Do I need to just slap some random garbage data in a WebRequest
object to get by the HTTP status code 411 restriction on IIS?
I have an HttpPost action method in an MVC 3 app that consumes a POST request with all the relevant information passed in the querystring (no body needed).
[HttpPost] public ActionResult SignUp(string email) { ... }
It worked great from Visual Studio's built in web host, Cassini. Unfortunately, once the MVC code was live on IIS [7.5 on 2008 R2], the server is pitching back an HTTP error code when I hit it from my outside C# form app.
The remote server returned an error: (411) Length Required.
Here is the calling code:
WebRequest request = WebRequest.Create("http://somewhere.com/signup/[email protected]");
request.Method = "POST";
using (WebResponse response = request.GetResponse())
using (Stream responseStream = response.GetResponseStream())
using (StreamReader responseReader = new StreamReader(responseStream)) {
// Do something with responseReader.ReadToEnd();
}
Turns out you can get this to go through by simply slapping an empty content length on the request before you send it.
WebRequest request = WebRequest.Create("http://somewhere.com/signup/[email protected]");
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentLength = 0;
Not sure how explicitly giving an empty length vs. implying one makes a difference, but IIS was happy after I did. There are probably other ways around this, but this seems simple enough.