Display image from Database in JSP [duplicate] - database

How can I retrieve and display images from a database in a JSP page?

Let's see in steps what should happen:
JSP is basically a view technology which is supposed to generate HTML output.
To display an image in HTML, you need the HTML <img> element.
To let it locate an image, you need to specify its src attribute.
The src attribute needs to point to a valid http:// URL and thus not a local disk file system path file:// as that would never work when the server and client run at physically different machines.
The image URL needs to have the image identifier in either the request path (e.g. http://example.com/context/images/foo.png) or as request parameter (e.g. http://example.com/context/images?id=1).
In JSP/Servlet world, you can let a Servlet listen on a certain URL pattern like /images/*, so that you can just execute some Java code on specific URL's.
Images are binary data and are to be obtained as either a byte[] or InputStream from the DB, the JDBC API offers the ResultSet#getBytes() and ResultSet#getBinaryStream() for this, and JPA API offers #Lob for this.
In the Servlet you can just write this byte[] or InputStream to the OutputStream of the response the usual Java IO way.
The client side needs to be instructed that the data should be handled as an image, thus at least the Content-Type response header needs to be set as well. You can obtain the right one via ServletContext#getMimeType() based on image file extension which you can extend and/or override via <mime-mapping> in web.xml.
That should be it. It almost writes code itself. Let's start with HTML (in JSP):
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/foo.png">
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/bar.png">
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/baz.png">
You can if necessary also dynamically set src with EL while iterating using JSTL:
<c:forEach items="${imagenames}" var="imagename">
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/${imagename}">
</c:forEach>
Then define/create a servlet which listens on GET requests on URL pattern of /images/*, the below example uses plain vanilla JDBC for the job:
#WebServlet("/images/*")
public class ImageServlet extends HttpServlet {
// content=blob, name=varchar(255) UNIQUE.
private static final String SQL_FIND = "SELECT content FROM Image WHERE name = ?";
#Resource(name="jdbc/yourDB") // For Tomcat, define as <Resource> in context.xml and declare as <resource-ref> in web.xml.
private DataSource dataSource;
#Override
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
String imageName = request.getPathInfo().substring(1); // Returns "foo.png".
try (Connection connection = dataSource.getConnection(); PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement(SQL_FIND)) {
statement.setString(1, imageName);
try (ResultSet resultSet = statement.executeQuery()) {
if (resultSet.next()) {
byte[] content = resultSet.getBytes("content");
response.setContentType(getServletContext().getMimeType(imageName));
response.setContentLength(content.length);
response.getOutputStream().write(content);
} else {
response.sendError(HttpServletResponse.SC_NOT_FOUND); // 404.
}
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
throw new ServletException("Something failed at SQL/DB level.", e);
}
}
}
That's it. In case you worry about HEAD and caching headers and properly responding on those requests, use this abstract template for static resource servlet.
See also:
How should I connect to JDBC database / datasource in a servlet based application?
How to upload an image and save it in database?
Simplest way to serve static data from outside the application server in a Java web application

I suggest you address that as two problems. There are several questions and answer related to both.
How to load blob from MySQL
See for instance Retrieve image stored as blob
How to display image dynamically
See for instance Show thumbnail dynamically

I've written and configured the code in JSP using Oracle database.
Hope it will help.
import java.io.BufferedInputStream;
import java.io.BufferedOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpSession;
import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream;
import javax.servlet.annotation.WebServlet;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse;
/**
* Servlet implementation class displayfetchimage
*/
#WebServlet("/displayfetchimage")
public class displayfetchimage extends HttpServlet {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
/**
* #see HttpServlet#HttpServlet()
*/
public displayfetchimage() {
super();
// TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
}
/**
* #see HttpServlet#doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
* response)
*/
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
Statement stmt = null;
String sql = null;
BufferedInputStream bin = null;
BufferedOutputStream bout = null;
InputStream in = null;
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
ServletOutputStream out;
out = response.getOutputStream();
Connection conn = employee.DbConnection.getDatabaseConnection();
HttpSession session = (HttpSession) request.getSession();
String ID = session.getAttribute("userId").toString().toLowerCase();
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
sql = "select user_image from employee_data WHERE username='" + ID + "' and rownum<=1";
ResultSet result = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
if (result.next()) {
in = result.getBinaryStream(1);// Since my data was in first column of table.
}
bin = new BufferedInputStream(in);
bout = new BufferedOutputStream(out);
int ch = 0;
while ((ch = bin.read()) != -1) {
bout.write(ch);
}
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(displayfetchimage.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
} finally {
try {
if (bin != null)
bin.close();
if (in != null)
in.close();
if (bout != null)
bout.close();
if (out != null)
out.close();
if (conn != null)
conn.close();
} catch (IOException | SQLException ex) {
System.out.println("Error : " + ex.getMessage());
}
}
}
// response.getWriter().append("Served at: ").append(request.getContextPath());
/**
* #see HttpServlet#doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
* response)
*/
protected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
Statement stmt = null;
String sql = null;
BufferedInputStream bin = null;
BufferedOutputStream bout = null;
InputStream in = null;
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
ServletOutputStream out;
out = response.getOutputStream();
Connection conn = employee.DbConnection.getDatabaseConnection();
HttpSession session = (HttpSession) request.getSession();
String ID = session.getAttribute("userId").toString().toLowerCase();
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
sql = "select user_image from employee_data WHERE username='" + ID + "' and rownum<=1";
ResultSet result = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
if (result.next()) {
in = result.getBinaryStream(1);
}
bin = new BufferedInputStream(in);
bout = new BufferedOutputStream(out);
int ch = 0;
while ((ch = bin.read()) != -1) {
bout.write(ch);
}
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(displayfetchimage.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
} finally {
try {
if (bin != null)
bin.close();
if (in != null)
in.close();
if (bout != null)
bout.close();
if (out != null)
out.close();
if (conn != null)
conn.close();
} catch (IOException | SQLException ex) {
System.out.println("Error : " + ex.getMessage());
}
}
}
}

