WCF stream to Android - android

I've got a WCF RESTful service that when hit returns an obscene amount of data. This RESTful service is specifically designed to be hit by Android (and iOS eventually). Does anyone have any ideas of the best way to implement a WCF service that returns a stream and an Android client that downloads it in the background?
-edit
I should note that I am already using AsyncTask, but I want to know if there is anything additional I need to have it download a stream.

Rest is platform agnostic so it does not matter. You should look into WCF 4: Download Files using WCF REST EndPoints to deal with downloading the heavy stuff in the back.

Related

How does android retrieve data from a website?

I'm new to android, I'm trying to build an android app that is a front for a web portal. For example, Airbnb. They have a website, but they also have an android app that, using it's own layout, will show listings from their website.
There are many websites that teach how to or even directly convert your website to android apps. However, this will result in an app that loads too slowly and is unresponsive due to CPU usage.
Could anyone share any tutorial/guide to learn how to do this myself?
Million thanks.
To actually load data from a web server you're gonna need and API which usually delivers the proper date using JSON or XML format so that you can properly parse and display that data. Building this API is in it self a complete course on its own.
But connecting to and requesting data from the API is usually done using some networking libraries. These are some of the better know libraries for this purpose.
OkHttp: A complete library with a set of tools for handling network connections and HTTP requests.
RetroFit:Type-safe HTTP client for Android and Java by Square, Inc. which is built on top of OkHttp.
Async-Http-Client:
The Async Http Client library's purpose is to allow Java applications
to easily execute HTTP requests and asynchronously process the HTTP
responses. The library also supports the WebSocket Protocol. The Async
HTTP Client library is simple to use.
There tons of other good libraries.
its called webservices
Through android you get data in form of json from a web server and then return in custom view as you want.
Follow this link hope it will help
Step by Step Method to Access Webservice from Android
you would have to write an API/Web service or use if already exits to fetch data from web server. Basically the concept is that, the website itself must be pulling data from some database, so write an API which would fetch the data from same API and return JSON data and consume the API from your android app.
If you know PHP refere to this for the help :http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/267023/Send-and-receive-json-between-android-and-php
You can write WebService, in programming it generally refers to a web page(ex. Airbnb), that can be called from your android application which can pass in data to it, or receive data from it.
WebService is basically like a 'method' or 'function' in a normal programming language; except you're calling it over the internet.
The first thing is you have to create a Web Service. The Web Service will be your "bridge" to consume the data from other Website like airbnb or others and return the data to your android through json format for example.
You can create a Web Service using many languages like C#, Java, PHP, etc. I would like to recommend you to use the language that you know the most.
You can try to google this
Cheers

Creating Web Service for Android Application

I've been reading some info about Web Services for Android using SOAP or REST but I've never created a web service so I have many questions about this.
I'm developing an Android App where the users answer some questions and for each user an XML file is generated and saved in the device.
Here are my queries:
What I would like to do is to send these XML files from the devices to the Web Service and also sometimes to retrieve all the files to any
device.
Do I need to convert these files into Byte or just send the XML?
Are these actions possible with the Web Service or will you use Java Sockets? In case you prefer the Web Service, what would you use:
REST, SOAP.
I would appreciate some links to tutorials and piece of advise.
Use SQL Server to manage the data on your desktop and create a web-service in .NET on Visual Studio.
Then connect to the web-service in your application and set/get data from the DB, using web-services. You can use either XML or JSON to transfer your data between the phone and the server.
There is no need for the use of Java Socket API for this.
Links which might be useful :
How to make a web-service in .NET (does not include the implementation in Android) : http://srikanthtechnologies.com/blog/dotnet/wsdaljava.aspx
How to connect your service with Android :
http://seesharpgears.blogspot.in/2010/11/basic-ksoap-android-tutorial.html
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/304302/Calling-Asp-Net-Webservice-ASMX-From-an-Android-Ap
http://adrianandroid.blogspot.in/2012/05/access-c-net-web-service-in.html
Note: I have never worked on RESTful services. My work has always been on SOAP and hence it remains my preference.
Your final choice of how, exactly, to architect your app, is going to be based on all sorts of things that you haven't included in your questions: your experience, the experience of the other developers in the project, so on and so on.
I will say this, however. REST is deep in the heart of Android. If you decide to go with REST and, possibly, JSON instead of XML (there is, almost certainly, no reason to use byte arrays), you will find that Android's architecture supports you. SOAP and such and you are on your own.

asp.net Web Api and mobile aplications

I just want to make a TV guide for Android and later some other Mobile Platform. I want to use an RSS updates to update my application. In this specific scenario I want to use http://tvprofil.net/ 's RSS resource. I thought that I could just call site's RSS XML from my Android app, parse it, show, and thats the end of the story.
But, my cousine told me that the best way to do things is through Asp.net Web Api Service. Something to deal with REST. So, If I have to change resource, to like some iptv provider's RSS I would just change the Service and not have to deal anything with my mobile application. Other advantage, he said, is if I want to build Windows Phone application or iOS aplication that works the same way, I would have that same service to do job for me and just create UI and basic things for those apps.
The problem is that I have no idea how Asp.net web Api is used.
Can anyone give me some usefull link, or even better, write an example of this thig. I just want the RSS from http://tvprofil.net/ to go through Asp.Net Web Api Service and that I can call service and get it as XML or ... even Json... or to get anything at all to my app.
The whole thing is pretty confusing to me
If a RSS feed has enough data for your application to function then you do not need ASP.NET Web Api. The only role ASP.NET Web Api could play in this scenario is if it acted as an intermediate. E.g. your client application contacts your server application (ASP.NET Web Api) which in turn pulls the data from the actual external data source (tvprofil.net RSS).
For completeness sake, a list of pro's and con's:
Advantages of using an intermediate server
Reliability. You can cache the data of the external data source and serve that data even while the external data source is offline. Also, by caching the data you can lighten the load on the external data source to a bare minimum.
Transformability. Your intermediate server can translate the data of an external data source to another format that is more suitable for your client application. This is useful when you have many external data sources that each serve data in another format. Your intermediate server acts as a layer of abstraction for your client application.
Disadvantages of using an intermediate server
More effort. It will take more effort to develop and host an intermediate server.
Reliability. You must ensure your intermediate server is online and connected to the internet 24/7

Android ReST based client and SOAP server. Is it possible?

I'm writing a web-service for Android. The client side will be coded in JAVA and we are planning on using ReST. But, the server supports SOAP, JMS( Java Messaging Service) and Remote Method Invocation (only these). I just want to know if it is possible to return response for a ReST based client from this server.
As far as I know, ReST is not a protocol like SOAP, but I just want to be sure that it can be done before I get started.
Any link to video/tutorial/code will also do.
Thanks in advance.
REST is really just an elegant way to use HTTP for resource access.
HTTP is the protocol.
So if you can process HTTP requests on that server, it's doable.
In a Java EE environment a servlet container is perfect: you can create a WAR based on the Jersey framework.

Android application consuming WCF

I'm new in Android and I have to do an application (in android) that consumes a NET WCF service with httpbasicbinding. I have heard about use of ksoap2-android, json and restfull but I don't know which is the best way for my app.
Anyone can suggest me anything?
Another problem is my WCF service return complex objects made by Linq To Sql and I don't know how can I use it in Android.
Thanks in advance!
If you use oData web services you can use the odata4j client library.
If you're using Service Stack to develop your web services you can use any REST client to easily consume them (in any format i.e. JSON, XML, JSV, SOAP, etc). The Hello World example shows a number of different ways you can consume a single web service.

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