57

i have a file downloader function:

        HttpClientHandler aHandler = new HttpClientHandler();
        aHandler.ClientCertificateOptions = ClientCertificateOption.Automatic;
        HttpClient aClient = new HttpClient(aHandler);
        aClient.DefaultRequestHeaders.ExpectContinue = false;
        HttpResponseMessage response = await aClient.GetAsync(url);
        InMemoryRandomAccessStream randomAccessStream = new InMemoryRandomAccessStream();

        // To save downloaded image to local storage
        var imageFile = await ApplicationData.Current.LocalFolder.CreateFileAsync(
        filename, CreationCollisionOption.ReplaceExisting);
        var fs = await imageFile.OpenAsync(FileAccessMode.ReadWrite);
        DataWriter writer = new DataWriter(fs.GetOutputStreamAt(0));

        writer.WriteBytes(await response.Content.ReadAsByteArrayAsync());

        await writer.StoreAsync();
        //current.image.SetSource(randomAccessStream);
        writer.DetachStream();
        await fs.FlushAsync();

How can i realize progress bar functionality? Maybe i can get the writers bytes written so far? Or something?

P.S. I cant use DownloadOperation(Background transferring) because data from server requests certificate - and this functionality doesn't exist in DownloadOperations.

4
  • What about Windows.Web.Http.HttpClient. That one supports progress.
    – kiewic
    Dec 18, 2013 at 17:07
  • 5
    Is Windows.Web.Http.HttpClient available on the desktop yet? I thought it was just for windows store apps. Which I've never actually seen anyone use in real life.
    – thund
    Jan 15, 2014 at 1:57
  • Is Windows.Web.Http.HttpClient can be used in ASP.Net?
    – tatigo
    Mar 3, 2015 at 17:39
  • this code example is exclusive for android / xamarin? Jun 12, 2019 at 16:53

11 Answers 11

57

From .Net 4.5 onwards: Use IProgress<T>

Since .Net 4.5 you can handle asynchronous progress reporting with the IProgress<T> interface. You can write an extension method for downloading files using the HttpClient that can be called like this where progress is the implementation of IProgress<float> for your progress bar or other UI stuff:

// Seting up the http client used to download the data
using (var client = new HttpClient()) {
    client.Timeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5);

    // Create a file stream to store the downloaded data.
    // This really can be any type of writeable stream.
    using (var file = new FileStream(filePath, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None)) {

        // Use the custom extension method below to download the data.
        // The passed progress-instance will receive the download status updates.
        await client.DownloadAsync(DownloadUrl, file, progress, cancellationToken);
    }
}

Implementation

The code for this extension method looks like this. Note that this extension depends on another extension for handling asynchronous stream copying with progress reporting.

public static class HttpClientExtensions
{
    public static async Task DownloadAsync(this HttpClient client, string requestUri, Stream destination, IProgress<float> progress = null, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default) {
        // Get the http headers first to examine the content length
        using (var response = await client.GetAsync(requestUri, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead)) {
            var contentLength = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;

            using (var download = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync()) {

                // Ignore progress reporting when no progress reporter was 
                // passed or when the content length is unknown
                if (progress == null || !contentLength.HasValue) {
                    await download.CopyToAsync(destination);
                    return;
                }

                // Convert absolute progress (bytes downloaded) into relative progress (0% - 100%)
                var relativeProgress = new Progress<long>(totalBytes => progress.Report((float)totalBytes / contentLength.Value));
                // Use extension method to report progress while downloading
                await download.CopyToAsync(destination, 81920, relativeProgress, cancellationToken);
                progress.Report(1);
            }
        }
    }
}

