I'm trying to access a file on the server via an api that is behind Basic Auth. I then want to download that to a client's PC.
I've got the following code which does GET the url from behind the basic auth, however the image never downloads properly. I either get a failed network error message or I get a message saying I can't download it because my machine doesn't have an app installed to open it. It's a png so it definitely does!
It goes the whole way through the code and doesn't error so I'm confused as to why it's not downloading correctly to the clients machine (my pc while I'm testing!)
In the code I am specifying one file and I have specified it's length as bytes just to try and narrow down where I'm going wrong. Normally this could be any file that's being access of any length!
This is the code I have:
//Create a stream for the file
Stream stream = null;
var size = fileResp.ContentLength; //I used this to determine the file was 64196 in size
//This controls how many bytes to read at a time and send to the client
int bytesToRead = 64196;
// Buffer to read bytes in chunk size specified above
byte[] buffer = new Byte[bytesToRead];
string url= "https://myURL/images/image-2019-04-02-16-25-18-458.png";
WebRequest myReq = WebRequest.Create(url);
string credentials = "username:pwd";
CredentialCache mycache = new CredentialCache();
myReq.Headers["Authorization"] = "Basic " + Convert.ToBase64String(Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(credentials));
myReq.Method = "GET";
// The number of bytes read
try
{
//Create a response for this request
HttpWebResponse fileResp = (HttpWebResponse)myReq.GetResponse();
if (myReq.ContentLength > 0)
fileResp.ContentLength = myReq.ContentLength;
//Get the Stream returned from the response
stream = fileResp.GetResponseStream();
// prepare the response to the client. resp is the client Response
var resp = HttpContext.Current.Response;
//Indicate the type of data being sent
string contentType = MimeMapping.GetMimeMapping("new.png");
resp.ContentType = contentType;
string fileName = "new.png";
//Name the file
resp.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=\"" + fileName + "\"");
resp.AddHeader("Content-Length", fileResp.ContentLength.ToString());
int length;
do
{
// Verify that the client is connected.
if (resp.IsClientConnected)
{
// Read data into the buffer.
length = stream.Read(buffer, 0, bytesToRead);
// and write it out to the response's output stream
resp.OutputStream.Write(buffer, 0, length);
// Flush the data
resp.Flush();
//Clear the buffer
buffer = new Byte[bytesToRead];
}
else
{
// cancel the download if client has disconnected
length = -1;
}
} while (length > 0); //Repeat until no data is read
}
finally
{
if (stream != null)
{
//Close the input stream
stream.Close();
}
}
The output from here: fileResp.GetResponseStream();
At first, please try to test if the following code works on your computer.
private bool DownloadImage(string imgurl, string filename)
{
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(imgurl);
HttpWebResponse response = null;
try
{
response = (HttpWebResponse)request.GetResponse();
}
catch
{
response = null;
return false;
}
if (response != null && response.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.OK)
{
Stream receiveStream = response.GetResponseStream();
Bitmap bitmap = new Bitmap(receiveStream);
if (bitmap != null)
{
bitmap.Save(filename);
}
receiveStream.Flush();
receiveStream.Close();
response.Close();
return true;
}
else
{
return false;
}
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
string imgurl = "https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/42/Cute-Ball-Go-icon.png";
string filename = "D:\\download_test.png";
bool bIsDownloadSuccess = DownloadImage(imgurl, filename);
}
This code works on me well.
It doesn't have error, but returns false.
Please check where false is returned.
If it has some error, the problem will be on Windows System.
Please try and let me know.
Thanks.
I want to resume interrupted resumable upload using Google Drive v3 C# SDK.
The reason why I want this is to create resumable upload in Restful Web API.
There is google drive api instance in this RestAPI, so this is relaying chunk data from client program to google drive.
As you know, client program cannot upload whole file data at one time to Web API, so we need to resume interrupted resumable upload.
So my plan is here.
First, we need to create upload session and receive Session URI.
Second, Create Upload instance every time from returned URI and add chunk data.
Third, repeat 2nd process until EOF.
