I'm trying to stream a large amount of binary data in JavaScript, accessing the data before the download completes. In most mainstream browsers, I can use the charset=x-user-defined
trick to manually get the raw byte data during the progress event.
In Internet Explorer, however, this trick doesn't work and I'm left with using the VBArray(responseBody).toArray()
method instead, which is painfully slow. However, since I only need to support IE 11 and later, I should be able to make use of IE's MSStream
to get the data progressively. The following code works fine on IE 11 desktop, but not on a Lumia Windows Phone 8.1 device running IE 11 mobile:
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', url, true);
xhr.responseType = 'ms-stream';
xhr.onreadystatechange = function () {
if (xhr.readyState === 3 && xhr.status === 200) {
// reader is an MSStreamReader object
reader.readAsArrayBuffer(xhr.response);
}
};
xhr.send();
On the Windows Phone device, the readyState
never goes past 1 and the status
is 0, indicating an unknown error occurred even though no actual error is thrown.
Does anyone have any idea why this isn't working for me, or maybe a solution to the problem?
readAsArrayBuffer
method pulling theIInputStreamObject
out of theMSStream
viamsDetachStream()
? That's what it shows to do, but I'm not sure if that will completely terminate the rest of the stream and just give you whatever's downloaded currently or not. Are there other methods onMSStream
to check out?MSStreamReader
as described here. Uh... that seems to eliminate what I said earlier. Again, is your URL formed differently between Windows Phone and desktop?url
? Does that resource have browser-detection built in? If so, Windows 8+ and IE10/11 Mobile don't seem to play nice with browser-detection scripts, as far as I've seen from a few cursory Google searches.