Cannot get angular $http to work - java

I'm trying to get a simple angularjs login screen to work.
The angular app sends the login details via http get method to a java servlet and anticipates a json response with success/fail. The java servlet is running on Tomcat 8.0.
Unfortunately, the angular app doesn't seem to be able to receive data from the servlet (it does send the data to the servlet) - the errorCallback method of "then" is called everytime.
Also, accessing the servlet's url directly from the browser works fine (the browser shows the response string).
Can you help me to find the problem?
This is the div element in the html page:
<div ng-controller = "loginCtrl">
<input type="text" ng-model = "userName" placeholder="Username"></input><br>
<input type = "text" ng-model = "userPass" placeholder="Password"></input><br>
<button type = "button" ng-click = "login()">Login</button><br>
{{message}}
</div>
This is the js code:
var expenseApp = angular.module("expenseApp",[]);
expenseApp.controller('loginCtrl',['$scope','$http',function($scope,$http) {
$scope.userName = "";
$scope.userPass = "";
$scope.message = "type in your credentials";
$scope.login = function() {
var address = "http://localhost:8080/ExpenseSystemServer/LoginServlet?userName=" + $scope.userName + "&userPass=" + $scope.userPass;
$http({method:'get',
url:address})
.then(function(data, status, headers, config) {
$scope.message = "http success";
},
function(data, status, headers, config) {
$scope.message = "http error";
});
};
}]);
And this is the servlet doGet method in java (the servlet's class name is LoginServlet):
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
response.setContentType("application/json");
response.setCharacterEncoding("UTF-8");
String userName = request.getParameter("userName");
String userPass = request.getParameter("userPass");
System.out.print("Login attempt with " + userName + "; " + userPass + ": ");
if (userName == null || userPass == null || !userName.equals("admin") || !userPass.equals("pass")){
response.getWriter().write("{'success':false,'message':'wrong details'}");
System.out.println("failed.");
}
else {
response.getWriter().write("{'success':true, 'user':{'name':'admin'},'message':'Hi admin!'}");
System.out.println("succeeded.");
}
}
Can you help me here?
Thanks.

You're sending invalid JSON from the servlet. JSON keys and string values must be in double quotes, not single quotes. Use JSONLint to validate your JSON. Or better, create a Java object, and a marshaller like Jackson to transform the object to valid JSON.
Also, instead of sending back a successful response (with code 200), with an object property "success" set to false, you should return an error response (400 if the required credentials are not there at all, 401 if they're not valid). Doing that not only shows respect for the HTTP protocol, but allows using http promises as intended:
http(...).then(successCallback, errorCallback)
instead of
http(...).then(successButActuallyMaybeErrorCallback, anotherErrorCallback)

Your JSON is invalid using single quotes that should be double
It's a really bad practice to create your own when most languages can encode it for you from native arrays and objects. I don't know best way using java but it needs to look like:
response.getWriter().write('{"success":false,"message":"wrong details"}');
note switch of single and double quotes

Related

How can I download data from Java back-end? [duplicate]