For this, I made test code, but it does not work at all.
var uploadStream = new System.IO.FileStream(UploadFileName, System.IO.FileMode.Open,
System.IO.FileAccess.Read);
var insert = service.Files.Create(new Google.Apis.Drive.v3.Data.File { Name = title }, uploadStream, ContentType);
Uri uploadUri = insert.InitiateSessionAsync().Result;
int chunk_size = ResumableUpload.MinimumChunkSize;
while (uploadStream.Length != uploadStream.Position)
{
byte[] temp = new byte[chunk_size];
uploadStream.Read(temp, 0, temp.Length);
MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream(temp);
ResumableUpload resume_uploader = ResumableUpload.CreateFromUploadUri(uploadUri, stream);
resume_uploader.ChunkSize = chunk_size;
IUploadProgress ss = resume_uploader.Resume();
Console.WriteLine("Uploaded " + ss.BytesSent.ToString());
}
Frankly, I expected to receive 308 Resume Incomplete Code, but the result is different.
"Invalid request. According to the Content-Range header, the final size of the upload is 262144 byte(s). This does not match the expected size of 1193188 byte(s), which was specified in an earlier request."
This means that I need to create code that resumes interrupted resumable upload using Google Drive C# SDK.
Anybody can help me?
Finally, I solved issue. Exact code is below. Actually, I could not find any source code on Google, so I was so sad. Every developer who wants to solve this issue, use my code please. Hope you are fine. :)
public static async Task<Google.Apis.Drive.v3.Data.File> UploadSync(DriveService driveService, string filepath)
{
string destfilename = Path.GetFileName(filepath);
List<string> parents = new List<string>();
parents.Add("root");
// Prepare the JSON metadata
string json = "{\"name\":\"" + destfilename + "\"";
if (parents.Count > 0)
{
json += ", \"parents\": [";
foreach (string parent in parents)
{
json += "\"" + parent + "\", ";
}
json = json.Remove(json.Length - 2) + "]";
}
json += "}";
Debug.WriteLine(json);
Google.Apis.Drive.v3.Data.File uploadedFile = null;
try
{
System.IO.FileInfo info = new System.IO.FileInfo(filepath);
ulong fileSize = (ulong)info.Length;
var uploadStream = new System.IO.FileStream(filepath, System.IO.FileMode.Open, System.IO.FileAccess.Read);
var insert = driveService.Files.Create(new Google.Apis.Drive.v3.Data.File { Name = destfilename, Parents = new List<string> { "root" } }, uploadStream, "application/octet-stream");
Uri uploadUri = insert.InitiateSessionAsync().Result;
int chunk_size = ResumableUpload.MinimumChunkSize;
int bytesSent = 0;
while (uploadStream.Length != uploadStream.Position)
{
byte[] temp = new byte[chunk_size];
int cnt = uploadStream.Read(temp, 0, temp.Length);
if (cnt == 0)
break;
HttpWebRequest httpRequest = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(uploadUri);
httpRequest.Method = "PUT";
httpRequest.Headers["Authorization"] = "Bearer " + ((UserCredential)driveService.HttpClientInitializer).Token.AccessToken;
httpRequest.ContentLength = (long)cnt;
httpRequest.Headers["Content-Range"] = string.Format("bytes {0}-{1}/{2}", bytesSent, bytesSent + cnt - 1, fileSize);
using (System.IO.Stream requestStream = httpRequest.GetRequestStreamAsync().Result)
{
requestStream.Write(temp, 0, cnt);
}
HttpWebResponse httpResponse;
try
{
httpResponse = (HttpWebResponse)httpRequest.GetResponse();
}
catch (WebException ex)
{
httpResponse = (HttpWebResponse)ex.Response;
}
if (httpResponse.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.OK)
{ }
else if ((int)httpResponse.StatusCode != 308)
break;
bytesSent += cnt;
Console.WriteLine("Uploaded " + bytesSent.ToString());
}
if (bytesSent != uploadStream.Length)
{
return null;
}
// Try to retrieve the file from Google
FilesResource.ListRequest request = driveService.Files.List();
if (parents.Count > 0)
request.Q += "'" + parents[0] + "' in parents and ";
request.Q += "name = '" + destfilename + "'";
FileList result = request.Execute();
if (result.Files.Count > 0)
uploadedFile = result.Files[0];
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Debug.WriteLine(ex.Message);
}
return uploadedFile;
}
I ve got the following code which
foreach (string dir in dirs) { //dirs all files in directory
try{
// Get an instance of WebClient
WebClient client = new System.Net.WebClient();
// parse the ftp host and file into a uri path for the upload
Uri uri = new Uri(m_FtpHost + new FileInfo(dir).Name);
// set the username and password for the FTP server
client.Credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential(m_FtpUsername, m_FtpPassword);
// upload the file asynchronously, non-blocking.
