54

I am using Mailgun API. There is a section that I need to provide a URL to them, then they are going to HTTP Post some data to me.

I provide this URL (http://test.com/MailGun/Webhook.aspx) to Mailgun, so they can Post data. I have a list of parameter names that they are sending like (recipient,domain, ip,...).

I am not sure how get that posted data in my page. In Webhook.aspx page I tried some code as follows but all of them are empty.

 lblrecipient.text= Request.Form["recipient"];

 lblip.Text= Request.Params["ip"];

 lbldomain.Text = Request.QueryString["domain"];

Not sure what to try to get the posted data?

3
  • You can try using fiddler to trace the post data and see what kind of parameters your page is getting from the request
    – eloycm
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:16
  • Check this out? Request.Form.AllKeys Nov 22, 2013 at 18:25
  • @AhmetKakıcı it is Empty.
    – Alma
    Nov 22, 2013 at 22:26

9 Answers 9

54

This code will list out all the form variables that are being sent in a POST. This way you can see if you have the proper names of the post values.

string[] keys = Request.Form.AllKeys;
for (int i= 0; i < keys.Length; i++) 
{
   Response.Write(keys[i] + ": " + Request.Form[keys[i]] + "<br>");
}
2
  • 6
    @eloycm Yes, fiddler would be fine locally, however it sounds like the POST requests are coming into the server from an external source. Nov 22, 2013 at 19:55
  • This answer is pretty good -- except for the writing the response part -- it does Alma no good if Mailgun get's a list of variables. Jan 31, 2017 at 22:29
47

This code reads the raw input stream from the HTTP request. Use this if the data isn't available in Request.Form or other model bindings or if you need access to the bytes/text as it comes.

using(var reader = new StreamReader(Request.InputStream))
    content = reader.ReadToEnd();
10

You can simply use Request["recipient"] to "read the HTTP values sent by a client during a Web request"

To access data from the QueryString, Form, Cookies, or ServerVariables collections, you can write Request["key"]

Source: MSDN

Update: Summarizing conversation

In order to view the values that MailGun is posting to your site you will need to read them from the web request that MailGun is making, record them somewhere and then display them on your page.

You should have one endpoint where MailGun will send the POST values to and another page that you use to view the recorded values.

It appears that right now you have one page. So when you view this page, and you read the Request values, you are reading the values from YOUR request, not MailGun.

10
  • this Request["recipient"] is empty as well.
    – Alma
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:23
  • the problem is he doesn't know the real names of the params sent to the page
    – eloycm
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:27
  • In that case @James' solution would be helpful
    – Andy T
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:28
  • @eloycm Actually I know the name of the params sent to the page
    – Alma
    Nov 22, 2013 at 21:43
  • From the sounds of it, you have an external service that is sending you data. You probably have a button on the page which causes an event on MailGun. MailGun then hits your URL with some data. Please let me know if this is close to what is happening.
    – Andy T
    Nov 22, 2013 at 22:06
3

You are missing a step. You need to log / store the values on your server (mailgun is a client). Then you need to retrieve those values on your server (your pc with your web browser will be a client). These will be two totally different aspx files (or the same one with different parameters).

aspx page 1 (the one that mailgun has):

var val = Request.Form["recipient"];
var file = new File(filename);
file.write(val);
close(file);

aspx page 2:

var contents = "";
if (File.exists(filename))
  var file = File.open(filename);
  contents = file.readtoend();
  file.close()

Request.write(contents);
1

Use this:

    public void ShowAllPostBackData()
    {
        if (IsPostBack)
        {
            string[] keys = Request.Form.AllKeys;
            Literal ctlAllPostbackData = new Literal();
            ctlAllPostbackData.Text = "<div class='well well-lg' style='border:1px solid black;z-index:99999;position:absolute;'><h3>All postback data:</h3><br />";
            for (int i = 0; i < keys.Length; i++)
            {
                ctlAllPostbackData.Text += "<b>" + keys[i] + "</b>: " + Request[keys[i]] + "<br />";
            }
            ctlAllPostbackData.Text += "</div>";
            this.Controls.Add(ctlAllPostbackData);
        }
    }
0

In the web browser, open up developer console (F12 in Chrome and IE), then open network tab and watch the request and response data. Another option - use Fiddler (http://fiddler2.com/).

When you get to see the POST request as it is being sent to your page, look into query string and headers. You will see whether your data comes in query string or as form - or maybe it is not being sent to your page at all.

UPDATE: sorry, had to look at MailGun APIs first, they do not go through your browser, requests come directly from their server. You'll have to debug and examine all members of Request.Params when you get the POST from MailGun.

9
  • I used F12 and Network tab, I am not seeing any on that parameters here where should look for them?
    – Alma
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:14
  • I don't know about explorer, for sure is not the best tool for web development, I don't see the post parameters there either (I rarely use IE anyway). another good option is firebug on firefox, there you get all the post parameter passed to the page
    – eloycm
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:26
  • Thanks @eloycm, I am installing firefox now.
    – Alma
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:32
  • @eloycm, in firefox, I can see response header and request header, is it the place that I should see the parameters that are posting to this page? I am not seeing any of parameters that I have name of them here :(
    – Alma
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:35
  • in firefox if you expand the request (clicking on the little cross on the left) you will see headers and then the post tabs, there in the post tab you should see a list of parameters
    – eloycm
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:38
0

Try this

string[] keys = Request.Form.AllKeys;
var value = "";
for (int i= 0; i < keys.Length; i++) 
{
   // here you get the name eg test[0].quantity
   // keys[i];
   // to get the value you use
   value = Request.Form[keys[i]];
}
0

In my case because I assigned the post data to the header, this is how I get it:

protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e){
    ...
    postValue = Request.Headers["Key"];

This is how I attached the value and key to the POST:

var request = new NSMutableUrlRequest(url){
    HttpMethod = "POST", 
    Headers = NSDictionary.FromObjectAndKey(FromObject(value), FromObject("key"))
};
webView.LoadRequest(request);
0

You can try to check the 'Request.Form.Keys'. If it will not works well, you can use 'request.inputStream' to get the soap string which will tell you all the request keys.

1
  • These two answers are already covered in previous answers to this question. When answering be sure to provide new answers, ideally with an example of how to use it in the context of the original question.
    – siva.k
    Aug 27, 2021 at 2:03

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