I have a Struts2 action in the server side for file downloading.
<action name="download" class="com.xxx.DownAction">
<result name="success" type="stream">
<param name="contentType">text/plain</param>
<param name="inputName">imageStream</param>
<param name="contentDisposition">attachment;filename={fileName}</param>
<param name="bufferSize">1024</param>
</result>
</action>
However when I call the action using the jQuery:
$.post(
"/download.action",{
para1:value1,
para2:value2
....
},function(data){
console.info(data);
}
);
in Firebug I see the data is retrieved with the Binary stream. I wonder how to open the file downloading window with which the user can save the file locally?
2019 modern browsers update
This is the approach I'd now recommend with a few caveats:
A relatively modern browser is required
If the file is expected to be very large you should likely do something similar to the original approach (iframe and cookie) because some of the below operations could likely consume system memory at least as large as the file being downloaded and/or other interesting CPU side effects.
fetch('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1')
.then(resp => resp.blob())
.then(blob => {
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
const a = document.createElement('a');
a.style.display = 'none';
a.href = url;
// the filename you want
a.download = 'todo-1.json';
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
alert('your file has downloaded!'); // or you know, something with better UX...
})
.catch(() => alert('oh no!'));
2012 Original jQuery/iframe/Cookie based approach
Bluish is completely right about this, you can't do it through Ajax because JavaScript cannot save files directly to a user's computer (out of security concerns). Unfortunately pointing the main window's URL at your file download means you have little control over what the user experience is when a file download occurs.
I created jQuery File Download which allows for an "Ajax like" experience with file downloads complete with OnSuccess and OnFailure callbacks to provide for a better user experience. Take a look at my blog post on the common problem that the plugin solves and some ways to use it and also a demo of jQuery File Download in action. Here is the source
Here is a simple use case demo using the plugin source with promises. The demo page includes many other, 'better UX' examples as well.
$.fileDownload('some/file.pdf')
.done(function () { alert('File download a success!'); })
.fail(function () { alert('File download failed!'); });
Depending on what browsers you need to support you may be able to use https://github.com/eligrey/FileSaver.js/ which allows more explicit control than the IFRAME method jQuery File Download uses.
Noone posted this #Pekka's solution... so I'll post it. It can help someone.
You don't need to do this through Ajax. Just use
window.location="download.action?para1=value1...."
You can with HTML5
NB: The file data returned MUST be base64 encoded because you cannot JSON encode binary data
In my AJAX response I have a data structure that looks like this:
{
result: 'OK',
download: {
mimetype: string(mimetype in the form 'major/minor'),
filename: string(the name of the file to download),
data: base64(the binary data as base64 to download)
}
}
That means that I can do the following to save a file via AJAX
var a = document.createElement('a');
if (window.URL && window.Blob && ('download' in a) && window.atob) {
// Do it the HTML5 compliant way
var blob = base64ToBlob(result.download.data, result.download.mimetype);
var url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
a.href = url;
a.download = result.download.filename;
a.click();
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
}
The function base64ToBlob was taken from here and must be used in compliance with this function
function base64ToBlob(base64, mimetype, slicesize) {
if (!window.atob || !window.Uint8Array) {
// The current browser doesn't have the atob function. Cannot continue
return null;
}
mimetype = mimetype || '';
slicesize = slicesize || 512;
var bytechars = atob(base64);
var bytearrays = [];
for (var offset = 0; offset < bytechars.length; offset += slicesize) {
var slice = bytechars.slice(offset, offset + slicesize);
var bytenums = new Array(slice.length);
for (var i = 0; i < slice.length; i++) {
bytenums[i] = slice.charCodeAt(i);
}
var bytearray = new Uint8Array(bytenums);
bytearrays[bytearrays.length] = bytearray;
}
return new Blob(bytearrays, {type: mimetype});
};
This is good if your server is dumping filedata to be saved. However, I've not quite worked out how one would implement a HTML4 fallback
The simple way to make the browser downloads a file is to make the request like that:
function downloadFile(urlToSend) {
var req = new XMLHttpRequest();
req.open("GET", urlToSend, true);
req.responseType = "blob";
req.onload = function (event) {
var blob = req.response;
var fileName = req.getResponseHeader("fileName") //if you have the fileName header available
var link=document.createElement('a');
link.href=window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
link.download=fileName;
link.click();
};
req.send();
}
This opens the browser download pop up.
1. Framework agnostic: Servlet downloading file as attachment
<!-- with JS -->
<a href="javascript:window.location='downloadServlet?param1=value1'">
download
</a>
<!-- without JS -->
<a href="downloadServlet?param1=value1" >download</a>
2. Struts2 Framework: Action downloading file as attachment
<!-- with JS -->
<a href="javascript:window.location='downloadAction.action?param1=value1'">
download
</a>
<!-- without JS -->
<a href="downloadAction.action?param1=value1" >download</a>
It would be better to use <s:a> tag pointing with OGNL to an URL created with <s:url> tag:
<!-- without JS, with Struts tags: THE RIGHT WAY -->
<s:url action="downloadAction.action" var="url">
<s:param name="param1">value1</s:param>
</s:ulr>
<s:a href="%{url}" >download</s:a>
In the above cases, you need to write the Content-Disposition header to the response, specifying that the file needs to be downloaded (attachment) and not opened by the browser (inline). You need to specify the Content Type too, and you may want to add the file name and length (to help the browser drawing a realistic progressbar).
