I'm currently in the learning phase for how the Google JS Client SDK works, since my boss needs me to learn how to integrate a Sign In button to his site to enable people to Authenticate via Google. I am testing the code for the custom Sign In button, with a touch of added functionality (like a Sign Out button), and in the process I've practically copy/pasted the code from their website. Let me show you the code first and then explain the issue, so that you can understand where the code is failing:
<script src="https://apis.google.com/js/client.js?onload=init"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
var clientId = '{my client id here}'; // for web
var apiKey = '{my api key here}';
var scopes = 'profile email';
function SignOut() {
// I know, sloppy, but the signOut method from Google doesn't work.
window.location = 'https://accounts.google.com/logout';
// Additional code if necessary.
};
function makeApiCall() {
gapi.client.load('plus', 'v1', function () {
var request = gapi.client.plus.people.get({ 'userId': 'me' });
request.execute(function (response) {
var heading = document.createElement('h4');
var image = document.createElement('img');
image.src = response.image.url;
heading.appendChild(image);
heading.appendChild(document.createTextNode(response.displayName));
document.getElementById('name').appendChild(heading);
alert('User logged in. makeApiCall() has executed.');
})
})
};
function init() {
gapi.client.setApiKey(this.apiKey);
window.setTimeout(checkAuth, 1);
console.log('Up and ready to go.');
};
function checkAuth() {
// Triggers when the page and the SDK loads.
gapi.auth.authorize({ client_id: clientId, scope: scopes, immediate: true }, handleAuthResult);
};
function handleAuthClick(event) {
// Triggers after a user click event to ensure no popup blockers interfere.
gapi.auth.authorize({ client_id: clientId, scope: scopes, immediate: false }, handleAuthResult);
return false;
};
function handleAuthResult(authResult) {
var authorizeButton = document.getElementById('SignInBtn');
var signoutButton = document.getElementById('SignOutBtn');
if (authResult && !authResult.error) {
var V = JSON.stringify(authResult);
localStorage.setItem('GoogleAuthResult', V);
console.log(V); // Just for testing...
var authTimeout = (authResult.expires_in - 5 * 60) * 1000; setTimeout(checkAuth, authTimeout); // As recommended by a Google employee in a video, so that the token refreshes.
authorizeButton.style.display = 'none'; // Switching between Sign In and Out buttons.
signoutButton.style.display = 'inline-block';
makeApiCall();
} else {
// Immediate:true failed so user is NOT signed in.
// Make the Sign In button the one visible and prep it
// so that it executes the Immediate:false after user click:
authorizeButton.style.visibility = 'inline-block';
authorizeButton.onclick = handleAuthClick;
signoutButton.style.visibility = 'none';
}
};
</script>
The handleAuthClick function does run on the button click, but after taking the user to the Google Sign In page, when that page brings me back, the browser kinda flickers and the handleAuthResult function does not execute. Therefore, nothing changes in the page after the successful sign in; the button displayed is the Sign In button (Sign Out button not visible) and no information is displayed on the 'name' textNode. This happens on Internet Explorer (11), Firefox (39) and Chrome (44). Also, it happens at home on my laptop (straight connection to the web via Cable broadband) and at work (on Windows 8.1 behind an Active Directory).
I began wondering so I started refreshing the browser page and after a couple of refreshes, since the script runs from the beginning, the immediate:true fires again and voilá: user is connected and API call triggers.
So, on my laptop, I changed the function being called back, in the immediate:false line's callback parameter, to the init() function and that fixed the problem: everything runs smoothly from beginning to end. Yet, this is not the way it is supposed to work. I still don't know what is going on with that line.
This morning, on my computer at work (behind Active Directory), that fix didn't work. I have to refresh the page a couple of times so that the script runs from the beginning and the immediate:true triggers recognizing the user's Signed In state and displaying the proper button on screen.
Any ideas on why does this callback fail?