With stream extension for the real progress reporting:

public static class StreamExtensions
{
    public static async Task CopyToAsync(this Stream source, Stream destination, int bufferSize, IProgress<long> progress = null, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default) {
        if (source == null)
            throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(source));
        if (!source.CanRead)
            throw new ArgumentException("Has to be readable", nameof(source));
        if (destination == null)
            throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(destination));
        if (!destination.CanWrite)
            throw new ArgumentException("Has to be writable", nameof(destination));
        if (bufferSize < 0)
            throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException(nameof(bufferSize));

        var buffer = new byte[bufferSize];
        long totalBytesRead = 0;
        int bytesRead;
        while ((bytesRead = await source.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length, cancellationToken).ConfigureAwait(false)) != 0) {
            await destination.WriteAsync(buffer, 0, bytesRead, cancellationToken).ConfigureAwait(false);
            totalBytesRead += bytesRead;
            progress?.Report(totalBytesRead);
        }
    }
}
5
  • This doesn't allow to add a cerrificate
    – Developer
    Sep 29, 2017 at 22:58
  • 5
    Create the HttpClient using a HttpClientHandler with correct certificate options applied like you did in your question
    – Bruno Zell
    Sep 29, 2017 at 23:01
  • 1
    Great answer. The only modification I made was adding the cancellationToken to the GetAsync and CopyToAsync (non-progress support) calls inside your HttpClientExtensions DownloadAsync method. Feb 7, 2020 at 4:33
  • 1
    There is a much simpler way to do this: stackoverflow.com/a/72481872/184746
    – caesay
    Jun 2, 2022 at 20:18
  • I had a the problem that progress.Report was firing to often slowing down my app, this helped me: stackoverflow.com/a/19661381/11957956 Jan 11 at 13:24
50

Here's a self-contained class that'll do the download, and report back the progress percentage, based on code from TheBlueSky on this SO answer, and eriksendc on this GitHub comment.

public class HttpClientDownloadWithProgress : IDisposable
{
    private readonly string _downloadUrl;
    private readonly string _destinationFilePath;

    private HttpClient _httpClient;

    public delegate void ProgressChangedHandler(long? totalFileSize, long totalBytesDownloaded, double? progressPercentage);

    public event ProgressChangedHandler ProgressChanged;

    public HttpClientDownloadWithProgress(string downloadUrl, string destinationFilePath)
    {
        _downloadUrl = downloadUrl;
        _destinationFilePath = destinationFilePath;
    }

    public async Task StartDownload()
    {
        _httpClient = new HttpClient { Timeout = TimeSpan.FromDays(1) };

        using (var response = await _httpClient.GetAsync(_downloadUrl, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead))
            await DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(response);
    }

    private async Task DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(HttpResponseMessage response)
    {
        response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();

        var totalBytes = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;

        using (var contentStream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync())
            await ProcessContentStream(totalBytes, contentStream);
    }

    private async Task ProcessContentStream(long? totalDownloadSize, Stream contentStream)
    {
        var totalBytesRead = 0L;
        var readCount = 0L;
        var buffer = new byte[8192];
        var isMoreToRead = true;

        using (var fileStream = new FileStream(_destinationFilePath, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None, 8192, true))
        {
            do
            {
                var bytesRead = await contentStream.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
                if (bytesRead == 0)
                {
                    isMoreToRead = false;
                    TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
                    continue;
                }

                await fileStream.WriteAsync(buffer, 0, bytesRead);

                totalBytesRead += bytesRead;
                readCount += 1;

                if (readCount % 100 == 0)
                    TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
            }
            while (isMoreToRead);
        }
    }

    private void TriggerProgressChanged(long? totalDownloadSize, long totalBytesRead)
    {
        if (ProgressChanged == null)
            return;

        double? progressPercentage = null;
        if (totalDownloadSize.HasValue)
            progressPercentage = Math.Round((double)totalBytesRead / totalDownloadSize.Value * 100, 2);

        ProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead, progressPercentage);
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        _httpClient?.Dispose();
    }
}

Usage:

var downloadFileUrl = "http://example.com/file.zip";
var destinationFilePath = Path.GetFullPath("file.zip");

using (var client = new HttpClientDownloadWithProgress(downloadFileUrl, destinationFilePath))
{
    client.ProgressChanged += (totalFileSize, totalBytesDownloaded, progressPercentage) => {
        Console.WriteLine($"{progressPercentage}% ({totalBytesDownloaded}/{totalFileSize})");
    };

    await client.StartDownload();
}

Result:

