Commit | Line | Data |
fc7ec1d9 |
1 | package Catalyst::Response; |
2 | |
059c085b |
3 | use Moose; |
6680c772 |
4 | use HTTP::Headers; |
faa02805 |
5 | use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints; |
b194746d |
6 | use Scalar::Util 'blessed'; |
e8361cf8 |
7 | use Catalyst::Response::Writer; |
6adc45cf |
8 | use Catalyst::Utils (); |
fc7ec1d9 |
9 | |
eefc03e1 |
10 | use namespace::clean -except => ['meta']; |
11 | |
531f1ab6 |
12 | with 'MooseX::Emulate::Class::Accessor::Fast'; |
13 | |
6adc45cf |
14 | our $DEFAULT_ENCODE_CONTENT_TYPE_MATCH = qr{text|xml$|javascript$}; |
15 | |
16 | has encodable_content_type => ( |
17 | is => 'rw', |
18 | required => 1, |
19 | default => sub { $DEFAULT_ENCODE_CONTENT_TYPE_MATCH } |
20 | ); |
21 | |
faa02805 |
22 | has _response_cb => ( |
23 | is => 'ro', |
46fff667 |
24 | isa => 'CodeRef', |
faa02805 |
25 | writer => '_set_response_cb', |
26 | clearer => '_clear_response_cb', |
27 | predicate => '_has_response_cb', |
28 | ); |
29 | |
30 | subtype 'Catalyst::Engine::Types::Writer', |
31 | as duck_type([qw(write close)]); |
32 | |
33 | has _writer => ( |
34 | is => 'ro', |
46fff667 |
35 | isa => 'Catalyst::Engine::Types::Writer', #Pointless since we control how this is built |
36 | #writer => '_set_writer', Now that its lazy I think this is safe to remove |
faa02805 |
37 | clearer => '_clear_writer', |
38 | predicate => '_has_writer', |
46fff667 |
39 | lazy => 1, |
40 | builder => '_build_writer', |
faa02805 |
41 | ); |
42 | |
46fff667 |
43 | sub _build_writer { |
44 | my $self = shift; |
45 | |
46 | ## These two lines are probably crap now... |
47 | $self->_context->finalize_headers unless |
48 | $self->finalized_headers; |
49 | |
50 | my @headers; |
51 | $self->headers->scan(sub { push @headers, @_ }); |
52 | |
53 | my $writer = $self->_response_cb->([ $self->status, \@headers ]); |
54 | $self->_clear_response_cb; |
55 | |
56 | return $writer; |
57 | } |
58 | |
e37f92f5 |
59 | has write_fh => ( |
60 | is=>'ro', |
a3c9ab76 |
61 | predicate=>'_has_write_fh', |
eb1f4b49 |
62 | lazy=>1, |
1f2a8069 |
63 | builder=>'_build_write_fh', |
64 | ); |
65 | |
e8361cf8 |
66 | sub _build_write_fh { |
67 | my $writer = $_[0]->_writer; # We need to get the finalize headers side effect... |
6adc45cf |
68 | my $requires_encoding = $_[0]->encodable_response; |
e8361cf8 |
69 | my %fields = ( |
70 | _writer => $writer, |
688e2420 |
71 | _context => $_[0]->_context, |
e8361cf8 |
72 | _requires_encoding => $requires_encoding, |
73 | ); |
74 | |
75 | return bless \%fields, 'Catalyst::Response::Writer'; |
76 | } |
e37f92f5 |
77 | |
78 | sub DEMOLISH { |
79 | my $self = shift; |
a3c9ab76 |
80 | return if $self->_has_write_fh; |
e37f92f5 |
81 | if($self->_has_writer) { |
82 | $self->_writer->close |
83 | } |
84 | } |
faa02805 |
85 | |
6680c772 |
86 | has cookies => (is => 'rw', default => sub { {} }); |
ffb43803 |
87 | has body => (is => 'rw', default => undef); |
88 | sub has_body { defined($_[0]->body) } |
99a543ee |
89 | |
059c085b |
90 | has location => (is => 'rw'); |
6680c772 |
91 | has status => (is => 'rw', default => 200); |
92 | has finalized_headers => (is => 'rw', default => 0); |
059c085b |
93 | has headers => ( |
94 | is => 'rw', |
9c331634 |
95 | isa => 'HTTP::Headers', |
6adc45cf |
96 | handles => [qw(content_encoding content_length content_type content_type_charset header)], |
6680c772 |
97 | default => sub { HTTP::Headers->new() }, |
98 | required => 1, |
99 | lazy => 1, |
059c085b |
100 | ); |
258733f1 |
101 | has _context => ( |
102 | is => 'rw', |
103 | weak_ref => 1, |
104 | clearer => '_clear_context', |
105 | ); |
fc7ec1d9 |
106 | |
18adb1ed |
107 | before [qw(status headers content_encoding content_length content_type )] => sub { |