You need to define your apiKey in the first section of your code
var clientId = '{my client id here}'; // for web
var apiKey = '{my api key here}'
Maybe thats the problem.
Google ApiKeys
Is it possible to log out user from a web site if he is using basic authentication?
Killing session is not enough, since, once user is authenticated, each request contains login info, so user is automatically logged in next time he/she access the site using the same credentials.
The only solution so far is to close browser, but that's not acceptable from the usability standpoint.
Have the user click on a link to https://log:out#example.com/. That will overwrite existing credentials with invalid ones; logging them out.
This does so by sending new credentials in the URL. In this case user="log" password="out".
An addition to the answer by bobince ...
With Ajax you can have your 'Logout' link/button wired to a Javascript function. Have this function send the XMLHttpRequest with a bad username and password. This should get back a 401. Then set document.location back to the pre-login page. This way, the user will never see the extra login dialog during logout, nor have to remember to put in bad credentials.
Basic Authentication wasn't designed to manage logging out. You can do it, but not completely automatically.
What you have to do is have the user click a logout link, and send a ‘401 Unauthorized’ in response, using the same realm and at the same URL folder level as the normal 401 you send requesting a login.
They must be directed to input wrong credentials next, eg. a blank username-and-password, and in response you send back a “You have successfully logged out” page. The wrong/blank credentials will then overwrite the previous correct credentials.
In short, the logout script inverts the logic of the login script, only returning the success page if the user isn't passing the right credentials.
The question is whether the somewhat curious “don't enter your password” password box will meet user acceptance. Password managers that try to auto-fill the password can also get in the way here.
Edit to add in response to comment: re-log-in is a slightly different problem (unless you require a two-step logout/login obviously). You have to reject (401) the first attempt to access the relogin link, than accept the second (which presumably has a different username/password). There are a few ways you could do this. One would be to include the current username in the logout link (eg. /relogin?username), and reject when the credentials match the username.
You can do it entirely in JavaScript:
IE has (for a long time) standard API for clearing Basic Authentication cache:
document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache")
Should return true when it works. Returns either false, undefined or blows up on other browsers.
New browsers (as of Dec 2012: Chrome, FireFox, Safari) have "magic" behavior. If they see a successful basic auth request with any bogus other username (let's say logout) they clear the credentials cache and possibly set it for that new bogus user name, which you need to make sure is not a valid user name for viewing content.
Basic example of that is:
var p = window.location.protocol + '//'
// current location must return 200 OK for this GET
window.location = window.location.href.replace(p, p + 'logout:password#')
An "asynchronous" way of doing the above is to do an AJAX call utilizing the logout username. Example:
(function(safeLocation){
var outcome, u, m = "You should be logged out now.";
// IE has a simple solution for it - API:
try { outcome = document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache") }catch(e){}
// Other browsers need a larger solution - AJAX call with special user name - 'logout'.
if (!outcome) {
// Let's create an xmlhttp object
outcome = (function(x){
if (x) {
// the reason we use "random" value for password is
// that browsers cache requests. changing
// password effectively behaves like cache-busing.
x.open("HEAD", safeLocation || location.href, true, "logout", (new Date()).getTime().toString())
x.send("")
// x.abort()
return 1 // this is **speculative** "We are done."
} else {
return
}
})(window.XMLHttpRequest ? new window.XMLHttpRequest() : ( window.ActiveXObject ? new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP") : u ))
}
if (!outcome) {
m = "Your browser is too old or too weird to support log out functionality. Close all windows and restart the browser."
}
alert(m)
// return !!outcome
})(/*if present URI does not return 200 OK for GET, set some other 200 OK location here*/)
You can make it a bookmarklet too:
javascript:(function (c) {
var a, b = "You should be logged out now.";
try {
a = document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache")
} catch (d) {
}
a || ((a = window.XMLHttpRequest ? new window.XMLHttpRequest : window.ActiveXObject ? new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP") : void 0) ? (a.open("HEAD", c || location.href, !0, "logout", (new Date).getTime().toString()), a.send(""), a = 1) : a = void 0);
a || (b = "Your browser is too old or too weird to support log out functionality. Close all windows and restart the browser.");
alert(b)
})(/*pass safeLocation here if you need*/);
The following function is confirmed working for Firefox 40, Chrome 44, Opera 31 and IE 11.