Try to flush and close the output stream if it does not display.
Blob image = rs.getBlob(ImageColName);
InputStream in = image.getBinaryStream();
// Output the blob to the HttpServletResponse
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
BufferedOutputStream o = new BufferedOutputStream(response.getOutputStream());
byte by[] = new byte[32768];
int index = in.read(by, 0, 32768);
while (index != -1) {
o.write(by, 0, index);
index = in.read(by, 0, 32768);
}
o.flush();
o.close();

I used SQL SERVER database and so the answer's code is in accordance. All you have to do is include an <img> tag in your jsp page and call a servlet from its src attribute like this
<img width="200" height="180" src="DisplayImage?ID=1">
Here 1 is unique id of image in database and ID is a variable. We receive value of this variable in servlet. In servlet code we take the binary stream input from correct column in table. That is your image is stored in which column. In my code I used third column because my images are stored as binary data in third column. After retrieving input stream data from table we read its content in an output stream so it can be written on screen. Here is it
import java.io.*;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.servlet.*;
import javax.servlet.http.*;
import model.ConnectionManager;
public class DisplayImage extends HttpServlet {
public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request,HttpServletResponse response)
throws IOException
{
Statement stmt=null;
String sql=null;
BufferedInputStream bin=null;
BufferedOutputStream bout=null;
InputStream in =null;
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
ServletOutputStream out;
out = response.getOutputStream();
Connection conn = ConnectionManager.getConnection();
int ID = Integer.parseInt(request.getParameter("ID"));
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
sql = "SELECT * FROM IMAGETABLE WHERE ID="+ID+"";
ResultSet result = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
if(result.next()){
in=result.getBinaryStream(3);//Since my data was in third column of table.
}
bin = new BufferedInputStream(in);
bout = new BufferedOutputStream(out);
int ch=0;
while((ch=bin.read())!=-1)
{
bout.write(ch);
}
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(DisplayImage.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}finally{
try{
if(bin!=null)bin.close();
if(in!=null)in.close();
if(bout!=null)bout.close();
if(out!=null)out.close();
if(conn!=null)conn.close();
}catch(IOException | SQLException ex){
System.out.println("Error : "+ex.getMessage());
}
}
}
}
After the execution of your jsp or html file you will see the image on screen.

You can also create custom tag for displaying image.
1) create custom tag java class and tld file.
2) write logic to display image like conversion of byte[] to string by Base64.
so it is used for every image whether you are displaying only one image or multiple images in single jsp page.

