Apache HttpClient making multipart form post

JavaMultipartform DataApache Httpclient-4.x

Java Problem Overview


I'm pretty green to HttpClient and I'm finding the lack of (and or blatantly incorrect) documentation extremely frustrating. I'm trying to implement the following post (listed below) with Apache Http Client, but have no idea how to actually do it. I'm going to bury myself in documentation for the next week, but perhaps more experienced HttpClient coders could get me an answer sooner.

Post:

Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=---------------------------1294919323195
Content-Length: 502
-----------------------------1294919323195
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="number"

5555555555
-----------------------------1294919323195
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="clip"

rickroll
-----------------------------1294919323195
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="upload_file"; filename=""
Content-Type: application/octet-stream


-----------------------------1294919323195
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="tos"

agree
-----------------------------1294919323195--

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

Use MultipartEntityBuilder from the HttpMime library to perform the request you want.

In my project I do that this way:

HttpEntity entity = MultipartEntityBuilder
    .create()
    .addTextBody("number", "5555555555")
    .addTextBody("clip", "rickroll")
    .addBinaryBody("upload_file", new File(filePath), ContentType.APPLICATION_OCTET_STREAM, "filename")
    .addTextBody("tos", "agree")
    .build();

HttpPost httpPost = new HttpPost("http://some-web-site");
httpPost.setEntity(entity);
HttpResponse response = httpClient.execute(httpPost);
HttpEntity result = response.getEntity();

Hope this will help.

(Updated this post to use MultipartEntityBuilder instead of deprecated MultipartEntity, using @mtomy code as the example)

Solution 2 - Java

> MultipartEntity now shows up as deprecated. I am using apache > httpclient 4.3.3 - does anyone know what we are supposed to use > instead? I find the google searches to be so full of MultipartEntity > examples I can't find anything. – vextorspace Mar 31 '14 at 20:36

Here is the sample code in HttpClient 4.3.x

http://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-client-4.3.x/httpmime/examples/org/apache/http/examples/entity/mime/ClientMultipartFormPost.java

import org.apache.http.entity.mime.MultipartEntityBuilder;

HttpPost httppost = new HttpPost("http://localhost:8080" +
        "/servlets-examples/servlet/RequestInfoExample");

FileBody bin = new FileBody(new File(args[0]));
StringBody comment = new StringBody("A binary file of some kind", ContentType.TEXT_PLAIN);

HttpEntity reqEntity = MultipartEntityBuilder.create()
        .addPart("bin", bin)
        .addPart("comment", comment)
        .build();


httppost.setEntity(reqEntity);

To use the class MultipartEntityBuilder, you need httpmime, which is a sub project of HttpClient

HttpClient 4.3.x:

http://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-client-4.3.x/index.html

httpmime 4.3.x:

http://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-client-4.3.x/httpmime/dependency-info.html

Solution 3 - Java

if use org.apache.commons.httpclient.HttpClient package, maybe that can help you!

    HttpConnectionManager httpConnectionManager = new MultiThreadedHttpConnectionManager();
    //here should set HttpConnectionManagerParams but not important for you
    HttpClient httpClient = new HttpClient(httpConnectionManager);

    PostMethod postMethod = new PostMethod("http://localhost/media");

    FilePart filePart = new FilePart("file", new File(filepath));
    StringPart typePart = new StringPart("type", fileContent.getType(), "utf-8");
    StringPart fileNamePart = new StringPart("fileName", fileContent.getFileName(), "utf-8");
    StringPart timestampPart = new StringPart("timestamp", ""+fileContent.getTimestamp(),"utf-8");
    Part[] parts = { typePart, fileNamePart, timestampPart, filePart };
    
    MultipartRequestEntity multipartRequestEntity = new MultipartRequestEntity(parts, postMethod.getParams());
    postMethod.setRequestEntity(multipartRequestEntity);
    httpClient.executeMethod(postMethod);
    String responseStr = postMethod.getResponseBodyAsString();

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionRussView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavamtomyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavaLi YingView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavaAlps1992View Answer on Stackoverflow