Bowser is used for browser detection, jQuery is also used.
- secUrl is the url to a password protected area from which to log out.
- redirUrl is the url to a non password protected area (logout success page).
- you might wish to increase the redirect timer (currently 200ms).
function logout(secUrl, redirUrl) {
if (bowser.msie) {
document.execCommand('ClearAuthenticationCache', 'false');
} else if (bowser.gecko) {
$.ajax({
async: false,
url: secUrl,
type: 'GET',
username: 'logout'
});
} else if (bowser.webkit) {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.open("GET", secUrl, true);
xmlhttp.setRequestHeader("Authorization", "Basic logout");
xmlhttp.send();
} else {
alert("Logging out automatically is unsupported for " + bowser.name
+ "\nYou must close the browser to log out.");
}
setTimeout(function () {
window.location.href = redirUrl;
}, 200);
}
Here's a very simple Javascript example using jQuery:
function logout(to_url) {
var out = window.location.href.replace(/:\/\//, '://log:out#');
jQuery.get(out).error(function() {
window.location = to_url;
});
}
This log user out without showing him the browser log-in box again, then redirect him to a logged out page
This isn't directly possible with Basic-Authentication.
There's no mechanism in the HTTP specification for the server to tell the browser to stop sending the credentials that the user already presented.
There are "hacks" (see other answers) typically involving using XMLHttpRequest to send an HTTP request with incorrect credentials to overwrite the ones originally supplied.
Just for the record, there is a new HTTP Response Header called Clear-Site-Data. If your server reply includes a Clear-Site-Data: "cookies" header, then the authentication credentials (not only cookies) should be removed. I tested it on Chrome 77 but this warning shows on the console:
Clear-Site-Data header on 'https://localhost:9443/clear': Cleared data types:
"cookies". Clearing channel IDs and HTTP authentication cache is currently not
supported, as it breaks active network connections.
And the auth credentials aren't removed, so this doesn't works (for now) to implement basic auth logouts, but maybe in the future will. Didn't test on other browsers.
References:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Clear-Site-Data
https://www.w3.org/TR/clear-site-data/
https://github.com/w3c/webappsec-clear-site-data
https://caniuse.com/#feat=mdn-http_headers_clear-site-data_cookies
It's actually pretty simple.
Just visit the following in your browser and use wrong credentials:
http://username:password#yourdomain.com
That should "log you out".
This is working for IE/Netscape/Chrome :
function ClearAuthentication(LogOffPage)
{
var IsInternetExplorer = false;
try
{
var agt=navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase();
if (agt.indexOf("msie") != -1) { IsInternetExplorer = true; }
}
catch(e)
{
IsInternetExplorer = false;
};
if (IsInternetExplorer)
{
// Logoff Internet Explorer
document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache");
window.location = LogOffPage;
}
else
{
// Logoff every other browsers
$.ajax({
username: 'unknown',
password: 'WrongPassword',
url: './cgi-bin/PrimoCgi',
type: 'GET',
beforeSend: function(xhr)
{
xhr.setRequestHeader("Authorization", "Basic AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=");
},
error: function(err)
{
window.location = LogOffPage;
}
});
}
}
$(document).ready(function ()
{
$('#Btn1').click(function ()
{
// Call Clear Authentication
ClearAuthentication("force_logout.html");
});
});
All you need is redirect user on some logout URL and return 401 Unauthorized error on it. On error page (which must be accessible without basic auth) you need to provide a full link to your home page (including scheme and hostname). User will click this link and browser will ask for credentials again.
