Exemple #1
0
        /// <summary>
        /// Given an IRequestInfo, construct a HttpRequestMessage, send it, check the response for success, then return it
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="requestInfo">IRequestInfo to construct the request from</param>
        /// <param name="readBody">True to pass HttpCompletionOption.ResponseContentRead, meaning that the body is read here</param>
        /// <returns>Resulting HttpResponseMessage</returns>
        protected virtual async Task <HttpResponseMessage> SendRequestAsync(IRequestInfo requestInfo, bool readBody)
        {
            var path    = this.SubstitutePathParameters(requestInfo) ?? String.Empty;
            var message = new HttpRequestMessage()
            {
                Method     = requestInfo.Method,
                RequestUri = this.ConstructUri(path, requestInfo),
                Content    = this.ConstructContent(requestInfo),
            };

            this.ApplyHttpRequestMessageProperties(requestInfo, message);

            // Do this after setting the content, as doing so may set headers which we want to remove / override
            this.ApplyHeaders(requestInfo, message);

            // If we're deserializing, we're always going to want the content, since we're always going to deserialize it.
            // Therefore use HttpCompletionOption.ResponseContentRead so that the content gets read at this point, meaning
            // that it can be cancelled by our CancellationToken.
            // However if we're returning a HttpResponseMessage, that's probably because the user wants to read it themselves.
            // They might want to only fetch the first bit, or stream it into a file, or get process on it. In this case,
            // we'll want HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead.

            var completionOption = readBody ? HttpCompletionOption.ResponseContentRead : HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead;
            var response         = await this.httpClient.SendAsync(message, completionOption, requestInfo.CancellationToken).ConfigureAwait(false);

            if (!response.IsSuccessStatusCode && !requestInfo.AllowAnyStatusCode)
            {
                throw await ApiException.CreateAsync(message, response).ConfigureAwait(false);
            }

            return(response);
        }
Exemple #2
0
        /// <summary>
        /// Given an IRequestInfo, construct a HttpRequestMessage, send it, check the response for success, then return it
        /// </summary>
        /// <param name="requestInfo">IRequestInfo to construct the request from</param>
        /// <returns>Resulting HttpResponseMessage</returns>
        protected virtual async Task <HttpResponseMessage> SendRequestAsync(IRequestInfo requestInfo)
        {
            var path    = this.SubstitutePathParameters(requestInfo) ?? String.Empty;
            var message = new HttpRequestMessage()
            {
                Method     = requestInfo.Method,
                RequestUri = this.ConstructUri(path, requestInfo),
                Content    = this.ConstructContent(requestInfo),
            };

            // Do this after setting the content, as doing so may set headers which we want to remove / override
            this.ApplyHeaders(requestInfo, message);

            // We're always going to want the content - we're a REST requesting library, and if there's a response we're always
            // going to parse it out before returning. If we use HttpCompletionOptions.ResponseContentRead, then our
            // CancellationToken will abort either the initial fetch *or* the read phases, which is what we want.
            var response = await this.httpClient.SendAsync(message, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseContentRead, requestInfo.CancellationToken).ConfigureAwait(false);

            if (!response.IsSuccessStatusCode && !requestInfo.AllowAnyStatusCode)
            {
                throw await ApiException.CreateAsync(response).ConfigureAwait(false);
            }

            return(response);
        }