7.81% (26722304/342028776)
8.05% (27535016/342028776)
8.28% (28307984/342028776)
8.5% (29086548/342028776)
8.74% (29898692/342028776)
8.98% (30704184/342028776)
9.22% (31522816/342028776)
7
  • 1
    Had to remove the following to get progress update: if (readCount % 100 == 0)
    – aherrick
    Feb 22, 2018 at 17:04
  • Any idea as to why its not loading the header total size?
    – Nevaran
    Mar 15, 2020 at 19:44
  • @Nevaran only reason could be the server isn't actually returning that header. Try doing a GET on the target URL with Postman, and see if it includes the Content-Length header. Mar 16, 2020 at 12:55
  • Im unsure how to do that- though it is my own file from Google Drive if that helps in any way about fixing the issue
    – Nevaran
    Mar 16, 2020 at 16:10
  • is this using System.web.http or System.net.http ?
    – gumuruh
    Mar 26, 2020 at 8:55
37

The best way to go is using Windows.Web.Http.HttpClient instead of System.Net.Http.HttpClient. The first one supports progress.

But if for some reason you want to stick to the System.Net one, you will need to implement your own progress.

Remove the DataWriter, remove the InMemoryRandomAccessStream and add HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead to GetAsync call so it returns as soon as headers are received, not when the whole response is received. I.e.:

// Your original code.
HttpClientHandler aHandler = new HttpClientHandler();
aHandler.ClientCertificateOptions = ClientCertificateOption.Automatic;
HttpClient aClient = new HttpClient(aHandler);
aClient.DefaultRequestHeaders.ExpectContinue = false;
HttpResponseMessage response = await aClient.GetAsync(
    url,
    HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead); // Important! ResponseHeadersRead.

// To save downloaded image to local storage
var imageFile = await ApplicationData.Current.LocalFolder.CreateFileAsync(
    filename,
    CreationCollisionOption.ReplaceExisting);
var fs = await imageFile.OpenAsync(FileAccessMode.ReadWrite);

// New code.
Stream stream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync();
IInputStream inputStream = stream.AsInputStream();
ulong totalBytesRead = 0;
while (true)
{
    // Read from the web.
    IBuffer buffer = new Windows.Storage.Streams.Buffer(1024);
    buffer = await inputStream.ReadAsync(
        buffer,
        buffer.Capacity,
        InputStreamOptions.None);

    if (buffer.Length == 0)
    {
        // There is nothing else to read.
        break;
    }

    // Report progress.
    totalBytesRead += buffer.Length;
    System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine("Bytes read: {0}", totalBytesRead);

    // Write to file.
    await fs.WriteAsync(buffer);
}
inputStream.Dispose();
fs.Dispose();
9
  • 2
    Thanks, this will do, but is there a way to get total amount of bytes i will recieve? To set ProgressBar's maximum
    – Developer
    Dec 19, 2013 at 9:29
  • 7
    Why not use ProgressMessageHandler msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… ? Jan 15, 2014 at 15:59
  • 1
    @thund You will find the handler and associated classes here nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.AspNet.WebApi.Client/5.0.0 Jan 19, 2014 at 6:09
  • 2
    You could use PostAsync with a System.Net.Http.StreamContent. You initialize the StreamContent with a stream implemented by you, and you can get an approximate upload progress each time Stream.Read() is called in your stream because you know how much data has been read.
    – kiewic
    May 10, 2015 at 10:09
  • 4
    You should get the total bytes by looking into the Content-Length header in the response. I.e.: response.Content.Headers.ContentLength
    – kiewic
    Jan 14, 2016 at 1:58
9

The simplest way to implement progress tracking for both uploading and downloading is to use ProgressMessageHandler from the Microsoft.AspNet.WebApi.Client nuget package.

