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Posted to user@struts.apache.org by "Dean A. Hoover" <dh...@rochester.rr.com> on 2004/06/04 14:37:45 UTC

HTTP header for dynamic pdf and IE6

Sorry if this is inappropriate for this list,
but I really don't know where else to turn. I
figured someone on this list may have solved it.

I have a java web application that allows
an end-user in their browser to download
a "file", which happens to be bytes stored
in a database.

In experimenting with how to do this, I have
this snippet of code in my Action:

            AttachmentListItem attachment =
             EmailSQL.getAttachmentListItem(connection, 3, 1);
            response.setContentType(attachment.getContentType());
            byte[] data =
             EmailSQL.getAttachmentBytes(connection, 3, 1);
            response.setContentLength(data.length);
            response.setHeader("Content-Disposition",
             "attachment; filename=\"" + attachment.getFileName() + "\"");
            ServletOutputStream out = response.getOutputStream();
            out.write(data);
            out.flush();
            out.close();

To test this out, I hit the link in my IE browser which brings up
a dialog box allowing me to "Open" or "Save" the file. If I save
the file, it does the right thing. If I press the open button, Acrobat
Reader opens up and then errors out with an alert box:
"There was an error opening the document. The file does not exist."

I have a yahoo email account that I tried a test on. I sent an email
message with the same pdf file attached to that account. I wanted to
see if yahoo figured out how to make this work. They did! (but I can't
figure out how to replicate)

Their header looks like this:
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:37:58 GMT
P3P: policyref="http://p3p.yahoo.com/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="CAO DSP COR CUR
ADM DEV TAI PSA PSD IVAi IVDi CONi TELo OTPi OUR DELi SAMi OTRi UNRi
PUBi IND PHY ONL UNI PUR FIN COM NAV INT DEM CNT STA POL HEA PRE GOV"
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=reference.pdf
Connection: close
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Content-Type: application/pdf; filename="foo.bar"

.s4g--&v=1

There is also some other stuff I am seeing just after the header: .s4g-&v=1
which looks something like a query string, but I'm not sure.

My header looks like this:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:35:15 GMT
Server: Apache/2.0.40 (Red Hat Linux) mod_perl/1.99_07-dev Perl/v5.8.0
mod_jk/1.2.5 PHP/4.2.2 mod_python/3.0.1 Python/2.2.2 mod_ssl/2.0.40
OpenSSL/0.9.7a
Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=DD3D0938B780EEBEBDC1B558CCBAD095; Path=/
Pragma: No-cache
Cache-Control: no-cache
Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="reference.pdf"
Content-Length: 214982
Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
Connection: Keep-Alive
Content-Type: application/pdf;charset=UTF-8


Does anyone know how to work around this problem? I suppose
there are actually 2 parts to this:
1) What is the magic in the HTTP header that allows this to work?
2) How can one create such a header in java?

Thanks.
Dean Hoover





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Re: HTTP header for dynamic pdf and IE6

Posted by Henrique VIECILI <vi...@softplan.com.br>.
Hi Dean,

I did it once, and i did like this:
(solution for PDF file working on IE and any Acrobat Version)
...
response.setContentType("application/octet-stream"); // Acrobat 4 seems "don´t like" 'application/pdf'
byte[] data = xxx.getData();
response.setContentLength(data.length);
response.setHeader("Content-Disposition","inline; filename=file.pdf");
  /* extension .pdf makes IE choose Acrobat to open the document
   * content 'inline' avoids popping-up the Open/Save Dialog twice in older IE version ( 5.0 )
   */
out = response.getOutputStream();
out.write(data);
out.flush();
out.close();

Ok, i´m sure it works with Acrobat4+ and IE5+. I did not tested in Linux and other browsers.

Henrique Viecili
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dean A. Hoover 
  To: struts-user@jakarta.apache.org 
  Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 9:37 AM
  Subject: HTTP header for dynamic pdf and IE6


  Sorry if this is inappropriate for this list,
  but I really don't know where else to turn. I
  figured someone on this list may have solved it.

  I have a java web application that allows
  an end-user in their browser to download
  a "file", which happens to be bytes stored
  in a database.

  In experimenting with how to do this, I have
  this snippet of code in my Action:

              AttachmentListItem attachment =
               EmailSQL.getAttachmentListItem(connection, 3, 1);
              response.setContentType(attachment.getContentType());
              byte[] data =
               EmailSQL.getAttachmentBytes(connection, 3, 1);
              response.setContentLength(data.length);
              response.setHeader("Content-Disposition",
               "attachment; filename=\"" + attachment.getFileName() + "\"");
              ServletOutputStream out = response.getOutputStream();
              out.write(data);
              out.flush();
              out.close();

  To test this out, I hit the link in my IE browser which brings up
  a dialog box allowing me to "Open" or "Save" the file. If I save
  the file, it does the right thing. If I press the open button, Acrobat
  Reader opens up and then errors out with an alert box:
  "There was an error opening the document. The file does not exist."

