edit: Its leaning into HttpListener at this point.. It might also have to be done via Sockets + webclient or all sockets You have to make a GET request to retrieve the request headers, that's about all... Sockets also can allow the server to PUSH things to the clients without having needed a request, which can't be done via webclients*
What i'm looking to do is type in a url to a website login server: college campus, email, forums, other things you'd need daily and create a working login for them. Since each server can vary, request types change: (ie): //castRequest.ServicePoint.Expect100Continue = false; //castRequest.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
how would these necessary changes be found from a C# client rather than manually laboring through packets and other harsh methods?
Here we go... - ok you open a site - no problem - you grab some login tags from the html, easy enough.. - now where i'm at: where you try to login - sending a user/pw isn't just a post of those two things - nor is just getting to the page sometimes either - there are http credentials, network credentials, and security credentials + USER/PW credentials
the html user/pw inputs are easy enough to parse out: input type="password" name="password" id="password" size="15" value="">, back to the question of ---> how would you connect and determine all requests that the server wants?
How would i go about analyzing and turning these requests on/off per-request & also how would i grab the data from the network: "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"? I'm also finding that this doesn't always return the same # of cookies that i'll get via certain browsers or other systems. WHY???
Code snippet that will be necessary://BEGIN
usually these sites have cookies enabled, so you use a cookie enabled WebClient:
namespace watcher
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
//throw in a function create a cookie container:
void startRequest(){
CookieContainer cookieJar = new CookieContainer();
HTTP http = new HTTP(cookieJar);
}
public class HTTP : WebClient
{
public HTTP()
: this(new CookieContainer())
{ }
public HTTP(CookieContainer c)
{
CookieContainer = c;
}
public CookieContainer CookieContainer { get; set; }
protected override WebRequest GetWebRequest(Uri address)
{
WebRequest request = base.GetWebRequest(address);
var castRequest = request as HttpWebRequest;
if (castRequest != null)
{
castRequest.CookieContainer = CookieContainer;
//castRequest.ServicePoint.Expect100Continue = false;
//castRequest.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
}
return request;
}
}
}