Related

Send .dex file via post request android studio

For my own purposes, I want to send other app's dex file to a remote server and get the answer.
I've used answers that I found here. I tried to create a simple example at first, just to connect to the server and upload the dex file. So far I haven't managed to extract dex from other apps , so I thought of using a dex file I already have.
As I've read, not common files should be stored either to "/res/raw" or "assets"
I tried many ways to load it as a File but none of them worked . The path I used in all cases were found in right click on file -> copy reference.
create a res folder under /raw and
File f = new File("res/raw/filename.dex");
Create a new assets folder under /app
File f = new File("filename.dex");
Create assets folder under /main
File f = new File("main/assets/filename.dex");
and so on.
The only way I managed to do so is by using InputStream
Inputstream in = getResources().openRawResources(R.raw.filename_without_dex)
but I couldn't cast it to File, so I dropped this solution.I want to have it as a File cause the following POST request must be a multipart/form.
In java, the way to "load" a file is straightforward. Why not in android ?
A truly ugly, quick and dirty solution.
No error check or cleanup.
But it works.
import android.content.pm.ApplicationInfo;
import android.content.pm.PackageManager;
import android.os.Bundle;
import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
import java.io.ByteArrayOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.RandomAccessFile;
import android.support.v7.app.ActionBarActivity;
import android.util.Log;
import android.view.Menu;
import android.view.MenuItem;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.zip.ZipEntry;
import java.util.zip.ZipFile;
import java.util.zip.ZipInputStream;
public class MainActivity extends ActionBarActivity {
final String TAG = "GetDex";
#Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_main);
getAppPaths(); // to list all packages
String s = "/data/app/SoftKeyboard/SoftKeyboard.apk"; // a sample package
byte[] b = getFile(s);
byte[] dex = unzipDex(b, s);
Log.d(TAG, String.format("DEX size is %d", dex.length));
}
List<String> getAppPaths() {
final PackageManager pm = getPackageManager();
//get a list of installed apps.
List<ApplicationInfo> packages = pm.getInstalledApplications(PackageManager.GET_META_DATA);
List<String> paths = new ArrayList<>();
for (ApplicationInfo packageInfo : packages) {
Log.d(TAG, "Installed package :" + packageInfo.packageName);
Log.d(TAG, "Apk file path:" + packageInfo.sourceDir);
paths.add(packageInfo.sourceDir);
}
return paths;
}
byte[] getFile(String filename) {
try {
RandomAccessFile f = new RandomAccessFile(filename, "r");
byte[] b = new byte[(int)f.length()];
f.readFully(b);
return b;
} catch(IOException exception) {
exception.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
public byte[] unzipDex(byte[] bytes, String filename) {
try{
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile(filename);
ZipInputStream zis = new ZipInputStream(new ByteArrayInputStream(bytes));
ZipEntry ze = zis.getNextEntry();
while(ze!=null){
String entryName = ze.getName();
if(!entryName.equals("classes.dex")) {
ze = zis.getNextEntry();
continue;
}
InputStream is = zipFile.getInputStream(ze);
ByteArrayOutputStream buffer = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
int nRead;
byte[] data = new byte[16384];
while ((nRead = is.read(data, 0, data.length)) != -1) {
buffer.write(data, 0, nRead);
}
buffer.flush();
return buffer.toByteArray();
}
System.out.println("Done");
}catch(IOException ex){
ex.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
}

Display Image with all data from database on jsp in form [duplicate]

