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I have looked at many questions regarding this same problem and have tried many proposed solutions without success. The one located here seems the most relevant, as the comment by RedSonic answered why this isn't working.
I am trying to make a POST or PUT request to my server using Java's Apache library.

public static void put(String caseNumber,DefaultHttpClient httpClient)
        throws Exception {
    HttpPut putRequest = new HttpPut(
            "http://localhost:8888/servlet/example1/" + caseNumber);
    putRequest.addHeader("Version", version);
//      putRequest.setHeader("Content-Type", content);
//      putRequest.addHeader(new BasicHeader("ContentType", content));
    putRequest.setHeader("Accept", accept);
    putRequest.setHeader("Date", date);

    List <NameValuePair> nvpsPut = new ArrayList <NameValuePair>();
    nvpsPut.add(new BasicNameValuePair("group", jsonPostGroup));
    putRequest.setEntity(new UrlEncodedFormEntity(nvpsPut));

    HttpResponse response = httpClient.execute(putRequest);

}

I have tried creating a separate entity and setting the entity's content type, then set the entity to the request. I've tried other things as well, but I can't manage to get the request to have the content type that I want to be passed in without the parameters I'm attempting to send over going blank.

Have also tried

HttpPut putRequest = new HttpPut("http://localhost:8888/servlet/example1/" + caseNumber);
putRequest.addHeader("Version", version);
putRequest.setHeader("Content-Type", content);
putRequest.setHeader("Accept", accept);
putRequest.setHeader("Date", date);

BasicHttpParams bhp = new BasicHttpParams();
bhp.setParameter("test", jsonPostGroup);
putRequest.setParams(bhp);

HttpResponse response = httpClient.execute(putRequest);

Log:

BasicClientConnectionManager - Get connection for route {}->http://localhost:8888
DefaultClientConnectionOperator - Connecting to localhost:8888
RequestAddCookies - CookieSpec selected: best-match
RequestAuthCache - Auth cache not set in the context
RequestTargetAuthentication - Target auth state: UNCHALLENGED
RequestProxyAuthentication - Proxy auth state: UNCHALLENGED
DefaultHttpClient - Attempt 1 to execute request
DefaultClientConnection - Sending request: PUT /servlet/example1/000001994 HTTP/1.1
wire - >> "PUT /servlet/example1/000001994 HTTP/1.1[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Version: 1.1[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Content-Type: application/JSON[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Accept: vnd.siren+JSON[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Date: Wed Aug 21 15:30:00 EDT 2013[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Content-Length: 0[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Host: localhost:8888[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "Connection: Keep-Alive[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "User-Agent: Apache-HttpClient/4.2.5 (java 1.5)[\r][\n]"
wire - >> "[\r][\n]"
headers - >> PUT /servlet/example1/000001994 HTTP/1.1
headers - >> Version: 1.1
headers - >> Content-Type: application/JSON
headers - >> Accept: vnd.siren+JSON
headers - >> Date: Wed Aug 21 15:30:00 EDT 2013
headers - >> Content-Length: 0
headers - >> Host: localhost:8888
headers - >> Connection: Keep-Alive
headers - >> User-Agent: Apache-HttpClient/4.2.5 (java 1.5)
wire - << "HTTP/1.1 200 OK[\r][\n]"
wire - << "Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=davwq58qgxr8yvyw7bfybbbv;Path=/[\r][\n]"
wire - << "Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT[\r][\n]"
wire - << "Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1[\r][\n]"
wire - << "Content-Length: 0[\r][\n]"
wire - << "Server: Jetty(9.0.0.v20130308)[\r][\n]"
wire - << "[\r][\n]"
DefaultClientConnection - Receiving response: HTTP/1.1 200 OK
headers - << HTTP/1.1 200 OK
headers - << Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=davwq58qgxr8yvyw7bfybbbv;Path=/
headers - << Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT
headers - << Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1
headers - << Content-Length: 0
headers - << Server: Jetty(9.0.0.v20130308)
ResponseProcessCookies - Cookie accepted: "[version: 0][name: JSESSIONID][value: davwq58qgxr8yvyw7bfybbbv][domain: localhost][path: /][expiry: null]". 
DefaultHttpClient - Connection can be kept alive indefinitely
BasicClientConnectionManager - Releasing connection org.apache.http.impl.conn.ManagedClientConnectionImpl@7842f3a9
BasicClientConnectionManager - Connection can be kept alive indefinitely

Edit: I have found a few other suggestions that I've tried. Such as setting the parameters on the httpclient instead of the request (which doesn't make much sense in this scenario) but I experienced the same issue.

Edit 8/23: I'm still able to pass parameters via the setting the Entity, and giving the entity a name + value pair. However, as mentioned, this hoses the content-type. Any more thoughts before I give up entirely?

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  • First of all, you are overwriting your HttpEntity by calling setEntity() a second time. Request parameters are not an entity. You can use the setParams(HttpParams) method of AbstractHttpMessage (ie. by inheritance HttpPost) to pass request parameters. Aug 21, 2013 at 18:06
  • Sorry, the first setEntity was a leftover when I was trying a bunch of different things. I'll edit that out now. I had tried setParams originally without success. I just attempted again, and will add that code to the original question. Aug 21, 2013 at 18:21
  • What you have in your second code snippet seems like it should work. Try to enable logging and check what is sent and what isn't. See here. Aug 21, 2013 at 18:28
  • I enabled logging, and it doesn't mention the name or the value for the BasicHttpParams. It also mentions that content-length is equal to zero. I don't see anything in the log that says why, but I'll try and figure it out. I tried posting the log, but it formats really poorly. Not sure if you have any suggestions for that. Aug 21, 2013 at 19:35
  • If you edit your code, in the banner above the text box, there are {} code braces. Select your log text and click it. Aug 21, 2013 at 19:50

1 Answer 1

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This is an old question, but shouldn't you be adding all of the headers? Some of the calls are setHeader:

putRequest.addHeader("Version", version);
putRequest.setHeader("Content-Type", content);

Should be:

putRequest.addHeader("Version", version);
putRequest.addHeader("Content-Type", content);
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  • I remember in the case of this API, the headers were desired but not necessary. That actually, providing the headers was breaking the application due to a bug in the underlying language (Business Basic w/Java) the API was written in. I've long since ran way from that! Jul 6, 2017 at 17:06

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