9ae060f0 |
108 | my $self = shift; |
109 | |
18adb1ed |
110 | $self->_context->log->warn( |
6adc45cf |
111 | "Useless setting a header value after finalize_headers and the response callback has been called." . |
18adb1ed |
112 | " Since we don't support tail headers this will not work as you might expect." ) |
113 | if ( $self->_context && $self->finalized_headers && !$self->_has_response_cb && @_ ); |
114 | }; |
115 | |
116 | # This has to be different since the first param to ->header is the header name and presumably |
117 | # you should be able to request the header even after finalization, just not try to change it. |
118 | before 'header' => sub { |
119 | my $self = shift; |
120 | my $header = shift; |
121 | |
122 | $self->_context->log->warn( |
123 | "Useless setting a header value after finalize_headers and the response callback has been called." . |
124 | " Since we don't support tail headers this will not work as you might expect." ) |
ca6d4ff6 |
125 | if ( $self->_context && $self->finalized_headers && !$self->_has_response_cb && @_ ); |
9ae060f0 |
126 | }; |
127 | |
059c085b |
128 | sub output { shift->body(@_) } |
129 | |
aa9e8261 |
130 | sub code { shift->status(@_) } |
131 | |
9c4288ea |
132 | sub write { |
133 | my ( $self, $buffer ) = @_; |
134 | |
135 | # Finalize headers if someone manually writes output |
89ba65d5 |
136 | $self->_context->finalize_headers unless $self->finalized_headers; |
9c4288ea |
137 | |
138 | $buffer = q[] unless defined $buffer; |
5c397774 |
139 | |
6adc45cf |
140 | if($self->encodable_response) { |
141 | $buffer = $self->_context->encoding->encode( $buffer, $self->_context->_encode_check ) |
142 | } |
9c4288ea |
143 | |
144 | my $len = length($buffer); |
145 | $self->_writer->write($buffer); |
146 | |
147 | return $len; |
148 | } |
149 | |
9c056c82 |
150 | sub unencoded_write { |
151 | my ( $self, $buffer ) = @_; |
152 | |
153 | # Finalize headers if someone manually writes output |
154 | $self->_context->finalize_headers unless $self->finalized_headers; |
155 | |
156 | $buffer = q[] unless defined $buffer; |
157 | |
158 | my $len = length($buffer); |
159 | $self->_writer->write($buffer); |
160 | |
161 | return $len; |
162 | } |
163 | |
9c4288ea |
164 | sub finalize_headers { |
165 | my ($self) = @_; |
9c4288ea |
166 | return; |
167 | } |
168 | |
e67f0874 |
169 | sub from_psgi_response { |
170 | my ($self, $psgi_res) = @_; |
b194746d |
171 | if(blessed($psgi_res) && $psgi_res->can('as_psgi')) { |
172 | $psgi_res = $psgi_res->as_psgi; |
173 | } |
e67f0874 |
174 | if(ref $psgi_res eq 'ARRAY') { |
175 | my ($status, $headers, $body) = @$psgi_res; |
176 | $self->status($status); |
4491e0cc |
177 | $self->headers(HTTP::Headers->new(@$headers)); |
67fd25bc |
178 | # Can be arrayref or filehandle... |
179 | if(defined $body) { # probably paranoia |
180 | ref $body eq 'ARRAY' ? $self->body(join('', @$body)) : $self->body($body); |
181 | } |
e67f0874 |
182 | } elsif(ref $psgi_res eq 'CODE') { |
183 | $psgi_res->(sub { |
4491e0cc |
184 | my $response = shift; |
185 | my ($status, $headers, $maybe_body) = @$response; |
e67f0874 |
186 | $self->status($status); |
4491e0cc |
187 | $self->headers(HTTP::Headers->new(@$headers)); |
8a3dcb98 |
188 | if(defined $maybe_body) { |
67fd25bc |
189 | # Can be arrayref or filehandle... |
190 | ref $maybe_body eq 'ARRAY' ? $self->body(join('', @$maybe_body)) : $self->body($maybe_body); |
e67f0874 |
191 | } else { |
192 | return $self->write_fh; |
193 | } |
4491e0cc |
194 | }); |
195 | } else { |
e67f0874 |
196 | die "You can't set a Catalyst response from that, expect a valid PSGI response"; |
197 | } |
d2000928 |
198 | |
