Firstly, I suggest rewriting your code with jQuery's help. This would compact your code, make it cross-platform, and easier to read and maintain:
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.11.0.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
function sendPost(){
$.ajax({
url: "some url",
type: "POST",
contentType: "text/xml",
data:
"<MESSAGE><HEADER><LOGIN>005693</LOGIN></HEADER>" +
"<SESSION><LATITUDE>0.0</LATITUDE><LONGITUDE>0.0</LONGITUDE>" +
"<APP>SRO</APP><ORG>MNM</ORG><TRANSACTION>PRELOGIN</TRANSACTION>" +
"<KEY>PRELOGIN/ID</KEY><TYPE>PRELOGIN</TYPE></SESSION>" +
"<PAYLOAD><PRELOGIN><ID>005693</ID>" +
"<USERNAME>" + $("#username").val() + "</USERNAME>" +
"<PASSWORD>" + $("#password").val() + "</PASSWORD>" +
"</PRELOGIN></PAYLOAD></MESSAGE>",
dataType: 'xml',
success: function(data) {
var firstname = $(data).find("FIRSTNAME").text();
var lastname = $(data).find("LASTNAME").text();
alert('Hello ' + firstname + ' ' + lastname);
},
error: function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
alert('Error');
}
});
}
</script>
Secondly, a javascript that origins from your server (e.g. www.myserver.com) can't communicate with other servers (i.e. you can't request data from www.anotherserver.com). Well you CAN, but if so you'd need to ensure the answer sent from www.anotherserver.com would be in JSONP format - and then you would just change "dataType" in the example above to "jsonp" to be able to access the result like "data.firstname" and "data.lastname".
Anyway, in your case I would create a local proxy on my own webserver (in the same folder where you have the above .HTML-file) that would forward the request to the other server and return the result. Thus:
$.ajax({
url: "myproxy.php",
type: "POST", ...
And then in myprox.php, something like this (I'm just assuming PHP here, but this could be easily ported to ASP.NET or ASP Classic):
<?php
// myproxy.php forwards the posted data to some other url, and returns the result
$clientContext = stream_context_create(array(
'http' => array(
'method' => 'POST',
'header' => 'Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8',
'content' => http_get_request_body()
)
));
print file_get_contents("some url", false, $clientContext);
?>
To clarify: This would make your HTML-page talk to myproxy.php (which lives on the same server [even in the same directory]), then myproxy.php talks to the server at "some url" which returns the data to myproxy.php, which in it's turn returns the data to your script.
Best of luck!
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