Example for Nginx:
location /logout {
return 401;
}
error_page 401 /errors/401.html;
location /errors {
auth_basic off;
ssi on;
ssi_types text/html;
alias /home/user/errors;
}
Error page /home/user/errors/401.html:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<p>You're not authorised. Login.</p>
I've just tested the following in Chrome (79), Firefox (71) and Edge (44) and it works fine. It applies the script solution as others noted above.
Just add a "Logout" link and when clicked return the following html
<div>You have been logged out. Redirecting to home...</div>
<script>
var XHR = new XMLHttpRequest();
XHR.open("GET", "/Home/MyProtectedPage", true, "no user", "no password");
XHR.send();
setTimeout(function () {
window.location.href = "/";
}, 3000);
</script>
add this to your application :
#app.route('/logout')
def logout():
return ('Logout', 401, {'WWW-Authenticate': 'Basic realm="Login required"'})
function logout() {
var userAgent = navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase();
if (userAgent.indexOf("msie") != -1) {
document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache", false);
}
xhr_objectCarte = null;
if(window.XMLHttpRequest)
xhr_object = new XMLHttpRequest();
else if(window.ActiveXObject)
xhr_object = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
else
alert ("Your browser doesn't support XMLHTTPREQUEST");
xhr_object.open ('GET', 'http://yourserver.com/rep/index.php', false, 'username', 'password');
xhr_object.send ("");
xhr_object = null;
document.location = 'http://yourserver.com';
return false;
}
function logout(url){
var str = url.replace("http://", "http://" + new Date().getTime() + "#");
var xmlhttp;
if (window.XMLHttpRequest) xmlhttp=new XMLHttpRequest();
else xmlhttp=new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
xmlhttp.onreadystatechange=function()
{
if (xmlhttp.readyState==4) location.reload();
}
xmlhttp.open("GET",str,true);
xmlhttp.setRequestHeader("Authorization","Basic xxxxxxxxxx")
xmlhttp.send();
return false;
}
Based on what I read above I got a simple solution that works on any browser:
1) on you logout page you call an ajax to your login back end. Your login back end must accept logout user. Once the back end accept, the browser clear the current user and assumes the "logout" user.
$.ajax({
async: false,
url: 'http://your_login_backend',
type: 'GET',
username: 'logout'
});
setTimeout(function () {
window.location.href = 'http://normal_index';
}, 200);
2) Now when the user got back to the normal index file it will try to automatic enter in the system with the user "logout", on this second time you must block it by reply with 401 to invoke the login/password dialog.
3) There are many ways to do that, I created two login back ends, one that accepts the logout user and one that doesn't. My normal login page use the one that doesn't accept, my logout page use the one that accepts it.
Sending https://invalid_login#hostname works fine everywhere except Safari on Mac (well, not checked Edge but should work there too).
Logout doesn't work in Safari when a user selects 'remember password' in the HTTP Basic Authentication popup. In this case the password is stored in Keychain Access (Finder > Applications > Utilities > Keychain Access (or CMD+SPACE and type "Keychain Access")). Sending https://invalid_login#hostname doesn't affect Keychain Access, so with this checkbox it is not possible to logout on Safari on Mac. At least it is how it works for me.
MacOS Mojave (10.14.6), Safari 12.1.2.
The code below works fine for me in Firefox (73), Chrome (80) and Safari (12). When a user navigates to a logout page the code is executed and drops the credentials.
//It should return 401, necessary for Safari only
const logoutUrl = 'https://example.com/logout';
const xmlHttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlHttp.open('POST', logoutUrl, true, 'logout');
xmlHttp.send();
Also for some reason Safari doesn't save credentials in the HTTP Basic Authentication popup even when the 'remember password' is selected. The other browsers do this correctly.