Note: this library was originally named System.Net.Http.Formatting, and was renamed to Microsoft.AspNet.WebApi.Client. However, this library is not related to ASP.Net and can be used by any project looking for official Microsoft extensions to HttpClient. The source code is available here.

Example:

var handler = new HttpClientHandler() { AllowAutoRedirect = true };
var ph = new ProgressMessageHandler(handler);

ph.HttpSendProgress += (_, args) =>
{
    Console.WriteLine($"upload progress: {(double)args.BytesTransferred / args.TotalBytes}");
};

ph.HttpReceiveProgress += (_, args) =>
{
    Console.WriteLine($"download progress: {(double)args.BytesTransferred / args.TotalBytes}");
};

var client = new HttpClient(ph);
await client.SendAsync(...);

Note that this will not report progress if uploading a byte array. The request message content must be a stream.

4
  • But, as you can see, the question didn't ask about ASP
    – Developer
    Jun 3, 2022 at 3:24
  • 3
    This has nothing to do with ASP. This nuget package contains the namespace System.Net.Http.Formatting which is simply content extensions for System.Net.Http. This can (and should) be used by any project looking for official extensions to HttpClient.
    – caesay
    Jun 3, 2022 at 4:50
  • 3
    By far the easiest and simplest solution!
    – Ladislav
    Sep 18, 2022 at 11:45
  • this doesnt work using HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead, right?
    – Emil
    Jul 10 at 2:03
6

The following code shows a minimal example of what must be done against the HttpClient api to get download progress.

HttpClient client = //...

// Must use ResponseHeadersRead to avoid buffering of the content
using (var response = await client.GetAsync(uri, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead)){
    // You must use as stream to have control over buffering and number of bytes read/received
    using (var stream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync())
    {
        // Read/process bytes from stream as appropriate

        // Calculated by you based on how many bytes you have read.  Likely incremented within a loop.
        long bytesRecieved = //...

        long? totalBytes = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;
        double? percentComplete = (double)bytesRecieved / totalBytes;

        // Do what you want with `percentComplete`
    }
}

The above does not tell you how to process the stream, how to report the process, or try to provide a direct solution to the code in the original question. However, this answer may be more accessible to future readers who wish to apply having progress to in their code.

1
  • 1
    Despite being a little incomplete, this is the only valid answer I can find. Windows.Web.Http is windows only and also it is a UWP library which is basically a nightmare dystopian version of .net Aug 27, 2021 at 21:32
5

same as @René Sackers solution above, but added the ability to cancel the download

class HttpClientDownloadWithProgress : IDisposable
{
    private readonly string _downloadUrl;
    private readonly string _destinationFilePath;
    private readonly CancellationToken? _cancellationToken;

    private HttpClient _httpClient;

    public delegate void ProgressChangedHandler(long? totalFileSize, long totalBytesDownloaded, double? progressPercentage);

    public event ProgressChangedHandler ProgressChanged;

    public HttpClientDownloadWithProgress(string downloadUrl, string destinationFilePath, CancellationToken? cancellationToken = null)
    {
        _downloadUrl = downloadUrl;
        _destinationFilePath = destinationFilePath;
        _cancellationToken = cancellationToken;
    }

    public async Task StartDownload()
    {
        _httpClient = new HttpClient { Timeout = TimeSpan.FromDays(1) };

        using (var response = await _httpClient.GetAsync(_downloadUrl, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead))
            await DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(response);
    }

    private async Task DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(HttpResponseMessage response)
    {
        response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();

        var totalBytes = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;

        using (var contentStream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync())
            await ProcessContentStream(totalBytes, contentStream);
    }

    private async Task ProcessContentStream(long? totalDownloadSize, Stream contentStream)
    {
        var totalBytesRead = 0L;
        var readCount = 0L;
        var buffer = new byte[8192];
        var isMoreToRead = true;

        using (var fileStream = new FileStream(_destinationFilePath, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None, 8192, true))
        {
            do
            {
                int bytesRead;
                if (_cancellationToken.HasValue)
                {
                    bytesRead = await contentStream.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length, _cancellationToken.Value);
                }
                else
                {
                    bytesRead = await contentStream.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
                }

                if (bytesRead == 0)
                {
                    isMoreToRead = false;
                    continue;
                }

                await fileStream.WriteAsync(buffer, 0, bytesRead);

                totalBytesRead += bytesRead;
                readCount += 1;

                if (readCount % 10 == 0)
                    TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
            }
            while (isMoreToRead);

