If your looking for a reliable and secure cross-domain RPC implementation then maybe you should take a look at easyXDM. It supports RPC with no server-side requirements using one of several available transport stacks. . Give it a twirl, http://easyxdm.net/v2.0.0/example/methods.html, run the test suite at http://easyxdm.net/v2.0.0/tests/ or check it out at Github: http://github.com/oyvindkinsey/easyXDM
http://kinsey.no/blog/index.php/2010/03/16/the-upcoming-release-of-easyxdm-v2-0/ On 16 Jan, 15:25, Piotr Jaroszyński <[email protected]> wrote: > 2010/1/14 Ray Ryan <[email protected]>: > > > Piotr, even if the response to your work was muted the issue does come up a > > lot. It would be great to see this in a project on code.google.com. Would it > > make sense in that form? > > I will see how hard it would be to ship it as a standalone project. > Afair the latest patch I came up with only introduced some cosmetic > changes - like making the RequestBuilder more friendly to subclassing. > I will work on that after my exams. > > btw. is anyone working on the new html5 cross domain xhrs? It would be > best to use window.name hack only as a fallback for them. > > -- > Best Regards > Piotr Jaroszyński -- http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Web-Toolkit-Contributors