199 | # Encoding compatibilty. If the response set a charset, well... we need |
200 | # to assume its properly encoded and NOT encode for this response. Otherwise |
201 | # We risk double encoding. |
202 | if($self->content_type_charset) { |
51b34249 |
203 | # We have to do this since for backcompat reasons having a charset doesn't always |
204 | # mean that the body is already encoded :( |
d2000928 |
205 | $self->_context->clear_encoding; |
206 | } |
e67f0874 |
207 | } |
208 | |
fc7ec1d9 |
209 | =head1 NAME |
210 | |
910410b8 |
211 | Catalyst::Response - stores output responding to the current client request |
fc7ec1d9 |
212 | |
213 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
214 | |
fbcc39ad |
215 | $res = $c->response; |
216 | $res->body; |
aa9e8261 |
217 | $res->code; |
fbcc39ad |
218 | $res->content_encoding; |
219 | $res->content_length; |
220 | $res->content_type; |
221 | $res->cookies; |
fbcc39ad |
222 | $res->header; |
223 | $res->headers; |
224 | $res->output; |
225 | $res->redirect; |
226 | $res->status; |
227 | $res->write; |
b22c6668 |
228 | |
fc7ec1d9 |
229 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
230 | |
910410b8 |
231 | This is the Catalyst Response class, which provides methods for responding to |
46372e65 |
232 | the current client request. The appropriate L<Catalyst::Engine> for your environment |
233 | will turn the Catalyst::Response into a HTTP Response and return it to the client. |
b22c6668 |
234 | |
235 | =head1 METHODS |
fc7ec1d9 |
236 | |
08a2c908 |
237 | =head2 $res->body( $text | $fh | $iohandle_object ) |
e060fe05 |
238 | |
239 | $c->response->body('Catalyst rocks!'); |
06e1b616 |
240 | |
46372e65 |
241 | Sets or returns the output (text or binary data). If you are returning a large body, |
77b5811a |
242 | you might want to use a L<IO::Handle> type of object (Something that implements the getline method |
243 | in the same fashion), or a filehandle GLOB. These will be passed down to the PSGI |
244 | handler you are using and might be optimized using server specific abilities (for |
245 | example L<Twiggy> will attempt to server a real local file in a non blocking manner). |
06e1b616 |
246 | |
6adc45cf |
247 | If you are using a filehandle as the body response you are responsible for |
566678d0 |
248 | making sure it conforms to the L<PSGI> specification with regards to content |
6adc45cf |
249 | encoding. Unlike with scalar body values or when using the streaming interfaces |
250 | we currently do not attempt to normalize and encode your filehandle. In general |
251 | this means you should be sure to be sending bytes not UTF8 decoded multibyte |
252 | characters. |
253 | |
254 | Most of the time when you do: |
255 | |
256 | open(my $fh, '<:raw', $path); |
257 | |
258 | You should be fine. If you open a filehandle with a L<PerlIO> layer you probably |
259 | are not fine. You can usually fix this by explicitly using binmode to set |
260 | the IOLayer to :raw. Its possible future versions of L<Catalyst> will try to |
261 | 'do the right thing'. |
262 | |
490b7a80 |
263 | When using a L<IO::Handle> type of object and no content length has been |
264 | already set in the response headers Catalyst will make a reasonable attempt |
265 | to determine the size of the Handle. Depending on the implementation of your |
266 | handle object, setting the content length may fail. If it is at all possible |
267 | for you to determine the content length of your handle object, |
4a178c0d |
268 | it is recommended that you set the content length in the response headers |
490b7a80 |
269 | yourself, which will be respected and sent by Catalyst in the response. |
270 | |
efeeb257 |