How can I retrieve and display images from a database in a JSP page?
Let's see in steps what should happen:
JSP is basically a view technology which is supposed to generate HTML output.
To display an image in HTML, you need the HTML <img> element.
To let it locate an image, you need to specify its src attribute.
The src attribute needs to point to a valid http:// URL and thus not a local disk file system path file:// as that would never work when the server and client run at physically different machines.
The image URL needs to have the image identifier in either the request path (e.g. http://example.com/context/images/foo.png) or as request parameter (e.g. http://example.com/context/images?id=1).
In JSP/Servlet world, you can let a Servlet listen on a certain URL pattern like /images/*, so that you can just execute some Java code on specific URL's.
Images are binary data and are to be obtained as either a byte[] or InputStream from the DB, the JDBC API offers the ResultSet#getBytes() and ResultSet#getBinaryStream() for this, and JPA API offers #Lob for this.
In the Servlet you can just write this byte[] or InputStream to the OutputStream of the response the usual Java IO way.
The client side needs to be instructed that the data should be handled as an image, thus at least the Content-Type response header needs to be set as well. You can obtain the right one via ServletContext#getMimeType() based on image file extension which you can extend and/or override via <mime-mapping> in web.xml.
That should be it. It almost writes code itself. Let's start with HTML (in JSP):
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/foo.png">
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/bar.png">
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/baz.png">
You can if necessary also dynamically set src with EL while iterating using JSTL:
<c:forEach items="${imagenames}" var="imagename">
<img src="${pageContext.request.contextPath}/images/${imagename}">
</c:forEach>
Then define/create a servlet which listens on GET requests on URL pattern of /images/*, the below example uses plain vanilla JDBC for the job:
#WebServlet("/images/*")
public class ImageServlet extends HttpServlet {
// content=blob, name=varchar(255) UNIQUE.
private static final String SQL_FIND = "SELECT content FROM Image WHERE name = ?";
#Resource(name="jdbc/yourDB") // For Tomcat, define as <Resource> in context.xml and declare as <resource-ref> in web.xml.
private DataSource dataSource;
#Override
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
String imageName = request.getPathInfo().substring(1); // Returns "foo.png".
try (Connection connection = dataSource.getConnection(); PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement(SQL_FIND)) {
statement.setString(1, imageName);
try (ResultSet resultSet = statement.executeQuery()) {
if (resultSet.next()) {
byte[] content = resultSet.getBytes("content");
response.setContentType(getServletContext().getMimeType(imageName));
response.setContentLength(content.length);
response.getOutputStream().write(content);
} else {
response.sendError(HttpServletResponse.SC_NOT_FOUND); // 404.
}
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
throw new ServletException("Something failed at SQL/DB level.", e);
}
}
}
That's it. In case you worry about HEAD and caching headers and properly responding on those requests, use this abstract template for static resource servlet.
See also:
How should I connect to JDBC database / datasource in a servlet based application?
How to upload an image and save it in database?
Simplest way to serve static data from outside the application server in a Java web application
I suggest you address that as two problems. There are several questions and answer related to both.
How to load blob from MySQL
See for instance Retrieve image stored as blob
How to display image dynamically
See for instance Show thumbnail dynamically
I've written and configured the code in JSP using Oracle database.
Hope it will help.
import java.io.BufferedInputStream;
import java.io.BufferedOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpSession;
import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream;
import javax.servlet.annotation.WebServlet;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse;
/**
* Servlet implementation class displayfetchimage
*/
#WebServlet("/displayfetchimage")
public class displayfetchimage extends HttpServlet {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
/**
* #see HttpServlet#HttpServlet()
*/
public displayfetchimage() {
super();
// TODO Auto-generated constructor stub
}
/**
* #see HttpServlet#doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
* response)
*/
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
Statement stmt = null;
String sql = null;
BufferedInputStream bin = null;
BufferedOutputStream bout = null;
InputStream in = null;
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
ServletOutputStream out;
out = response.getOutputStream();
Connection conn = employee.DbConnection.getDatabaseConnection();
HttpSession session = (HttpSession) request.getSession();
String ID = session.getAttribute("userId").toString().toLowerCase();
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
sql = "select user_image from employee_data WHERE username='" + ID + "' and rownum<=1";
ResultSet result = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
if (result.next()) {
in = result.getBinaryStream(1);// Since my data was in first column of table.
}
bin = new BufferedInputStream(in);
bout = new BufferedOutputStream(out);
int ch = 0;
while ((ch = bin.read()) != -1) {
bout.write(ch);
}
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(displayfetchimage.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
} finally {
try {
if (bin != null)
bin.close();
if (in != null)
in.close();
if (bout != null)
bout.close();
if (out != null)
out.close();
if (conn != null)
conn.close();
} catch (IOException | SQLException ex) {
System.out.println("Error : " + ex.getMessage());
}
}
}
// response.getWriter().append("Served at: ").append(request.getContextPath());
/**
* #see HttpServlet#doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse
* response)
*/
protected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
Statement stmt = null;
String sql = null;
BufferedInputStream bin = null;
BufferedOutputStream bout = null;
InputStream in = null;
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
ServletOutputStream out;
out = response.getOutputStream();
Connection conn = employee.DbConnection.getDatabaseConnection();
HttpSession session = (HttpSession) request.getSession();
String ID = session.getAttribute("userId").toString().toLowerCase();
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
sql = "select user_image from employee_data WHERE username='" + ID + "' and rownum<=1";
ResultSet result = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
if (result.next()) {
in = result.getBinaryStream(1);
}
bin = new BufferedInputStream(in);
bout = new BufferedOutputStream(out);
int ch = 0;
while ((ch = bin.read()) != -1) {
bout.write(ch);
}
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(displayfetchimage.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
} finally {
try {
if (bin != null)
bin.close();
if (in != null)
in.close();
if (bout != null)
bout.close();
if (out != null)
out.close();
if (conn != null)
conn.close();
} catch (IOException | SQLException ex) {
System.out.println("Error : " + ex.getMessage());
}
}
}
}
Try to flush and close the output stream if it does not display.
Blob image = rs.getBlob(ImageColName);
InputStream in = image.getBinaryStream();
// Output the blob to the HttpServletResponse
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
BufferedOutputStream o = new BufferedOutputStream(response.getOutputStream());
byte by[] = new byte[32768];
int index = in.read(by, 0, 32768);
while (index != -1) {
o.write(by, 0, index);
index = in.read(by, 0, 32768);
}
o.flush();
o.close();
I used SQL SERVER database and so the answer's code is in accordance. All you have to do is include an <img> tag in your jsp page and call a servlet from its src attribute like this
<img width="200" height="180" src="DisplayImage?ID=1">
Here 1 is unique id of image in database and ID is a variable. We receive value of this variable in servlet. In servlet code we take the binary stream input from correct column in table. That is your image is stored in which column. In my code I used third column because my images are stored as binary data in third column. After retrieving input stream data from table we read its content in an output stream so it can be written on screen. Here is it
import java.io.*;
import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.ResultSet;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.sql.Statement;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.servlet.*;
import javax.servlet.http.*;
import model.ConnectionManager;
public class DisplayImage extends HttpServlet {
public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request,HttpServletResponse response)
throws IOException
{
Statement stmt=null;
String sql=null;
BufferedInputStream bin=null;
BufferedOutputStream bout=null;
InputStream in =null;
response.setContentType("image/jpeg");
ServletOutputStream out;
out = response.getOutputStream();
Connection conn = ConnectionManager.getConnection();
int ID = Integer.parseInt(request.getParameter("ID"));
try {
stmt = conn.createStatement();
sql = "SELECT * FROM IMAGETABLE WHERE ID="+ID+"";
ResultSet result = stmt.executeQuery(sql);
if(result.next()){
in=result.getBinaryStream(3);//Since my data was in third column of table.
}
bin = new BufferedInputStream(in);
bout = new BufferedOutputStream(out);
int ch=0;
while((ch=bin.read())!=-1)
{
bout.write(ch);
}
} catch (SQLException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(DisplayImage.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}finally{
try{
if(bin!=null)bin.close();
if(in!=null)in.close();
if(bout!=null)bout.close();
if(out!=null)out.close();
if(conn!=null)conn.close();
}catch(IOException | SQLException ex){
System.out.println("Error : "+ex.getMessage());
}
}
}
}
After the execution of your jsp or html file you will see the image on screen.
You can also create custom tag for displaying image.
1) create custom tag java class and tld file.
2) write logic to display image like conversion of byte[] to string by Base64.
so it is used for every image whether you are displaying only one image or multiple images in single jsp page.

