How to send POST request in JSON using HTTPClient in Android?

AndroidJsonPostHttprequest

Android Problem Overview


I'm trying to figure out how to POST JSON from Android by using HTTPClient. I've been trying to figure this out for a while, I have found plenty of examples online, but I cannot get any of them to work. I believe this is because of my lack of JSON/networking knowledge in general. I know there are plenty of examples out there but could someone point me to an actual tutorial? I'm looking for a step by step process with code and explanation of why you do each step, or of what that step does. It doesn't need to be a complicated, simple will suffice.

Again, I know there are a ton of examples out there, I'm just really looking for an example with an explanation of what exactly is happening and why it is doing that way.

If someone knows about a good Android book on this, then please let me know.

Thanks again for the help @terrance, here is the code I described below

public void shNameVerParams() throws Exception{
	 String path = //removed
	 HashMap  params = new HashMap();
	 
	 params.put(new String("Name"), "Value"); 
	 params.put(new String("Name"), "Value");
	 
	 try {
		HttpClient.SendHttpPost(path, params);
	} catch (Exception e) {
		// TODO Auto-generated catch block
		e.printStackTrace();
	}
 }

Android Solutions


Solution 1 - Android

In this answer I am using an example posted by Justin Grammens.

About JSON

JSON stands for JavaScript Object Notation. In JavaScript properties can be referenced both like this object1.name and like this object['name'];. The example from the article uses this bit of JSON.

The Parts
A fan object with email as a key and [email protected] as a value

{
  fan:
    {
      email : '[email protected]'
    }
}

So the object equivalent would be fan.email; or fan['email'];. Both would have the same value of '[email protected]'.

About HttpClient Request

The following is what our author used to make a HttpClient Request. I do not claim to be an expert at all this so if anyone has a better way to word some of the terminology feel free.

public static HttpResponse makeRequest(String path, Map params) throws Exception 
{
	//instantiates httpclient to make request
	DefaultHttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient();
	
	//url with the post data
	HttpPost httpost = new HttpPost(path);
	
	//convert parameters into JSON object
	JSONObject holder = getJsonObjectFromMap(params);
	
	//passes the results to a string builder/entity
	StringEntity se = new StringEntity(holder.toString());
	
	//sets the post request as the resulting string
	httpost.setEntity(se);
	//sets a request header so the page receving the request
	//will know what to do with it
	httpost.setHeader("Accept", "application/json");
	httpost.setHeader("Content-type", "application/json");
	
	//Handles what is returned from the page 
	ResponseHandler responseHandler = new BasicResponseHandler();
	return httpclient.execute(httpost, responseHandler);
}

Map

If you are not familiar with the Map data structure please take a look at the http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/Map.html">Java Map reference. In short, a map is similar to a dictionary or a hash.

private static JSONObject getJsonObjectFromMap(Map params) throws JSONException {

	//all the passed parameters from the post request
	//iterator used to loop through all the parameters
	//passed in the post request
	Iterator iter = params.entrySet().iterator();
	
	//Stores JSON
	JSONObject holder = new JSONObject();
	
	//using the earlier example your first entry would get email
	//and the inner while would get the value which would be '[email protected]' 
	//{ fan: { email : '[email protected]' } }
	
	//While there is another entry
	while (iter.hasNext()) 
	{
		//gets an entry in the params
		Map.Entry pairs = (Map.Entry)iter.next();
		
		//creates a key for Map
		String key = (String)pairs.getKey();
		
		//Create a new map
		Map m = (Map)pairs.getValue();   
		
		//object for storing Json
		JSONObject data = new JSONObject();
		
		//gets the value
		Iterator iter2 = m.entrySet().iterator();
		while (iter2.hasNext()) 
		{
			Map.Entry pairs2 = (Map.Entry)iter2.next();
			data.put((String)pairs2.getKey(), (String)pairs2.getValue());
		}
		
		//puts email and '[email protected]'  together in map
		holder.put(key, data);
	}
	return holder;
}

Please feel free to comment on any questions that arise about this post or if I have not made something clear or if I have not touched on something that your still confused about... etc whatever pops in your head really.

(I will take down if Justin Grammens does not approve. But if not then thanks Justin for being cool about it.)

Update

I just happend to get a comment about how to use the code and realized that there was a mistake in the return type. The method signature was set to return a string but in this case it wasnt returning anything. I changed the signature to HttpResponse and will refer you to this link on http://thinkandroid.wordpress.com/2009/12/30/getting-response-body-of-httpresponse/">Getting Response Body of HttpResponse the path variable is the url and I updated to fix a mistake in the code.

Solution 2 - Android

Here is an alternative solution to @Terrance's answer. You can easly outsource the conversion. The Gson library does wonderful work converting various data structures into JSON and the other way around.

public static void execute() {
    Map<String, String> comment = new HashMap<String, String>();
    comment.put("subject", "Using the GSON library");
    comment.put("message", "Using libraries is convenient.");
    String json = new GsonBuilder().create().toJson(comment, Map.class);
	makeRequest("http://192.168.0.1:3000/post/77/comments", json);
}

public static HttpResponse makeRequest(String uri, String json) {
	try {
		HttpPost httpPost = new HttpPost(uri);
		httpPost.setEntity(new StringEntity(json));
		httpPost.setHeader("Accept", "application/json");
		httpPost.setHeader("Content-type", "application/json");
		return new DefaultHttpClient().execute(httpPost);
	} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
		e.printStackTrace();
	} catch (ClientProtocolException e) {
		e.printStackTrace();
	} catch (IOException e) {
		e.printStackTrace();
	}
	return null;
}

Similar can be done by using Jackson instead of Gson. I also recommend taking a look at Retrofit which hides a lot of this boilerplate code for you. For more experienced developers I recommend trying out RxAndroid.

