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How can I tell when HTTP Headers have been sent in an ASP.NET application?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-21 19:37 出处:网络
Long story short, I have an ASP.NET application I\'m trying to debug and at some point, in very particular circumstances, the application will throw exceptions at a Response.Redirect() stating:

Long story short, I have an ASP.NET application I'm trying to debug and at some point, in very particular circumstances, the application will throw exceptions at a Response.Redirect() stating:

"Cannot redirect after HTTP headers have been sent."

Which I more or less get, except that I cannot figure out where the headers were sent.

Is there something to look for in an ASP.NET application that will in开发者_StackOverflow社区dicate that the HTTP headers have been sent?

BONUS DIFFICULTY: The ASP.NET app is still in .NET 1.1. The circumstances regarding the delay behind the upgrade are a really sore subject.


HttpApplication has an event PreSendRequestHeaders which is called just when headers are writtne. Subscribe to this and log it or add a breakpoint.

Beyond that, HttpResponse has a internal property called HeadersWritten (_headersWritten field in .NET 1.1). Since it's internal you can't access it directly, but you can through reflection. If this is only for internal debugging (i.e., not production code), then it's be fine to use reflection.

Check this method before/after all the page lifecylce events. Once you know which event is writing out the headers, add more HeadersWritten checks to find out where they're getting written. Through progressive narrowing of checks to this property, you'll find it.

New info

HeadersWritten property is public starting from .Net 4.5.2


Samuel's reply just solved this problem for me (+1). I can't paste a code sample in a comment, but in the interest of helping others, here's how I used the event he suggested to add a HeadersWritten property to my IHTTPHandler:

protected bool HeadersWritten { get; private set; }

void ApplicationInstance_BeginRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    HeadersWritten = false;
}

void ApplicationInstance_PreSendRequestHeaders(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    HeadersWritten = true;
}

public void ProcessRequest(HttpContextBase context)
{
    context.ApplicationInstance.PreSendRequestHeaders += new EventHandler(ApplicationInstance_PreSendRequestHeaders);
    do_some_stuff();
}

In my code that would break if I mess with headers too late, I simply check the HeadersWritten property first:

if (!HeadersWritten)
{
    Context.Response.StatusDescription = get_custom_description(Context.Response.StatusCode);
}
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