271 | Please note that the object needs to implement C<getline>, not just |
77b5811a |
272 | C<read>. Older versions of L<Catalyst> expected your filehandle like objects |
273 | to do read. If you have code written for this expectation and you cannot |
274 | change the code to meet the L<PSGI> specification, you can try the following |
275 | middleware L<Plack::Middleware::AdaptFilehandleRead> which will attempt to |
276 | wrap your object in an interface that so conforms. |
efeeb257 |
277 | |
278 | Starting from version 5.90060, when using an L<IO::Handle> object, you |
279 | may want to use L<Plack::Middleware::XSendfile>, to delegate the |
280 | actual serving to the frontend server. To do so, you need to pass to |
281 | C<body> an IO object with a C<path> method. This can be achieved in |
282 | two ways. |
283 | |
284 | Either using L<Plack::Util>: |
285 | |
286 | my $fh = IO::File->new($file, 'r'); |
287 | Plack::Util::set_io_path($fh, $file); |
288 | |
289 | Or using L<IO::File::WithPath> |
290 | |
291 | my $fh = IO::File::WithPath->new($file, 'r'); |
292 | |
293 | And then passing the filehandle to body and setting headers, if needed. |
294 | |
295 | $c->response->body($fh); |
296 | $c->response->headers->content_type('text/plain'); |
297 | $c->response->headers->content_length(-s $file); |
298 | $c->response->headers->last_modified((stat($file))[9]); |
299 | |
300 | L<Plack::Middleware::XSendfile> can be loaded in the application so: |
301 | |
302 | __PACKAGE__->config( |
303 | psgi_middleware => [ |
304 | 'XSendfile', |
305 | # other middlewares here... |
306 | ], |
307 | ); |
308 | |
309 | B<Beware> that loading the middleware without configuring the |
310 | webserver to set the request header C<X-Sendfile-Type> to a supported |
311 | type (C<X-Accel-Redirect> for nginx, C<X-Sendfile> for Apache and |
312 | Lighttpd), could lead to the disclosure of private paths to malicious |
313 | clients setting that header. |
314 | |
315 | Nginx needs the additional X-Accel-Mapping header to be set in the |
316 | webserver configuration, so the middleware will replace the absolute |
317 | path of the IO object with the internal nginx path. This is also |
318 | useful to prevent a buggy app to server random files from the |
319 | filesystem, as it's an internal redirect. |
320 | |
321 | An nginx configuration for FastCGI could look so: |
322 | |
323 | server { |
324 | server_name example.com; |
325 | root /my/app/root; |
326 | location /private/repo/ { |
327 | internal; |
328 | alias /my/app/repo/; |
329 | } |
330 | location /private/staging/ { |
331 | internal; |
332 | alias /my/app/staging/; |
333 | } |
334 | location @proxy { |
335 | include /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params; |
336 | fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME ''; |
337 | fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_script_name; |
338 | fastcgi_param HTTP_X_SENDFILE_TYPE X-Accel-Redirect; |
339 | fastcgi_param HTTP_X_ACCEL_MAPPING /my/app=/private; |
340 | fastcgi_pass unix:/my/app/run/app.sock; |
341 | } |
342 | } |
343 | |
344 | In the example above, passing filehandles with a local path matching |
345 | /my/app/staging or /my/app/repo will be served by nginx. Passing paths |
346 | with other locations will lead to an internal server error. |
347 | |
348 | Setting the body to a filehandle without the C<path> method bypasses |
349 | the middleware completely. |
350 | |
351 | For Apache and Lighttpd, the mapping doesn't apply and setting the |
352 | X-Sendfile-Type is enough. |
353 | |
02570318 |
354 | =head2 $res->has_body |
355 | |
356 | Predicate which returns true when a body has been set. |
357 | |
aa9e8261 |
358 | =head2 $res->code |
359 | |
