Reputation: 445
I am working on a Windows app and am having some issues with cookies. Please note that I am working with Windows.Web.Http, not the System namespace HttpClient.
The API I'm working with uses an auth-header for authentication. Basically after a POST to login, I need a way to get the cookies returned and then use those cookies to perform the subsequent API calls. I posted an example of what I currently have, which succeeds. I can see the cookies in the result object. I'm just not entirely sure where to go from here / how to proceed. Thanks! Any ideas?
using MyApi.Interfaces;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using Windows.Web.Http;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using MyApi.Models.Auth;
using MyApi.Models;
namespace MyApi
{
public class MyService
{
private const string MyBaseUrl = "http://api.my.com:3000";
private readonly HttpClient _httpClient = new HttpClient();
public async Task<SignInResponse> AttemptLogin(string username, string password)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(username) || string.IsNullOrEmpty(password))
throw new ArgumentException("Username or password is null or empty");
var uri = new Uri(string.Format("{0}/{1}", MyBaseUrl, "auth/signin"));
var authSignIn = new Models.Auth.SignInRequest();
authSignIn.Email = username;
authSignIn.Password = password;
var myObject = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(authSignIn);
// I see the headers in the result object, but I'm not
// sure the best way to a) get them out and b) shove them into
// all of the next calls
var result = await _httpClient.PostAsync(uri,
new HttpStringContent(myObject.ToString(),
Windows.Storage.Streams.UnicodeEncoding.Utf8,
"application/json"));
var content = await result.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
var successResponse = new SignInResponse();
try
{
successResponse = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<SignInResponse>(content);
}
catch (Exception)
{
var failResponse = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<ErrorResponse>(content);
throw new Exception(failResponse.message);
}
return successResponse;
}
}
}
Upvotes: 3
Views: 1574
Reputation: 74257
Take a look at Flurl. It presents a fluent interface over the Http bits, so you can say something like this to authenticate and reuse the connection with the cookies:
using (var fc = new FlurlClient().EnableCookies())
{
var url = new Url( "http://api.com/endpoint" ) ;
await url
.AppendPathSegment("login")
.WithClient(fc)
.PostUrlEncodedAsync(new { user = "user", pass = "pass" });
var page = await url
.AppendPathSegment("home")
.WithClient(fc)
.GetStringAsync();
// Need to inspect the cookies? FlurlClient exposes them as a dictionary.
var sessionId = fc.Cookies["session_id"].Value;
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 16420
You can use HttpBaseProtocolFilter.CookieManager
, e.g.:
var filter = new HttpBaseProtocolFilter();
var cookieManager = filter.CookieManager;
var uri = new Uri("http://api.my.com:3000");
foreach (var cookie in cookieManager.GetCookies(uri))
{
Debug.WriteLine(cookie.Name);
Debug.WriteLine(cookie.Value);
}
Notice, if the cookies are already in the HttpCookieContainer, the cookies will be automatically added in the next requests to http://api.my.com:3000, and no action is required from your side.
If you want to modify them or delete them, the HttpCookieContainer has methods to do that.
Upvotes: 5