client.UploadFileAsync(uri, "STOR",dir);
}
catch(Exception e){
print(e.Message);
}
}
Can I retrieve back the progress of the upload? I have in the dirs 4-5 files. I want exact the progress (not the files uploaded/(total files))
EDIT: Thus the right approach is the following:
public int percentage;
try{
// Get an instance of WebClient
WebClient client = new System.Net.WebClient();
// parse the ftp host and file into a uri path for the upload
Uri uri = new Uri(m_FtpHost + new FileInfo(dir).Name);
// set the username and password for the FTP server
client.Credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential(m_FtpUsername, m_FtpPassword);
// upload the file asynchronously, non-blocking.
client.UploadProgressChanged += WebClientUploadProgressChanged;
client.UploadFileCompleted += WebClientUploadCompleted;
client.UploadFileAsync(uri, "STOR",dir);
}
void WebClientUploadProgressChanged(object sender, UploadProgressChangedEventArgs e)
{
percentage = e.ProgressPercentage;
}
void WebClientUploadCompleted(object sender, UploadFileCompletedEventArgs e)
{
print( "Upload is finished. ");
}
I add this implementation to my code, however it seems that it doenst print anything in the console.
WebClient contains a dedicated event for this
public event UploadProgressChangedEventHandler UploadProgressChanged
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.net.webclient.uploadprogresschanged(v=vs.110).aspx
EDIT : HttpWebRequest approach based on a google result :
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(uri);
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentType = "text/plain";
request.Timeout = -1; //Infinite wait for the response.
// Get the file information object.
FileInfo fileInfo = new FileInfo("C:\\Test\\uploadFile.dat");
// Set the file content length.
request.ContentLength = fileInfo.Length;
// Get the number of segments the file will be uploaded to the stream.
int segments = Convert.ToInt32(fileInfo.Length / (1024 * 4));
// Get the source file stream.
using (FileStream fileStream = fileInfo.OpenRead())
{
// Create 4KB buffer which is file page size.
byte[] tempBuffer = new byte[1024 * 4];
int bytesRead = 0;
// Write the source data to the network stream.
using (Stream requestStream = request.GetRequestStream())
{
// Loop till the file content is read completely.
while ((bytesRead = fileStream.Read(tempBuffer, 0, tempBuffer.Length)) > 0)
{
// Write the 4 KB data in the buffer to the network stream.
requestStream.Write(tempBuffer, 0, bytesRead);
// Update your progress bar here using segment count.
}
}
}
// Post the request and Get the response from the server.
using (WebResponse response = request.GetResponse())
{
// Request is successfully posted to the server.
}
I am trying to upload a picture from the Pictures Library (on WP7) and save it in a folder on the server.
On the server, I'm using PHP to receive the file using POST Method.
The PHP Code is:
<?php
$uploads_dir = 'files/'; //Directory to save the file that comes from client application.
if ($_FILES["file"]["error"] == UPLOAD_ERR_OK) {
$tmp_name = $_FILES["file"]["tmp_name"];
$name = $_FILES["file"]["name"];
move_uploaded_file($tmp_name, "$uploads_dir/$name");
}
?>
I've already tried some approaches, but they all just seem to fail.
I've already done this job in a Windows Forms application using the Client.UploadFile method but it seems that it cannot be used on a Windows Phone Application.
I think httpwebrequest can help, right?
This is my C# code so far:
public partial class SamplePage : PhoneApplicationPage
{
public SamplePage()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
PhotoChooserTask selectphoto = null;
private void SampleBtn_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
selectphoto = new PhotoChooserTask();
selectphoto.Completed += new EventHandler<PhotoResult>(selectphoto_Completed);
selectphoto.Show();
}
void selectphoto_Completed(object sender, PhotoResult e)
{
if (e.TaskResult == TaskResult.OK)
{
BinaryReader reader = new BinaryReader(e.ChosenPhoto);
image1.Source = new BitmapImage(new Uri(e.OriginalFileName));
txtBX.Text = e.OriginalFileName;
}
}
}
I read it somewhere that the image is required to be converted to a string of bytes, I don't know for sure.