360 | Alias for $res->status. |
361 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
362 | =head2 $res->content_encoding |
b5176d9e |
363 | |
910410b8 |
364 | Shortcut for $res->headers->content_encoding. |
b5176d9e |
365 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
366 | =head2 $res->content_length |
b5176d9e |
367 | |
910410b8 |
368 | Shortcut for $res->headers->content_length. |
b5176d9e |
369 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
370 | =head2 $res->content_type |
b5176d9e |
371 | |
910410b8 |
372 | Shortcut for $res->headers->content_type. |
b5176d9e |
373 | |
87e9f9ab |
374 | This value is typically set by your view or plugin. For example, |
375 | L<Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple> will guess the mime type based on the file |
376 | it found, while L<Catalyst::View::TT> defaults to C<text/html>. |
377 | |
6adc45cf |
378 | =head2 $res->content_type_charset |
379 | |
380 | Shortcut for $res->headers->content_type_charset; |
381 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
382 | =head2 $res->cookies |
fc7ec1d9 |
383 | |
910410b8 |
384 | Returns a reference to a hash containing cookies to be set. The keys of the |
385 | hash are the cookies' names, and their corresponding values are hash |
7e743798 |
386 | references used to construct a L<CGI::Simple::Cookie> object. |
fc7ec1d9 |
387 | |
388 | $c->response->cookies->{foo} = { value => '123' }; |
389 | |
7e743798 |
390 | The keys of the hash reference on the right correspond to the L<CGI::Simple::Cookie> |
910410b8 |
391 | parameters of the same name, except they are used without a leading dash. |
392 | Possible parameters are: |
ac965e92 |
393 | |
b0ad47c1 |
394 | =over |
ac965e92 |
395 | |
71453caf |
396 | =item value |
ac965e92 |
397 | |
71453caf |
398 | =item expires |
ac965e92 |
399 | |
71453caf |
400 | =item domain |
ac965e92 |
401 | |
71453caf |
402 | =item path |
403 | |
404 | =item secure |
405 | |
b21bc468 |
406 | =item httponly |
407 | |
71453caf |
408 | =back |
ac965e92 |
409 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
410 | =head2 $res->header |
fbcc39ad |
411 | |
910410b8 |
412 | Shortcut for $res->headers->header. |
fbcc39ad |
413 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
414 | =head2 $res->headers |
fc7ec1d9 |
415 | |
910410b8 |
416 | Returns an L<HTTP::Headers> object, which can be used to set headers. |
fc7ec1d9 |
417 | |
418 | $c->response->headers->header( 'X-Catalyst' => $Catalyst::VERSION ); |
419 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
420 | =head2 $res->output |
fc7ec1d9 |
421 | |
910410b8 |
422 | Alias for $res->body. |
fc7ec1d9 |
423 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
424 | =head2 $res->redirect( $url, $status ) |
fc7ec1d9 |
425 | |
2f381252 |
426 | Causes the response to redirect to the specified URL. The default status is |
427 | C<302>. |
fc7ec1d9 |
428 | |
73a52566 |
429 | $c->response->redirect( 'http://slashdot.org' ); |
430 | $c->response->redirect( 'http://slashdot.org', 307 ); |
431 | |
2f381252 |
432 | This is a convenience method that sets the Location header to the |
433 | redirect destination, and then sets the response status. You will |
ee24f3a8 |
434 | want to C< return > or C<< $c->detach() >> to interrupt the normal |
2f381252 |
435 | processing flow if you want the redirect to occur straight away. |
436 | |
824a5eb0 |
437 | B<Note:> do not give a relative URL as $url, i.e: one that is not fully |
438 | qualified (= C<http://...>, etc.) or that starts with a slash |
439 | (= C</path/here>). While it may work, it is not guaranteed to do the right |
440 | thing and is not a standard behaviour. You may opt to use uri_for() or |