For example, when downloading a ZIP:
response.setContentType("application/zip");
response.addHeader("Content-Disposition",
"attachment; filename=\"name of my file.zip\"");
response.setHeader("Content-Length", myFile.length()); // or myByte[].length...
With Struts2 (unless you are using the Action as a Servlet, an hack for direct streaming, for example), you don't need to directly write anything to the response; simply using the Stream result type and configuring it in struts.xml will work: EXAMPLE
<result name="success" type="stream">
<param name="contentType">application/zip</param>
<param name="contentDisposition">attachment;filename="${fileName}"</param>
<param name="contentLength">${fileLength}</param>
</result>
3. Framework agnostic (/ Struts2 framework): Servlet(/Action) opening file inside the browser
If you want to open the file inside the browser, instead of downloading it, the Content-disposition must be set to inline, but the target can't be the current window location; you must target a new window created by javascript, an <iframe> in the page, or a new window created on-the-fly with the "discussed" target="_blank":
<!-- From a parent page into an IFrame without javascript -->
<a href="downloadServlet?param1=value1" target="iFrameName">
download
</a>
<!-- In a new window without javascript -->
<a href="downloadServlet?param1=value1" target="_blank">
download
</a>
<!-- In a new window with javascript -->
<a href="javascript:window.open('downloadServlet?param1=value1');" >
download
</a>
I have created little function as workaround solution (inspired by #JohnCulviner plugin):
// creates iframe and form in it with hidden field,
// then submit form with provided data
// url - form url
// data - data to form field
// input_name - form hidden input name
function ajax_download(url, data, input_name) {
var $iframe,
iframe_doc,
iframe_html;
if (($iframe = $('#download_iframe')).length === 0) {
$iframe = $("<iframe id='download_iframe'" +
" style='display: none' src='about:blank'></iframe>"
).appendTo("body");
}
iframe_doc = $iframe[0].contentWindow || $iframe[0].contentDocument;
if (iframe_doc.document) {
iframe_doc = iframe_doc.document;
}
iframe_html = "<html><head></head><body><form method='POST' action='" +
url +"'>" +
"<input type=hidden name='" + input_name + "' value='" +
JSON.stringify(data) +"'/></form>" +
"</body></html>";
iframe_doc.open();
iframe_doc.write(iframe_html);
$(iframe_doc).find('form').submit();
}
Demo with click event:
$('#someid').on('click', function() {
ajax_download('/download.action', {'para1': 1, 'para2': 2}, 'dataname');
});
I faced the same issue and successfully solved it. My use-case is this.
"Post JSON data to the server and receive an excel file.
That excel file is created by the server and returned as a response to the client. Download that response as a file with custom name in browser"
$("#my-button").on("click", function(){
// Data to post
data = {
ids: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
};
// Use XMLHttpRequest instead of Jquery $ajax
xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
var a;
if (xhttp.readyState === 4 && xhttp.status === 200) {
// Trick for making downloadable link
a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(xhttp.response);
// Give filename you wish to download
a.download = "test-file.xls";
a.style.display = 'none';
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
}
};
// Post data to URL which handles post request
xhttp.open("POST", excelDownloadUrl);
xhttp.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "application/json");
// You should set responseType as blob for binary responses
xhttp.responseType = 'blob';
xhttp.send(JSON.stringify(data));
});
The above snippet is just doing following
Posting an array as JSON to the server using XMLHttpRequest.
After fetching content as a blob(binary), we are creating a downloadable URL and attaching it to invisible "a" link then clicking it. I did a POST request here. Instead, you can go for a simple GET too. We cannot download the file through Ajax, must use XMLHttpRequest.
Here we need to carefully set few things on the server side. I set few headers in Python Django HttpResponse. You need to set them accordingly if you use other programming languages.
# In python django code
response = HttpResponse(file_content, content_type="application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet")
Since I download xls(excel) here, I adjusted contentType to above one. You need to set it according to your file type. You can use this technique to download any kind of files.
Ok, based on ndpu's code heres an improved (I think) version of ajax_download;-
function ajax_download(url, data) {
var $iframe,
iframe_doc,
iframe_html;
if (($iframe = $('#download_iframe')).length === 0) {
$iframe = $("<iframe id='download_iframe'" +
" style='display: none' src='about:blank'></iframe>"
).appendTo("body");
}
iframe_doc = $iframe[0].contentWindow || $iframe[0].contentDocument;
if (iframe_doc.document) {
iframe_doc = iframe_doc.document;
}
iframe_html = "<html><head></head><body><form method='POST' action='" +
url +"'>"
Object.keys(data).forEach(function(key){
iframe_html += "<input type='hidden' name='"+key+"' value='"+data[key]+"'>";
});
iframe_html +="</form></body></html>";
iframe_doc.open();
iframe_doc.write(iframe_html);
$(iframe_doc).find('form').submit();
}
Use this like this;-
$('#someid').on('click', function() {
ajax_download('/download.action', {'para1': 1, 'para2': 2});
});
The params are sent as proper post params as if coming from an input rather than as a json encoded string as per the previous example.
CAVEAT: Be wary about the potential for variable injection on those forms. There might be a safer way to encode those variables. Alternatively contemplate escaping them.
My approach is completly based on jQuery. The problem for me was that it has to be a POST-HTTP call. And I wanted it to be done by jQuery alone.
The solution:
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "/some/webpage",
headers: {'X-CSRF-TOKEN': csrfToken},
data: additionalDataToSend,
dataType: "text",
success: function(result) {
let blob = new Blob([result], { type: "application/octetstream" });