But, please help me.
Thanks a lot in advance.
I would convert the image to base64 (see System.Convert) then transfer via POST:
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("http://mydomain.cc/saveimage.php");
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
string postData = String.Format("image={0}", myBase64EncodedImage);
// Getting the request stream.
request.BeginGetRequestStream
(result =>
{
// Sending the request.
using (var requestStream = request.EndGetRequestStream(result))
{
using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(requestStream))
{
writer.Write(postData);
writer.Flush();
}
}
// Getting the response.
request.BeginGetResponse(responseResult =>
{
var webResponse = request.EndGetResponse(responseResult);
using (var responseStream = webResponse.GetResponseStream())
{
using (var streamReader = new StreamReader(responseStream))
{
string srresult = streamReader.ReadToEnd();
}
}
}, null);
}, null);
}
saveimage.php should look like this:
<?
function base64_to_image( $imageData, $outputfile ) {
/* encode & write data (binary) */
$ifp = fopen( $outputfile, "wb" );
fwrite( $ifp, base64_decode( $imageData ) );
fclose( $ifp );
/* return output filename */
return( $outputfile );
}
if (isset($_POST['image'])) {
base64_to_jpeg($_POST['image'], "my_path_to_store_images.jpg");
}
else
die("no image data found");
?>
Note: I have not tested the code. There might be typos or other errors. It's just to illustrate how I would transfer an image using POST.
Edit as a repy to your comment: I don't have code to encode to base64 at hand but here is how you would decode a base64 encoded image in C#:
byte[] image = Convert.FromBase64String(str);
I've got WPF application I'm writing that posts files to one of social networks.
Upload itself working just fine, but I'd like to provide some indication of how far along I am with the uploading.
I tried a bunch of ways to do this:
1) HttpWebRequest.GetStream method:
using (
var FS = File.Open(
localFilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read))
{
long len = FS.Length;
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest) WebRequest.Create(url);
request.Method = "POST";
request.ProtocolVersion = HttpVersion.Version11;
request.ContentType = "multipart/form-data; boundary=--AaB03x";
//predata and postdata is two byte[] arrays, that contains
//strings for MIME file upload (defined above and is not important)
request.ContentLength = predata.Length + FS.Length + postdata.Length;
request.AllowWriteStreamBuffering = false;
using (var reqStream = request.GetRequestStream())
{
reqStream.Write(predata, 0, predata.Length);
int bytesRead = 0;
int totalRead = 0;
do
{
bytesRead = FS.Read(fileData, 0, MaxContentSize);
totalRead += bytesRead;
reqStream.Write(fileData, 0, bytesRead);
reqStream.Flush(); //trying with and without this
//this part will show progress in percents
sop.prct = (int) ((100*totalRead)/len);
} while (bytesRead > 0);
reqStream.Write(postdata, 0, postdata.Length);
}
HttpWebResponse responce = (HttpWebResponse) request.GetResponse();
using (var respStream = responce.GetResponseStream())
{
//do things
}
}
2) WebClient way (much shorter):
void UploadFile (url, localFilePath)
{
...
WebClient client = new WebClient();
client.UploadProgressChanged += new UploadProgressChangedEventHandler(UploadPartDone);
client.UploadFileCompleted += new UploadFileCompletedEventHandler(UploadComplete);
client.UploadFileAsync(new Uri(url), localFilePath);
done.WaitOne();
//do things with responce, received from UploadComplete
JavaScriptSerializer jssSer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
return jssSer.Deserialize<UniversalJSONAnswer>(utf8.GetString(UploadFileResponce));
//so on...
...