Accept Multipart file upload as camel restlet or cxfrs endpoint

I am looking to implement a route where reslet/cxfrs end point will accept file as multipart request and process. (Request may have some JSON data as well.
Thanks in advance.
Regards.
[EDIT]
Have tried following code. Also tried sending file using curl. I can see file related info in headers and debug output, but not able to retrieve attachment.
from("servlet:///hello").process(new Processor() {
#Override
public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception {
Message in = exchange.getIn();
StringBuffer v = new StringBuffer();
HttpServletRequest request = (HttpServletRequest) in
.getHeaders().get(Exchange.HTTP_SERVLET_REQUEST);
DiskFileItemFactory diskFile = new DiskFileItemFactory();
FileItemFactory factory = diskFile;
ServletFileUpload upload = new ServletFileUpload(factory);
List items = upload.parseRequest(request);
.....
curl :
curl -vvv -i -X POST -H "Content-Type: multipart/form-data" -F "image=#/Users/navaltiger/1.jpg; type=image/jpg" http://:8080/JettySample/camel/hello
following code works (but can't use as it embeds jetty, and we would like to deploy it on tomcat/weblogic)
public void configure() throws Exception {
// getContext().getProperties().put("CamelJettyTempDir", "target");
getContext().setStreamCaching(true);
getContext().setTracing(true);
from("jetty:///test").process(new Processor() {
// from("servlet:///hello").process(new Processor() {
public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception {
String body = exchange.getIn().getBody(String.class);
HttpServletRequest request = exchange.getIn().getBody(
HttpServletRequest.class);
StringBuffer v = new StringBuffer();
// byte[] picture = (request.getParameter("image")).getBytes();
v.append("\n Printing All Request Parameters From HttpSerlvetRequest: \n+"+body +" \n\n");
Enumeration<String> requestParameters = request
.getParameterNames();
while (requestParameters.hasMoreElements()) {
String paramName = (String) requestParameters.nextElement();
v.append("\n Request Paramter Name: " + paramName
+ ", Value - " + request.getParameter(paramName));
}
I had a similar problem and managed to resolve inspired by the answer of brentos. The rest endpoint in my case is defined via xml:
<restContext id="UploaderServices" xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring">
<rest path="/uploader">
<post bindingMode="off" uri="/upload" produces="application/json">
<to uri="bean:UploaderService?method=uploadData"/>
</post>
</rest>
</restContext>
I had to use "bindingMode=off" to disable xml/json unmarshalling because the HttpRequest body contains multipart data (json/text+file) and obviously the standard unmarshaling process was unable to process the request because it's expecting a string in the body and not a multipart payload.
The file and other parameters are sent from a front end that uses the file upload angular module: https://github.com/danialfarid/ng-file-upload
To solve CORS problems I had to add a CORSFilter filter in the web.xml like the one here:
public class CORSFilter implements Filter {
#Override
public void doFilter(ServletRequest req, ServletResponse resp, FilterChain chain) throws IOException,
ServletException {
HttpServletResponse httpResp = (HttpServletResponse) resp;
HttpServletRequest httpReq = (HttpServletRequest) req;
httpResp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, TRACE, OPTIONS, CONNECT, PATCH");
httpResp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
if (httpReq.getMethod().equalsIgnoreCase("OPTIONS")) {
httpResp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Headers",
httpReq.getHeader("Access-Control-Request-Headers"));
}
chain.doFilter(req, resp);
}
#Override
public void init(FilterConfig arg0) throws ServletException {
}
#Override
public void destroy() {
}
}
Also, I had to modify a little bit the unmarshaling part:
public String uploadData(Message exchange) {
String contentType=(String) exchange.getIn().getHeader(Exchange.CONTENT_TYPE);
MediaType mediaType = MediaType.valueOf(contentType); //otherwise the boundary parameter is lost
InputRepresentation representation = new InputRepresentation(exchange
.getBody(InputStream.class), mediaType);
try {
List<FileItem> items = new RestletFileUpload(
new DiskFileItemFactory())
.parseRepresentation(representation);
for (FileItem item : items) {
if (!item.isFormField()) {
InputStream inputStream = item.getInputStream();
// Path destination = Paths.get("MyFile.jpg");
// Files.copy(inputStream, destination,
// StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING);
System.out.println("found file in request:" + item);
}else{
System.out.println("found string in request:" + new String(item.get(), "UTF-8"));
}
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return "200";
}
I'm using the Camel REST DSL with Restlet and was able to get file uploads working with the following code.
rest("/images").description("Image Upload Service")
.consumes("multipart/form-data").produces("application/json")
.post().description("Uploads image")
.to("direct:uploadImage");
from("direct:uploadImage")
.process(new Processor() {
#Override
public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception {
MediaType mediaType =
exchange.getIn().getHeader(Exchange.CONTENT_TYPE, MediaType.class);
InputRepresentation representation =
new InputRepresentation(
exchange.getIn().getBody(InputStream.class), mediaType);
try {
List<FileItem> items =
new RestletFileUpload(
new DiskFileItemFactory()).parseRepresentation(representation);
for (FileItem item : items) {
if (!item.isFormField()) {
InputStream inputStream = item.getInputStream();
Path destination = Paths.get("MyFile.jpg");
Files.copy(inputStream, destination,
StandardCopyOption.REPLACE_EXISTING);
}
}
} catch (FileUploadException | IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
});
you can do this with restdsl even if you are not using restlet (exemple jetty) for your restdsl component.
you need to turn restdinding of first for that route and reate two classes to handle the multipart that is in your body.
you need two classes :
DWRequestContext
DWFileUpload
and then you use them in your custom processor
here is the code :
DWRequestContext.java
import org.apache.camel.Exchange;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.RequestContext;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.nio.charset.StandardCharsets;
