Google app engine receiving audio binary stream - perl

UPDATE AFTER ANSWER: the code is now fixed and works look below for correct code
Im trying to post from a perl script (on my server) to my google app engine, and im not sure how to go about doing this on the google app engine side.
This is my perl script for testing :
my $audio = `cat audiotest.flac`;
my $url = "http://app.appspot.com/MainPage" #this is not the real url
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new;
my $response = $ua->post($url, Content_Type => "audio/x-flac; rate=16000", Content => $audio);
if ($response->is_success)
{
print $response->content;
}
So that is how i send the flac binary stream, but the question is how does google app engine receive it and do something with it. This is what im attempting to do in python (but the code is not correct and / or doesnt make sense)
class MainPage(webapp.RequestHandler):
def post(self):
destinationURL = "http://www.google.com/speech-api/v1/recognize?xjerr=1&client=chromium&lang=en-US"
result = urlfetch.fetch(url=destinationURL, payload= self.request.body, method=urlfetch.POST, headers={'Content-Type': 'audio/x-flac; rate=16000'})
self.response.out.write(result.content)
result is supposed to return to me the string representation of the flac audio i submitted to google's speech to text service (also known as x-webkit-speech). Any idea what i am supposed to put in the payload for the urlfetch, and how to get the result back? Thanks!

Since you're sending the audio file as the body of the request, not as part of a form, you can access it with self.request.body.
I'm a little confused as to why you're sending an audio file to App Engine just so it can send it to another service, though.

Related

HttpWebRequest.GetRequestStream() is not working in MS Dynamics CRM Plugin

I have written a plugin wherein I am trying to get an XML response.
This is my code :
// Set the Method property of the request to POST.
string strXMLServer = "xxx";
var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(strXMLServer);
request.Method = "POST";
// Set the ContentType property of the WebRequest.
request.ContentType = "xyz";
// Assuming XML is stored in strXML
byte[] byteArray = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(strXML);
// Set the ContentLength property of the WebRequest.
request.ContentLength = byteArray.Length;
//(LINE 5) Get the request stream
Stream dataStream = request.GetRequestStream();
// Write the data to the request stream.
dataStream.Write(byteArray, 0, byteArray.Length);
// Close the Stream object.
dataStream.Close();
This code works fine when its written in a console application. But when I copy the same code to a class library(plugin) and tries to debug it using plugin profiler, the application gets stopped abruptly when it reaches (LINE 5)
i.e. At Stream dataStream = request.GetRequestStream();
request.GetRequestStream() function is not working with plugin, but works fine within a console.
Any help would be appreciated :)
Thanks in advance
Note: I am using Dynamics 365 online trial version
There are a couple of things to take into consideration when building a plugin with web requests. Firstly, you need to use WebClient as it's widely supported by Microsoft products.
Secondly, your URL needs to be a DNS name and not an IP address, as this is a hosted plugin in sandbox mode.
Example from Microsoft's website: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg509030.aspx
Reading material: https://crmbusiness.wordpress.com/2015/02/05/understanding-plugin-sandbox-mode/

Downloading from google cloud storage with php

Is there a way to achieve downloading via. the google-php-api? I have tried the following:
using the medialink and trying to curl the object (Returns "Login Required")
reading the guzzle response stream (comes back empty even though all the headers have the correct data)
I am able to see everything but the body of the file via. the API.
Edit:
I am of course able to download the file via the medialink, taken it is set to public - however that will not work for this situation.
The solution is as follows...
You must make an authorized HTTP request, to do this you must:
$object = $service->objects->listObjects(BUCKET, OBJECT);
$http = $client->authorize();
$request = new GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Request('GET', $object->getMediaLink());
$response = $http->send($request);
$body = $response->getBody()->read($object->getSize());
The above is a small snippet but the jist of what you need to get the contents of a file.