}
void UploadComplete(object sender, UploadFileCompletedEventArgs e)
{
UploadFileResponce=e.Result;
done.Set();
}
void UploadPartDone(object sender, UploadProgressChangedEventArgs e)
{
//this part expected to show progress
sop.prct=(int)(100*e.BytesSent/e.TotalBytesToSend);
}
3) Even TcpClient way:
using (
var FS = File.Open(
localFilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read))
{
long len = FS.Length;
long totalRead = 0;
using (var client = new TcpClient(urli.Host, urli.Port))
{
using (var clearstream = client.GetStream())
{
using (var writer = new StreamWriter(clearstream))
using (var reader = new StreamReader(clearstream))
{
//set progress to 0
sop.prct = 0;
// Send request headers
writer.WriteLine("POST " + urli.AbsoluteUri + " HTTP/1.1");
writer.WriteLine("Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=--AaB03x");
writer.WriteLine("Host: " + urli.Host);
writer.WriteLine("Content-Length: " + (predata.Length + len + postdata.Length).ToString());
writer.WriteLine();
//some data for MIME
writer.Write(utf8.GetString(predata));
writer.Flush();
int bytesRead;
do
{
bytesRead = FS.Read(fileData, 0, MaxContentSize);
totalRead += bytesRead;
writer.BaseStream.Write(fileData, 0, bytesRead);
writer.BaseStream.Flush();
sop.prct = (int) ((100*totalRead)/len);
} while (bytesRead > 0)
writer.Write(utf8.GetString(postdata));
writer.Flush();
//read line of response and do other thigs...
respStr = reader.ReadLine();
...
}
}
}
}
In all cases the file was successfully sent to the server.
But always progress looks like this: for a few seconds it runs from 0 to 100 and then waits until file actually uploading (about 5 minutes - file is 400MB).
So I think the data from a file is buffered somewhere and I'm tracking not uploading, but buffering data. And then must wait until it's uploaded.
My questions are:
1) Is there any way to track actual uploading data? That the method Stream.Write() or Flush() (which as I read somewhere, does not work for NetworkStream) did not return until it receives confirmation from the server that the TCP packets received.
2) Or can I deny buffering (AllowWriteStreamBUffering for HttpWebRequest doesn't work)?
3) And does it make sense to go further "down" and try with Sockets?
updated:
To avoid any doubts in the way of progress displaying on UI, I rewrote the code to log a file.
so, here is code:
using (var LogStream=File.Open("C:\\123.txt",FileMode.Create,FileAccess.Write,FileShare.Read))
using (var LogWriter=new StreamWriter(LogStream))
using (var FS = File.Open(localFilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read, FileShare.Read))
{
long len = FS.Length;
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest) WebRequest.Create(url);
request.Timeout = 7200000; //2 hour timeout
request.Method = "POST";
request.ProtocolVersion = HttpVersion.Version11;
request.ContentType = "multipart/form-data; boundary=--AaB03x";
//predata and postdata is two byte[] arrays, that contains
//strings for MIME file upload (defined above and is not important)
request.ContentLength = predata.Length + FS.Length + postdata.Length;
request.AllowWriteStreamBuffering = false;
LogWriter.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.ToString("o") + " Start write into request stream. ");
using (var reqStream = request.GetRequestStream())
{
reqStream.Write(predata, 0, predata.Length);
int bytesRead = 0;
int totalRead = 0;
do
{
bytesRead = FS.Read(fileData, 0, MaxContentSize);
totalRead += bytesRead;
reqStream.Write(fileData, 0, bytesRead);
reqStream.Flush(); //trying with and without this
//sop.prct = (int) ((100*totalRead)/len); //this part will show progress in percents
LogWriter.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.ToString("o") + " totalRead= " + totalRead.ToString() + " / " + len.ToString());
} while (bytesRead > 0);
reqStream.Write(postdata, 0, postdata.Length);
}
LogWriter.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.ToString("o") + " All sent!!! Waiting for responce... ");
LogWriter.Flush();
HttpWebResponse responce = (HttpWebResponse) request.GetResponse();
LogWriter.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.ToString("o") + " Responce received! ");
using (var respStream = responce.GetResponseStream())
{
if (respStream == null) return null;
using (var streamReader = new StreamReader(respStream))
{
string resp = streamReader.ReadToEnd();
JavaScriptSerializer jssSer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
return jssSer.Deserialize<UniversalJSONAnswer>(resp);
}
}
}
and here is result (I cut the middle):
2011-11-19T22:00:54.5964408+04:00 Start write into request stream.