let a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
a.download = "test.xml";;
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
document.body.removeChild(a);
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(a.href);
...
},
error: errorDialog
});
Explanation:
What I and many others do is to create a link on the webpage, indicating that the target should be downloaded and putting the result of the http-request as the target. After that I append the link to the document than simply clicking the link and removing the link afterwards. You don't need an iframe anymore.
The magic lies in the lines
let blob = new Blob([result], { type: "application/octetstream" });
a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
The interesting point is that this solution is only working with a "blob". As you can see in other answers, some are simply using a blob but not explaining why and how to create it.
As you can read e.g. in the Mozilla developer documentation you need a file, media ressource or blob for the function "createObjectURL()" to work. The problem is that your http-response might not be any of those.
Therefore the first thing you must do is to convert your response to a blob. This is what the first line does. Then you can use the "createObjectURL" with your newly created blob.
If you than click the link your browser will open a file-save dialog and you can save your data. Obviously it s possible that you cannot define a fixed filename for your file to download. Then you must make your response more complex like in the answer from Luke.
And don't forget to free up the memory especially when you are working with large files. For more examples and information you can look at the details of the JS blob object
Here is what I did, pure javascript and html. Did not test it but this should work in all browsers.
Javascript Function
var iframe = document.createElement('iframe');
iframe.id = "IFRAMEID";
iframe.style.display = 'none';
document.body.appendChild(iframe);
iframe.src = 'SERVERURL'+'?' + $.param($scope.filtro);
iframe.addEventListener("load", function () {
console.log("FILE LOAD DONE.. Download should start now");
});
Using just components that is supported in all browsers no additional
libraries.
Here is my server side JAVA Spring controller code.
#RequestMapping(value = "/rootto/my/xlsx", method = RequestMethod.GET)
public void downloadExcelFile(#RequestParam(value = "param1", required = false) String param1,
HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ParseException {
Workbook wb = service.getWorkbook(param1);
if (wb != null) {
try {
String fileName = "myfile_" + sdf.format(new Date());
response.setContentType("application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet");
response.setHeader("Content-disposition", "attachment; filename=\"" + fileName + ".xlsx\"");
wb.write(response.getOutputStream());
response.getOutputStream().close();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
How to DOWNLOAD a file after receiving it by AJAX
It’s convenient when the file is created for a long time and you need to show PRELOADER
Example when submitting a web form:
<script>
$(function () {
$('form').submit(function () {
$('#loader').show();
$.ajax({
url: $(this).attr('action'),
data: $(this).serialize(),
dataType: 'binary',
xhrFields: {
'responseType': 'blob'
},
success: function(data, status, xhr) {
$('#loader').hide();
// if(data.type.indexOf('text/html') != -1){//If instead of a file you get an error page
// var reader = new FileReader();
// reader.readAsText(data);
// reader.onload = function() {alert(reader.result);};
// return;
// }
var link = document.createElement('a'),
filename = 'file.xlsx';
// if(xhr.getResponseHeader('Content-Disposition')){//filename
// filename = xhr.getResponseHeader('Content-Disposition');
// filename=filename.match(/filename="(.*?)"/)[1];
// filename=decodeURIComponent(escape(filename));
// }
link.href = URL.createObjectURL(data);
link.download = filename;
link.click();
}
});
return false;
});
});
</script>
Optional functional is commented out to simplify the example.
No need to create temporary files on the server.
On jQuery v2.2.4 OK. There will be an error on the old version:
Uncaught DOMException: Failed to read the 'responseText' property from 'XMLHttpRequest': The value is only accessible if the object's 'responseType' is '' or 'text' (was 'blob').
function downloadURI(uri, name)
{
var link = document.createElement("a");
link.download = name;
link.href = uri;
link.click();
}
I try to download a CSV file and then do something after download has finished. So I need to implement an appropriate callback function.
Using window.location="..." is not a good idea because I cannot operate the program after finishing download. Something like this, change header so it is not a good idea.
fetch is a good alternative however it cannot support IE 11. And window.URL.createObjectURL cannot support IE 11.You can refer this.
This is my code, it is similar to the code of Shahrukh Alam. But you should take care that window.URL.createObjectURL maybe create memory leaks. You can refer this. When response has arrived, data will be stored into memory of browser. So before you click a link, the file has been downloaded. It means that you can do anything after download.
$.ajax({
url: 'your download url',
type: 'GET',
}).done(function (data, textStatus, request) {
// csv => Blob
var blob = new Blob([data]);
// the file name from server.
var fileName = request.getResponseHeader('fileName');
if (window.navigator && window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob) { // for IE
window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob(blob, fileName);
} else { // for others
var url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
const a = document.createElement('a');
a.style.display = 'none';
a.href = url;
a.download = fileName;
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
//Do something after download
...
}
}).then(after_download)
}
Adding some more things to above answer for downloading a file
Below is some java spring code which generates byte Array
#RequestMapping(value = "/downloadReport", method = { RequestMethod.POST })
public ResponseEntity<byte[]> downloadReport(
#RequestBody final SomeObejct obj, HttpServletResponse response) throws Exception {