This JavaScript must be working for all latest version browsers:
//Detect Browser
var isOpera = !!window.opera || navigator.userAgent.indexOf(' OPR/') >= 0;
// Opera 8.0+ (UA detection to detect Blink/v8-powered Opera)
var isFirefox = typeof InstallTrigger !== 'undefined'; // Firefox 1.0+
var isSafari = Object.prototype.toString.call(window.HTMLElement).indexOf('Constructor') > 0;
// At least Safari 3+: "[object HTMLElementConstructor]"
var isChrome = !!window.chrome && !isOpera; // Chrome 1+
var isIE = /*#cc_on!#*/false || !!document.documentMode; // At least IE6
var Host = window.location.host;
//Clear Basic Realm Authentication
if(isIE){
//IE
document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache");
window.location = '/';
}
else if(isSafari)
{//Safari. but this works mostly on all browser except chrome
(function(safeLocation){
var outcome, u, m = "You should be logged out now.";
// IE has a simple solution for it - API:
try { outcome = document.execCommand("ClearAuthenticationCache") }catch(e){}
// Other browsers need a larger solution - AJAX call with special user name - 'logout'.
if (!outcome) {
// Let's create an xmlhttp object
outcome = (function(x){
if (x) {
// the reason we use "random" value for password is
// that browsers cache requests. changing
// password effectively behaves like cache-busing.
x.open("HEAD", safeLocation || location.href, true, "logout", (new Date()).getTime().toString())
x.send("");
// x.abort()
return 1 // this is **speculative** "We are done."
} else {
return
}
})(window.XMLHttpRequest ? new window.XMLHttpRequest() : ( window.ActiveXObject ? new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP") : u ))
}
if (!outcome) {
m = "Your browser is too old or too weird to support log out functionality. Close all windows and restart the browser."
}
alert(m);
window.location = '/';
// return !!outcome
})(/*if present URI does not return 200 OK for GET, set some other 200 OK location here*/)
}
else{
//Firefox,Chrome
window.location = 'http://log:out#'+Host+'/';
}
type chrome://restart in the address bar and chrome, with all its apps that are running in background, will restart and the Auth password cache will be cleaned.
This is how my logout is working using form:
create basic auth user logout with password logout
create folder logout/ and add .htaccess: with line 'require user logout'
RewriteEngine On
AuthType Basic
AuthName "Login"
AuthUserFile /mypath/.htpasswd
require user logout
add logout button to website as form like:
<form action="https://logout:logout#example.com/logout/" method="post">
<button type="submit">Logout</button>
</form>
logout/index.php could be something like:
<?php
echo "LOGOUT SUCCESS";
header( "refresh:2; url=https://example.com" );
?>
5.9.2022 confirmed working on chrome, edge and samsung android internet browser
use a session ID (cookie)
invalidate the session ID on the server
Don't accept users with invalid session IDs
I updated mthoring's solution for modern Chrome versions:
function logout(secUrl, redirUrl) {
if (bowser.msie) {
document.execCommand('ClearAuthenticationCache', 'false');
} else if (bowser.gecko) {
$.ajax({
async: false,
url: secUrl,
type: 'GET',
username: 'logout'
});
} else if (bowser.webkit || bowser.chrome) {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.open(\"GET\", secUrl, true);
xmlhttp.setRequestHeader(\"Authorization\", \"Basic logout\");\
xmlhttp.send();
} else {
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5957822/how-to-clear-basic-authentication-details-in-chrome
redirUrl = url.replace('http://', 'http://' + new Date().getTime() + '#');
}
setTimeout(function () {
window.location.href = redirUrl;
}, 200);
}
As others have said, we need to get the same URL and send an error (e.g., 401: StatusUnauthorized something like that), and that's it.
