instiki/vendor/rails/actionpack/lib/action_controller/streaming.rb

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2007-01-22 14:43:50 +01:00
module ActionController #:nodoc:
# Methods for sending files and streams to the browser instead of rendering.
module Streaming
DEFAULT_SEND_FILE_OPTIONS = {
:type => 'application/octet-stream'.freeze,
:disposition => 'attachment'.freeze,
:stream => true,
:buffer_size => 4096
}.freeze
protected
# Sends the file by streaming it 4096 bytes at a time. This way the
# whole file doesn't need to be read into memory at once. This makes
# it feasible to send even large files.
#
# Be careful to sanitize the path parameter if it coming from a web
# page. send_file(params[:path]) allows a malicious user to
# download any file on your server.
#
# Options:
# * <tt>:filename</tt> - suggests a filename for the browser to use.
# Defaults to File.basename(path).
# * <tt>:type</tt> - specifies an HTTP content type.
# Defaults to 'application/octet-stream'.
# * <tt>:disposition</tt> - specifies whether the file will be shown inline or downloaded.
# Valid values are 'inline' and 'attachment' (default).
# * <tt>:stream</tt> - whether to send the file to the user agent as it is read (true)
# or to read the entire file before sending (false). Defaults to true.
# * <tt>:buffer_size</tt> - specifies size (in bytes) of the buffer used to stream the file.
# Defaults to 4096.
# * <tt>:status</tt> - specifies the status code to send with the response. Defaults to '200 OK'.
#
# The default Content-Type and Content-Disposition headers are
# set to download arbitrary binary files in as many browsers as
# possible. IE versions 4, 5, 5.5, and 6 are all known to have
# a variety of quirks (especially when downloading over SSL).
#
# Simple download:
# send_file '/path/to.zip'
#
# Show a JPEG in the browser:
# send_file '/path/to.jpeg', :type => 'image/jpeg', :disposition => 'inline'
#
# Show a 404 page in the browser:
# send_file '/path/to/404.html, :type => 'text/html; charset=utf-8', :status => 404
#
# Read about the other Content-* HTTP headers if you'd like to
# provide the user with more information (such as Content-Description).
# http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.11
#
# Also be aware that the document may be cached by proxies and browsers.
# The Pragma and Cache-Control headers declare how the file may be cached
# by intermediaries. They default to require clients to validate with
# the server before releasing cached responses. See
# http://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/ for an overview of web caching and
# http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.9
# for the Cache-Control header spec.
def send_file(path, options = {}) #:doc:
raise MissingFile, "Cannot read file #{path}" unless File.file?(path) and File.readable?(path)
options[:length] ||= File.size(path)
options[:filename] ||= File.basename(path)
send_file_headers! options
@performed_render = false
if options[:stream]
render :status => options[:status], :text => Proc.new { |response, output|
logger.info "Streaming file #{path}" unless logger.nil?
len = options[:buffer_size] || 4096
File.open(path, 'rb') do |file|
if output.respond_to?(:syswrite)
begin
while true
output.syswrite(file.sysread(len))
end
rescue EOFError
end
else
while buf = file.read(len)
output.write(buf)
end
end
end
}
else
logger.info "Sending file #{path}" unless logger.nil?
File.open(path, 'rb') { |file| render :status => options[:status], :text => file.read }
end
end
# Send binary data to the user as a file download. May set content type, apparent file name,
# and specify whether to show data inline or download as an attachment.
#
# Options:
# * <tt>:filename</tt> - Suggests a filename for the browser to use.
# * <tt>:type</tt> - specifies an HTTP content type.
# Defaults to 'application/octet-stream'.
# * <tt>:disposition</tt> - specifies whether the file will be shown inline or downloaded.
# * <tt>:status</tt> - specifies the status code to send with the response. Defaults to '200 OK'.
# Valid values are 'inline' and 'attachment' (default).
#
# Generic data download:
# send_data buffer
#
# Download a dynamically-generated tarball:
# send_data generate_tgz('dir'), :filename => 'dir.tgz'
#
# Display an image Active Record in the browser:
# send_data image.data, :type => image.content_type, :disposition => 'inline'
#
# See +send_file+ for more information on HTTP Content-* headers and caching.
def send_data(data, options = {}) #:doc:
logger.info "Sending data #{options[:filename]}" unless logger.nil?
send_file_headers! options.merge(:length => data.size)
@performed_render = false
render :status => options[:status], :text => data
end
private
def send_file_headers!(options)
options.update(DEFAULT_SEND_FILE_OPTIONS.merge(options))
[:length, :type, :disposition].each do |arg|
raise ArgumentError, ":#{arg} option required" if options[arg].nil?
end
disposition = options[:disposition].dup || 'attachment'
disposition <<= %(; filename="#{options[:filename]}") if options[:filename]
@headers.update(
'Content-Length' => options[:length],
'Content-Type' => options[:type].strip, # fixes a problem with extra '\r' with some browsers
'Content-Disposition' => disposition,
'Content-Transfer-Encoding' => 'binary'
)
# Fix a problem with IE 6.0 on opening downloaded files:
# If Cache-Control: no-cache is set (which Rails does by default),
# IE removes the file it just downloaded from its cache immediately
# after it displays the "open/save" dialog, which means that if you
# hit "open" the file isn't there anymore when the application that
# is called for handling the download is run, so let's workaround that
@headers['Cache-Control'] = 'private' if @headers['Cache-Control'] == 'no-cache'
end
end
end