OutputStream out = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
// write something to output stream
HttpHeaders respHeaders = new HttpHeaders();
respHeaders.setContentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_OCTET_STREAM);
respHeaders.add("X-File-Name", name);
ByteArrayOutputStream bos = (ByteArrayOutputStream) out;
return new ResponseEntity<byte[]>(bos.toByteArray(), respHeaders, HttpStatus.CREATED);
}
Now in javascript code using FileSaver.js ,can download a file with below code
var json=angular.toJson("somejsobject");
var url=apiEndPoint+'some url';
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
//headers('X-File-Name')
xhr.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 201) {
var res = this.response;
var fileName=this.getResponseHeader('X-File-Name');
var data = new Blob([res]);
saveAs(data, fileName); //this from FileSaver.js
}
}
xhr.open('POST', url);
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization','Bearer ' + token);
xhr.setRequestHeader('Content-Type', 'application/json');
xhr.responseType = 'arraybuffer';
xhr.send(json);
The above will download file
In Rails, I do it this way:
function download_file(file_id) {
let url = '/files/' + file_id + '/download_file';
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: url,
processData: false,
success: function (data) {
window.location = url;
},
error: function (xhr) {
console.log(' Error: >>>> ' + JSON.stringify(xhr));
}
});
}
The trick is the window.location part. The controller's method looks like:
# GET /files/{:id}/download_file/
def download_file
send_file(#file.file,
:disposition => 'attachment',
:url_based_filename => false)
end
Use window.open https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/open
For example, you can put this line of code in a click handler:
window.open('/file.txt', '_blank');
It will open a new tab (because of the '_blank' window-name) and that tab will open the URL.
Your server-side code should also have something like this:
res.set('Content-Disposition', 'attachment; filename=file.txt');
And that way, the browser should prompt the user to save the file to disk, instead of just showing them the file. It will also automatically close the tab that it just opened.
The HTML Code :
<button type="button" id="GetFile">Get File!</button>
The jQuery Code :
$('#GetFile').on('click', function () {
$.ajax({
url: 'https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/s.cdpn.io/172905/test.pdf',
method: 'GET',
xhrFields: {
responseType: 'blob'
},
success: function (data) {
var a = document.createElement('a');
var url = window.URL.createObjectURL(data);
a.href = url;
a.download = 'myfile.pdf';
document.body.append(a);
a.click();
a.remove();
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
}
});
});
Ok so here is the working code when Using MVC and you are getting your file from a controller
lets say you have your byte array declare and populate, the only thing you need to do is to use the File function (using System.Web.Mvc)
byte[] bytes = .... insert your bytes in the array
return File(bytes, System.Net.Mime.MediaTypeNames.Application.Octet, "nameoffile.exe");
and then, in the same controller, add thoses 2 functions
protected override void OnResultExecuting(ResultExecutingContext context)
{
CheckAndHandleFileResult(context);
base.OnResultExecuting(context);
}
private const string FILE_DOWNLOAD_COOKIE_NAME = "fileDownload";
/// <summary>
/// If the current response is a FileResult (an MVC base class for files) then write a
/// cookie to inform jquery.fileDownload that a successful file download has occured
/// </summary>
/// <param name="context"></param>
private void CheckAndHandleFileResult(ResultExecutingContext context)
{
if (context.Result is FileResult)
//jquery.fileDownload uses this cookie to determine that a file download has completed successfully
Response.SetCookie(new HttpCookie(FILE_DOWNLOAD_COOKIE_NAME, "true") { Path = "/" });
else
//ensure that the cookie is removed in case someone did a file download without using jquery.fileDownload
if (Request.Cookies[FILE_DOWNLOAD_COOKIE_NAME] != null)
Response.Cookies[FILE_DOWNLOAD_COOKIE_NAME].Expires = DateTime.Now.AddYears(-1);
}
and then you will be able to call your controller to download and get the "success" or "failure" callback
$.fileDownload(mvcUrl('name of the controller'), {
httpMethod: 'POST',
successCallback: function (url) {
//insert success code
},
failCallback: function (html, url) {
//insert fail code
}
});
I found a fix that while it's not actually using ajax it does allow you to use a javascript call to request the download and then get a callback when the download actually starts. I found this helpful if the link runs a server side script that takes a little bit to compose the file before sending it. so you can alert them that it's processing, and then when it does finally send the file remove that processing notification. which is why I wanted to try to load the file via ajax to begin with so that I could have an event happen when the file is requested and another when it actually starts downloading.
the js on the front page
function expdone()
{
document.getElementById('exportdiv').style.display='none';
}
function expgo()
{
document.getElementById('exportdiv').style.display='block';
document.getElementById('exportif').src='test2.php?arguments=data';
}
the iframe
<div id="exportdiv" style="display:none;">
<img src="loader.gif"><br><h1>Generating Report</h1>
<iframe id="exportif" src="" style="width: 1px;height: 1px; border:0px;"></iframe>
</div>
then the other file:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script>
function expdone()
{
window.parent.expdone();
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<iframe id="exportif" src="<?php echo "http://10.192.37.211/npdtracker/exportthismonth.php?arguments=".$_GET["arguments"]; ?>"></iframe>
<script>document.getElementById('exportif').onload= expdone;</script>
</body></html>
I think there's a way to read get data using js so then no php would be needed. but I don't know it off hand and the server I'm using supports php so this works for me. thought I'd share it in case it helps anyone.
If the server is writing the file back in the response (including cookies if
