require 'digest/md5' module ActionController # :nodoc: # Represents an HTTP response generated by a controller action. One can use # an ActionController::Response object to retrieve the current state # of the response, or customize the response. An Response object can # either represent a "real" HTTP response (i.e. one that is meant to be sent # back to the web browser) or a test response (i.e. one that is generated # from integration tests). See CgiResponse and TestResponse, respectively. # # Response is mostly a Ruby on Rails framework implement detail, and # should never be used directly in controllers. Controllers should use the # methods defined in ActionController::Base instead. For example, if you want # to set the HTTP response's content MIME type, then use # ActionControllerBase#headers instead of Response#headers. # # Nevertheless, integration tests may want to inspect controller responses in # more detail, and that's when Response can be useful for application # developers. Integration test methods such as # ActionController::Integration::Session#get and # ActionController::Integration::Session#post return objects of type # TestResponse (which are of course also of type Response). # # For example, the following demo integration "test" prints the body of the # controller response to the console: # # class DemoControllerTest < ActionController::IntegrationTest # def test_print_root_path_to_console # get('/') # puts @response.body # end # end class Response < Rack::Response DEFAULT_HEADERS = { "Cache-Control" => "no-cache" } attr_accessor :request attr_accessor :session, :assigns, :template, :layout attr_accessor :redirected_to, :redirected_to_method_params delegate :default_charset, :to => 'ActionController::Base' def initialize @status = 200 @header = Rack::Utils::HeaderHash.new(DEFAULT_HEADERS) @writer = lambda { |x| @body << x } @block = nil @body = "", @session, @assigns = [], [] end def location; headers['Location'] end def location=(url) headers['Location'] = url end # Sets the HTTP response's content MIME type. For example, in the controller # you could write this: # # response.content_type = "text/plain" # # If a character set has been defined for this response (see charset=) then # the character set information will also be included in the content type # information. def content_type=(mime_type) self.headers["Content-Type"] = if mime_type =~ /charset/ || (c = charset).nil? mime_type.to_s else "#{mime_type}; charset=#{c}" end end # Returns the response's content MIME type, or nil if content type has been set. def content_type content_type = String(headers["Content-Type"] || headers["type"]).split(";")[0] content_type.blank? ? nil : content_type end # Set the charset of the Content-Type header. Set to nil to remove it. # If no content type is set, it defaults to HTML. def charset=(charset) headers["Content-Type"] = if charset "#{content_type || Mime::HTML}; charset=#{charset}" else content_type || Mime::HTML.to_s end end def charset charset = String(headers["Content-Type"] || headers["type"]).split(";")[1] charset.blank? ? nil : charset.strip.split("=")[1] end def last_modified if last = headers['Last-Modified'] Time.httpdate(last) end end def last_modified? headers.include?('Last-Modified') end def last_modified=(utc_time) headers['Last-Modified'] = utc_time.httpdate end def etag headers['ETag'] end def etag? headers.include?('ETag') end def etag=(etag) if etag.blank? headers.delete('ETag') else headers['ETag'] = %("#{Digest::MD5.hexdigest(ActiveSupport::Cache.expand_cache_key(etag))}") end end def redirect(url, status) self.status = status self.location = url.gsub(/[\r\n]/, '') self.body = "You are being redirected." end def sending_file? headers["Content-Transfer-Encoding"] == "binary" end def assign_default_content_type_and_charset! self.content_type ||= Mime::HTML self.charset ||= default_charset unless sending_file? end def prepare! assign_default_content_type_and_charset! handle_conditional_get! set_content_length! convert_content_type! convert_language! convert_cookies! end def each(&callback) if @body.respond_to?(:call) @writer = lambda { |x| callback.call(x) } @body.call(self, self) elsif @body.respond_to?(:to_str) yield @body else @body.each(&callback) end @writer = callback @block.call(self) if @block end def write(str) @writer.call str.to_s str end def set_cookie(key, value) if value.has_key?(:http_only) ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn( "The :http_only option in ActionController::Response#set_cookie " + "has been renamed. Please use :httponly instead.", caller) value[:httponly] ||= value.delete(:http_only) end super(key, value) end private def handle_conditional_get! if etag? || last_modified? set_conditional_cache_control! elsif nonempty_ok_response? self.etag = body if request && request.etag_matches?(etag) self.status = '304 Not Modified' self.body = '' end set_conditional_cache_control! end end def nonempty_ok_response? ok = !status || status.to_s[0..2] == '200' ok && body.is_a?(String) && !body.empty? end def set_conditional_cache_control! if headers['Cache-Control'] == DEFAULT_HEADERS['Cache-Control'] headers['Cache-Control'] = 'private, max-age=0, must-revalidate' end end def convert_content_type! headers['Content-Type'] ||= "text/html" headers['Content-Type'] += "; charset=" + headers.delete('charset') if headers['charset'] end # Don't set the Content-Length for block-based bodies as that would mean # reading it all into memory. Not nice for, say, a 2GB streaming file. def set_content_length! if status && status.to_s[0..2] == '204' headers.delete('Content-Length') elsif length = headers['Content-Length'] headers['Content-Length'] = length.to_s elsif !body.respond_to?(:call) && (!status || status.to_s[0..2] != '304') headers["Content-Length"] = (body.respond_to?(:bytesize) ? body.bytesize : body.size).to_s end end def convert_language! headers["Content-Language"] = headers.delete("language") if headers["language"] end def convert_cookies! headers['Set-Cookie'] = Array(headers['Set-Cookie']).compact end end end