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How does one determine if a server supports resuming a file transfer or get request?

My thoughts were to set the header to start the get request at byte "2" instead of 0, and immediately closing the http request if that gave the proper result

but I was wondering if there was something about the server response for a different kind of probe that would reveal this information to me

3 Answers 3

45
+50

To probe the download resume feature of a server, you may send a HEAD request to the server supplying a Range header with arbitrary values. If the response code is 206, then resume is supported.

Example with curl:

$ curl -i -X HEAD --header "Range: bytes=50-100" http://mirrors.melbourne.co.uk/ubuntu-releases//raring/ubuntu-13.04-desktop-amd64.iso

Update:

Here's an example in Java:

import org.apache.http.client.ResponseHandler;
import org.apache.http.client.HttpClient;
import org.apache.http.HttpResponse;
import org.apache.http.client.methods.HttpHead;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.DefaultHttpClient;
import org.apache.http.message.BasicHeader;

public class ResumeChecker {

    public final static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {

        HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient();
        HttpHead httpRequest = new HttpHead("http://www.google.com");
        httpRequest.addHeader(new BasicHeader("Range", "bytes=10-20"));

        System.out.println("Executing request " + httpRequest.getURI());

        HttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httpRequest);

        // Check here that response.getStatusLine() contains 206 code
    }
}

However, I haven't tested it mysqlf.

4
  • how would I do this with java apache library? `new BasicHeader("Range", "bytes=50-100") ? any thing extra
    – CQM
    Commented Aug 13, 2013 at 15:19
  • Do not know about apache library but with Standard lib class URL, you can use connection.setRequestProperty("Range","bytes="+startvalue+"-"+endvalue)
    – Pratap
    Commented Mar 11, 2014 at 5:55
  • 1
    Response 206 is not a unique indicator, that the server supports range requests. Code 416 (Range Not Satisfiable) is also very possible, especially when requesting unknown/fictional ranges!
    – Ben
    Commented Nov 13, 2019 at 13:17
  • 1
    Worth adding that some servers will return just 200 OK (like Amazon S3) when making a head request, need to look for "Accept-Ranges" response header as well. Mine was "accept-ranges: bytes".
    – n0ne
    Commented Dec 17, 2021 at 3:36
5

Adding to @aadel's answer:

Most of the servers nowadays respond with Accept-Ranges: bytes header in case they support resuming. Postman, RequestMaker or Insomnia can help you in examining request/response headers.

3
  • 1
    I have seen - active, in the wild - servers that respond with Accept-Range: bytes but still don't support ranged downloads (at least, maybe for some files but not all of them). Sending a request with Range gets you a 200 and the entire file rather than a 206 with just the part you requested. They might be due to badly-written HTTP/HTTPS proxies. Moral of the story: don't trust the headers. Make the HEAD request anyway. Or double-check the response code of the GET.
    – Corrodias
    Commented Nov 18, 2017 at 6:20
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    Correction to my last comment: It isn't necessarily badly-written. A 200 is a valid response if your If-Range header indicates that you're requesting a different version of the file from what the server has. Still, the takeaway is that a 200 is a valid response to a Range request.
    – Corrodias
    Commented Nov 18, 2017 at 6:46
  • @Corrodias But it still means you may end up corrupting a file if the first part of it was already downloaded and then the server returns the first part again, which you end up appending to the local file. Commented Sep 20, 2019 at 16:20
0

You can test it out, starting, stopping, then restarting a download:

curl --continue-at - http://... >> file.out

For whatever reason, this (from another answer) gave me a 403:

curl -i -X HEAD --header "Range: bytes=50-100" http://...

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