Actually ,I had searched some questions and go to the github. But I'm new ,I cannot understand the example.
I want to create the http server in android so I can access it in PC browser.
I had instance a class extend nanohttpd, but the server just don't work. I don't know why ,my computer and phone are in the same WIFI,uh.....
public class MyHTTPD extends NanoHTTPD {
/**
* Constructs an HTTP server on given port.
*/
public MyHTTPD()throws IOException {
super(8080);
}
@Override
public Response serve( String uri, Method method,
Map<String, String> header, Map<String, String> parms,
Map<String, String> files )
{
System.out.println( method + " '222" + uri + "' " );
String msg = "<html><body><h1>Hello server</h1>\n";
if ( parms.get("username") == null )
msg +=
"<form action='?' method='get'>\n" +
" <p>Your name: <input type='text' name='username'></p>\n" +
"</form>\n";
else
msg += "<p>Hello, " + parms.get("username") + "!</p>";
msg += "</body></html>\n";
return new NanoHTTPD.Response(msg );
}
public static void main( String[] args )
{
try
{
new MyHTTPD();
}
catch( IOException ioe )
{
System.err.println( "Couldn't start server:\n" + ioe );
System.exit( -1 );
}
System.out.println( "Listening on port 8080. Hit Enter to stop.\n" );
try { System.in.read(); } catch( Throwable t ) {
System.out.println("read error");
};
}
}
Your sample code is missing one small detail - you create the server but you never call the "start()" method which kicks it off to listen for incoming connections. In your main() method, you could write
and all would be well, your server would respond the way you hoped it would.
The reason it works that way is twofold: I want the constructor to be a cheap, inexpensive operation, without side-effects. For instance, while unit testing, I call "start()" in the setup and "stop()" in the teardown methods of my jUnit test.
This code working for fine viewing html pages with css class which are in my assesst folders
this will start the server below code for server functions
Android Activities have a lifecycle and do not use a
main()
function.If you want to start and stop the webserver as part of the Activity then you need call start and stop in
onPause
andonResume
, ieAn alternative is to implement the webserver as part of a Service.
In an app I'm working I have a requirement to keep the webserver running even if the user leaves the app. The only way to do this is to start and stop the webserver as part of a long-running Service that is not bound to the Activity. See Vogella's great tutorial on Android Services.
This is the code working for me, but I have different version of NANOHTTPD, I don't have time right now to test out your solution. Here is UploadServer class and Nano class. I return file-upload.htm from sdcard/Discover Control/Web path
NanoHttpd class
NanoHTTPD.java
FILE UPLOAD
file-upload.htm
Hope this helps and enjoy your work.