On 1 Nov 2011, at 01:43, Anantaneni Harish
<anantaneni.ha...@vertexsoft.com> wrote:

>
> Any thoughts about this?

Only one. Why doesn't request.getParameterXxxx work for you?


p


>
> Thanks and Regards,
> Harish
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Anantaneni Harish
> Sent: Monday, October 31, 2011 11:23 AM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: RE: cannot read complete HTTP request body. It reads only 8192 
> characters
>
> String keyValuePair = null;
> String[] arrKeyValue = null;
> BufferedReader in = request.getReader();
> while ((keyValuePair = in.readLine()) != null) {
> arrKeyValue = keyValuePair.split("=");
>
> Above code reads incomplete data(read only 8192 bytes) at my customer's 
> environment, but reads complete data in my environment.
>
> String keyValuePair = null;
> String[] arrKeyValue = null;
> BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new 
> InputStreamReader(request.getInputStream()));
> while ((keyValuePair = in.readLine()) != null) {
> arrKeyValue = keyValuePair.split("=");
>
> Above code reads complete data in both the environments. *no changes done to 
> customer's environment.
>
> I hope you can help me now by finding the reason for data lost at my 
> customer's environment when using request.getReader().
>
> Thanks and Regards,
> Harish
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com]
> Sent: Friday, October 28, 2011 9:08 PM
> To: Tomcat Users List
> Subject: Re: cannot read complete HTTP request body. It reads only 8192 
> characters
>
> Konstantin Kolinko wrote:
>> 2011/10/27 Christopher Schultz <ch...@christopherschultz.net>:
>>> On 10/27/2011 4:58 AM, Anantaneni Harish wrote:
>>>> Thanks for the directions the Rainer. Actually the issue is just
>>>> solved.
>>>>
>>>> We have changed from BufferedReader in = request.getReader();
>>>>
>>>> to
>>>>
>>>> BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new
>>>> InputStreamReader(request.getInputStream()));
>>>>
>>>> Now whole body has been read at my client's environment as well.
>>>>
>>>> But would like to know, what causes the issue. Do you have any
>>>> idea, why same method can read whole data in my environment and
>>>> does not read whole data at my customer's environment?
>>> You'll have to provide more information, such as the code you are
>>> using.
>>>
>>> I'm fairly sure Tomcat is not the source of the problem.
>>>
>>
>> +1.
>>
>> I think you need to pay more attention on the documentation of the
>> java.io.Reader#read() method, or maybe look for a tutorial.
>>
>> See also documentation for java.io.InputStream#available().
>>
>> In short:  the read() method returns a portion of data that is
>> currently available. If you need more data you must call read()
>> repeatedly in a loop until it returns -1.
>>
>
> .. and the difference between two systems, may be that on one system, the 
> network is
> faster (or the system slower, or the buffer bigger) and so by the time you do 
> the read,
> there are more bytes available in the buffer.
>
>> If you had provided some of your source code that performs reading, we
>> would be able to point at the exact error in your code.
>>
>
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