401 is a HTTP status, so it shouldn't have anything to do with the 32 vs 64 bit. I would check and make sure that the web service is setup using the correct crednentials (especially if you are planning on using anonymous access).
If I remember correctly the DefaultNetworkCredential pulls the account running the service, so I would check to make sure the account for the service you are using has the appropriate authorities to access the web service. The easy way to check this is give the account running the service administrative access to the machine (then take it away when you're done). if it works, then it is a permissions problem. If not, then you know it's something else.
To give the account rights go to Administrative Tools -- > Computer Management -- >Local Users And Groups -- > Groups. Add the Network User to the appropriate group (like I said I would start with admin and work my way down.)
There are several ways to perform HTTP GET
and POST
requests:
Method A: HttpClient (Preferred)
Available in: .NET Framework 4.5+
, .NET Standard 1.1+
, .NET Core 1.0+
.
It is currently the preferred approach, and is asynchronous and high performance. Use the built-in version in most cases, but for very old platforms there is a NuGet package.
using System.Net.Http;
Setup
It is recommended to instantiate one HttpClient
for your application's lifetime and share it unless you have a specific reason not to.
private static readonly HttpClient client = new HttpClient();
See HttpClientFactory
for a dependency injection solution.
POST
var values = new Dictionary<string, string>
{
{ "thing1", "hello" },
{ "thing2", "world" }
};
var content = new FormUrlEncodedContent(values);
var response = await client.PostAsync("http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx", content);
var responseString = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
GET
var responseString = await client.GetStringAsync("http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx");
Method B: Third-Party Libraries
RestSharp
POST
var client = new RestClient("http://example.com");
// client.Authenticator = new HttpBasicAuthenticator(username, password);
var request = new RestRequest("resource/{id}");
request.AddParameter("thing1", "Hello");
request.AddParameter("thing2", "world");
request.AddHeader("header", "value");
request.AddFile("file", path);
var response = client.Post(request);
var content = response.Content; // Raw content as string
var response2 = client.Post<Person>(request);
var name = response2.Data.Name;
Flurl.Http
It is a newer library sporting a fluent API, testing helpers, uses HttpClient under the hood, and is portable. It is available via NuGet.
using Flurl.Http;
POST
var responseString = await "http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx"
.PostUrlEncodedAsync(new { thing1 = "hello", thing2 = "world" })
.ReceiveString();
GET
var responseString = await "http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx"
.GetStringAsync();
Method C: HttpWebRequest (not recommended for new work)
Available in: .NET Framework 1.1+
, .NET Standard 2.0+
, .NET Core 1.0+
. In .NET Core, it is mostly for compatibility -- it wraps HttpClient
, is less performant, and won't get new features.
using System.Net;
using System.Text; // For class Encoding
using System.IO; // For StreamReader
POST
var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx");
var postData = "thing1=" + Uri.EscapeDataString("hello");
postData += "&thing2=" + Uri.EscapeDataString("world");
var data = Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(postData);
request.Method = "POST";
request.ContentType = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
request.ContentLength = data.Length;
using (var stream = request.GetRequestStream())
{
stream.Write(data, 0, data.Length);
}
var response = (HttpWebResponse)request.GetResponse();
var responseString = new StreamReader(response.GetResponseStream()).ReadToEnd();
GET
var request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create("http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx");
var response = (HttpWebResponse)request.GetResponse();
var responseString = new StreamReader(response.GetResponseStream()).ReadToEnd();
Method D: WebClient (Not recommended for new work)
This is a wrapper around HttpWebRequest
. Compare with HttpClient
.
Available in: .NET Framework 1.1+
, NET Standard 2.0+
, .NET Core 2.0+
using System.Net;
using System.Collections.Specialized;
POST
using (var client = new WebClient())
{
var values = new NameValueCollection();
values["thing1"] = "hello";
values["thing2"] = "world";
var response = client.UploadValues("http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx", values);
var responseString = Encoding.Default.GetString(response);
}
GET
using (var client = new WebClient())
{
var responseString = client.DownloadString("http://www.example.com/recepticle.aspx");
}
Best Answer
Ok, found what the problem was. I was trying to call a .wsdl url instead of .asmx url. Doh!