Solution 3 - Android

I recommend using this HttpURLConnectioninstead HttpGet. As HttpGet is already deprecated in Android API level 22.

HttpURLConnection httpcon;	
String url = null;
String data = null;
String result = null;
try {
  //Connect
  httpcon = (HttpURLConnection) ((new URL (url).openConnection()));
  httpcon.setDoOutput(true);
  httpcon.setRequestProperty("Content-Type", "application/json");
  httpcon.setRequestProperty("Accept", "application/json");
  httpcon.setRequestMethod("POST");
  httpcon.connect();

  //Write 		
  OutputStream os = httpcon.getOutputStream();
  BufferedWriter writer = new BufferedWriter(new OutputStreamWriter(os, "UTF-8"));
  writer.write(data);
  writer.close();
  os.close();
	      
  //Read 		
  BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(httpcon.getInputStream(),"UTF-8"));

  String line = null; 
  StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();         

  while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {  
    sb.append(line); 
  } 	    

  br.close();  
  result = sb.toString();

} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
	e.printStackTrace();
} catch (IOException e) {
	e.printStackTrace();
} 

Solution 4 - Android

Too much code for this task, checkout this library https://github.com/kodart/Httpzoid Is uses GSON internally and provides API that works with objects. All JSON details are hidden.

Http http = HttpFactory.create(context);
http.get("http://example.com/users")
    .handler(new ResponseHandler<User[]>() {
        @Override
        public void success(User[] users, HttpResponse response) {
        }
    }).execute();

Solution 5 - Android

There are couple of ways to establish HHTP connection and fetch data from a RESTFULL web service. The most recent one is GSON. But before you proceed to GSON you must have some idea of the most traditional way of creating an HTTP Client and perform data communication with a remote server. I have mentioned both the methods to send POST & GET requests using HTTPClient.

/**
 * This method is used to process GET requests to the server.
 * 
 * @param url 
 * @return String
 * @throws IOException
 */
public static String connect(String url) throws IOException {

	HttpGet httpget = new HttpGet(url);
	HttpResponse response;
	HttpParams httpParameters = new BasicHttpParams();
	// Set the timeout in milliseconds until a connection is established.
	// The default value is zero, that means the timeout is not used. 
	int timeoutConnection = 60*1000;
	HttpConnectionParams.setConnectionTimeout(httpParameters, timeoutConnection);
	// Set the default socket timeout (SO_TIMEOUT) 
	// in milliseconds which is the timeout for waiting for data.
	int timeoutSocket = 60*1000;
	
	HttpConnectionParams.setSoTimeout(httpParameters, timeoutSocket);
	HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient(httpParameters);
	try {
		
		response = httpclient.execute(httpget);
		
		HttpEntity entity = response.getEntity();
		if (entity != null) {
			InputStream instream = entity.getContent();
			result = convertStreamToString(instream);
			//instream.close();
		}
	} 
	catch (ClientProtocolException e) {
		Utilities.showDLog("connect","ClientProtocolException:-"+e);
	} catch (IOException e) {
		Utilities.showDLog("connect","IOException:-"+e); 
	}
	return result;
}


 /**
 * This method is used to send POST requests to the server.
 * 
 * @param URL
 * @param paramenter
 * @return result of server response
 */
static public String postHTPPRequest(String URL, String paramenter) {		

	HttpParams httpParameters = new BasicHttpParams();
	// Set the timeout in milliseconds until a connection is established.
	// The default value is zero, that means the timeout is not used. 
	int timeoutConnection = 60*1000;
	HttpConnectionParams.setConnectionTimeout(httpParameters, timeoutConnection);
	// Set the default socket timeout (SO_TIMEOUT) 
	// in milliseconds which is the timeout for waiting for data.
	int timeoutSocket = 60*1000;
	
	HttpConnectionParams.setSoTimeout(httpParameters, timeoutSocket);
	HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient(httpParameters);
	HttpPost httppost = new HttpPost(URL);
	httppost.setHeader("Content-Type", "application/json");
	try {
		if (paramenter != null) {
			StringEntity tmp = null;
			tmp = new StringEntity(paramenter, "UTF-8");
			httppost.setEntity(tmp);
		}
		HttpResponse httpResponse = null;
		httpResponse = httpclient.execute(httppost);
		HttpEntity entity = httpResponse.getEntity();
		if (entity != null) {
			InputStream input = null;
			input = entity.getContent();
			String res = convertStreamToString(input);
			return res;
		}
	} 
	 catch (Exception e) {
		System.out.print(e.toString());
	}
	return null;
}

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questionuser631063View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - AndroidTerranceView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - AndroidJJDView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - AndroidEgisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - AndroidArthurView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - AndroidMike ClarkView Answer on Stackoverflow