you use them to determine whether the file download started), Simply create a form with the values and submit it:
function ajaxPostDownload(url, data) {
var $form;
if (($form = $('#download_form')).length === 0) {
$form = $("<form id='download_form'" + " style='display: none; width: 1px; height: 1px; position: absolute; top: -10000px' method='POST' action='" + url + "'></form>");
$form.appendTo("body");
}
//Clear the form fields
$form.html("");
//Create new form fields
Object.keys(data).forEach(function (key) {
$form.append("<input type='hidden' name='" + key + "' value='" + data[key] + "'>");
});
//Submit the form post
$form.submit();
}
Usage:
ajaxPostDownload('/fileController/ExportFile', {
DownloadToken: 'newDownloadToken',
Name: $txtName.val(),
Type: $txtType.val()
});
Controller Method:
[HttpPost]
public FileResult ExportFile(string DownloadToken, string Name, string Type)
{
//Set DownloadToken Cookie.
Response.SetCookie(new HttpCookie("downloadToken", DownloadToken)
{
Expires = DateTime.UtcNow.AddDays(1),
Secure = false
});
using (var output = new MemoryStream())
{
//get File
return File(output.ToArray(), "application/vnd.ms-excel", "NewFile.xls");
}
}
I have tried Ajax and HttpRequest ways to get my result download file but I've failed, finally I've solved my problem using these steps:
implemented a simple hidden form in my html code:
<form method="post" id="post_form" style="display:none" action="amin.php" >
<input type="hidden" name="action" value="export_xlsx" />
<input type="hidden" name="post_form_data" value="" />
</form>
input with 'action' name is for calling function in my php code,
input with 'post_form_data' name for sending long data of a table which were not possible to send with GET. this data was encoded to json, and put json in input:
var list = new Array();
$('#table_name tr').each(function() {
var row = new Array();
$(this).find('td').each(function() {
row.push($(this).text());
});
list.push(row);
});
list = JSON.stringify(list);
$("input[name=post_form_data]").val(list);
now, the form is ready with my desire values in inputs, just need to trigger the submit.
document.getElementById('post_form').submit();
and done!
while my result is a file (xlsx file for me) the page wouldn't be redirected and instantly the file starts to download in last page, so no need to useiframe or window.open etc.
if you are trying to do something like this, this should be an easy trick 😉.
If you want to use jQuery File Download , please note this for IE.
You need to reset the response or it will not download
//The IE will only work if you reset response
getServletResponse().reset();
//The jquery.fileDownload needs a cookie be set
getServletResponse().setHeader("Set-Cookie", "fileDownload=true; path=/");
//Do the reset of your action create InputStream and return
Your action can implement ServletResponseAware to access getServletResponse()
It is certain that you can not do it through Ajax call.
However, there is a workaround.
Steps :
If you are using form.submit() for downloading the file, what you can do is :
Create an ajax call from client to server and store the file stream inside the session.
Upon "success" being returned from server, call your form.submit() to just stream the file stream stored in the session.
This is helpful in case when you want to decide whether or not file needs to be downloaded after making form.submit(), eg: there can be a case where on form.submit(), an exception occurs on the server side and instead of crashing, you might need to show a custom message on the client side, in such case this implementation might help.
there is another solution to download a web page in ajax. But I am referring to a page that must first be processed and then downloaded.
First you need to separate the page processing from the results download.
1) Only the page calculations are made in the ajax call.
$.post("CalculusPage.php", { calculusFunction: true, ID: 29, data1: "a", data2: "b" },
function(data, status)
{
if (status == "success")
{
/* 2) In the answer the page that uses the previous calculations is downloaded. For example, this can be a page that prints the results of a table calculated in the ajax call. */
window.location.href = DownloadPage.php+"?ID="+29;
}
}
);
// For example: in the CalculusPage.php
if ( !empty($_POST["calculusFunction"]) )
{
$ID = $_POST["ID"];
$query = "INSERT INTO ExamplePage (data1, data2) VALUES ('".$_POST["data1"]."', '".$_POST["data2"]."') WHERE id = ".$ID;
...
}
// For example: in the DownloadPage.php
$ID = $_GET["ID"];
$sede = "SELECT * FROM ExamplePage WHERE id = ".$ID;
...
$filename="Export_Data.xls";
header("Content-Type: application/vnd.ms-excel");
header("Content-Disposition: inline; filename=$filename");
...
I hope this solution can be useful for many, as it was for me.
That's it works so fine in any browser (I'm using asp.net core)
function onDownload() {
const api = '#Url.Action("myaction", "mycontroller")';
var form = new FormData(document.getElementById('form1'));
fetch(api, { body: form, method: "POST"})
.then(resp => resp.blob())
.then(blob => {
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
$('#linkdownload').attr('download', 'Attachement.zip');
$('#linkdownload').attr("href", url);
$('#linkdownload')
.fadeIn(3000,
function() { });
})
.catch(() => alert('An error occurred'));
}
<button type="button" onclick="onDownload()" class="btn btn-primary btn-sm">Click to Process Files</button>
<a role="button" href="#" style="display: none" class="btn btn-sm btn-secondary" id="linkdownload">Click to download Attachments</a>
<form asp-controller="mycontroller" asp-action="myaction" id="form1"></form>
function onDownload() {
const api = '#Url.Action("myaction", "mycontroller")';
//form1 is your id form, and to get data content of form
var form = new FormData(document.getElementById('form1'));
fetch(api, { body: form, method: "POST"})
.then(resp => resp.blob())
.then(blob => {
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
$('#linkdownload').attr('download', 'Attachments.zip');
$('#linkdownload').attr("href", url);
$('#linkdownload')
.fadeIn(3000,
function() {
});
})
.catch(() => alert('An error occurred'));
}
I struggled with this issue for a long time. Finally an elegant external library suggested here helped me out.

