161

How can I use HttpWebRequest (.NET, C#) asynchronously?

4

10 Answers 10

127

Use HttpWebRequest.BeginGetResponse()

HttpWebRequest webRequest;

void StartWebRequest()
{
    webRequest.BeginGetResponse(new AsyncCallback(FinishWebRequest), null);
}

void FinishWebRequest(IAsyncResult result)
{
    webRequest.EndGetResponse(result);
}

The callback function is called when the asynchronous operation is complete. You need to at least call EndGetResponse() from this function.

5
  • 17
    BeginGetResponse is not that useful for async usage. It seems to block while trying to contact the resource. Try unplugging your network cable or giving it a malformed uri, and then running this code. Instead you probably need to run GetResponse on a second thread you provide.
    – Ash
    Oct 21, 2012 at 3:52
  • 2
    @AshleyHenderson - Could you please provide me a sample?
    – Tohid
    Nov 14, 2012 at 14:28
  • 1
    @Tohid here is a full class with sample I've used with Unity3D.
    – cregox
    May 27, 2013 at 23:17
  • 3
    You should add webRequest.Proxy = null to speed up the request dramatically.
    – Trontor
    Oct 30, 2013 at 10:55
  • C# throws an error telling me that this is an obsolete class
    – AleX_
    Aug 3, 2017 at 14:29
71

By far the easiest way is by using TaskFactory.FromAsync from the TPL. It's literally a couple of lines of code when used in conjunction with the new async/await keywords:

var request = WebRequest.Create("http://www.stackoverflow.com");
var response = (HttpWebResponse) await Task.Factory
    .FromAsync<WebResponse>(request.BeginGetResponse,
                            request.EndGetResponse,
                            null);
Debug.Assert(response.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.OK);

If you can't use the C#5 compiler then the above can be accomplished using the Task.ContinueWith method:

Task.Factory.FromAsync<WebResponse>(request.BeginGetResponse,
                                    request.EndGetResponse,
                                    null)
    .ContinueWith(task =>
    {
        var response = (HttpWebResponse) task.Result;
        Debug.Assert(response.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.OK);
    });
2
67

Considering the answer:

HttpWebRequest webRequest;

void StartWebRequest()
{
    webRequest.BeginGetResponse(new AsyncCallback(FinishWebRequest), null);
}

void FinishWebRequest(IAsyncResult result)
{
    webRequest.EndGetResponse(result);
}

You could send the request pointer or any other object like this:

void StartWebRequest()
{
    HttpWebRequest webRequest = ...;
    webRequest.BeginGetResponse(new AsyncCallback(FinishWebRequest), webRequest);
}

void FinishWebRequest(IAsyncResult result)
{
    HttpWebResponse response = (result.AsyncState as HttpWebRequest).EndGetResponse(result) as HttpWebResponse;
}

Greetings

1
  • 7
    +1 for the option that doesn't over-scope the 'request' variable, but you could have made a cast instead of using "as" keyword. An InvalidCastException would be thrown instead of a confuse NullReferenceException Jun 30, 2012 at 20:38
64

Everyone so far has been wrong, because BeginGetResponse() does some work on the current thread. From the documentation:

The BeginGetResponse method requires some synchronous setup tasks to complete (DNS resolution, proxy detection, and TCP socket connection, for example) before this method becomes asynchronous. As a result, this method should never be called on a user interface (UI) thread because it might take considerable time (up to several minutes depending on network settings) to complete the initial synchronous setup tasks before an exception for an error is thrown or the method succeeds.

So to do this right:

void DoWithResponse(HttpWebRequest request, Action<HttpWebResponse> responseAction)
{
    Action wrapperAction = () =>
    {
        request.BeginGetResponse(new AsyncCallback((iar) =>
        {
            var response = (HttpWebResponse)((HttpWebRequest)iar.AsyncState).EndGetResponse(iar);
            responseAction(response);
        }), request);
    };
    wrapperAction.BeginInvoke(new AsyncCallback((iar) =>
    {
        var action = (Action)iar.AsyncState;
        action.EndInvoke(iar);
    }), wrapperAction);
}

You can then do what you need to with the response. For example:

HttpWebRequest request;
// init your request...then:
DoWithResponse(request, (response) => {
    var body = new StreamReader(response.GetResponseStream()).ReadToEnd();
    Console.Write(body);
});
5
  • 2
    Could you not just call the GetResponseAsync method of the HttpWebRequest using await (assuming you made your function async)? I've very new to C# so this may be complete jibberish...
    – Brad
    Feb 20, 2013 at 23:17
  • GetResponseAsync looks good, though you'll need .NET 4.5 (currently beta).
    – Isak
    Feb 21, 2013 at 17:23
  • 16
    Jesus. That is some ugly code. Why can't async code be readable? May 14, 2013 at 1:25
  • Why do you need request.BeginGetResponse()? Why wrapperAction.BeginInvoke() does not suffice?
    – Igor Gatis
    Aug 21, 2015 at 0:41
  • 2
    @Gatis There are two levels of asynchronous calls - wrapperAction.BeginInvoke() is the first asynchronous call to the lambda expression which calls request.BeginGetResponse(), which is the second asynchronous call. As Isak points out, BeginGetResponse() requires some synchronous setup, which is why he wraps it in an additional asynchronous call. Nov 11, 2015 at 17:12
9
public static async Task<byte[]> GetBytesAsync(string url) {
    var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(url);
    using (var response = await request.GetResponseAsync())
    using (var content = new MemoryStream())
    using (var responseStream = response.GetResponseStream()) {
        await responseStream.CopyToAsync(content);
        return content.ToArray();
    }
}

public static async Task<string> GetStringAsync(string url) {
    var bytes = await GetBytesAsync(url);
    return Encoding.UTF8.GetString(bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
}
0
7

I ended up using BackgroundWorker, it is definitely asynchronous unlike some of the above solutions, it handles returning to the GUI thread for you, and it is very easy to understand.