phpmailer attach pdf from dynamic url

I'm sending an email using phpmailer. I have web service to generate pdf. This pdf is not uploading or downloading to anywhere.
PDF url is like
http://mywebsite/webservices/report/sales_invoice.php?company=development&sale_id=2
I need to attach this dynamic pdf url to my email.
My email sending service url is like
http://mywebsite/webservices/mailservices/sales_email.php
Below is the code which i am using to attach the pdf.
$pdf_url = "../report/sales_invoice.php?company=development&sale_id=2";
$mail->AddAttachment($pdf_url);
Sending message is working but pdf doesn't attached. It gives below message.
Could not access file: ../report/sales_invoice.php?company=development&sale_id=2
I need some help
To have the answer right here:
As phpmailer would not auto-fetch the remote content, you need to do it yourself.
So you go:
// we can use file_get_contents to fetch binary data from a remote location
$url = 'http://mywebsite/webservices/report/sales_invoice.php?company=development&sale_id=2';
$binary_content = file_get_contents($url);
// You should perform a check to see if the content
// was actually fetched. Use the === (strict) operator to
// check $binary_content for false.
if ($binary_content === false) {
throw new Exception("Could not fetch remote content from: '$url'");
}
// $mail must have been created
$mail->AddStringAttachment($binary_content, "sales_invoice.pdf", $encoding = 'base64', $type = 'application/pdf');
// continue building your mail object...
Some other things to watch out for:
Depending on the server response time, your script might run into timing issues. Also, the fetched data might be pretty large and could cause php to exceed its memory allocation.

Perl WebService::Soundcloud - how to pass track parameters while uploading to Soundcloud

I'm trying to upload a sound to soundcloud using WebService::Soundcloud. I've so far been able to make a couple of GET/POST requests following the examples provided by the WebService::Soundcloud documentation.
However, I can't find a decent example anywhere on how to do an upload while passing the required parameters i.e. track, and within it, asset_data, title e.t.c. I'm wondering if I should be sending out a multipart message.
Any examples will be appreciated!
Also, here's what I have tried so far: After authenticating and getting a valid WebService::Soundcloud instance.
GET my $response = $scloud->get( '/me/tracks' );
PUT my $response = $scloud->put( '/me/tracks/91576621', JSON::to_json({track=>{title=>"My test title",description=>"My test description"}}) );
POST my $file = '/home/ski/track1.mp3';
my $asset_data = File::Slurp::read_file( $file, binmode => ':raw' );
my $response = $scloud->post('/me/tracks', '{"track":{"title":"My test title","asset_data":"'.$asset_data.'"}}' );
This fails with "Request entity contains invalid byte sequence. Please transmit valid UTF-8"
The example you provide manually constructs the JSON but doesn't take into account the binary nature of the file content which means it's unlikely to work. It's also vulnerable to abusive content changing your JSON due to lack of escaping/proper encoding.
The documentation you cite has a put example which demonstrate the content needs to be encoded into JSON and then passed to the library. I've not used this api but it's probably a simple case of using encode_json as per the examples. I'll just show an example that's equivalent to your manual encoding:
use JSON qw(encode_json);
my $asset_data = "ascii, quotes (\"'), non-ascii: \000\001\002\003";
my $content = encode_json({ track => { title => "My test title",
asset_data => $asset_data}});
print $content . "\n"; ### inspection of encoding
And this shows that JSON uses a UTF-8 representation to deal with binary data:
{"track":{"asset_data":"ascii, quotes (\"'), non-ascii: \u0000\u0001\u0002\u0003","title":"My test title"}}
The key/values are being re-ordered there but it's equivalent JSON.

Help with a Windows Service/Scheduled Task that must use a web browser and file dialogs