        }

        //the last progress trigger should occur after the file handle has been released or you may get file locked error
        TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
    }

    private void TriggerProgressChanged(long? totalDownloadSize, long totalBytesRead)
    {
        if (ProgressChanged == null)
            return;

        double? progressPercentage = null;
        if (totalDownloadSize.HasValue)
            progressPercentage = Math.Round((double)totalBytesRead / totalDownloadSize.Value * 100, 2);

        ProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead, progressPercentage);
    }

    public void Dispose()
    {
        _httpClient?.Dispose();
    }
}
5

René Sackers version is excellent but it could be better. Specifically, it has a subtle race condition caused by TriggerProgressChanged firing before the stream closes. The fix is to fire the event after the stream is explicitly disposed. The version below includes the above change, inherits from HttpClient and adds support for cancellation tokens.

public delegate void ProgressChangedHandler(long? totalFileSize, long totalBytesDownloaded, double? progressPercentage);

public class HttpClientWithProgress : HttpClient
{
    private readonly string _DownloadUrl;
    private readonly string _DestinationFilePath;

    public event ProgressChangedHandler ProgressChanged;

    public HttpClientWithProgress(string downloadUrl, string destinationFilePath)
    {
        _DownloadUrl = downloadUrl;
        _DestinationFilePath = destinationFilePath;
    }

    public async Task StartDownload()
    {
        using (var response = await GetAsync(_DownloadUrl, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead))
            await DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(response);
    }

    public async Task StartDownload(CancellationToken cancellationToken)
    {
        using (var response = await GetAsync(_DownloadUrl, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead, cancellationToken))
            await DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(response);
    }

    private async Task DownloadFileFromHttpResponseMessage(HttpResponseMessage response)
    {
        response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
        long? totalBytes = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;
        using (var contentStream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync())
            await ProcessContentStream(totalBytes, contentStream);
    }

    private async Task ProcessContentStream(long? totalDownloadSize, Stream contentStream)
    {
        long totalBytesRead = 0L;
        long readCount = 0L;
        byte[] buffer = new byte[8192];
        bool isMoreToRead = true;

        using (FileStream fileStream = new FileStream(_DestinationFilePath, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None, 8192, true))
        {
            do
            {
                int bytesRead = await contentStream.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
                if (bytesRead == 0)
                {
                    isMoreToRead = false;
                    continue;
                }

                await fileStream.WriteAsync(buffer, 0, bytesRead);

                totalBytesRead += bytesRead;
                readCount += 1;

                if (readCount % 10 == 0)
                    TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
            }
            while (isMoreToRead);
        }
        TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
    }

    private void TriggerProgressChanged(long? totalDownloadSize, long totalBytesRead)
    {
        if (ProgressChanged == null)
            return;

        double? progressPercentage = null;
        if (totalDownloadSize.HasValue)
            progressPercentage = Math.Round((double)totalBytesRead / totalDownloadSize.Value * 100, 2);

        ProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead, progressPercentage);
    }
}
0
5

This is my variation on the answer of René Sackers. Main differences:

