I'm a little confused. I'm trying to post to my web service in an async manner, ideally I want to start the request, show a loading spinner on the UI and then when the async request finishes process the response and either show an error if there is one, or do another operation with the result.
Here is my code, I call the request here and pass some data in.
private void SignInExecute()
{
if (Username == null || Password == null)
{
LoginOutput = "Please provide a username or password.";
}
else
{
this.webService.SendLoginRequest("http://localhost:3000/client_sessions", "username=" + Username + "&password=" + Password);
}
}
And here is the actual web request code:
public void SendLoginRequest(string url, string postdata)
{
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(url);
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
request.Accept = "application/json";
byte[] byteArray = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(postdata);
request.CookieContainer = new CookieContainer();
request.ContentLength = byteArray.Length;
Stream dataStream = request.GetRequestStream();
dataStream.Write(byteArray, 0, byteArray.Length);
dataStream.Close();
((HttpWebRequest)request).KeepAlive = false;
request.BeginGetResponse(new AsyncCallback(GetLoginResponseCallback), request);
}
private static void GetLoginResponseCallback(IAsyncResult asynchronousResult)
{
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)asynchronousResult.AsyncState;
// End the operation
HttpWebResponse response = (HttpWebResponse)request.EndGetResponse(asynchronousResult);
Stream streamResponse = response.GetResponseStream();
StreamReader streamRead = new StreamReader(streamResponse);
string responseString = streamRead.ReadToEnd();
Console.WriteLine(responseString);
// Close the stream object
streamResponse.Close();
streamRead.Close();
response.Close();
}
So to sum up. I want to be able to return the response back to the object which originally gave the call for the web request to start. Any help?
You need to tell the
BeginGetResponse
to go back to the same context in which it was called viaSynchronizationContext.Current
. Something like this (the code does not have proper error checking, so you should think about that properly) (Also, Platinum Azure is correct that you should use ausing
to let your streams close properly (and guaranteed):In your SendLoginRequest:
The getresponse code:
To implement your UI processing
Now, I would test this out first, though. My understanding of Microsoft's implementation of event driven async was that the response was context-aware, and knew which context to return to. So, before jumping to the assumption that you are not on the same context, test it out by trying to update the UI (this will cause a thread context exception if you are not on the calling (UI) thread)