Create a web service on http://www.a.com/service.asmx and send a cross-domain ajax request to it from http://www.b.com. Check the headers in Firebug, or in Live HTTP Headers, or any other plugin you wish.
There is no trace of the X-Requested-With HTTP Header field among request headers.
However, if you send an ajax request to the same service from the same domain (say for example http://www.a.com/about), you will see that header field.
Why is the X-Requested-With header field omitted for cross-domain ajax requests?
Update: I know that JSONP calls are not AJAX calls in nature. Thus you won't see any X-Requested-With header field, in JSONP calls.
If you are using jQuery to do your ajax request, it will not send the header X-Requested-With (HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH) = XMLHttpRequest, because it is cross domain. But there are 2 ways to fix this and send the header:
Option 1) Manually set the header in the ajax call:
$.ajax({
url: "http://your-url...",
headers: {'X-Requested-With': 'XMLHttpRequest'}
});
Option 2) Tell jQuery not to use cross domain defaults, so it will keep the X-Requested-With header in the ajax request:
$.ajax({
url: "http://your-url...",
crossDomain: false
});
But with this, the server must allow those headers, then the server needs to print those headers:
print "Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *\n";
print "Access-Control-Allow-Headers: X-Requested-With, Content-Type\n";
The first line above will avoid the error "Origin is not allowed by Access-Control-Allow-Origin."
The second line will avoid the error "Request header field X-Requested-With is not allowed by Access-Control-Allow-Headers."