  • A more functional style.
  • Only one method instead of a whole object.
  • Can cancel the download
        public async static Task Download(
               string downloadUrl,
               string destinationFilePath,
               Func<long?, long, double?, bool> progressChanged)
        {
            using var httpClient = new HttpClient { Timeout = TimeSpan.FromDays(1) };
            using var response = await httpClient.GetAsync(downloadUrl, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead);

            response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
            var totalBytes = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;

            using var contentStream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync();
            var totalBytesRead = 0L;
            var readCount = 0L;
            var buffer = new byte[8192];
            var isMoreToRead = true;

            static double? calculatePercentage(long? totalDownloadSize, long totalBytesRead) => totalDownloadSize.HasValue ? Math.Round((double)totalBytesRead / totalDownloadSize.Value * 100, 2) : null;

            using var fileStream = new FileStream(destinationFilePath, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None, 8192, true);

            do
            {
                var bytesRead = await contentStream.ReadAsync(buffer);
                if (bytesRead == 0)
                {
                    isMoreToRead = false;

                    if (progressChanged(totalBytes, totalBytesRead, calculatePercentage(totalBytes, totalBytesRead)))
                    {
                        throw new OperationCanceledException();
                    }

                    continue;
                }

                await fileStream.WriteAsync(buffer.AsMemory(0, bytesRead));

                totalBytesRead += bytesRead;
                readCount++;

                if (readCount % 100 == 0)
                {
                    if (progressChanged(totalBytes, totalBytesRead, calculatePercentage(totalBytes, totalBytesRead)))
                    {
                        throw new OperationCanceledException();
                    }
                }
            }
            while (isMoreToRead);
        }

It can be called this way:

    // Change this variable to stop the download
    // You can use a global variable or some kind of state management
    var mustStop = false;

    var downloadProgress = (long? _, long __, double? progressPercentage) =>
    {
       if (progressPercentage.HasValue)
          progressBar.Value = progressPercentage.Value;

       // In this example only the variable is checked
       // You could write other code that evaluates other conditions
       return mustStop;
    };

    SomeClass.Download("https://example.com/bigfile.zip", "c:\downloads\file.zip", downloadProgress);
3
  • How is this method to be called and update on a progressbar? Thanks!
    – Feng Jiang
    Nov 21, 2021 at 14:22
  • 1
    Edited the answer to include a use sample Nov 22, 2021 at 15:15
  • nice, gotta convert this to DotNetFramework 4.8
    – MC9000
    Aug 29, 2022 at 15:50
0

Hm, you could have another thread check the current size of the stream being written (you'd also pass the expected file size to it) and then update the progress bar accordingly.

3
  • i would be glad if you could provide an example
    – Developer
    Dec 18, 2013 at 16:00
  • Sadly I do not own a Win8 copy, so I can't test your function. Yet, if you want to make things rather simple you could make the filename and filesize global, have a background worker with a loop and a thread sleep checking the fileSize on a regular basis, and updating the progress bar. This is, however, a not very elegant solution. Dec 18, 2013 at 16:25
  • I think that won't work. Nothing is written to the stream until ReadAsByteArrayAsync returns.
    – kiewic
    Dec 18, 2013 at 17:09
0

This is a modified version of René Sackers answer with the following functional changes:

  • http client not disposed (because it should not be disposed)
  • better progress handling
  • callback to create httpRequest (custom header support)
  • utilizes ArrayPool to reduce memory footprint
  • automatic event subscribe+unsubscribe to prevent memory leaks by event handlers

You can also use this nuget package https://www.nuget.org/packages/Amusoft.Toolkit.Http to gain all benefits. Since it supports net462 and above that is probably the easiest way.

Usage:

await DownloadWithProgress.ExecuteAsync(HttpClients.General, assetUrl, downloadFilePath, progressHandler, () =>
{
    var requestMessage = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, assetUrl);
    requestMessage.Headers.Accept.TryParseAdd("application/octet-stream");
    return requestMessage;
});

I guess i am not the only one who needs custom headers so i figured i would share this rewrite