Spring MVC - Ajax call returns JSON with Unterminated string

I'm very new to this, like really, really new.
I'm using Spring MVC (5.0) and am making an ajax call, as shown below.
This all works fine.
#RestController
public class AjaxController
{
#RequestMapping(value="/search/users", method=RequestMethod.GET)
public Person getUsers(#RequestParam("username") String username)
{
persons = personService.findPersonByUsername(username);
return persons.size() == 0 ? null : persons.get(0);
}
}
The method gets the person from the database and returns it.
According to the Spring Restful guide,
"The XXX object must be converted to JSON.Thanks to Spring’s HTTP message converter support, you don’t need to do this conversion manually. Because Jackson 2 is on the classpath, Spring’s MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter is automatically chosen to convert the XXX instance to JSON."
So, Spring is automatically generating the JSON which will be returned to the client. The problem is, I get an error message in my client javascript:
SyntaxError: JSON.parse: unterminated string literal at line 1 column 103911 of the JSON data
My client javascript is equally simple, consisting of only:
function ajax_get_users(input_box)
{
var xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhttp.open("GET", "users?username=" + username, true); // url of server-side ajax script, specify synchronous ajax call
// get asynchronous response
xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {
var person = JSON.parse(this.responseText); // this is where the unterminated String error occurs
}
};
xhttp.setRequestHeader("Content-type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"); // set http header
xhttp.send(); // send the ajax request to the web server
}
Since Spring is constructing the JSON, how do I even fix the problem?

Java : How to handle POST request without form?

I'm sending a http post request from javascript, with some json data.
Javascript
var data = {text : "I neeed to store this string in database"}
var xhr= new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open("POST","http://localhost:9000/postJson" , true);
xhr.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8");
xhr.send(data);
xhr.setRequestHeader("Connection", "close");
//Also, I've tried a jquery POST
//$.post('postJson', {'data=' : JSON.stringify(data)});
//But this doesn't make a request at all. What am I messing up here?
Route
POST /postJson controllers.Application.postJson()
Controller
public static Result postJson(){
//What should I write here to get the data
//I've tried the below but values is showing null
RequestBody rb=request().body();
final Map<String,String[]> values=rb.asFormUrlEncoded();
}
What is the way to parse the POST request body?
Much thanks!
Retreive the request body directly as JSON... no need to complicate your life.
public static Result postJson() {
JsonNode rb = request().body().asJson();
//manipulate the result
String textForDBInsertion = rb.get("text").asText(); //retreives the value for the text key as String
Logger.debug("text for insertion: " + textForDBInsertion
+ "JSON from request: " + rb);
return ok(rb);
}
Also, I recommend you use the AdvancedRestClient Chrome plugin for testing. This way you can eliminate from the equation client-side code errors.
Cheers!

Ajax calling a java Rest API

I am having ajax problems that I cannot figure out, and need some help... I am using Spring for my REST api and my ajax calls don't seem to work... I have searched the forums and haven't been able to find an answer:
My java Spring api is as follows:
#Controller
#RequestMapping("api")
public class RecentRestController {
RecentService recentService;
#Autowired
public void PersonRestController(RecentService recentService) {
this.recentService = recentService;
}
/**
* Add recent lake, then get recently viewed lakes and users ordered by timestamp
* #param handle
* #return
*/
#RequestMapping(value = "recent/weather/{auser}/{temp}/{windspeed}/{winddeg}/{laketag}", method = RequestMethod.GET)
#ResponseBody
public RecentlyViewedList getRecentlyViewedLakes(#PathVariable String auser, #PathVariable Integer temp,
#PathVariable Integer windspeed, #PathVariable Integer winddeg, #PathVariable String laketag) {
RecentlyViewedList rvl = recentService.getRecentlyViewedWeather(auser, temp, windspeed, winddeg, laketag);
return rvl;
}
When I use ajax to call this Java REST from ajax it doesn't seem to work. My ajax call looks as follows from html/php:
new $Ajax.Request('http://localhost:8080/server/api/weahter/lake/' + agruments.auser + '/' + arguments.windspeed +'/' + arguments.winddeg + '/' + arguments.laketag, {
type : "GET",
//:url : recenturl,
//cache : false,
async : false,
crossDomain: true,
dataType : 'jsonp',
//data: arguments,
success : function(recent) {
alert("SUCESS");
var i=0;
var lakecount = recent.lake.length;
var usercount = recent.user.length;
alert("lakecount:" + lakecount);
alert("usercount:" + usercount);
},
error : function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {
alert("An error has occurred making the request: " + errorThrown);
},
});
It never seems to work. It never calls my REST api correct.. What am I doing incorrectly?
Something is wrong with how I calling my REST service..
Any help is greatly appreciated..
Thanks in advance.
As you are checking for a #GET request, the most obvious thing to do is to try to hit the API directly from a browser ( type in your URL field
http://localhost:8080/server/api/weahter/lake/' + agruments.auser + '/' + arguments.windspeed +'/' + arguments.winddeg + '/' + arguments.laketag
with the parameters resolved ).
Other thing you should be checking is that your context path is 'server' as that is where the URL is pointing.
Also you have and spelling error in the first parameter of the URL: 'agruments' instead of 'arguments'
Yeah, the request has recent in it. What I cannot figure out is that if I build it manualy:
url : 'http://localhost:8080/server/api/recent/lake/nightstalker/3/3/3/TXFORK'
it works. But when I build it with variables, it does not.

