hash) to store client state
take a look at http://www.asual.com/swfaddress/, it is used by Flash and ajax to handle browser history with ajax,
Silverlight 3.0 uses a similar technique of using the #(hash) in the url for state.
The real solution is to let the client maintain state, rather than your server. You're breaking the laws of the Internet if you keep so much client state on your server that the back button doesn't work :)
This solution may or may not apply to your case, and it may or may not work with your browser. It seemed to work for me on IE7 where each page had a distinct "widget Id" referenced in the URL querystring -
//try to detect a bad back-button usage;
//widgetId not match querystring parameter did=#
var mustReload = false;
if (location.search != null &&
location.search.indexOf("&did=") > 0)
{
var urlWidgetId = location.search.substring(
location.search.indexOf("&did=")+5);
if (urlWidgetId.indexOf("&") > 0)
{
urlWidgetId = urlWidgetId.substring(
0,urlWidgetId.indexOf("&"));
}
if (currentDashboard != urlWidgetId)
{
mustReload = true;
}
}
if (mustReload)
{
... //reload the page to resynch here
}
I have created a custom URL protocol handler.
http://
mailto://
custom://
I have registered a WinForms application to respond accordingly. This all works great.
But I would like to be able to gracefully handle the case where the user doesn't have the custom URL protocol handler installed, yet.
In order to be able to do this I need to be able to detect the browser's registered protocol handlers, I would assume from JavaScript. But I have been unable to find a way to poll for the information. I am hoping to find a solution to this problem.
Thanks for any ideas you might be able to share.
This would be a very, very hacky way to do this... but would this work?
Put the link in as normal...
But attach an onclick handler to it, that sets a timer and adds an onblur handler for the window
(in theory) if the browser handles the link (application X) will load stealing the focus from the window...
If the onblur event fires, clear the timer...
Otherwise in 3-5seconds let your timeout fire... and notify the user "Hmm, looks like you don't have the Mega Uber Cool Application installed... would you like to install it now? (Ok) (Cancel)"
Far from bulletproof... but it might help?
There's no great cross-browser way to do this. In IE10+ on Win8+, a new msLaunchUri api enables you to launch a protocol, like so:
navigator.msLaunchUri('skype:123456',
function()
{
alert('success');
},
function()
{
alert('failed');
}
);
If the protocol is not installed, the failure callback will fire. Otherwise, the protocol will launch and the success callback will fire.
I discuss this topic a bit further here:
https://web.archive.org/web/20180308105244/https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/ieinternals/2011/07/13/understanding-protocols/
This topic is of recent (2021) interest; see https://github.com/fingerprintjs/external-protocol-flooding for discussion.
HTML5 defines Custom scheme and content handlers (to my knowledge Firefox is the only implementor so far), but unfortunately there is currently no way to check if a handler already exists—it has been proposed, but there was no follow-up. This seems like a critical feature to use custom handlers effectively and we as developers should bring attention to this issue in order to get it implemented.
There seems to be no straightforward way via javascript to detect the presence of an installed app that has registered a protocol handler.
In the iTunes model, Apple provides urls to their servers, which then provide pages that run some javascript:
http://ax.itunes.apple.com/detection/itmsCheck.js
So the iTunes installer apparently deploys plugins for the major browsers, whose presence can then be detected.
If your plugin is installed, then you can be reasonably sure that redirecting to your app-specific url will succeed.
What seams the most easy solution is to ask the user the first time.
Using a Javascript confirm dialog per example:
You need this software to be able to read this link. Did you install it ?
if yes: create a cookie to not ask next time; return false and the link applies
if false: window.location.href = '/downloadpage/'
If you have control of the program you're trying to run (the code), one way to see if the user was successful in running the application would be to:
Before trying to open the custom protocol, make an AJAX request to a server script that saves the user's intent in a database (for example, save the userid and what he wanted to do).
Try to open the program, and pass on the intent data.
Have the program make a request to the server to remove the database entry (using the intent data to find the correct row).
Make the javascript poll the server for a while to see if the database entry is gone. If the entry is gone, you'll know the user was successful in opening the application, otherwise the entry will remain (you can remove it later with cronjob).
I have not tried this method, just thought it.
I was able to finally get a cross-browser (Chrome 32, Firefox 27, IE 11, Safari 6) solution working with a combination of this and a super-simple Safari extension. Much of this solution has been mentioned in one way or another in this and this other question.