  I have a yahoo email account that I tried a test on. I sent an email
  message with the same pdf file attached to that account. I wanted to
  see if yahoo figured out how to make this work. They did! (but I can't
  figure out how to replicate)

  Their header looks like this:
  Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:37:58 GMT
  P3P: policyref="http://p3p.yahoo.com/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="CAO DSP COR CUR
  ADM DEV TAI PSA PSD IVAi IVDi CONi TELo OTPi OUR DELi SAMi OTRi UNRi
  PUBi IND PHY ONL UNI PUR FIN COM NAV INT DEM CNT STA POL HEA PRE GOV"
  Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=reference.pdf
  Connection: close
  Transfer-Encoding: chunked
  Content-Type: application/pdf; filename="foo.bar"

  .s4g--&v=1

  There is also some other stuff I am seeing just after the header: .s4g-&v=1
  which looks something like a query string, but I'm not sure.

  My header looks like this:
  HTTP/1.1 200 OK
  Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:35:15 GMT
  Server: Apache/2.0.40 (Red Hat Linux) mod_perl/1.99_07-dev Perl/v5.8.0
  mod_jk/1.2.5 PHP/4.2.2 mod_python/3.0.1 Python/2.2.2 mod_ssl/2.0.40
  OpenSSL/0.9.7a
  Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=DD3D0938B780EEBEBDC1B558CCBAD095; Path=/
  Pragma: No-cache
  Cache-Control: no-cache
  Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT
  Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="reference.pdf"
  Content-Length: 214982
  Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
  Connection: Keep-Alive
  Content-Type: application/pdf;charset=UTF-8


  Does anyone know how to work around this problem? I suppose
  there are actually 2 parts to this:
  1) What is the magic in the HTTP header that allows this to work?
  2) How can one create such a header in java?

  Thanks.
  Dean Hoover





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  To unsubscribe, e-mail: user-unsubscribe@struts.apache.org
  For additional commands, e-mail: user-help@struts.apache.org

Re: HTTP header for dynamic pdf and IE6

Posted by "Dean A. Hoover" <dh...@rochester.rr.com>.
Sorry its not clear, but the filename does end in .pdf
Dean

Mark Lowe wrote:

> I'm not sure, but i think bill thought the world a better place if 
> applications associate file types according to the file suffix.
>
> it will need .pdf at the end of the filename.
>
> filename=\"" + attachment.getFileName() + "\".pdf"
>
> could fix it.
>
> On 4 Jun 2004, at 14:37, Dean A. Hoover wrote:
>
>> Sorry if this is inappropriate for this list,
>> but I really don't know where else to turn. I
>> figured someone on this list may have solved it.
>>
>> I have a java web application that allows
>> an end-user in their browser to download
>> a "file", which happens to be bytes stored
>> in a database.
>>
>> In experimenting with how to do this, I have
>> this snippet of code in my Action:
>>
>>            AttachmentListItem attachment =
>>             EmailSQL.getAttachmentListItem(connection, 3, 1);
>>            response.setContentType(attachment.getContentType());
>>            byte[] data =
>>             EmailSQL.getAttachmentBytes(connection, 3, 1);
>>            response.setContentLength(data.length);
>>            response.setHeader("Content-Disposition",
>>             "attachment; filename=\"" + attachment.getFileName() + 
>> "\"");
>>            ServletOutputStream out = response.getOutputStream();
>>            out.write(data);
>>            out.flush();
>>            out.close();
>>
>> To test this out, I hit the link in my IE browser which brings up
>> a dialog box allowing me to "Open" or "Save" the file. If I save
>> the file, it does the right thing. If I press the open button, Acrobat
>> Reader opens up and then errors out with an alert box:
>> "There was an error opening the document. The file does not exist."
>>
>> I have a yahoo email account that I tried a test on. I sent an email
>> message with the same pdf file attached to that account. I wanted to
>> see if yahoo figured out how to make this work. They did! (but I can't
>> figure out how to replicate)
>>
>> Their header looks like this:
>> Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:37:58 GMT
>> P3P: policyref="http://p3p.yahoo.com/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="CAO DSP COR CUR
>> ADM DEV TAI PSA PSD IVAi IVDi CONi TELo OTPi OUR DELi SAMi OTRi UNRi
>> PUBi IND PHY ONL UNI PUR FIN COM NAV INT DEM CNT STA POL HEA PRE GOV"
>> Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=reference.pdf
>> Connection: close
>> Transfer-Encoding: chunked
>> Content-Type: application/pdf; filename="foo.bar"
>>
>> .s4g--&v=1
>>
>> There is also some other stuff I am seeing just after the header: 
>> .s4g-&v=1
>> which looks something like a query string, but I'm not sure.
>>
>> My header looks like this:
>> HTTP/1.1 200 OK
>> Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:35:15 GMT
>> Server: Apache/2.0.40 (Red Hat Linux) mod_perl/1.99_07-dev Perl/v5.8.0
>> mod_jk/1.2.5 PHP/4.2.2 mod_python/3.0.1 Python/2.2.2 mod_ssl/2.0.40
>> OpenSSL/0.9.7a
>> Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=DD3D0938B780EEBEBDC1B558CCBAD095; Path=/
>> Pragma: No-cache
>> Cache-Control: no-cache
>> Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT
>> Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="reference.pdf"
>> Content-Length: 214982
>> Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
>> Connection: Keep-Alive
>> Content-Type: application/pdf;charset=UTF-8
>>
>>
>> Does anyone know how to work around this problem? I suppose
>> there are actually 2 parts to this:
>> 1) What is the magic in the HTTP header that allows this to work?
>> 2) How can one create such a header in java?
>>
>> Thanks.
>> Dean Hoover
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: user-unsubscribe@struts.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: user-help@struts.apache.org
>>
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: user-unsubscribe@struts.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: user-help@struts.apache.org
>
>



