-public class HTTP {
-
- /** Carriage return/line feed. */
- public static final String CRLF = "\r\n";
-
- /**
- * Convert an HTTP header string into a JSONObject. It can be a request
- * header or a response header. A request header will contain
- * <pre>{
- * Method: "POST" (for example),
- * "Request-URI": "/" (for example),
- * "HTTP-Version": "HTTP/1.1" (for example)
- * }</pre>
- * A response header will contain
- * <pre>{
- * "HTTP-Version": "HTTP/1.1" (for example),
- * "Status-Code": "200" (for example),
- * "Reason-Phrase": "OK" (for example)
- * }</pre>
- * In addition, the other parameters in the header will be captured, using
- * the HTTP field names as JSON names, so that <pre>
- * Date: Sun, 26 May 2002 18:06:04 GMT
- * Cookie: Q=q2=PPEAsg--; B=677gi6ouf29bn&b=2&f=s
- * Cache-Control: no-cache</pre>
- * become
- * <pre>{...
- * Date: "Sun, 26 May 2002 18:06:04 GMT",
- * Cookie: "Q=q2=PPEAsg--; B=677gi6ouf29bn&b=2&f=s",
- * "Cache-Control": "no-cache",
- * ...}</pre>
- * It does no further checking or conversion. It does not parse dates.
- * It does not do '%' transforms on URLs.
- * @param string An HTTP header string.
- * @return A JSONObject containing the elements and attributes
- * of the XML string.
- * @throws JSONException
- */
- public static JSONObject toJSONObject(String string) throws JSONException {
- JSONObject jo = new JSONObject();
- HTTPTokener x = new HTTPTokener(string);
- String token;
-
- token = x.nextToken();
- if (token.toUpperCase(Locale.ROOT).startsWith("HTTP")) {
-
-// Response
-
- jo.put("HTTP-Version", token);
- jo.put("Status-Code", x.nextToken());
- jo.put("Reason-Phrase", x.nextTo('\0'));
- x.next();
-
- } else {
-
-// Request
-
- jo.put("Method", token);
- jo.put("Request-URI", x.nextToken());
- jo.put("HTTP-Version", x.nextToken());
- }
-
-// Fields
-
- while (x.more()) {
- String name = x.nextTo(':');
- x.next(':');
- jo.put(name, x.nextTo('\0'));
- x.next();
- }
- return jo;
+public class HTTP
+{
+
+ /** Carriage return/line feed. */
+ public static final String CRLF = "\r\n";
+
+ /**
+ * Convert an HTTP header string into a JSONObject. It can be a request header
+ * or a response header. A request header will contain
+ *
+ * <pre>
+ * {
+ * Method: "POST" (for example),
+ * "Request-URI": "/" (for example),
+ * "HTTP-Version": "HTTP/1.1" (for example)
+ * }
+ * </pre>
+ *
+ * A response header will contain
+ *
+ * <pre>
+ * {
+ * "HTTP-Version": "HTTP/1.1" (for example),
+ * "Status-Code": "200" (for example),
+ * "Reason-Phrase": "OK" (for example)
+ * }
+ * </pre>
+ *
+ * In addition, the other parameters in the header will be captured, using the
+ * HTTP field names as JSON names, so that
+ *
+ * <pre>
+ * Date: Sun, 26 May 2002 18:06:04 GMT
+ * Cookie: Q=q2=PPEAsg--; B=677gi6ouf29bn&b=2&f=s
+ * Cache-Control: no-cache
+ * </pre>
+ *
+ * become
+ *
+ * <pre>
+ * {...
+ * Date: "Sun, 26 May 2002 18:06:04 GMT",
+ * Cookie: "Q=q2=PPEAsg--; B=677gi6ouf29bn&b=2&f=s",
+ * "Cache-Control": "no-cache",
+ * ...}
+ * </pre>
+ *
+ * It does no further checking or conversion. It does not parse dates. It does
+ * not do '%' transforms on URLs.
+ *
+ * @param string
+ * An HTTP header string.
+ * @return A JSONObject containing the elements and attributes of the XML
+ * string.
+ * @throws JSONException
+ */
+ public static JSONObject toJSONObject(String string) throws JSONException
+ {
+ JSONObject jo = new JSONObject();
+ HTTPTokener x = new HTTPTokener(string);
+ String token;
+
+ token = x.nextToken();
+ if (token.toUpperCase(Locale.ROOT).startsWith("HTTP"))
+ {
+
+ // Response
+
+ jo.put("HTTP-Version", token);
+ jo.put("Status-Code", x.nextToken());
+ jo.put("Reason-Phrase", x.nextTo('\0'));
+ x.next();
+