And I use the Get method to let it know I need to logout,
Here is a full example of writing with golang.
package main
import (
"crypto/subtle"
"fmt"
"log"
"net/http"
)
func BasicAuth(username, password, realm string, handlerFunc http.HandlerFunc) http.HandlerFunc {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
queryMap := r.URL.Query()
if _, ok := queryMap["logout"]; ok { // localhost:8080/public/?logout
w.WriteHeader(http.StatusUnauthorized) // 401
_, _ = w.Write([]byte("Success logout!\n"))
return
}
user, pass, ok := r.BasicAuth()
if !ok ||
subtle.ConstantTimeCompare([]byte(user), []byte(username)) != 1 ||
subtle.ConstantTimeCompare([]byte(pass), []byte(password)) != 1 {
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/WWW-Authenticate
w.Header().Set("WWW-Authenticate", `Basic realm="`+realm+`", charset="UTF-8"`)
w.WriteHeader(http.StatusUnauthorized)
_, _ = w.Write([]byte("Unauthorised.\n"))
return
}
handlerFunc(w, r)
}
}
type UserInfo struct {
name string
psw string
}
func main() {
portNumber := "8080"
guest := UserInfo{"guest", "123"}
// localhost:8080/public/ -> ./public/everyone
publicHandler := http.StripPrefix(
"/public/", http.FileServer(http.Dir("./public/everyone")),
)
publicHandlerFunc := func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
switch r.Method {
case http.MethodGet:
publicHandler.ServeHTTP(w, r)
/*
case http.MethodPost:
case http.MethodPut:
case http.MethodDelete:
*/
default:
return
}
}
http.HandleFunc("/public/",
BasicAuth(guest.name, guest.psw, "Please enter your username and password for this site",
publicHandlerFunc),
)
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(fmt.Sprintf(":%s", portNumber), nil))
}
When you have already logout, then you need to refresh (F5) the page. Otherwise, you may see the old content.
Actually I think basic authentication was intended to be used with static pages, not for any sophisticated session management or CGI pages.
Thus when wanting session management you should design a classic "login form" to query for user and password (maybe 2nd factor as well).
The CGI form handler should convert successful authentication to a session (ID) that is remembered on the server and (in a cookie or as part of the URI).
Then logout can be implemented simply by making the server (and client) "forget" the session.
The other advantage is that (even when encrypted) the user and password is not send with every request to the server (instead the session ID would be sent).
If the session ID on the server is combined with a timestamp for the "last action" performed, then session timeout could be implemented by comparing that timestamp with the current time:
If the time span is too large, "timeout" the session by forgetting the session ID.
Any request to an invalid session would cause a redirection to the login page (or maybe if you want to make it more comfortable, you can have a "revalidation form" that requests the password again, too).
As a proof of concept I had implemented a completely cookie-free session management that is purely URI-based (the session ID is always part of the URI).
However the complete code would be too long for this answer.
Special care about performance has to be taken when wanting to handle several thousands of concurrent sessions.
For anyone who use Windows Authentication (also known as Negotiate, Kerberos, or NTLM authentication), I use ASP.NET Core with Angular.
I found an efficient manner to change users !
I modify my login method on the javascript side like that :
protected login(changeUser: boolean = false): Observable<AuthInfo> {
let params = new HttpParams();
if(changeUser) {
let dateNow = this.datePipe.transform(new Date(), 'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss');
params = params.set('changeUser', dateNow!);
}
const url: string = `${environment.yourAppsApiUrl}/Auth/login`;
return this.http.get<AuthInfo>(url, { params: params });
}
Here is my method on the backend :
[Route("api/[controller]")]
[ApiController]
[Produces("application/json")]
[Authorize(AuthenticationSchemes = NegotiateDefaults.AuthenticationScheme)]
public class AuthController : Controller
{
[HttpGet("login")]
public async Task<IActionResult> Login(DateTime? changeUser = null)
{
if (changeUser > DateTime.Now.AddSeconds(-3))
return Unauthorized();
...
... (login process)
...
return Ok(await _authService.GetToken());
}
}
return Unauthorized() return the 401 code that causes the browser identification popup window to appear, here is the process :
I transmit the date now as a parameter if I want to change user.