public class DWRequestContext implements RequestContext {
private Exchange exchange;
public DWRequestContext(Exchange exchange) {
this.exchange = exchange;
}
public String getCharacterEncoding() {
return StandardCharsets.UTF_8.toString();
}
//could compute here (we have stream cache enabled)
public int getContentLength() {
return (int) -1;
}
public String getContentType() {
return exchange.getIn().getHeader("Content-Type").toString();
}
public InputStream getInputStream() throws IOException {
return this.exchange.getIn().getBody(InputStream.class);
}
}
DWFileUpload.java
import org.apache.camel.Exchange;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.FileItem;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.FileItemFactory;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.FileUpload;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.FileUploadException;
import java.util.List;
public class DWFileUpload extends
FileUpload {
public DWFileUpload() {
super();
}
public DWFileUpload(FileItemFactory fileItemFactory) {
super(fileItemFactory);
}
public List<FileItem> parseInputStream(Exchange exchange)
throws FileUploadException {
return parseRequest(new DWRequestContext(exchange));
}
}
you can define your processor like this:
routeDefinition.process(new Processor() {
#Override
public void process(Exchange exchange) throws Exception {
// Create a factory for disk-based file items
DiskFileItemFactory factory = new DiskFileItemFactory();
factory.setRepository(new File(System.getProperty("java.io.tmpdir")));
DWFileUpload upload = new DWFileUpload(factory);
java.util.List<FileItem> items = upload.parseInputStream(exchange);
//here I assume I have only one, but I could split it here somehow and link them to camel properties...
//with this, the first file sended with your multipart replaces the body
// of the exchange for the next processor to handle it
exchange.getIn().setBody(items.get(0).getInputStream());
}
});
I stumbled into the same requirement of having to consume a multipart request (containing file data including binary) through Apache Camel Restlet component.
Even though 2.17.x is out, since my project was part of a wider framework / application, I had to be using version 2.12.4.
Initially, my solution drew a lot from restlet-jdbc example yielded data in exchange that although was successfully retrieving text files but I was unable to retrieve correct binary content.
I attempted to dump the data directly into a file to inspect the content using following code (abridged).
from("restlet:/upload?restletMethod=POST")
.to("direct:save-files");
from("direct:save-files")
.process(new org.apache.camel.Processor(){
public void process(org.apache.camel.Exchange exchange){
/*
* Code to sniff exchange content
*/
}
})
.to("file:///C:/<path to a folder>");
;
I used org.apache.commons.fileupload.MultipartStream from apache fileuplaod library to write following utility class to parse Multipart request from a file. It worked successfully when the output of a mulitpart request from Postman was fed to it. However, failed to parse content of the file created by Camel (even through to eyes content of both files looked similar).
public class MultipartParserFileCreator{
public static final String DELIMITER = "\\r?\\n";
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
// taking it from the content-type in exchange
byte[] boundary = "------5lXVNrZvONBWFXxd".getBytes();
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(new File("<path-to-file>"));
extractFile(fis, boundary);
}
public static void extractFile(InputStream is, byte[] boundary) throws Exception {
MultipartStream multipartStream = new MultipartStream(is, boundary, 1024*4, null);
boolean nextPart = multipartStream.skipPreamble();
while (nextPart) {
String headers = multipartStream.readHeaders();
if(isFileContent(headers)) {
String filename = getFileName(headers);
File file = new File("<dir-where-file-created>"+filename);
if(!file.exists()) {
file.createNewFile();
}
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(file);
multipartStream.readBodyData(fos);
fos.flush();
fos.close();
}else {
multipartStream.readBodyData(System.out);
}
nextPart = multipartStream.readBoundary();
}
}
public static String[] getContentDispositionTokens(String headersJoined) {
String[] headers = headersJoined.split(DELIMITER, -1);
for(String header: headers) {
System.out.println("Processing header: "+header);
if(header != null && header.startsWith("Content-Disposition:")) {
return header.split(";");
}
}
throw new RuntimeException(
String.format("[%s] header not found in supplied headers [%s]", "Content-Disposition:", headersJoined));
}
public static boolean isFileContent(String header) {
String[] tokens = getContentDispositionTokens(header);
for (String token : tokens) {
if (token.trim().startsWith("filename")) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
public static String getFileName(String header) {
String[] tokens = getContentDispositionTokens(header);
for (String token : tokens) {
if (token.trim().startsWith("filename")) {
String filename = token.substring(token.indexOf("=") + 2, token.length()-1);
System.out.println("fileName is " + filename);
return filename;
}
}
return null;
}
}
On debugging through the Camel code, I noticed that at one stage Camel is converting the entire content into String. After a point I had to stop pursuing this approach as there was very little on net applicable for version 2.12.4 and my work was not going anywhere.
Finally, I resorted to following solution
Write an implementation of HttpServletRequestWrapper to allow
multiple read of input stream. One can get an idea from
How to read request.getInputStream() multiple times
Create a filter that uses the above to wrap HttpServletRequest object, reads and extract the file to a directory Convenient way to parse incoming multipart/form-data parameters in a Servlet and attach the path to the request using request.setAttribute() method. With web.xml, configure this filter on restlet servlet
In the process method of camel route, type cast the
exchange.getIn().getBody() in HttpServletRequest object, extract the
attribute (path) use it to read the file as ByteStreamArray for
further processing
Not the cleanest, but I could achieve the objective.

