Link and execute external JavaScript file hosted on GitHub

JavascriptGithub

Javascript Problem Overview


When I try to change the linked reference of a local JavaScript file to a GitHub raw version my test file stops working. The error is:

> Refused to execute script from ... because its MIME type (text/plain) is not executable, and strict MIME type checking is enabled.

Is there a way to disable this behavior or is there a service that allows linking to GitHub raw files?

Working code:

<script src="bootstrap-wysiwyg.js"></script>

Non-working code:

<script src="https://raw.github.com/mindmup/bootstrap-wysiwyg/master/bootstrap-wysiwyg.js"></script>

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

There is a good workaround for this, now, by using jsdelivr.net.

Steps:

  1. Find your link on GitHub, and click to the "Raw" version.
  2. Copy the URL.
  3. Change raw.githubusercontent.com to cdn.jsdelivr.net
  4. Insert /gh/ before your username.
  5. Remove the branch name.
  6. (Optional) Insert the version you want to link to, as @version (if you do not do this, you will get the latest - which may cause long-term caching)

Examples:

http://raw.githubusercontent.com/<username>/<repo>/<branch>/path/to/file.js

Use this URL to get the latest version:

http://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/<username>/<repo>/path/to/file.js

Use this URL to get a specific version or commit hash:

http://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/<username>/<repo>@<version or hash>/path/to/file.js

For production environments, consider targeting a specific tag or commit-hash rather than the branch. Using the latest link may result in long-term caching of the file, causing your link to not be updated as you push new versions. Linking to a file by commit-hash or tag makes the link unique to version.


Why is this needed?

In 2013, GitHub started using X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff, which instructs more modern browsers to enforce strict MIME type checking. It then returns the raw files in a MIME type returned by the server, preventing the browser from using the file as-intended (if the browser honors the setting).

For background on this topic, please refer to this discussion thread.

Solution 2 - Javascript

This is no longer possible. GitHub has explicitly disabled JavaScript hotlinking, and newer versions of browsers respect that setting.

Heads up: nosniff header support coming to Chrome and Firefox

Solution 3 - Javascript

rawgithub.com redirects to rawgit.com So the above example would now be

http://rawgit.com/user/package/master/link.min.js

Solution 4 - Javascript

GitHub Pages is GitHub’s official solution to this problem.

raw.githubusercontent makes all files use the text/plain MIME type, even if the file is a CSS or JavaScript file. So going to https://raw.githubusercontent.com/‹user›/‹repo›/‹branch›/‹filepath› will not be the correct MIME type but instead a plaintext file, and linking it via <link href="..."/> or <script src="..."></script> won’t work—the CSS won’t apply / the JS won’t run.

GitHub Pages hosts your repo at a special URL, so all you have to do is check-in your files and push. Note that in most cases, GitHub Pages requires you to commit to a special branch, gh-pages.

On your new site, which is usually https://‹user›.github.io/‹repo›, every file committed to the gh-pages branch (the most recent commit) is present at this url. So then you can link to your js file via <script src="https://‹user›.github.io/‹repo›/file.js"></script>, and this will be the correct MIME type.

Do you have build files?

Personally, my recommendation is to run this branch parallel to master. On the gh-pages branch, you can edit your .gitignore file to check in all the dist/build files you need for your site (e.g. if you have any minified/compiled files), while keeping them ignored on your master branch. This is useful because you typically don’t want to track changes in build files in your regular repo. Every time you want to update your hosted files, simply merge master into gh-pages, rebuild, commit, and then push.

(protip: you can merge and rebuild in the same commit with these steps:)

$ git checkout gh-pages
$ git merge --no-ff --no-commit master  # prepare the merge but don’t commit it (as if there were a merge conflict)
$ npm run build                         # (or whatever your build process is)
$ git add .                             # stage the newly built files
$ git merge --continue                  # commit the merge
$ git push origin gh-pages

Solution 5 - Javascript

https://raw.githack.com/

found this site supply a CDN for

  • remove nosniff http header
  • fix mime type by ext name

and this site:

https://rawgit.com/ > NOTE: RawGit has reached the end of its useful life

Solution 6 - Javascript

Above answers clearly answer the question but I want to provide another alternative - A different view/approach to solve the similar problem.

You can also use browser extension to remove X-Content-Type-Options response header for raw.githubusercontent.com files. There are couple of browser extensions to modify response headers.

