'C#: Writing a CookieContainer to Disk and Loading Back In For Use

I have a CookieContainer extracted from a HttpWebRequest/HttpWebResponse session named CookieJar. I want my application to store cookies between runs, so cookies collected in the CookieContainer on one run of the program will be used the next run, too.

I think the way to do this would be to somehow write the contents of a CookieContainer to disk. My question is:

  • How can you write a CookieContainer to the disk? Are there built-in functions for this, or, if not, what are the approaches people have taken? Are there any classes available for simplifying this?
  • Once you've written a CookieContainer to the disk, how do you load it back in for use?

UPDATE: The first answer has suggested serialization of the CookieContainer. However, I am not very familiar with how to serialize and deserialize such complex objects. Could you provide some sample code? The suggestion was to utilise SOAPFormatter.



Solution 1:[1]

This problem was bugging me for ages, nothing I could find worked. I worked it out, so putting that information out into the world.

Answer using BinaryFormatter:

    public static void WriteCookiesToDisk(string file, CookieContainer cookieJar)
    {
        using(Stream stream = File.Create(file))
        {
            try {
                Console.Out.Write("Writing cookies to disk... ");
                BinaryFormatter formatter = new BinaryFormatter();
                formatter.Serialize(stream, cookieJar);
                Console.Out.WriteLine("Done.");
            } catch(Exception e) { 
                Console.Out.WriteLine("Problem writing cookies to disk: " + e.GetType()); 
            }
        }
    }   

    public static CookieContainer ReadCookiesFromDisk(string file)
    {

        try {
            using(Stream stream = File.Open(file, FileMode.Open))
            {
                Console.Out.Write("Reading cookies from disk... ");
                BinaryFormatter formatter = new BinaryFormatter();
                Console.Out.WriteLine("Done.");
                return (CookieContainer)formatter.Deserialize(stream);
            }
        } catch(Exception e) { 
            Console.Out.WriteLine("Problem reading cookies from disk: " + e.GetType()); 
            return new CookieContainer(); 
        }
    }

Solution 2:[2]

It is interesting to have cookies in text format. Besides being able to be used to write to disk, it can be used for other purposes.

WORKS FOR ME!

Use the LoadCookiesFromFile and SaveCookiesToFile functions to load and write the cookies to the disk respectively.

Or use the GetCookies and SetCookies functions to do the same thing, but to manipulate it as a string.

CookieContainer cookieContainer = new CookieContainer();

void LoadCookiesFromFile(string path)
{
    SetCookies(cookieContainer, File.ReadAllText(path));
}

void SaveCookiesToFile(string path)
{
    File.WriteAllText(path, GetCookies(cookieContainer));
}

string GetCookies(CookieContainer cookieContainer)
{
    using (MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream())
    {
        new BinaryFormatter().Serialize(stream, cookieContainer);
        var bytes = new byte[stream.Length];
        stream.Position = 0;
        stream.Read(bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
        return Convert.ToBase64String(bytes);
    }
}

void SetCookies(CookieContainer cookieContainer, string cookieText)
{
    try
    {
        var bytes = Convert.FromBase64String(cookieText);
        using (MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream(bytes))
        {
            cookieContainer = (CookieContainer)new BinaryFormatter().Deserialize(stream);
        }
    }
    catch
    {
        //Ignore if the string is not valid.
    }
}

Solution 3:[3]

All of the previous answers are outdated since serializing using IFormatter classes was deprecated https://aka.ms/binaryformatter

So the correct method now is serializing it using something else that supports IEnumerable<T>.

Here's an example using System.Text.Json

Serialize

await using var fs = File.OpenWrite("cookies.json");
// Beware: GetAllCookies is available starting with .NET 6
JsonSerializer.Serialize(fs, cookieContainer.GetAllCookies());

Deserialize

var cookieContainer = new CookieContainer();
await using var fs = File.OpenRead("cookies.json");
var cookieCollection = JsonSerializer.Deserialize<CookieCollection>(fs);
cookieContainer.Add(cookieCollection);

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 LucidObscurity
Solution 2 Sergio Cabral
Solution 3