Solrj client and XML response

I am using solr4.0 in jetty server. I want to query solr using solrj and expecting results to be formatted in XML. So i used HttpSolrServer (CloudSolrServer and LBHttpSolrServer does not provide support for setting parser) and i set parser to Xmlparser. Moreover i am also setting SolrQuery param wt=xml.But i am not able to get results in XML.Here is my test code
package solrjtest;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileWriter;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.UUID;
import org.apache.solr.client.solrj.SolrQuery;
import org.apache.solr.client.solrj.SolrServerException;
import org.apache.solr.client.solrj.impl.CommonsHttpSolrServer;
import org.apache.solr.client.solrj.impl.XMLResponseParser;
import org.apache.solr.client.solrj.response.QueryResponse;
import org.apache.solr.common.SolrDocumentList;
class SolrjTest
{
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException, SolrServerException
{
SolrjTest solrj = new SolrjTest();
solrj.query("hello");
}
public void query(String q) throws IOException, SolrServerException
{
CommonsHttpSolrServer server = null;
String uuid = null;
boolean flag = true;
while (flag == true)
{
uuid = UUID.randomUUID().toString();
File f = new File("D:/SearchResult/" + uuid + ".txt");
if (!f.exists())
{
flag=false;
f.createNewFile();
}
}
try
{
server = new CommonsHttpSolrServer("http://skyfall:8983/solr/documents");
server.setParser(new XMLResponseParser());
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
SolrQuery query = new SolrQuery();
query.setQuery(q);
query.setParam("wt", "xml");
FileWriter fw = new FileWriter("D:/SearchResult/" + uuid + ".txt");
try
{
QueryResponse qr = server.query(query);
SolrDocumentList sdl = qr.getResults();
XMLResponseParser r = new XMLResponseParser();
Object[] o = new Object[sdl.size()];
o = sdl.toArray();
for (int i = 0; i < o.length; i++)
{
System.out.println(o[i].toString());
fw.write(o[i].toString() + "\n");
}
fw.flush();
fw.close();
System.out.println("finished");
}
catch (SolrServerException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Any idea whats going wrong here ?
With that setup, the Solr server at the machine skyfall does send the response in XML and the CommonsHttpSolrServer wrapper does correctly parse the XML. However, that does not change the internal representation in the QueryResponse, which is just a thin wrapper around the Solr class NamedList.
You can (mis)use the XMLResponseWriter to get an XML representation of the full QueryResponse:
private String toXML(SolrParams request, QueryResponse response) {
XMLResponseWriter xmlWriter = new XMLResponseWriter();
Writer w = new StringWriter();
SolrQueryResponse sResponse = new SolrQueryResponse();
sResponse.setAllValues(response.getResponse());
try {
xmlWriter.write(w, new LocalSolrQueryRequest(null, request), sResponse);
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new RuntimeException("Unable to convert Solr response into XML", e);
}
return w.toString();
}

