Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

C# How can I check if a URL exists/is valid?

People also ask

C dalam Latin berapa?

C adalah huruf ketiga dalam alfabet Latin. Dalam bahasa Indonesia, huruf ini disebut ce (dibaca [tʃe]).

Bahasa C digunakan untuk apa?

Meskipun C dibuat untuk memprogram sistem dan jaringan komputer namun bahasa ini juga sering digunakan dalam mengembangkan software aplikasi. C juga banyak dipakai oleh berbagai jenis platform sistem operasi dan arsitektur komputer, bahkan terdapat beberepa compiler yang sangat populer telah tersedia.

Bahasa C dibuat pertama kali oleh siapa dan tahun berapa?

Bahasa pemrograman C ini dikembangkan antara tahun 1969 – 1972 oleh Dennis Ritchie. Yang kemudian dipakai untuk menulis ulang sistem operasi UNIX. Selain untuk mengembangkan UNIX, bahasa C juga dirilis sebagai bahasa pemrograman umum.


Here is another implementation of this solution:

using System.Net;

///
/// Checks the file exists or not.
///
/// The URL of the remote file.
/// True : If the file exits, False if file not exists
private bool RemoteFileExists(string url)
{
    try
    {
        //Creating the HttpWebRequest
        HttpWebRequest request = WebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest;
        //Setting the Request method HEAD, you can also use GET too.
        request.Method = "HEAD";
        //Getting the Web Response.
        HttpWebResponse response = request.GetResponse() as HttpWebResponse;
        //Returns TRUE if the Status code == 200
        response.Close();
        return (response.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.OK);
    }
    catch
    {
        //Any exception will returns false.
        return false;
    }
}

From: http://www.dotnetthoughts.net/2009/10/14/how-to-check-remote-file-exists-using-c/


You could issue a "HEAD" request rather than a "GET"? So to test a URL without the cost of downloading the content:

// using MyClient from linked post
using(var client = new MyClient()) {
    client.HeadOnly = true;
    // fine, no content downloaded
    string s1 = client.DownloadString("http://google.com");
    // throws 404
    string s2 = client.DownloadString("http://google.com/silly");
}

You would try/catch around the DownloadString to check for errors; no error? It exists...


With C# 2.0 (VS2005):

private bool headOnly;
public bool HeadOnly {
    get {return headOnly;}
    set {headOnly = value;}
}

and

using(WebClient client = new MyClient())
{
    // code as before
}

These solutions are pretty good, but they are forgetting that there may be other status codes than 200 OK. This is a solution that I've used on production environments for status monitoring and such.

If there is a url redirect or some other condition on the target page, the return will be true using this method. Also, GetResponse() will throw an exception and hence you will not get a StatusCode for it. You need to trap the exception and check for a ProtocolError.

Any 400 or 500 status code will return false. All others return true. This code is easily modified to suit your needs for specific status codes.

/// <summary>
/// This method will check a url to see that it does not return server or protocol errors
/// </summary>
/// <param name="url">The path to check</param>
/// <returns></returns>
public bool UrlIsValid(string url)
{
    try
    {
        HttpWebRequest request = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest;
        request.Timeout = 5000; //set the timeout to 5 seconds to keep the user from waiting too long for the page to load
        request.Method = "HEAD"; //Get only the header information -- no need to download any content

        using (HttpWebResponse response = request.GetResponse() as HttpWebResponse)
        {
            int statusCode = (int)response.StatusCode;
            if (statusCode >= 100 && statusCode < 400) //Good requests
            {
                return true;
            }
            else if (statusCode >= 500 && statusCode <= 510) //Server Errors
            {
                //log.Warn(String.Format("The remote server has thrown an internal error. Url is not valid: {0}", url));
                Debug.WriteLine(String.Format("The remote server has thrown an internal error. Url is not valid: {0}", url));
                return false;
            }
        }
    }
    catch (WebException ex)
    {
        if (ex.Status == WebExceptionStatus.ProtocolError) //400 errors
        {
            return false;
        }
        else
        {
            log.Warn(String.Format("Unhandled status [{0}] returned for url: {1}", ex.Status, url), ex);
        }
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        log.Error(String.Format("Could not test url {0}.", url), ex);
    }
    return false;
}

If I understand your question correctly, you could use a small method like this to give you the results of your URL test:

WebRequest webRequest = WebRequest.Create(url);  
WebResponse webResponse;
try 
{
  webResponse = webRequest.GetResponse();
}
catch //If exception thrown then couldn't get response from address
{
  return 0;
} 
return 1;

You could wrap the above code in a method and use it to perform validation. I hope this answers the question you were asking.


Try this (Make sure you use System.Net):

public bool checkWebsite(string URL) {
   try {
      WebClient wc = new WebClient();
      string HTMLSource = wc.DownloadString(URL);
      return true;
   }
   catch (Exception) {
      return false;
   }
}

When the checkWebsite() function gets called, it tries to get the source code of the URL passed into it. If it gets the source code, it returns true. If not, it returns false.

Code Example:

//The checkWebsite command will return true:
bool websiteExists = this.checkWebsite("https://www.google.com");

//The checkWebsite command will return false:
bool websiteExists = this.checkWebsite("https://www.thisisnotarealwebsite.com/fakepage.html");

WebRequest request = WebRequest.Create("http://www.google.com");
try
{
     request.GetResponse();
}
catch //If exception thrown then couldn't get response from address
{
     MessageBox.Show("The URL is incorrect");`
}