I`m trying to send a binary file (png image) in http response.
FILE *file;
char *buffer;
int fileLen;
//Open file
file = fopen("1.png", "rb");
if (!file)
{
return;
}
//Get file length
fseek(file, 0, SEEK_END);
fileLen=ftell(file);
fseek(file, 0, SEEK_SET);
//Allocate memory
buffer=(char *)malloc(fileLen+1);
if (!buffer)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Memory error!");
fclose(file);
return;
}
//Read file contents into buffer
fread(buffer, fileLen, 1, file);
fclose(file);
//free(buffer);
char header[102400];
sprintf(header,
"HTTP/1.1 200 OK\n"
"Date: Thu, 19 Feb 2009 12:27:04 GMT\n"
"Server: Apache/2.2.3\n"
"Last-Modified: Wed, 18 Jun 2003 16:05:58 GMT\n"
"ETag: \"56d-9989200-1132c580\"\n"
"Content-Type: image/png\n"
"Content-Length: %i\n"
"Accept-Ranges: bytes\n"
"Connection: close\n"
"\n", fileLen);
char *reply = (char*)malloc(strlen(header)+fileLen);
strcpy(reply, header);
strcat(reply, buffer);
printf("msg %s\n", reply);
//return 0;
int sd = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
struct sockaddr_in addr;
bzero(&addr, sizeof(addr));
addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
addr.sin_port = htons(8081);
addr.sin_addr.s_addr = INADDR_ANY;
if(bind(sd,&addr,sizeof(addr))!=0)
{
printf("bind error\n");
}
if (listen(sd, 16)!=0)
{
printf("listen error\n");
}
for(;;)
{
int size = sizeof(addr);
int client = accept(sd, &addr, &size);
if (client > 0)
{
printf("client connected\n");
send(client, reply, strlen(reply), 0);
}
}
but my browser does not understand this =( What am I doing wrong exactly?
UPD: I tried to send text data - its OK. But binary data fails
The problem is that your message body is being treated as a null-terminated text string (you use strcat
and strlen
on it), when it isn't one: it is binary data (a PNG file). Therefore, strcat
and strlen
both stop on the first 0 byte in the image (typically quite early).
Your program is even printing out the response body: notice that it gives the correct header, but that once the PNG header (binary data) starts, there is only a few bytes.
strcat(reply, buffer)
, where buffer
potentially contains 0 bytes. Change it to memcpy(reply+strlen(header), buffer, fileLen)
.send(client, reply, strlen(reply), 0)
, where reply
potentially contains 0 bytes. Pre-calculate the length of the reply, or replace the strlen with strlen(header)+fileLen
.Another bug is that you aren't closing the connection when you're done, so the browser will just wait forever. You need this, after send
:
close(client);
The HTTP protocol specifies that it expects "\r\n" instead of "\n". Try that. :)
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