Implementation:

public delegate void DownloadProgressHandler(long? totalFileSize, long totalBytesDownloaded, double? progressPercentage);

public static class DownloadWithProgress
{
    public static async Task ExecuteAsync(HttpClient httpClient, string downloadPath, string destinationPath, DownloadProgressHandler progress, Func<HttpRequestMessage> requestMessageBuilder = null)
    {
        requestMessageBuilder ??= GetDefaultRequestBuilder(downloadPath);
        var download = new HttpClientDownloadWithProgress(httpClient, destinationPath, requestMessageBuilder);
        download.ProgressChanged += progress;
        await download.StartDownload();
        download.ProgressChanged -= progress;
    }

    private static Func<HttpRequestMessage> GetDefaultRequestBuilder(string downloadPath)
    {
        return () => new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, downloadPath);
    }
}

internal class HttpClientDownloadWithProgress
{
    private readonly HttpClient _httpClient;
    private readonly string _destinationFilePath;
    private readonly Func<HttpRequestMessage> _requestMessageBuilder;
    private int _bufferSize = 8192;

    public event DownloadProgressHandler ProgressChanged;

    public HttpClientDownloadWithProgress(HttpClient httpClient, string destinationFilePath, Func<HttpRequestMessage> requestMessageBuilder)
    {
        _httpClient = httpClient ?? throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(httpClient));
        _destinationFilePath = destinationFilePath ?? throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(destinationFilePath));
        _requestMessageBuilder = requestMessageBuilder ?? throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(requestMessageBuilder));
    }

    public async Task StartDownload()
    {
        using var requestMessage = _requestMessageBuilder.Invoke();
        using var response = await _httpClient.SendAsync(requestMessage, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead);
        await DownloadAsync(response);
    }

    private async Task DownloadAsync(HttpResponseMessage response)
    {
        response.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();

        var totalBytes = response.Content.Headers.ContentLength;

        using (var contentStream = await response.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync())
            await ProcessContentStream(totalBytes, contentStream);
    }

    private async Task ProcessContentStream(long? totalDownloadSize, Stream contentStream)
    {
        var totalBytesRead = 0L;
        var readCount = 0L;
        var buffer = ArrayPool<byte>.Shared.Rent(_bufferSize);
        var isMoreToRead = true;

        using (var fileStream = new FileStream(_destinationFilePath, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None, _bufferSize, true))
        {
            do
            {
                var bytesRead = await contentStream.ReadAsync(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
                if (bytesRead == 0)
                {
                    isMoreToRead = false;
                    ReportProgress(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
                    continue;
                }

                await fileStream.WriteAsync(buffer, 0, bytesRead);

                totalBytesRead += bytesRead;
                readCount += 1;

                if (readCount % 100 == 0)
                    ReportProgress(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
            }
            while (isMoreToRead);
        }

        ArrayPool<byte>.Shared.Return(buffer);
    }

    private void ReportProgress(long? totalDownloadSize, long totalBytesRead)
    {
        double? progressPercentage = null;
        if (totalDownloadSize.HasValue)
            progressPercentage = Math.Round((double)totalBytesRead / totalDownloadSize.Value * 100, 2);

        ProgressChanged?.Invoke(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead, progressPercentage);
    }
}
4
  • After 7 years of asked question - this is still actual =)
    – Developer
    Aug 8, 2021 at 12:15
  • This is nice. Just need a C# 7.3 version.
    – MC9000
    Aug 29, 2022 at 16:06
  • where found Https.General? progressHandler is progressbar on windows forms? i'm using this code in net 6.0!!! nice code!!!
    – Tiago NET
    Sep 25, 2022 at 14:29
  • @Developer yup. Then again seeing how progress is usually a UI desire it does make sense that it is not built in even though it is often a desire with downloads. Oh well
    – Dbl
    Sep 30, 2022 at 15:13
-1

Im not really sure how to measure how the completion logic, but for now this seems to do it.

public event ProgressChangedHandler ProgressChanged;
public event ProgressCompleteHandler DownloadComplete;

...

TriggerProgressChanged(totalDownloadSize, totalBytesRead);
TriggerDownloadComplete(totalBytesRead == totalDownloadSize);
private void TriggerDownloadComplete(bool status)
{
   DownloadComplete(status);
}
client.DownloadComplete += (status) =>
{
   if (status)
   {
       // success
   }
};

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