|  Fruit of Eden
				
				846096dd6b
				Added Controllers | há 7 anos atrás | |
|---|---|---|
| app | há 7 anos atrás | |
| gradle | há 7 anos atrás | |
| .gitignore | há 7 anos atrás | |
| AndroidWebServer-master.iml | há 7 anos atrás | |
| README.md | há 7 anos atrás | |
| build.gradle | há 7 anos atrás | |
| gradlew | há 7 anos atrás | |
| gradlew.bat | há 7 anos atrás | |
| local.properties | há 7 anos atrás | |
| settings.gradle | há 7 anos atrás | 
This is a sample project for creating an Android Web Server using the NanoHTTPD library.

To make an Android Web Server add NanoHTTPD dependency in your build.gradle file:
compile 'org.nanohttpd:nanohttpd:2.2.0'
After that, you must create an Android Web Server Class this way:
public class AndroidWebServer extends NanoHTTPD {
    
    public AndroidWebServer(int port) {
        super(port);
    }
    
    public AndroidWebServer(String hostname, int port) {
        super(hostname, port);
    }
        
    //...
}
Add serve() method in your Android Web Server Class :
@Override
public Response serve(IHTTPSession session) {
    String msg = "<html><body><h1>Hello server</h1>\n";
    Map<String, String> parms = session.getParms();
    if (parms.get("username") == null) {
        msg += "<form action='?' method='get'>\n";
        msg += "<p>Your name: <input type='text' name='username'></p>\n";
        msg += "</form>\n";
    } else {
        msg += "<p>Hello, " + parms.get("username") + "!</p>";
    }
    return newFixedLengthResponse( msg + "</body></html>\n" );
}
serve() is a very important method beacause this is the response sent by your web server.
You can now instantiate and start your server in your activity. (Full implementation here)
AndroidWebServer androidWebServer = new AndroidWebServer(port);
androidWebServer.start();
androidWebServer.stop();
AndroidWebServer by Lopez Mikhael is licensed under a Apache License 2.0.