441 | uri_for_action() instead. |
442 | |
00038a21 |
443 | B<Note:> If $url is an object that does ->as_string (such as L<URI>, which is |
444 | what you get from ->uri_for) we automatically call that to stringify. This |
445 | should ease the common case usage |
446 | |
447 | return $c->res->redirect( $c->uri_for(...)); |
448 | |
73a52566 |
449 | =cut |
450 | |
451 | sub redirect { |
452 | my $self = shift; |
fbcc39ad |
453 | |
454 | if (@_) { |
73a52566 |
455 | my $location = shift; |
f1bbebac |
456 | my $status = shift || 302; |
73a52566 |
457 | |
00038a21 |
458 | if(blessed($location) && $location->can('as_string')) { |
459 | $location = $location->as_string; |
460 | } |
461 | |
73a52566 |
462 | $self->location($location); |
463 | $self->status($status); |
464 | } |
465 | |
466 | return $self->location; |
467 | } |
fc7ec1d9 |
468 | |
059c085b |
469 | =head2 $res->location |
470 | |
471 | Sets or returns the HTTP 'Location'. |
472 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
473 | =head2 $res->status |
fc7ec1d9 |
474 | |
910410b8 |
475 | Sets or returns the HTTP status. |
fc7ec1d9 |
476 | |
477 | $c->response->status(404); |
aa9e8261 |
478 | |
479 | $res->code is an alias for this, to match HTTP::Response->code. |
b0ad47c1 |
480 | |
b5ecfcf0 |
481 | =head2 $res->write( $data ) |
fbcc39ad |
482 | |
dd096a3a |
483 | Writes $data to the output stream. Calling this method will finalize your |
484 | headers and send the headers and status code response to the client (so changing |
485 | them afterwards is a waste... be sure to set your headers correctly first). |
486 | |
487 | You may call this as often as you want throughout your response cycle. You may |
488 | even set a 'body' afterward. So for example you might write your HTTP headers |
489 | and the HEAD section of your document and then set the body from a template |
490 | driven from a database. In some cases this can seem to the client as if you had |
491 | a faster overall response (but note that unless your server support chunked |
492 | body your content is likely to get queued anyway (L<Starman> and most other |
493 | http 1.1 webservers support this). |
494 | |
495 | If there is an encoding set, we encode each line of the response (the default |
496 | encoding is UTF-8). |
fbcc39ad |
497 | |
e5ac67e5 |
498 | =head2 $res->unencoded_write( $data ) |
499 | |
500 | Works just like ->write but we don't apply any content encoding to C<$data>. Use |
501 | this if you are already encoding the $data or the data is arriving from an encoded |
502 | storage. |
503 | |
e37f92f5 |
504 | =head2 $res->write_fh |
505 | |
e8361cf8 |
506 | Returns an instance of L<Catalyst::Response::Writer>, which is a lightweight |
507 | decorator over the PSGI C<$writer> object (see L<PSGI.pod\Delayed-Response-and-Streaming-Body>). |
508 | |
509 | In addition to proxying the C<write> and C<close> method from the underlying PSGI |
510 | writer, this proxy object knows any application wide encoding, and provides a method |
511 | C<write_encoded> that will properly encode your written lines based upon your |
512 | encoding settings. By default in L<Catalyst> responses are UTF-8 encoded and this |
513 | is the encoding used if you respond via C<write_encoded>. If you want to handle |
514 | encoding yourself, you can use the C<write> method directly. |
515 | |
516 | Encoding only applies to content types for which it matters. Currently the following |
517 | content types are assumed to need encoding: text (including HTML), xml and javascript. |
518 | |
519 | We provide access to this object so that you can properly close over it for use in |
520 | asynchronous and nonblocking applications. For example (assuming you are using a supporting |