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Re: HTTP header for dynamic pdf and IE6

Posted by Mark Lowe <ma...@boxstuff.com>.
I'm not sure, but i think bill thought the world a better place if 
applications associate file types according to the file suffix.

it will need .pdf at the end of the filename.

filename=\"" + attachment.getFileName() + "\".pdf"

could fix it.

On 4 Jun 2004, at 14:37, Dean A. Hoover wrote:

> Sorry if this is inappropriate for this list,
> but I really don't know where else to turn. I
> figured someone on this list may have solved it.
>
> I have a java web application that allows
> an end-user in their browser to download
> a "file", which happens to be bytes stored
> in a database.
>
> In experimenting with how to do this, I have
> this snippet of code in my Action:
>
>            AttachmentListItem attachment =
>             EmailSQL.getAttachmentListItem(connection, 3, 1);
>            response.setContentType(attachment.getContentType());
>            byte[] data =
>             EmailSQL.getAttachmentBytes(connection, 3, 1);
>            response.setContentLength(data.length);
>            response.setHeader("Content-Disposition",
>             "attachment; filename=\"" + attachment.getFileName() + 
> "\"");
>            ServletOutputStream out = response.getOutputStream();
>            out.write(data);
>            out.flush();
>            out.close();
>
> To test this out, I hit the link in my IE browser which brings up
> a dialog box allowing me to "Open" or "Save" the file. If I save
> the file, it does the right thing. If I press the open button, Acrobat
> Reader opens up and then errors out with an alert box:
> "There was an error opening the document. The file does not exist."
>
> I have a yahoo email account that I tried a test on. I sent an email
> message with the same pdf file attached to that account. I wanted to
> see if yahoo figured out how to make this work. They did! (but I can't
> figure out how to replicate)
>
> Their header looks like this:
> Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:37:58 GMT
> P3P: policyref="http://p3p.yahoo.com/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="CAO DSP COR CUR
> ADM DEV TAI PSA PSD IVAi IVDi CONi TELo OTPi OUR DELi SAMi OTRi UNRi
> PUBi IND PHY ONL UNI PUR FIN COM NAV INT DEM CNT STA POL HEA PRE GOV"
> Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=reference.pdf
> Connection: close
> Transfer-Encoding: chunked
> Content-Type: application/pdf; filename="foo.bar"
>
> .s4g--&v=1
>
> There is also some other stuff I am seeing just after the header: 
> .s4g-&v=1
> which looks something like a query string, but I'm not sure.
>
> My header looks like this:
> HTTP/1.1 200 OK
> Date: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 15:35:15 GMT
> Server: Apache/2.0.40 (Red Hat Linux) mod_perl/1.99_07-dev Perl/v5.8.0
> mod_jk/1.2.5 PHP/4.2.2 mod_python/3.0.1 Python/2.2.2 mod_ssl/2.0.40
> OpenSSL/0.9.7a
> Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=DD3D0938B780EEBEBDC1B558CCBAD095; Path=/
> Pragma: No-cache
> Cache-Control: no-cache
> Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT
> Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="reference.pdf"
> Content-Length: 214982
> Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
> Connection: Keep-Alive
> Content-Type: application/pdf;charset=UTF-8
>
>
> Does anyone know how to work around this problem? I suppose
> there are actually 2 parts to this:
> 1) What is the magic in the HTTP header that allows this to work?
> 2) How can one create such a header in java?
>
> Thanks.
> Dean Hoover
>
>
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: user-unsubscribe@struts.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: user-help@struts.apache.org
>


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