Using the following code:
HttpListener listener = new HttpListener();
//listener.Prefixes.Add("http://*:80/");
listener.Prefixes.Add("http://*:8080/");
listener.Prefixes.Add("http://*:8081/");
listener.Prefixes.Add("http://*:8082/");
listener.Start();
HttpListenerContext context = listener.GetContext();
HttpListenerRequest request = context.Request;
The program hangs on the GetContext();
despite loading http (not https) pages in IE and Firefox.
When I uncomment the first line I get the error:
Failed to listen on prefix 'http://*:80/' because it conflicts with an
existing registration on the machine.
So how do I listen to a browser's requests?
@L.B I want to write a "proxy"
Don't reinvent the wheel and just use the FiddlerCore
public class HttpProxy : IDisposable
{
public HttpProxy()
{
Fiddler.FiddlerApplication.BeforeRequest += FiddlerApplication_BeforeRequest;
Fiddler.FiddlerApplication.Startup(8764, true, true);
}
void FiddlerApplication_BeforeRequest(Fiddler.Session oSession)
{
Console.WriteLine(String.Format("REQ: {0}", oSession.url));
}
public void Dispose()
{
Fiddler.FiddlerApplication.Shutdown();
}
}
EDIT
You can start with this rectangular wheel :)
void SniffPort80()
{
byte[] input = new byte[] { 1 };
Socket socket = new Socket(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, SocketType.Raw, ProtocolType.IP);
socket.Bind(new IPEndPoint(IPAddress.Broadcast, 80));
socket.IOControl(IOControlCode.ReceiveAll, input, null);
byte[] buffer = new byte[0x10000];
Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
{
while (true)
{
int len = socket.Receive(buffer);
if (len <= 40) continue; //Poor man's check for TCP payload
string bin = Encoding.UTF8.GetString(buffer, 0, len); //Don't trust to this line. Encoding may be different :) even it can contain binary data like images, videos etc.
Console.WriteLine(bin);
}
});
}
this port is probably being used...
run netstat -ano on the command line, youll see list of the ports that are being used and the their process ids.
I dont know, why the GetContext();
hangs, because there is too less information about what happens with the listerner variable, but the problem with port 80 usually is caused by Skype, because it uses port 80 by default. To fix that, open Skype's preferences, go to advanced->connection and uncheck "Use Port 80 and 443 as an alternative for incoming Connections".
I would consider looking into this package http://www.nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.AspNet.WebApi.OwinSelfHost/
It uses HttpListener under the covers and with the WebApi HttpMessageHandler it is very easy to create a proxy.
It hangs because GetContext() is waiting for a request to be received, as said in its documentation:
This method blocks while waiting for an incoming request. If you want incoming requests to be processed asynchronously (on separate threads) so that your application does not block, use the BeginGetContext method.
For more info see: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.net.httplistener.getcontext(v=vs.110).aspx
Using Asynchronous model tends to be complex, another alternative is running all that code in a different Thread but it depends on your goals.
Replace *
in your prefixes with +
listener.Prefixes.Add("http://+:8080/");