It is also very easy to handle exceptions, as they end up in the RunWorkerCompleted method, but make sure you read this: Unhandled exceptions in BackgroundWorker

I used WebClient but obviously you could use HttpWebRequest.GetResponse if you wanted.

var worker = new BackgroundWorker();

worker.DoWork += (sender, args) => {
    args.Result = new WebClient().DownloadString(settings.test_url);
};

worker.RunWorkerCompleted += (sender, e) => {
    if (e.Error != null) {
        connectivityLabel.Text = "Error: " + e.Error.Message;
    } else {
        connectivityLabel.Text = "Connectivity OK";
        Log.d("result:" + e.Result);
    }
};

connectivityLabel.Text = "Testing Connectivity";
worker.RunWorkerAsync();
6

.NET has changed since many of these answers were posted, and I'd like to provide a more up-to-date answer. Use an async method to start a Task that will run on a background thread:

private async Task<String> MakeRequestAsync(String url)
{    
    String responseText = await Task.Run(() =>
    {
        try
        {
            HttpWebRequest request = WebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest;
            WebResponse response = request.GetResponse();            
            Stream responseStream = response.GetResponseStream();
            return new StreamReader(responseStream).ReadToEnd();            
        }
        catch (Exception e)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Error: " + e.Message);
        }
        return null;
    });

    return responseText;
}

To use the async method:

String response = await MakeRequestAsync("http://example.com/");

Update:

This solution does not work for UWP apps which use WebRequest.GetResponseAsync() instead of WebRequest.GetResponse(), and it does not call the Dispose() methods where appropriate. @dragansr has a good alternative solution that addresses these issues.

10
  • 1
    Thank you ! Have been trying to find an async example, lots of examples using old approach which is over complex.
    – WDUK
    Nov 24, 2017 at 5:40
  • Will this not block a thread for each response? it seems quite a bit different to e.g. learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/parallel-programming/… Jan 11, 2018 at 15:11
  • @PeteKirkham A background thread is doing the request, not the UI thread. The goal is to avoid blocking the UI thread. Any method you choose to make a request will block the thread making the request. The Microsoft example you refer to is trying to make multiple requests, but they are still creating a Task (a background thread) for the requests.
    – tronman
    Jan 12, 2018 at 16:07
  • 3
    To be clear, this is 100% synchronous/blocking code. To use async, WebRequest.GetResponseAsync() and StreamReader.ReadToEndAync() need to be used and awaited. Mar 11, 2018 at 22:02
  • 4
    @tronman Running blocking methods in a Task when async equivalents are available is a highly discouraged anti-pattern. While it does unblock the calling thread, it does nothing for scale for web hosting scenarios since you're just moving the work to another thread rather than using IO completion ports to achieve the asynchrony. Mar 13, 2018 at 19:17
3
public void GetResponseAsync (HttpWebRequest request, Action<HttpWebResponse> gotResponse)
    {
        if (request != null) { 
            request.BeginGetRequestStream ((r) => {
                try { // there's a try/catch here because execution path is different from invokation one, exception here may cause a crash
                    HttpWebResponse response = request.EndGetResponse (r);
                    if (gotResponse != null) 
                        gotResponse (response);
                } catch (Exception x) {
                    Console.WriteLine ("Unable to get response for '" + request.RequestUri + "' Err: " + x);
                }
            }, null);
        } 
    }
0

Follow up to the @Isak 's answer, which is very good. Nonetheless it's biggest flaw is that it will only call the responseAction if the response has status 200-299. The best way to fix this is:

private void DoWithResponseAsync(HttpWebRequest request, Action<HttpWebResponse> responseAction)
{
    Action wrapperAction = () =>
    {
        request.BeginGetResponse(new AsyncCallback((iar) =>
        {
            HttpWebResponse response;
            try
            {
                response = (HttpWebResponse)((HttpWebRequest)iar.AsyncState).EndGetResponse(iar);
            }
            catch (WebException ex)
            {
                // It needs to be done like this in order to read responses with error status:
                response = ex.Response as HttpWebResponse;
            }
            responseAction(response);
        }), request);
    };
    wrapperAction.BeginInvoke(new AsyncCallback((iar) =>
    {
        var action = (Action)iar.AsyncState;
        action.EndInvoke(iar);
    }), wrapperAction);
}

And then as @Isak follows:

HttpWebRequest request;
// init your request...then:
DoWithResponse(request, (response) => {
    var body = new StreamReader(response.GetResponseStream()).ReadToEnd();
    Console.Write(body);
});
-1

I've been using this for async UWR, hopefully it helps someone

    string uri = "http://some.place.online";

    using (UnityWebRequest uwr = UnityWebRequest.Get(uri))
    {
        var asyncOp = uwr.SendWebRequest();
        while (asyncOp.isDone == false) await Task.Delay(1000 / 30); // 30 hertz

        if(uwr.result == UnityWebRequest.Result.Success) return uwr.downloadHandler.text;
        Debug.LogError(uwr.error);
    }

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