What I'm Trying To Do
I'm trying to create a solution of any kind that will run nightly on a Windows server, authenticate to a website, check a web page on the site for new links indicating a new version of a zip file, use new links (if present) to download a zip file, unzip the downloaded file to an existing folder on the server, use the unzipped contents (sql scripts, etc.) to build an instance of a database, and log everything that happens to a text file.
Forms App: The Part That Sorta Works
I created a Windows Forms app that uses a couple of WebBrowser controls, a couple of threads, and a few timers to do all that except the running nightly. It works great as a Form when I'm logged in and run it, but I need to get it (or something like it) to run on it's own like a Service or scheduled task.
My Service Attempt
So, I created a Windows Service that ticks every hour and, if the System.DateTime.Now.Hour >= 22, attempts to launch the Windows Forms app to do it's thing. When the Service attempts to launch the Form, this error occurs:
ActiveX control '8856f961-340a-11d0-a96b-00c04fd705a2' cannot be instantiated because the current thread is not in a single-threaded apartment.
which I researched and tried to resolve by either placing the [STAThread] attribute on the Main method of the Service's Program class or using some code like this in a few places including the Form constructor:
webBrowseThread = new Thread(new ThreadStart(InitializeComponent));
webBrowseThread.SetApartmentState(ApartmentState.STA);
webBrowseThread.Start();
I couldn't get either approach to work. In the latter approach, the controls on the Form (which would get initialized inside IntializeComponent) don't get initialized and I get null reference exceptions.
My Scheduled Task Attempt
So, I tried creating a nightly scheduled task using my own credentials to run the Form locally on my dev machine (just testing). It gets farther than the Service did, but gets hung up at the File Download Dialog.
Related Note: To send the key sequences to get through the File Download and File Save As dialogs, my Form actually runs a couple of vbscript files that use WScript.Shell.SendKeys. Ok, that's embarassing to admit, but I tried a few different things including SendMessage in Win32 API and referencing IWshRuntimeLibrary to use SendKeys inside my C# code. When I was researching how to get through the dialogs, the Win32 API seemed to be the recommended way to go, but I couldn't figure it out. The vbscript files was the only thing I could get to work, but I'm worried now that this may be the reason why a scheduled task won't work.
Regarding My Choice of WebBrowser Control
I have read about the System.WebClient class as an alternative to the WebBrowser control, but at a glance, it doesn't look like it has what I need to get this done. For example, I needed (or I think I needed) the WebBrowser's DocumentCompleted and FileDownload events to handle the delays in pages loading, files downloading, etc. Is there more to WebClient that I'm not seeing? Is there another class besides WebBrowser that is more Service-friendly and would do the trick?
In Summary
Geez, this is long. Sorry! It would help to even have a high level recommendation for a better way to do what I'm trying to do, because nothing I've tried has worked.
Update 10/22/09
Well, I think I'm closer, but I'm stuck again. I should end up with a decent-sized zip file with several files in it, but the zip file resulting from my code is empty. Here's my code:
// build post request
string targetHref = "http://wwwcf.nlm.nih.gov/umlslicense/kss/login.cfm";
HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(targetHref);
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
// encoding to use
Encoding enc = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252);
// build post string containing authentication information and add to post request
string poststring = "returnUrl=" + fixCharacters(targetDownloadFileUrl);
poststring += getUsernameAndPasswordString();
poststring += "&login2.x=0&login2.y=0";
// convert to required byte array
byte[] postBytes = enc.GetBytes(poststring);
request.ContentLength = postBytes.Length;
// write post to request
Stream postStream = request.GetRequestStream();
postStream.Write(postBytes, 0, postBytes.Length);
postStream.Close();
// get response as stream
HttpWebResponse response = (HttpWebResponse)request.GetResponse();
Stream responseStream = response.GetResponseStream();
// writes stream to zip file
FileStream writeStream = new FileStream(fullZipFileName, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write);
ReadWriteStream(responseStream, writeStream);
response.Close();
responseStream.Close();
The code for ReadWriteStream looks like this.
private void ReadWriteStream(Stream readStream, Stream writeStream)
{
// taken verbatum from http://www.developerfusion.com/code/4669/save-a-stream-to-a-file/
int Length = 256;
Byte[] buffer = new Byte[Length];
int bytesRead = readStream.Read(buffer, 0, Length);
// write the required bytes
while (bytesRead > 0)
{
writeStream.Write(buffer, 0, bytesRead);
bytesRead = readStream.Read(buffer, 0, Length);
}
readStream.Close();
writeStream.Close();
}
The building of the post string is taken from my previous forms app that works. I compared the resulting values in poststring for both sets of code (my working forms app and this one) and they're identical.
I'm not even sure how to troubleshoot this further. Anyone see anything obvious as to why this isn't working?