I return the 401 code if no more than 3 seconds have passed since that moment Now.
I complete my credential and the same request with the same parameter is sent to the backend.
Since more than 3 seconds have passed, I continue the login process but this time with the new credential !
function logout(secUrl, redirUrl) {
if (bowser.msie) {
document.execCommand('ClearAuthenticationCache', 'false');
} else if (bowser.gecko) {
$.ajax({
async: false,
url: secUrl,
type: 'GET',
username: 'logout'
});
} else if (bowser.webkit) {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.open("GET", secUrl, true);
xmlhttp.setRequestHeader("Authorization", "Basic logout");
xmlhttp.send();
} else {
alert("Logging out automatically is unsupported for " + bowser.name
+ "\nYou must close the browser to log out.");
}
setTimeout(function () {
window.location.href = redirUrl;
}, 200);
}
I tried using the above in the following way.
?php
ob_start();
session_start();
require_once 'dbconnect.php';
// if session is not set this will redirect to login page
if( !isset($_SESSION['user']) ) {
header("Location: index.php");
exit;
}
// select loggedin users detail
$res=mysql_query("SELECT * FROM users WHERE userId=".$_SESSION['user']);
$userRow=mysql_fetch_array($res);
?>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<title>Welcome - <?php echo $userRow['userEmail']; ?></title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="assets/css/bootstrap.min.css" type="text/css" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css" type="text/css" />
<script src="assets/js/bowser.min.js"></script>
<script>
//function logout(secUrl, redirUrl)
//bowser = require('bowser');
function logout(secUrl, redirUrl) {
alert(redirUrl);
if (bowser.msie) {
document.execCommand('ClearAuthenticationCache', 'false');
} else if (bowser.gecko) {
$.ajax({
async: false,
url: secUrl,
type: 'GET',
username: 'logout'
});
} else if (bowser.webkit) {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.open("GET", secUrl, true);
xmlhttp.setRequestHeader("Authorization", "Basic logout");
xmlhttp.send();
} else {
alert("Logging out automatically is unsupported for " + bowser.name
+ "\nYou must close the browser to log out.");
}
window.location.assign(redirUrl);
/*setTimeout(function () {
window.location.href = redirUrl;
}, 200);*/
}
function f1()
{
alert("f1 called");
//form validation that recalls the page showing with supplied inputs.
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<nav class="navbar navbar-default navbar-fixed-top">
<div class="container">
<div class="navbar-header">
<button type="button" class="navbar-toggle collapsed" data-toggle="collapse" data-target="#navbar" aria-expanded="false" aria-controls="navbar">
<span class="sr-only">Toggle navigation</span>
<span class="icon-bar"></span>
<span class="icon-bar"></span>
<span class="icon-bar"></span>
</button>
<a class="navbar-brand" href="http://www.codingcage.com">Coding Cage</a>
</div>
<div id="navbar" class="navbar-collapse collapse">
<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
<li class="active">Back to Article</li>
<li>jQuery</li>
<li>PHP</li>
</ul>
<ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
<li class="dropdown">
<a href="#" class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" role="button" aria-haspopup="true" aria-expanded="false">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-user"></span> Hi' <?php echo $userRow['userEmail']; ?> <span class="caret"></span></a>
<ul class="dropdown-menu">
<li><span class="glyphicon glyphicon-log-out"></span> Sign Out</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</div><!--/.nav-collapse -->
</div>
</nav>
<div id="wrapper">
<div class="container">
<div class="page-header">
<h3>Coding Cage - Programming Blog</h3>
</div>
<div class="row">
<div class="col-lg-12" id="div_logout">
<h1 onclick="logout(window.location.href, 'www.espncricinfo.com')">MichaelA1S1! Click here to see log out functionality upon click inside div</h1>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<script src="assets/jquery-1.11.3-jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="assets/js/bootstrap.min.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
<?php ob_end_flush(); ?>
But it only redirects you to new location. No logout.