2011-11-19T22:00:54.6404433+04:00 totalRead= 1048576 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:54.6424434+04:00 totalRead= 2097152 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:54.6434435+04:00 totalRead= 3145728 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:54.6454436+04:00 totalRead= 4194304 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:54.6464437+04:00 totalRead= 5242880 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:54.6494438+04:00 totalRead= 6291456 / 410746880
.......
2011-11-19T22:00:55.3434835+04:00 totalRead= 408944640 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:55.3434835+04:00 totalRead= 409993216 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:55.3464837+04:00 totalRead= 410746880 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:55.3464837+04:00 totalRead= 410746880 / 410746880
2011-11-19T22:00:55.3464837+04:00 All sent!!! Waiting for responce...
2011-11-19T22:07:23.0616597+04:00 Responce received!
as you can see program thinks that it uploaded ~400MB for about 2 seconds. And after 7 minutes file actually uploads and I receive responce.
updated again:
Seems to this is happening under WIndows 7 (not shure about x64 or x86).
When I run my code uder XP everything works perfectly and progress is shown absolute correctly
it's more than year since this question was posted, but I think my post can be usefull for someone.
I had the same problem with showing progress and it behaved exactly like you described. So i decided to use HttpClient which shows upload progress correctly. Then I've encountered interesting bug - when I had Fiddler launched HttpClient started to show its upload progress in unexpected way like in WebClient/HttpWebRequest above so I thinked maybe that was a problem of why WebClient showed upload progres not correctly (I think I had it launched). So I tried with WebClient again (without fiddler-like apps launched) and all works as it should, upload progress has correct values. I have tested in on several PC with win7 and XP and in all cases progress was showing correctly.
So, I think that such program like Fiddler (probably not only a fiddler) has some affect on how WebClient and other .net classes shows upload progress.
this discussion approves it:
HttpWebRequest doesn't work except when fiddler is running
You could use the WebClient's UploadFile to upload file rather than using writing file as a file stream. In order to track the percentage of the data received and uploaded you can use UploadFileAsyn and subscribe to its events.
In the code bellow I've used UploadFileAsyn to the upload files synchronously, but it need not to be synchronous as far as you don't dispose the instance of the uploader.
class FileUploader : IDisposable
{
private readonly WebClient _client;
private readonly Uri _address;
private readonly string _filePath;
private bool _uploadCompleted;
private bool _uploadStarted;
private bool _status;
public FileUploader(string address, string filePath)
{
_client = new WebClient();
_address = new Uri(address);
_filePath = filePath;
_client.UploadProgressChanged += FileUploadProgressChanged;
_client.UploadFileCompleted += FileUploadFileCompleted;
}
private void FileUploadFileCompleted(object sender, UploadFileCompletedEventArgs e)
{
_status = (e.Cancelled || e.Error == null) ? false : true;
_uploadCompleted = true;
}
private void FileUploadProgressChanged(object sender, UploadProgressChangedEventArgs e)
{
if(e.ProgressPercentage % 10 == 0)
{
//This writes the pecentage data uploaded and downloaded
Console.WriteLine("Send: {0}, Received: {1}", e.BytesSent, e.BytesReceived);
//You can have a delegate or a call back to update your UI about the percentage uploaded
//If you don't have the condition (i.e e.ProgressPercentage % 10 == 0 )for the pecentage of the process
//the callback will slow you upload process down
}
}
public bool Upload()
{
if (!_uploadStarted)
{
_uploadStarted = true;
_client.UploadFileAsync(_address, _filePath);
}
while (!_uploadCompleted)
{
Thread.Sleep(1000);
}
return _status;
}
public void Dispose()
{
_client.Dispose();
}
}
Client Code:
using (FileUploader uploader = new FileUploader("http://www.google.com", #"C:\test.txt"))
{
uploader.Upload();
}
You can register a custom callback (may be a delegate) on the FileUploadProgressChanged event handler to update your WPF UI.
The upload progress changed event get called more often if your callback for the event does any IO then that'll slowdown the download progress. It's best to have infrequent update e.g. the following code update only evey 10% up.
private int _percentageDownloaded;
private void FileUploadProgressChanged(object sender, UploadProgressChangedEventArgs e)
{
if (e.ProgressPercentage % 10 == 0 && e.ProgressPercentage > _percentageDownloaded)
{
_percentageDownloaded = e.ProgressPercentage;
//Any callback instead of printline
Console.WriteLine("Send: {0} Received: {1}", e.BytesSent, e.BytesReceived);
}
}
my suggestion is to use new HTTPClient class (available in .NET 4.5). It supports progress.
