My problem is that I am not able to get non-text files to display properly in the browser. In the code for my server, I use a while loop to listen for requests. When a request comes in, I read the headers into a variable headers
. After that, I check if the request is a GET request. If it is, then I check that the file exists and that it is a file and not a directory. Then, I look at the extension of the file to determine the next line in my HTTP response.
pw.print("HTTP/1.1 Status: 200 OK\r\n");
String ext = file.getName().substring( file.getName().lastIndexOf('.') + 1, file.getName().length() );
if(ext.equals("txt"))
{
pw.print("Content-Type: text/plain\r\n\r\n");
}
else if(ext.equals("html"))
{
pw.print("Content-Type: text/html\r\n\r\n");
}
else if(ext.equals("jpg"))
{
pw.print("Content-Type: image/jpeg\r\n\r\n");
}
else if(ext.equals("png"))
{
pw.print("Content-Type: image/png\r\n\r\n");
}
else if(ext.equals("pdf"))
{
pw.print("Content-Type: application/pdf\r\n\r\n");
}
if( !ext.equals("txt") && !ext.equals("html") )
{
ImageInputStream imageStream = ImageIO.createImageInputStream(file);
BufferedImage bufferedImage = ImageIO.read(file);
ImageIO.write(bufferedImage, ext, socket.getOutputStream());
}
Now, as far as I know once I get into the last conditional (I'm requesting localhost:port/my_png.png
) then the content should be written to the socket and, because I told it what its Content-Type
should be, the browser should be able to interpret that file. Unfortunately, that is not happening. I am getting text output in the browser that are bytes. My output looks something like this:
‰PNG
���
IHDR���i���`���‘ïË¥��%IDATxÚíœ=h#×úÆ]ÜBE
Does anyone know why I'm having this problem?
socket
the connection to the browser? if so, then it seems that you're not writing the headers before the body. Can you post a bit more of code?socket
is the connection to the browser. But, I'm writing the end of the headers in the top conditionals before I output the body in the last conditional.pw
? there's something here that doesn't look Ok... anyway, try flushing:pw.flush()
before writing tosocket