Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I am writing an iframe based facebook app. Now I want to use the same html page to render the normal website as well as the canvas page within facebook. I want to know if I can determine whether the page has been loaded inside the iframe or directly in the browser?

share|improve this question

9 Answers

up vote 211 down vote accepted

if ( window.self === window.top ) { not in a frame } else { in a frame }

top and self are both window objects (along with parent), so you're seeing if your window is the top window.

share|improve this answer
1  
This seems to work fine in Firefox. Does it work in other browsers too? – akshat Nov 28 '08 at 15:51
4  
yes it does indeed. – Mohammad May 27 '10 at 15:01
1  
Thanks saved my time :) – Wasim Shaikh Sep 27 '11 at 10:07
2  
Having a page with an iframe within an iframe, to test from my child iframe if my parent iframe was embeded in the page, I used if (parent === top) – sglessard Mar 27 '12 at 14:31
1  
This method is not working with IE – Ananda Subasinghe Nov 23 '12 at 5:58
show 3 more comments

RoBorg is correct, but I wanted to add a side note.

In IE7/IE8 when Microsoft added Tabs to their browser they broke one thing that will cause havoc with your JS if you are not careful.

Imagine this page layout:

MainPage.html
  IframedPage1.html   (named "foo")
  IframedPage2.html   (named "bar")
    IframedPage3.html (named "baz")

Now in frame "baz" you click a link (no target, loads in the "baz" frame) it works fine.

If the page that gets loaded, lets call it special.html, uses JS to check if "it" has a parent frame named "bar" it will return true (expected).

Now lets say that the special.html page when it loads, checks the parent frame (for existence and its name, and if it is "bar" it reloads itself in the bar frame. e.g.

if(window.parent && window.parent.name == 'bar'){
  window.parent.location = self.location;
}

So far so good. Now comes the bug.

Lets say instead of clicking on the original link like normal, and loading the special.html page in the "baz" frame, you middle-clicked it or chose to open it in a new Tab.

When that new tab loads (with no parent frames at all!) IE will enter an endless loop of page loading! because IE "copies over" the frame structure in JavaScript such that the new tab DOES have a parent, and that parent HAS the name "bar".

The good news, is that checking:

if(self == top){
  //this returns true!
}

in that new tab does return true, and thus you can test for this odd condition.

share|improve this answer
Has the bug been fixed in the meantime? I can't reproduce it in IE8. I always get the correct window.parent. – Pumbaa80 Sep 10 '12 at 7:22
Not sure - I'll run my test suite against IE9 and below again and post an update. – scunliffe Sep 10 '12 at 20:36

The accepted answer didn't work for me inside the content script of a Firefox 6.0 Extension (Addon-SDK 1.0): Firefox executes the content script in each: the top-level window and in all iframes.

Inside the content script I get the following results:

 (window !== window.top) : false 
 (window.self !== window.top) : true

The strange thing about this output is that it's always the same regardless whether the code is run inside an iframe or the top-level window.

On the other hand Google Chrome seems to execute my content script only once within the top-level window, so the above wouldn't work at all.

What finally worked for me in a content script in both browsers is this:

 console.log(window.frames.length + ':' + parent.frames.length);

Without iframes this prints 0:0, in a top-level window containing one frame it prints 1:1, and in the only iframe of a document it prints 0:1.

This allows my extension to determine in both browsers if there are any iframes present, and additionally in Firefox if it is run inside one of the iframes.

share|improve this answer
Oh, it helpes me a lot! I'm confused by firefox jetpack for a long time. thx. – legendlee May 11 '12 at 10:45

Since you are asking in the context of a facebook app, you might want to consider detecting this at the server when the initial request is made. Facebook will pass along a bunch of querystring data including the fb_sig_user key if it is called from an iframe.

Since you probably need to check and use this data anyway in your app, use it to determine the the appropriate context to render.

share|improve this answer

I'm using this:

var isIframe = (self.frameElement && (self.frameElement+"").indexOf("HTMLIFrameElement") > -1);
share|improve this answer

Use this javascript function as an example on how to accomplish this.

function isNoIframeOrIframeInMyHost() {
// Validation: it must be loaded as the top page, or if it is loaded in an iframe 
// then it must be embedded in my own domain.
// Info: IF top.location.href is not accessible THEN it is embedded in an iframe 
// and the domains are different.
var myresult = true;
try {
    var tophref = top.location.href;
    var tophostname = top.location.hostname.toString();
    var myhref = location.href;
    if (tophref === myhref) {
        myresult = true;
    } else if (tophostname !== "www.yourdomain.com") {
        myresult = false;
    }
} catch (error) { 
  // error is a permission error that top.location.href is not accessible 
  // (which means parent domain <> iframe domain)!
    myresult = false;
}
return myresult;
}
share|improve this answer
if (window.frames.length != parent.frames.length) { page loaded in iframe }

But only if number of iframes differs in your page and page who are loading you in iframe. Make no iframe in your page to have 100% guarantee of result of this code

share|improve this answer

Write this javascript in each page

if (self == top) { window.location = "Home.aspx"; }

Then it will automatically redirects to home page.

share|improve this answer
Your redirect will work when you're not if frame. So I would not be able to navigate in your site. Secondly, techniques exists to prevent from redirecting from the parent page. – barius May 14 at 0:35

It's an ancient piece of code that I've used a few times:

if (parent.location.href == self.location.href) {
    window.location.href = 'https://www.facebook.com/pagename?v=app_1357902468';
}
share|improve this answer
3  
Due to XSS reading the parent location is not allowed. – Eneko Alonso Sep 27 '12 at 21:28

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.