got Validation of viewstate MAC failed when sending post request from google app engine via url fetch service

I have a task to fetch html from a website, before I go to that page I need to log in.
I use a low-level api url fetch service. Here is my code test code:
private String postPage(String loginPageHtml) throws IOException{
String charset = "UTF-8";
Document doc = Jsoup.parse(loginPageHtml);
Iterator<Element> inputHiddensIter = doc.select("form").first().select("input[type=hidden]").iterator();
String paramStr = "";
paramStr += "Username" + "=" + URLEncoder.encode("username", charset) + "&";
paramStr += "Password" + "=" + URLEncoder.encode("password", charset) + "&";
paramStr += "ImageButton1.x" + "=" + URLEncoder.encode("50", charset) + "&";
paramStr += "ImageButton1.y" + "=" + URLEncoder.encode("10", charset) + "&";
while (inputHiddensIter.hasNext()) {
Element ele = inputHiddensIter.next();
String name = ele.attr("name");
String val = ele.attr("value");
paramStr += name + "=" + URLEncoder.encode(val, charset) + "&";
}
URL urlObj = new URL(LOG_IN_PAGE);
URLFetchService fetcher = URLFetchServiceFactory.getURLFetchService();
HTTPRequest request = new HTTPRequest(urlObj, HTTPMethod.POST);
HTTPHeader header = new HTTPHeader("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
HTTPHeader header3 = new HTTPHeader("Content-Language", "en-US");
HTTPHeader header4 = new HTTPHeader("User-Agent", DEFAULT_USER_AGENT);
if(!cookie.isEmpty()){
request.addHeader(new HTTPHeader("Set-Cookie", cookie));
}
request.addHeader(header);
request.addHeader(header3);
request.addHeader(header4);
request.setPayload(paramStr.getBytes());
request.getFetchOptions().setDeadline(30d);
HTTPResponse response = null;
try{
response = fetcher.fetch(request);
byte[] content = response.getContent();
int responseCode = response.getResponseCode();
log.severe("Response Code : " + responseCode);
List<HTTPHeader>headers = response.getHeaders();
for(HTTPHeader h : headers) {
String headerName = h.getName();
if(headerName.equals("Set-Cookie")){
cookie = h.getValue();
}
}
String s = new String(content, "UTF-8");
return s;
}catch (IOException e){
/* ... */
}
return "";
}
Here is my default user agent:
private static final String DEFAULT_USER_AGENT = "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/21.0.1180.83 Safari/537.1";
It works fine on my dev machine, but when I deploy on app engine and test it, I get response code 500 and the following error:
Validation of viewstate MAC failed. If this application is hosted by a Web Farm or cluster, ensure >that configuration specifies the same validationKey and validation algorithm. >AutoGenerate cannot be used in a cluster.
Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please >review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
Exception Details: System.Web.HttpException: Validation of viewstate MAC failed. If this application >is hosted by a Web Farm or cluster, ensure that configuration specifies the same >validationKey and validation algorithm. AutoGenerate cannot be used in a cluster.
It seems some error occur on ASP side.
Is there something wrong with my code or some limitation on app engine?
It looks like you are doing a POST to an aspx page.
When an aspx page receives a POST request it expects some hidden inputs which have an encoded ViewState present - if you browse to the page in question and "View Source" you should see some fields just inside the <form /> tag that look something like this:
<input type="hidden" name="__EVENTTARGET" id="__EVENTTARGET" value="" />
<input type="hidden" name="__EVENTARGUMENT" id="__EVENTARGUMENT" value="" />
<input type="hidden" name="__VIEWSTATE" id="__VIEWSTATE" value="xxxxxxxxx" />
Because you are submitting a POST request without these values present, it's having trouble decoding and validating them (which is what that error means - it can also crop up for other reasons in other scenarios).
There are a couple of possible solutions to this:
1 - If you have access to the code for the site, and the login page doesn't require ViewState, you could try switching it off at the page level within the #Page directive:
<%# Page ViewStateMode="Disabled" .... %>
2 - You could do a double-request
- do a GET request on the login page to retrieve the values for any missing hidden fields
- use those values and include them in your POST
EDIT
Ah yes, from your comment I can see that you're including the hidden form fields already - apologies!
In which case, another possibility is that the login page is on a load balanced environment. Each server in that environment will have a different MachineKey value (which is used to encode/decode the ViewState). You may be reading from one and posting to the other. Some LBs inject ArrowPoint cookies into the response to ensure that you "stick" to the same server between requests.
I can see you're already including a cookie in your POST, but I can't see where it's defined. Is it from the first GET request, or is it a custom cookie? If you haven't tried it already, maybe try using the cookie from the original GET where you're retrieving the login page HTML? Other than that, I'm out of ideas - sorry!
Commonly, when you're trying to emulate a postBack on the asp.net, you need to POST:
preserved from the first request cookies to act on the same session
data fields (login, password)
hidden ones from the first page: __VIEWSTATE, __VIEWSTATEENCRYPTED (even if it's empty!), __EVENTVALIDATION
if you sending some action items, maybe you need to include also hidden fields __EVENTTARGET and __EVENTARGUMENT

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