521 | server, like L<Twiggy>: |
e37f92f5 |
522 | |
523 | package AsyncExample::Controller::Root; |
524 | |
525 | use Moose; |
526 | |
527 | BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller' } |
528 | |
529 | sub prepare_cb { |
530 | my $write_fh = pop; |
531 | return sub { |
532 | my $message = shift; |
533 | $write_fh->write("Finishing: $message\n"); |
534 | $write_fh->close; |
535 | }; |
536 | } |
537 | |
538 | sub anyevent :Local :Args(0) { |
539 | my ($self, $c) = @_; |
540 | my $cb = $self->prepare_cb($c->res->write_fh); |
541 | |
542 | my $watcher; |
543 | $watcher = AnyEvent->timer( |
544 | after => 5, |
545 | cb => sub { |
546 | $cb->(scalar localtime); |
547 | undef $watcher; # cancel circular-ref |
548 | }); |
549 | } |
550 | |
dd096a3a |
551 | Like the 'write' method, calling this will finalize headers. Unlike 'write' when you |
552 | can this it is assumed you are taking control of the response so the body is never |
553 | finalized (there isn't one anyway) and you need to call the close method. |
554 | |
e4cc83b2 |
555 | =head2 $res->print( @data ) |
556 | |
557 | Prints @data to the output stream, separated by $,. This lets you pass |
558 | the response object to functions that want to write to an L<IO::Handle>. |
559 | |
e7ea7308 |
560 | =head2 $res->finalize_headers() |
8738b8fe |
561 | |
562 | Writes headers to response if not already written |
563 | |
e67f0874 |
564 | =head2 from_psgi_response |
565 | |
566 | Given a PSGI response (either three element ARRAY reference OR coderef expecting |
567 | a $responder) set the response from it. |
568 | |
569 | Properly supports streaming and delayed response and / or async IO if running |
570 | under an expected event loop. |
571 | |
b194746d |
572 | If passed an object, will expect that object to do a method C<as_psgi>. |
573 | |
e67f0874 |
574 | Example: |
575 | |
576 | package MyApp::Web::Controller::Test; |
577 | |
578 | use base 'Catalyst::Controller'; |
579 | use Plack::App::Directory; |
580 | |
581 | |
582 | my $app = Plack::App::Directory->new({ root => "/path/to/htdocs" }) |
583 | ->to_app; |
584 | |
585 | sub myaction :Local Args { |
586 | my ($self, $c) = @_; |
faa1bcff |
587 | $c->res->from_psgi_response($app->($c->req->env)); |
e67f0874 |
588 | } |
589 | |
590 | Please note this does not attempt to map or nest your PSGI application under |
aca337aa |
591 | the Controller and Action namespace or path. You may wish to review 'PSGI Helpers' |
592 | under L<Catalyst::Utils> for help in properly nesting applications. |
593 | |
594 | B<NOTE> If your external PSGI application returns a response that has a character |
595 | set associated with the content type (such as "text/html; charset=UTF-8") we set |
596 | $c->clear_encoding to remove any additional content type encoding processing later |
597 | in the application (this is done to avoid double encoding issues). |
e67f0874 |
598 | |
6adc45cf |
599 | =head2 encodable_content_type |
600 | |
601 | This is a regular expression used to determine of the current content type |
602 | should be considered encodable. Currently we apply default encoding (usually |
603 | UTF8) to text type contents. Here's the default regular expression: |
604 | |
605 | This would match content types like: |
606 | |
607 | text/plain |
608 | text/html |
609 | text/xml |
610 | application/javascript |
611 | application/xml |
612 | application/vnd.user+xml |
613 | |
614 | B<NOTE>: We don't encode JSON content type responses by default since most |
615 | of the JSON serializers that are commonly used for this task will do so |
616 | automatically and we don't want to double encode. If you are not using a |
