When you do an AJAX request on a website, the URL you request from needs to reside on the same domain as where the request was made from. This is a security restriction imposed by the browser. There is a way to sneak around this by using a bit of a "man in the middle" approach.
PHP, being a server-side language, has the ability to pull content from any URL. So a PHP file can become the man in the middle. The contents of the PHP file can be set up to accept a URL as a parameter and then return the contents of that URL.
<?php
echo file_get_contents($_GET['url']);
// WARNING: You REALLY should write something to whitelist or otherwise limit what the function will accept, or it could be a security danger to your server (people could read any file).
?>
With that in place, we can do an AJAX request directly to that URL, passing it the URL we actually want the data from as a parameter. See how we are passing "http://google.com" as data below.
<script type='text/javascript' src='http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4/jquery.min.js?ver=1.3.2'></script>
<script type='text/javascript'>
$(function() {
$.ajax({
type: "GET",
dataType: 'html',
data: 'url=http://google.com',
url: 'get.php',
success: function(data){
// Yah! Do something cool with data
},
error: function(){
// Boo! Handle the error.
}
});
});
</script>
This is an extremely simple example. If you are interested in a more robust version, check out the Simple PHP Proxy.