Question

i have this ajax function that looks like so

   $.ajax({
                      type: "POST",
                      url: "http://localhost:55556",
                      data: "lots and lots of pie",
                      cache: false,
                      success: function(result)
                      {     
                        alert("sent");


                      },
                      failure: function()
                      {
                              alert('An Error has occured, please try again.');
                      }
              });

and a server that looks like so

 clientSocket = AcceptConnection();

 inp = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader (clientSocket.getInputStream()));
 String requestString = inp.readLine();

 BufferedReader ed = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(clientSocket.getInputStream()));

   while(true){
          String tmp = inp.readLine();
          System.out.println(tmp);
     }

now the odd thing is when i send my ajax my server gets by using system.out

Host: localhost:55556
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.2; WOW64; rv:27.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/27.0
Accept: */*
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8
Content-Length: 20
Origin: null
Connection: keep-alive
Pragma: no-cache
Cache-Control: no-cache  

the question is where is the data that i sent through, where is lots of pie?

Was it helpful?

Solution

The data should come after a blank line after the header lines, but I think the problem is that the data does not end with a newline character, and therefore, you cannot read it with the .readLine() method.

While looping through the header lines, you could look for the "Content-Length" line and get the length of the data. When you have reached the blank line, stop using .readLine(). Instead switch to reading one character at a time, reading the number of characters specified by the "Content-Length" header. I think you can find example code for this in this answer.

If you can, I suggest you use a library to help with this. I think the Apache HTTP Core library can help with this. See this answer.

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