617 | tool like L<JSON> to produce JSON type content, (for example you are using |
618 | a template system, or creating the strings manually) you will need to either |
619 | encoding the body yourself: |
620 | |
621 | $c->response->body( $c->encoding->encode( $body, $c->_encode_check ) ); |
622 | |
623 | Or you can alter the regular expression using this attribute. |
624 | |
625 | =head2 encodable_response |
626 | |
627 | Given a L<Catalyst::Response> return true if its one that can be encoded. |
628 | |
629 | make sure there is an encoding set on the response |
630 | make sure the content type is encodable |
631 | make sure no content type charset has been already set to something different from the global encoding |
632 | make sure no content encoding is present. |
633 | |
634 | Note this does not inspect a body since we do allow automatic encoding on streaming |
635 | type responses. |
636 | |
637 | =cut |
638 | |
639 | sub encodable_response { |
640 | my ($self) = @_; |
641 | return 0 unless $self->_context; # Cases like returning a HTTP Exception response you don't have a context here... |
642 | return 0 unless $self->_context->encoding; |
643 | |
d2000928 |
644 | # The response is considered to have a 'manual charset' when a charset is already set on |
645 | # the content type of the response AND it is not the same as the one we set in encoding. |
646 | # If there is no charset OR we are asking for the one which is the same as the current |
647 | # required encoding, that is a flag that we want Catalyst to encode the response automatically. |
6adc45cf |
648 | my $has_manual_charset = 0; |
649 | if(my $charset = $self->content_type_charset) { |
650 | $has_manual_charset = (uc($charset) ne uc($self->_context->encoding->mime_name)) ? 1:0; |
651 | } |
652 | |
d2000928 |
653 | # Content type is encodable if it matches the regular expression stored in this attribute |
654 | my $encodable_content_type = $self->content_type =~ m/${\$self->encodable_content_type}/ ? 1:0; |
655 | |
656 | # The content encoding is allowed (for charset encoding) only if its empty or is set to identity |
657 | my $allowed_content_encoding = (!$self->content_encoding || $self->content_encoding eq 'identity') ? 1:0; |
658 | |
659 | # The content type must be an encodable type, and there must be NO manual charset and also |
660 | # the content encoding must be the allowed values; |
6adc45cf |
661 | if( |
d2000928 |
662 | $encodable_content_type and |
663 | !$has_manual_charset and |
664 | $allowed_content_encoding |
665 | ) { |
6adc45cf |
666 | return 1; |
667 | } else { |
668 | return 0; |
669 | } |
670 | } |
671 | |
faa02805 |
672 | =head2 DEMOLISH |
673 | |
674 | Ensures that the response is flushed and closed at the end of the |
675 | request. |
676 | |
677 | =head2 meta |
678 | |
679 | Provided by Moose |
680 | |
e4cc83b2 |
681 | =cut |
682 | |
683 | sub print { |
684 | my $self = shift; |
685 | my $data = shift; |
686 | |
687 | defined $self->write($data) or return; |
688 | |
689 | for (@_) { |
690 | defined $self->write($,) or return; |
691 | defined $self->write($_) or return; |
692 | } |
fe3083a8 |
693 | defined $self->write($\) or return; |
b0ad47c1 |
694 | |
e4cc83b2 |
695 | return 1; |
696 | } |
697 | |
910410b8 |
698 | =head1 AUTHORS |
fc7ec1d9 |
699 | |
2f381252 |
700 | Catalyst Contributors, see Catalyst.pm |
fc7ec1d9 |
701 | |
702 | =head1 COPYRIGHT |
703 | |
b0ad47c1 |
704 | This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify |
61b1e958 |
705 | it under the same terms as Perl itself. |
fc7ec1d9 |
706 | |
707 | =cut |
708 | |
e5ecd5bc |
709 | __PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable; |
710 | |
fc7ec1d9 |
711 | 1; |