This article helped me a lot with this:
http://www.strathweb.com/2012/06/drag-and-drop-files-to-wpf-application-and-asynchronously-upload-to-asp-net-web-api/
My code for upload file:
private void HttpSendProgress(object sender, HttpProgressEventArgs e)
{
HttpRequestMessage request = sender as HttpRequestMessage;
Console.WriteLine(e.BytesTransferred);
}
private void Window_Loaded_1(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
ProgressMessageHandler progress = new ProgressMessageHandler();
progress.HttpSendProgress += new EventHandler<HttpProgressEventArgs>(HttpSendProgress);
HttpRequestMessage message = new HttpRequestMessage();
StreamContent streamContent = new StreamContent(new FileStream("e:\\somefile.zip", FileMode.Open));
message.Method = HttpMethod.Put;
message.Content = streamContent;
message.RequestUri = new Uri("{Here your link}");
var client = HttpClientFactory.Create(progress);
client.SendAsync(message).ContinueWith(task =>
{
if (task.Result.IsSuccessStatusCode)
{
}
});
}
This one has been bugging me for at least one day. I have started with using WebClient.UploadFileAsync, next tried the ProgressMessageHandler for HttpClient then rolled my own HttpContent for the HttpClient API. None of those approaches worked (for me).
It appears HttpWebRequest, which sits at the bottom of most (all?) .NET Http abstraction like WebClient and HttpClient, buffers the request and response stream by default, which I confirmed by looking at it in ILSpy.
As others have noted, you can make your request use chunked encoding one way or another which will effectively disable buffering the request stream, but still this is not going to fix the progress reporting.
I found that it was necessary to flush the request stream after each block that I send in order to accurately reflect sending progress, or else your data will simply be buffered one step further down the pipeline (probably somewhere in NetworkStream or OS, didn't check). The sample code below works for me and also does a minimalistic job at translating back from a HttpWebResponse to HttpResponseMessage (which you may not need, YMMV).
public async Task<HttpResponseMessage> UploadFileAsync( string uploadUrl, string absoluteFilePath, Action<int> progressPercentCallback )
{
var length = new FileInfo( absoluteFilePath ).Length;
var request = new HttpWebRequest( new Uri(uploadUrl) ) {
Method = "PUT",
AllowWriteStreamBuffering = false,
AllowReadStreamBuffering = false,
ContentLength = length
};
const int chunkSize = 4096;
var buffer = new byte[chunkSize];
using (var req = await request.GetRequestStreamAsync())
using (var readStream = File.OpenRead(absoluteFilePath))
{
progressPercentCallback(0);
int read = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < length; i += read)
{
read = await readStream.ReadAsync( buffer, 0, chunkSize );
await req.WriteAsync( buffer, 0, read );
await req.FlushAsync(); // flushing is required or else we jump to 100% very fast
progressPercentCallback((int)(100.0 * i / length));
}
progressPercentCallback(100);
}
var response = (HttpWebResponse)await request.GetResponseAsync();
var result = new HttpResponseMessage( response.StatusCode );
result.Content = new StreamContent( response.GetResponseStream() );
return result;
}
At fast guess, you are running this code on UI thread. You need to run upload stuff on new thread.
At that point you have 2 options. 1) You run timer on UI thread and update UI. 2) You update UI using Invoke(because you can't access UI from another thread) calls to update UI.
In the first example I think your progress bar is showing how fast you write into the stream from the file on disk - not the actual upload progress (which is why it all happens to 100% really quickly then the upload chugs on*).
I might be wrong ^^ and have no WPF experience but I have uploaded massive files from Silverlight to WCF and the model used there is (as you do) to break up the file into blocks. Send each block. When you get a response from the server ("block 26 received ok"), update the progress bar as really, you can't (or should not) update the progress bar unless you /know/ that block x made it - and a good way to know that is if the server says it got it.
*I wish I could upload 400Mb in 5 mins. Would take me all day...
I had the same problem. I spent a lot of time and solved the problem as follows:
Antivirus AVAST. When I turn it off my program works perfectly...