Conclusion 10/23/09
I finally have this working. A couple of important hurdles I had to get over. I had some problems with the ReadWriteStream method code that I got online. I don't know why, but it wasn't working for me. A guy named JB in Claudio Lassala's Virtual Brown Bag meeting helped me to come up with this code which worked much better for my purposes:
private void WriteResponseStreamToFile(Stream responseStreamToRead, string zipFileFullName)
{
// responseStreamToRead will contain a zip file, write it to a file in
// the target location at zipFileFullName
FileStream fileStreamToWrite = new FileStream(zipFileFullName, FileMode.Create);
int readByte = responseStreamToRead.ReadByte();
while (readByte != -1)
{
fileStreamToWrite.WriteByte((byte)readByte);
readByte = responseStreamToRead.ReadByte();
}
fileStreamToWrite.Flush();
fileStreamToWrite.Close();
}
As Will suggested below, I did have trouble with the authentication. The following code is what worked to get around that issue. A few comments inserted addressing key issues I ran into.
string targetHref = "http://wwwcf.nlm.nih.gov/umlslicense/kss/login.cfm";
HttpWebRequest firstRequest = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(targetHref);
firstRequest.AllowAutoRedirect = false; // this is critical, without this, NLM redirects and the whole thing breaks
// firstRequest.Proxy = new WebProxy("127.0.0.1", 8888); // not needed for production, but this helped in order to debug the http traffic using Fiddler
firstRequest.Method = "POST";
firstRequest.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
// build post string containing authentication information and add to post request
StringBuilder poststring = new StringBuilder("returnUrl=" + fixCharacters(targetDownloadFileUrl));
poststring.Append(getUsernameAndPasswordString());
poststring.Append("&login2.x=0&login2.y=0");
// convert to required byte array
byte[] postBytes = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(poststring.ToString());
firstRequest.ContentLength = postBytes.Length;
// write post to request
Stream postStream = firstRequest.GetRequestStream();
postStream.Write(postBytes, 0, postBytes.Length); // Fiddler shows that post and response happen on this line
postStream.Close();
// get response as stream
HttpWebResponse firstResponse = (HttpWebResponse)firstRequest.GetResponse();
// create new request for new location and cookies
HttpWebRequest secondRequest = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(firstResponse.GetResponseHeader("location"));
secondRequest.AllowAutoRedirect = false;
secondRequest.Headers.Add(HttpRequestHeader.Cookie, firstResponse.GetResponseHeader("Set-Cookie"));
// get response to second request
HttpWebResponse secondResponse = (HttpWebResponse)secondRequest.GetResponse();
// write stream to zip file
Stream responseStreamToRead = secondResponse.GetResponseStream();
WriteResponseStreamToFile(responseStreamToRead, fullZipFileName);
responseStreamToRead.Close();
sl.logScriptActivity("Downloading update.");
firstResponse.Close();
I want to underscore that setting AllowAutoRedirect to false on the first HttpWebRequest instance was critical to the whole thing working. Fiddler showed two additional requests that occurred when this was not set, and it broke the rest of the script.
You're trying to use UI controls to do something in a windows service. This will never work.
What you need to do is just use the WebRequest and WebResponse classes to download the contents of the webpage.
var request = WebRequest.Create("http://www.google.com");
var response = request.GetResponse();
var stream = response.GetResponseStream();
You can dump the contents of the stream, parse the text looking for updates, and then construct a new request for the URL of the file you want to download. That response stream will then have the file, which you can dump on the filesystem and etc etc.
Before you wonder, GetResponse will block until the response returns, and the stream will block as data is being received, so you don't need to worry about events firing when everything has been downloaded.
You definitely need to re-think your approach (as you've already begun to do) to eliminate the Forms-based application approach. The service you're describing needs to operate with no UI at all.
I'm not familiar with the details of System.WebClient, but since it
provides common methods for sending
data to and receiving data from a
resource identified by a URI,
it will probably be your answer.
At first glance, WebClient.DownloadFile(...) or WebClient.DownloadFileAsync(...) will do what you need.
The only thing I can add is that once you have scraped your screen and have the fully qualified name of the file you want to download, you could pass it along to the Windows/DOS command 'get' which will fetch files via HTTP. You can also script a command-line FTP client if desired. It's been a long time since I tried something like this in Windows, but I think you're almost there. Once you have fetched the correct file, building a batch file to do everything else should be pretty easy. If you are more comfortable with Unix, google "unix services for windows" just keep an eye on the services they start running (DHCP, etc). There are some nice utilities which will let your treat dos as a unix-like shell (ls -l, grep, etc) Finally, you could try another language like Perl or Python but I don't think that's the kind of advice you were looking for. :)