JSF file upload on GAE

I'm trying to have a file upload element in my JSF over Google App Engine.
I have browsed the web for several alternatives but none seem to work with GAE.
I was able to do so using JSP and servlet with BlobstoreService but couldn't find a way to make it working with JSF.
As a workaround I was trying to see if there is a way to include a JSP within a JSF but I guess this isn't doable as well.
Would be thankful to get a working example.
Thanks!
First get library http://code.google.com/p/gmultipart/ and add to your project.
And than override class org.primefaces.webapp.filter.FileUploadFilter (just put in your src).
There is code of class org.primefaces.webapp.filter.FileUploadFilter:
package org.primefaces.webapp.filter;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.servlet.Filter;
import javax.servlet.FilterChain;
import javax.servlet.FilterConfig;
import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.ServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.ServletResponse;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.FileItemFactory;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.disk.DiskFileItemFactory;
import org.apache.commons.fileupload.servlet.ServletFileUpload;
import org.gmr.web.multipart.GFileItemFactory;
import org.primefaces.webapp.MultipartRequest;
public class FileUploadFilter implements Filter {
private final static Logger logger = Logger.getLogger(FileUploadFilter.class.getName());
private final static String THRESHOLD_SIZE_PARAM = "thresholdSize";
private final static String UPLOAD_DIRECTORY_PARAM = "uploadDirectory";
private String thresholdSize;
private String uploadDir;
public void init(FilterConfig filterConfig) throws ServletException {
thresholdSize = filterConfig.getInitParameter(THRESHOLD_SIZE_PARAM);
uploadDir = filterConfig.getInitParameter(UPLOAD_DIRECTORY_PARAM);
if(logger.isLoggable(Level.FINE))
logger.fine("FileUploadFilter initiated successfully");
}
public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ServletResponse response, FilterChain filterChain) throws IOException, ServletException {
HttpServletRequest httpServletRequest = (HttpServletRequest) request;
boolean isMultipart = ServletFileUpload.isMultipartContent(httpServletRequest);
if(isMultipart) {
if(logger.isLoggable(Level.FINE))
logger.fine("Parsing file upload request");
//start change
FileItemFactory diskFileItemFactory = new GFileItemFactory();
/* if(thresholdSize != null) {
diskFileItemFactory.setSizeThreshold(Integer.valueOf(thresholdSize));
}
if(uploadDir != null) {
diskFileItemFactory.setRepository(new File(uploadDir));
}*/
//end change
ServletFileUpload servletFileUpload = new ServletFileUpload(diskFileItemFactory);
MultipartRequest multipartRequest = new MultipartRequest(httpServletRequest, servletFileUpload);
if(logger.isLoggable(Level.FINE))
logger.fine("File upload request parsed succesfully, continuing with filter chain with a wrapped multipart request");
filterChain.doFilter(multipartRequest, response);
} else {
filterChain.doFilter(request, response);
}
}
public void destroy() {
if(logger.isLoggable(Level.FINE))
logger.fine("Destroying FileUploadFilter");
}
}
In managed bean write method like:
public void handleFileUpload(FileUploadEvent event) {
UploadedFile uploadedFile = event.getFile();
try {
String blobKey = BlobUtils.uploadImageToBlobStore(uploadedFile.getContentType(), uploadedFile.getFileName(), uploadedFile.getContents());
this.iconKey = blobKey;
} catch (IOException e) {
log.log(Level.SEVERE, "Ошибка при попытке загрузить файл в blob-хранилище", e);
FacesMessage msg = new FacesMessage(FacesMessage.SEVERITY_ERROR, "Ошибка при попытке загрузить файл", event.getFile().getFileName() + " не загружен!");
FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().addMessage(null, msg);
return;
}
FacesMessage msg = new FacesMessage("Успешно.", event.getFile().getFileName() + " загружен.");
FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().addMessage(null, msg);
}
And that all.
First of all , I think that whatever you are doing with JSP should eventually work with JSF as well..
BUT,
If you are looking for a file upload component for JSF , that works on GAE ,
take a look at the PrimeFaces FileUpload
Here is another link that got an explanation on what to do in order it to work on GAE :Primefaces File Upload Filter
(haven't tried it myself...)

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