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I am trying to upload an UTF-8 text file to a server in Blackberry. The upload works great but when I check the file in the server it's an ASCII file and what I need is an UTF-8 file.

This is the code that I use when I create the file:

FileConnection fc = (FileConnection)Connector.open(fileName);
if (!fc.exists()){
    fc.create();
}
long byteOffset = fc.usedSize();
OutputStream outStream = fc.openOutputStream(byteOffset);           
outStream.write(line.getBytes("UTF-8"));
outStream.close();
fc.close();

To send the file I use this:

public void run (){

    httpConnection = null;
    _connectionURL = null;
    String lineEnd = "\r\n";
    String twoHyphens = "--"; 
    String boundary = "*****";  
    int rc = -1;
    OutputStream os = null;

    try {

        _connectionURL = Constants.UPLOAD_URL + getConnectionString();

        httpConnection = (HttpConnection)Connector.open(_connectionURL);
        byte [] postDataBytes = getData();

        httpConnection.setRequestMethod("POST");
        httpConnection.setRequestProperty("Connection", "Keep-Alive"); 
        httpConnection.setRequestProperty("User-Agent", "BlackBerry");
        httpConnection.setRequestProperty("Content-Type", "multipart/form-data;boundary=*****");                        
        httpConnection.setRequestProperty(HttpProtocolConstants.HEADER_CONTENT_LANGUAGE, "en-US");
        httpConnection.setRequestProperty(HttpProtocolConstants.HEADER_CACHE_CONTROL,"no-cache, no-store, no-transform");           

        os = httpConnection.openOutputStream();
        os.write((twoHyphens + boundary + lineEnd).getBytes());
        os.write(("Content-Disposition: form-data; name=\"uploadedfile\";filename=\"" + fileName +"\"" + lineEnd).getBytes());
        os.write(lineEnd.getBytes());
        os.write(postDataBytes);
        os.write(lineEnd.getBytes());
        os.write((twoHyphens + boundary + twoHyphens + lineEnd).getBytes());
        os.flush(); 


        // Response
        rc = httpConnection.getResponseCode();
        InputStream in = httpConnection.openInputStream();
        int ch;
        StringBuffer stringBuffer = new StringBuffer();
        while( ( ch = in.read() ) != -1 ){
            stringBuffer.append( (char)ch );
        }            
        String responseString = stringBuffer.toString();

        ...

    }catch (IOException ioe){
       ...
    }
}

...

private byte[] getData() throws IOException {
    int _c;
    StringBuffer _stringBuffer = new StringBuffer("UTF-8");
    FileConnection fileForUpload = (FileConnection) Connector.open(Constants.FOLDER_FILES+this.fileName, Connector.READ);
    this.fileInputStream = fileForUpload.openDataInputStream();
    this.postData = new URLEncodedPostData("UTF-8", false);
    while( (_c = this.fileInputStream.read()) != -1){
        _stringBuffer.append((char)_c);         
    }
    postData.setData(_stringBuffer);
    byte [] _postData = postData.getBytes();
    fileForUpload.close();
    return _postData;
}

I guess there is something wrong in getData() method or in the httpConnection properties, but i don't know what is it.

Thanks for your help

2 Answers 2

2

In addition to Jon Skeet's answer.

To read byte array from file you can simply use net.rim.device.api.io.IOUtilities:

FileConnection fileForUpload = 
        (FileConnection) Connector.open(path, Connector.READ);
InputStream stream = fileForUpload.openInputStream();
byte[] data = IOUtilities.streamToBytes(stream);
5
  • Thanks Arhimed, I've tried with IOUtilities.streamToBytes() but files are still uploaded in the server in ASCII.
    – esteban
    Jan 4, 2013 at 9:03
  • Well, if you save data to file using String.getBytes("UTF-8"), then data is in correct encoding. If later on device side you manipulate with that data only as a byte array, then encoding does not change and server should get it in correct encoding. It could be a server side issue - are you sure server treats the got binary data correctly? Jan 4, 2013 at 12:55
  • Solved. The problem was: I was testing with a file that contain only ASCII characters, that's why when I used the file -ib command in the server side I always received charset: us-ascii After that, I tried with special characters within the file and the commands result was charset: utf-8. By the way, I mark your answer as correct because the way I get the byte array was wrong and yours correct. Thank you Arhimed.
    – esteban
    Jan 4, 2013 at 15:36
  • Well, actually Jon Skeet's answer deserves solution mark just because he was first who explained to you what's wrong. While mine just shows an easy way to do what he suggested. So feel free to move solution to his answer. Jan 5, 2013 at 9:05
  • +1, because I think IOUtilities.streamToBytes() is really the best solution, for BlackBerry Java ... and also for good sportsmanship :)
    – Nate
    Jan 5, 2013 at 22:15
2

Look at this code, which appears twice:

while( ( ch = in.read() ) != -1 ){
    stringBuffer.append( (char)ch );
}

That's treating each byte as a separate character, effectively in ISO-8859-1.

If you really want to convert the content to text, you should be using an InputStreamReader with an encoding of UTF-8, then ideally reading blocks of characters (rather than one character at a time).

This isn't helping either:

byte [] _postData = postData.getBytes();

That will be using the platform default encoding to convert a string to bytes - that's almost never what you want.

Given that your getData method is trying to read a file as a byte array, you shouldn't be converting it to text at all, IMO. If you know the file length beforehand, you should just create a byte array of the right size and repeatedly call InputStream.read(byte[], int, int), noting the return value to see how far you've read. If you don't, you can repeatedly read into a smallish buffer, then write the data you've just read into a ByteArrayOutputStream which you can later get the byte array from.

Additionally, you don't appear to ever close any of your streams - which you should do in finally statements, so that the streams are closed even if an exception is thrown.

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  • +1 but there is no hole in ISO-8859-1, the 0x80-0x9F range maps to the C1 control characters of the same unicode code point value.
    – Esailija
    Jan 3, 2013 at 15:31
  • @Esailija: Will remove that bit. I'd thought it was an actual hole, but I believe that varies between documents you read :(
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 3, 2013 at 15:32
  • Well according to wikipedia, the one with the holes is ISO 8859-1 (no dash) and the one supplemented with C0 and C1 is ISO-8859-1 (dash after ISO) :P
    – Esailija
    Jan 3, 2013 at 15:35
  • @Esailija: Ah. That's almost certainly where I was confused. (Frankly I don't blame myself too much on this one!)
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 3, 2013 at 15:38
  • @Jon Skeet: +1. I've just posted a simplier way of reading bytes from file on BlackBerry. Jan 3, 2013 at 21:26

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