As indicated in my own comment to the original question, the JavaScript injection approach works. Basically, what you need to do is add some piece of JavaScript code to the DOM onsubmit event, have it parse the form's fields, and return the result back to a Java-registered function.
Code example:
public class MyBrowser extends Activity {
private final String jsInjectCode =
"function parseForm(event) {" +
" var form = this;" +
" // make sure form points to the surrounding form object if a custom button was used" +
" if (this.tagName.toLowerCase() != 'form')" +
" form = this.form;" +
" var data = '';" +
" if (!form.method) form.method = 'get';" +
" data += 'method=' + form.method;" +
" data += '&action=' + form.action;" +
" var inputs = document.forms[0].getElementsByTagName('input');" +
" for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {" +
" var field = inputs[i];" +
" if (field.type != 'submit' && field.type != 'reset' && field.type != 'button')" +
" data += '&' + field.name + '=' + field.value;" +
" }" +
" HTMLOUT.processFormData(data);" +
"}" +
"" +
"for (var form_idx = 0; form_idx < document.forms.length; ++form_idx)" +
" document.forms[form_idx].addEventListener('submit', parseForm, false);" +
"var inputs = document.getElementsByTagName('input');" +
"for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {" +
" if (inputs[i].getAttribute('type') == 'button')" +
" inputs[i].addEventListener('click', parseForm, false);" +
"}" +
"";
class JavaScriptInterface {
@JavascriptInterface
public void processFormData(String formData) {
//added annotation for API > 17 to make it work
<do whatever you need to do with the form data>
}
}
onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.browser);
WebView browser = (WebView)findViewById(R.id.browser_window);
browser.getSettings().setJavaScriptEnabled(true);
browser.addJavascriptInterface(new JavaScriptInterface(), "HTMLOUT");
browser.setWebViewClient(new WebViewClient() {
@Override
public boolean shouldOverrideUrlLoading(WebView view, String url) {
view.loadUrl(url);
return true;
}
@Override
public void onPageFinished(WebView view, String url) {
view.loadUrl("javascript:(function() { " +
MyBrowser.jsInjectCode + "})()");
}
}
Informally, what this does is inject the custom JavaScript code (as a onsubmit
handler) whenever a page finishes loading. On submission of a form, Javascript will parse the form data and pass it back to Java land through the JavaScriptInterface
object.
In order to parse form fields, the Javascript code adds form onsubmit
and button onclick
handlers. The former can handle canonical form submissions through a regular submit button while the latter deals with custom submit buttons, i.e., buttons that do some additional Javascript magic before calling form.submit()
.
Please be aware that the Javascript code may not be perfect: There might be other methods to submit a form that my injected code may not be able to catch. However, I'm convinced that the injected code can be updated to deal with such possibilities.
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