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How do I call a url in order to process the results?

I have a stand-alone reporting servlet which I link to for reports. I want to email these reports now, if I were doing this in the browser, I could just use an xhttprequest, and process the results - I basically want to do the same thing in Java, but I'm not sure how to go about it.

UPDATE: I'm looking to get a file back from the url (whether that be a pdf or html etc).

UPDATE: This will be running purely on the server - there is no request that triggers the emailing, rather it is a scheduled email.

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3 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check
public byte[] download(URL url) throws IOException {
    URLConnection uc = url.openConnection();
    int len = uc.getContentLength();
    InputStream is = new BufferedInputStream(uc.getInputStream());
    try {
        byte[] data = new byte[len];
        int offset = 0;
        while (offset < len) {
            int read = is.read(data, offset, data.length - offset);
            if (read < 0) {
                break;
            }
          offset += read;
        }
        if (offset < len) {
            throw new IOException(
                String.format("Read %d bytes; expected %d", offset, len));
        }
        return data;
    } finally {
        is.close();
    }
}

Edit: Cleaned up the code.

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Hi Albert, thanks for that - I will try it out now. – RodeoClown Oct 27 '08 at 0:35
vote up 1 vote down

If the intention is to run another resource while your servlet is executing with out transferring control to the other resource you can try using include(request, response).

RequestDispatcher dispatcher =
   getServletContext().getRequestDispatcher("/url of other resource");
if (dispatcher != null)
   dispatcher.include(request, response);
}

You may put this on a servlet and the result of the other resource is included on your servlet.

EDIT: Since you are looking to get a file back then this solution works for that too.

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Thanks Vincent. It doesn't look like that will quite meet what I am looking for - I'm not looking to include anything in the response. There is no response in this instance (it is a scheduled task that runs purely server-side). – RodeoClown Oct 27 '08 at 0:31
vote up 1 vote down

Check out the URL and URLConnection classes. Here's some documentation: http://www.exampledepot.com/egs/java.net/Post.html

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Thanks for that, checking out now. – RodeoClown Oct 27 '08 at 0:06

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