Android - Write byte array to OutputStreamWriter

10,890

change

OutputStreamWriter dataStream = new OutputStreamWriter(conn.getOutputStream());

with this

DataOutputStream dataStream = new DataOutputStream(conn.getOutputStream()); 

and directly call dataStream.write(buffer);

let me know how it behave

Edit: edited answer according to comment

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Paul
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Paul

I've been a developer since 2004. I work in C#, ASP.Net, WPF, XAML, HTML/JavaScript/CSS, Java, Delphi, and a couple flavors of SQL. I write for web, desktop, Android, Windows Mobile, and database servers.

Updated on June 21, 2022

Comments

  • Paul
    Paul almost 2 years

    I have an application that uploads photos through a web service. In the past, I loaded a file into a stream, and converted to Base64. Then I posted the resulting string through the write() method of an OutputStreamWriter. Now, the web service has changed, and it expects multipart/form-data and it does not expect Base64.

    So somehow I need to post the chararters of this file as is without conversion. I'm sure I'm close, but all I ever get is a content lengh underflow or overflow. The odd thing is that in the debugger I can see that my buffer length is the same length as the string I'm posting. Here's what I'm doing and hopefully enough code:

    // conn is my connection
    OutputStreamWriter dataStream = new OutputStreamWriter(conn.getOutputStream());
    
    // c is my file
    int bytesRead = 0;
    long bytesAvailable = c.length();
    
    while (bytesAvailable > 0) {
       byte[] buffer = new byte[Math.min(12288, (int)bytesAvailable)];
       bytesRead = fileInputStream.read(buffer, 0, Math.min(12288, (int)bytesAvailable));
    
       // assign the string if needed.
       if (bytesRead > 0) {
          bytesAvailable = fileInputStream.available();
    
          // I've tried many encoding types here.
          String sTmp = new String(buffer, "ISO-8859-1");
          // HERE'S the issue.  I can't just write the buffer,
          dataStream.write(sTmp);
          dataStream.flush();
    // Yes there's more code, but this should be enough to show why I don't know what I'm doing!