  1. Requestly: Chrome + Firefox
  2. Modify Headers: Firefox

If you use Requestly, I can suggest two solutions

Solution 1: Use Modify Headers Rule and remove the response header

Steps
  1. Install Requestly from http://www.requestly.in
  2. Go to Rules Page
  3. Click on Add Icon to create a rule
  4. Select Modify Headers
  5. Give a Name and Descripton
  6. Select Remove -> Response -> X-Content-Type-Options
  7. In Source field, enter Url -> Contains -> raw.githubusercontent.com

Solution 2: Use Replace host Rule

  1. Install Requestly from http://www.requestly.in
  2. Go to Rules Page
  3. Click on Add Icon to create a rule
  4. Replace raw.githubusercontent.com with rawgit.com

Check this screenshot for more detailsenter image description here

How to test

We created a simple JS Fiddle to test out if we can use raw github files as scripts in our code. Here is the Fiddle with the following code

<center id="msg"></center>

<script src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sachinjain024/practicebook/master/web-extensions-master/storage/background.js"></script>
<script>
try {
  if (typeof BG.Methods !== 'undefoned') {
    document.getElementById('msg').innerHTML = 'Script evaluated successfully!';
  }
} catch (e) {
  document.getElementById('msg').innerHTML = 'Problem evaluating script';
}
</script>

If you see Script evaluated successfully!, It means you are able to use raw github file in your code Otherwise Problem evaluating script indicates that there is some problem while executing script from raw github source.

I also wrote an article on Requestly blog about this. Please refer it for more details.

Hope it helps!!

Disclaimer: I am author of Requestly So you can blame for anything you don't like.

Solution 7 - Javascript

My use case was to load 'bookmarklets' direclty from my Bitbucket account which has same restrictions as Github. The work around I came up with was to AJAX for the script and run eval on the response string, below snippet is based on that approach.

<script>
    var sScriptURL ='<script-URL-here>'; 
    var oReq = new XMLHttpRequest(); 
    oReq.addEventListener("load", 
       function fLoad() {eval(this.responseText + '\r\n//# sourceURL=' + sScriptURL)}); 
    oReq.open("GET", sScriptURL); oReq.send(); false;
</script>

Note that appending of sourceURL comment is to allow for debuging of the script within browser's developer tools.

Solution 8 - Javascript

To make things clear and short

//raw.githubusercontent.com --> //rawgit.com

Note that this is handled by rawgit's development hosting and not their cdn for production hosting

Solution 9 - Javascript

When a file is uploaded to github you can use it as external source or free hosting. Troy Alford has explained it well above. But to make it easier let me tell you some easy steps then you can use a github raw file in your site:

Here is your file's link:

https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mindmup/bootstrap-wysiwyg/master/bootstrap-wysiwyg.js

Now to execute it you have to remove https:// and the dot( . ) between raw and githubusercontent

Like this:

rawgithubusercontent.com/mindmup/bootstrap-wysiwyg/master/bootstrap-wysiwyg.js

Now when you will visit this link you will get a link that can be used to call your javascript:

Here is the final link:

https://rawgit.com/mindmup/bootstrap-wysiwyg/master/bootstrap-wysiwyg.js

Similarly if you host a css file you have to do it as mentioned above. It is the easiest way to get simple link to call your external css or javascript file hosted on github.

I hope this is helpful.

Referance URL: http://101helper.blogspot.com/2015/11/store-blogger-codes-on-github-boost-blogger-speed.html

Solution 10 - Javascript

I found the error was shown due to the comments at the beginning of file , You can solve this issue , by simply creating your own file without comment and push to git, it shows no error

For proof you can try these two file with same code of easy pagination :

without comment

with comment

Solution 11 - Javascript

I had the same issue as you, what I did is change to

<script type="application/javascript" src="bootstrap-wysiwyg.js"></script>

It works for me.

Solution 12 - Javascript

Most simple way:
<script type="text/plain" src="http://raw.githubusercontent.com/user/repo/branch/file.js"></script>
Served by GitHub,
and

very

reliable.
With text/plain
enter image description here Without text/plain
enter image description here

Solution 13 - Javascript

raw.github.com is not truely raw access to file asset, but a view rendered by Rails. So accessing raw.github.com is much heavier than needed. I don't know why raw.github.com is implemented as a Rails view. Instead of fix this route issue, GitHub added a X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff header.

Workaround:

  • Put the script to user.github.io/repo
  • Use a third party CDN like rawgit.com.

Solution 14 - Javascript

Alternatively, if generating your markup server-side, you can just fetch and inject. For example, in JSTL you could do this:

<script type="text/javascript">
    <c:import url="https://raw.github.com/mindmup/bootstrap-wysiwyg/master/bootstrap-wysiwyg.js" />
</script>

They don't allow hotlinking for a reason, so probably bad form if you want to be a good citizen. I'd suggest you cache that javascript and only actually re-fetch periodically as you see fit.

Solution 15 - Javascript

Example


original

https://raw.githubusercontent.com/antelove19/qrcodejs/master/qrcode.min.js

cdn.jsdelivr.net

https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/antelove19/qrcodejs/qrcode.min.js

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

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Solution 1 - JavascriptTroy AlfordView Answer on Stackoverflow
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