Here's the script:
function launchCustomProtocol(elem, url, callback) {
var iframe, myWindow, success = false;
if (Browser.name === "Internet Explorer") {
myWindow = window.open('', '', 'width=0,height=0');
myWindow.document.write("<iframe src='" + url + "'></iframe>");
setTimeout(function () {
try {
myWindow.location.href;
success = true;
} catch (ex) {
console.log(ex);
}
if (success) {
myWindow.setTimeout('window.close()', 100);
} else {
myWindow.close();
}
callback(success);
}, 100);
} else if (Browser.name === "Firefox") {
try {
iframe = $("<iframe />");
iframe.css({"display": "none"});
iframe.appendTo("body");
iframe[0].contentWindow.location.href = url;
success = true;
} catch (ex) {
success = false;
}
iframe.remove();
callback(success);
} else if (Browser.name === "Chrome") {
elem.css({"outline": 0});
elem.attr("tabindex", "1");
elem.focus();
elem.blur(function () {
success = true;
callback(true); // true
});
location.href = url;
setTimeout(function () {
elem.off('blur');
elem.removeAttr("tabindex");
if (!success) {
callback(false); // false
}
}, 1000);
} else if (Browser.name === "Safari") {
if (myappinstalledflag) {
location.href = url;
success = true;
} else {
success = false;
}
callback(success);
}
}
The Safari extension was easy to implement. It consisted of a single line of injection script:
myinject.js:
window.postMessage("myappinstalled", window.location.origin);
Then in the web page JavaScript, you need to first register the message event and set a flag if the message is received:
window.addEventListener('message', function (msg) {
if (msg.data === "myappinstalled") {
myappinstalledflag = true;
}
}, false);
This assumes the application which is associated with the custom protocol will manage the installation of the Safari extension.
In all cases, if the callback returns false, you know to inform the user that the application (i.e., it's custom protocol) is not installed.
You say you need to detect the browser's protocol handlers - do you really?
What if you did something like what happens when you download a file from sourceforge? Let's say you want to open myapp://something. Instead of simply creating a link to it, create a link to another HTML page accessed via HTTP. Then, on that page, say that you're attempting to open the application for them. If it doesn't work, they need to install your application, which they can do by clicking on the link you'll provide. If it does work, then you're all set.
This was a recommended approach for IE by Microsoft support
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms537503%28VS.85%29.aspx#related_topics
"If you have some control over the binaries being installed on a user’s machine, checking the UA in script seems like a relevant approach:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Internet Settings\5.0\User Agent\Post Platform
" -- By M$ support
Every web page has access to the userAgent string and if you drop a custom post platform value, detecting this in javascript using navigator.userAgent is quite simple.
Fortunately, other major browsers like Firefox and Chrome (barring Safari :( ), do not throw "page not found" errors when a link with a custom protocol is clicked and the protocol is not installed on the users machine. IE is very unforgiving here, any trick to click in a invisible frame or trap javascript errors does not work and ends up with ugly "webpage cannot be displayed" error. The trick we use in our case is to inform users with browser specific images that clicking on the custom protocol link will open an application. And if they do not find the app opening up, they can click on an "install" page. In terms of XD this wprks way better than the ActiveX approach for IE.
For FF and Chrome, just go ahead and launch the custom protocol without any detection. Let the user tell you what he sees.
For Safari, :( no answers yet
I'm trying to do something similar and I just discovered a trick that works with Firefox. If you combine it with the trick for IE you can have one that works on both main browsers (I'm not sure if it works in Safari and I know it doesn't work in Chrome)
if (navigator.appName=="Microsoft Internet Explorer" && document.getElementById("testprotocollink").protocolLong=="Unknown Protocol") {
alert("No handler registered");
} else {
try {
window.location = "custom://stuff";
} catch(err) {
if (err.toString().search("NS_ERROR_UNKNOWN_PROTOCOL") != -1) {
alert("No handler registered");
}
}
}
In order for this to work you also need to have a hidden link somewhere on the page, like this:
<a id="testprotocollink" href="custom://testprotocol" style="display: none;">testprotocollink</a>
It's a bit hacky but it works. The Firefox version unfortunately still pops up the default alert that comes up when you try to visit a link with an unknown protocol, but it will run your code after the alert is dismissed.
You can try something like this:
function OpenCustomLink(link) {
var w = window.open(link, 'xyz', 'status=0,toolbar=0,menubar=0,height=0,width=0,top=-10,left=-10');
if(w == null) {
//Work Fine
}
else {
w.close();
if (confirm('You Need a Custom Program. Do you want to install?')) {
window.location = 'SetupCustomProtocol.exe'; //URL for installer
}
}
}
This is not a trivial task; one option might be to use signed code, which you could leverage to access the registry and/or filesystem (please note that this is a very expensive option). There is also no unified API or specification for code signing, so you would be required to generate specific code for each target browser. A support nightmare.
Also, I know that Steam, the gaming content delivery system, doesn't seem to have this problem solved either.
Here's another hacky answer that would require (hopefully light) modification to your application to 'phone home' on launch.
User clicks link, which attempts to launch the application. A unique
identifier is put in the link, so that it's passed to the
application when it launches. Web app shows a spinner or something of that nature.
Web page then starts checking for a
'application phone home' event from an app with this same unique ID.
When launched, your application does an HTTP post to your web app
with the unique identifier, to indicate presence.
Either the web page sees that the application launched, eventually, or moves on with a 'please download' page.