Reputation: 144
In java how do you know whether you have an error stream from a Http(s)connection or if it is an InputStream? The only way I can tell to do it is go for both, check for null and catch any exceptions.
HttpConnection con = (HttpConnection)URL.openConnection();
//Write to output
InputStream in = con.GetInputStream();
//Vs
InputStream error = con.getErrorStream();
How does java determine which stream it has? Is it based solely on response code of the connetion? So if its >=200 and <300 then its inputStream otherwhise its an errorStream?
Thanks.
Upvotes: 4
Views: 3431
Reputation: 10136
HTTP_INTERNAL_ERROR (500) isn't the only response code that can create an error stream, there are many others: 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, etc.
Not only that, but connection.getResponseCode()
may throw an exception if it initiated the connection and the HTTP response status code was an error-class status code. So checking for 500 (HTTP_INTERNAL_ERROR) immediately after connection.getResponseCode()
may actually be unreachable code, depending on how you're accessing connection
.
The strategy I have seen implemented is to use the error stream if an exception was thrown, otherwise use the input stream. The following code provides a basic structural starting point. You'll probably want to add to it.
InputStream responseStream = null;
int responseCode = -1;
IOException exception = null;
try
{
responseCode = connection.getResponseCode();
responseStream = connection.getInputStream();
}
catch(IOException e)
{
exception = e;
responseCode = connection.getResponseCode();
responseStream = connection.getErrorStream();
}
// You can now examine the responseCode, responseStream, and exception variables
// For example:
if (responseStream != null)
{
// Go ahead and examine responseCode, but
// always read the data from the responseStream no matter what
// (This clears the connection for reuse).
// Probably log the exception if it's not null
}
else
{
// This can happen if e.g. a malformed HTTP response was received
// This should be treated as an error. The responseCode variable
// can be examined but should not be trusted to be accurate.
// Probably log the exception if it's not null
}
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 54084
You can do it as following:
InputStream inStream = null;
int responseCode = connection.getResponseCode();
if (responseCode == HttpURLConnection.HTTP_INTERNAL_ERROR) {
inStream = connection.getErrorStream();
}
else{
inStream = connection.getInputStream();
}
The HTTP
return code signifies what is the kind of stream to read back.
Upvotes: 1