NAME
CGI::Header - Adapter for CGI::header() function
SYNOPSIS
use CGI;
use CGI::Header;
my $query = CGI->new;
# CGI.pm-compatible HTTP header properties
my $header = {
-attachment => 'foo.gif',
-charset => 'utf-7',
-cookie => [ $cookie1, $cookie2 ], # CGI::Cookie objects
-expires => '+3d',
-nph => 1,
-p3p => [qw/CAO DSP LAW CURa/],
-target => 'ResultsWindow',
-type => 'image/gif'
};
# create a CGI::Header object
my $h = CGI::Header->new( $header, $query );
# update $header
$h->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 );
$h->delete( 'Content-Disposition' );
$h->clear;
$h->header; # same reference as $header
VERSION
This document refers to CGI::Header version 0.34.
DEPENDENCIES
This module is compatible with CGI.pm 3.51 or higher.
DESCRIPTION
This module is a utility class to manipulate a hash reference received by the header()
function of CGI.pm. This class is, so to speak, a subclass of Hash, while Perl5 doesn't provide a built-in class called Hash.
This module isn't the replacement of the CGI::header()
function. If you're allowed to replace the function with other modules like HTTP::Headers, you should do so.
This module can be used in the following situation:
- 1. $header is a hash reference which represents CGI response headers
-
For example, CGI::Application implements
header_add()
method which can be used to add CGI.pm-compatible HTTP header properties. Instances of CGI applications often hold those properties.my $header = { -type => 'text/plain' };
- 2. Manipulates $header using CGI::Header
-
Since property names are case-insensitive, application developers have to normalize them manually when they specify header properties. CGI::Header normalizes them automatically.
use CGI::Header; my $h = CGI::Header->new( $header ); $h->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 ); # add Content-Length header $header; # => { # -type => 'text/plain', # -content_length => '3002', # }
- 3. Passes $header to CGI::header() to stringify the variable
-
use CGI; print CGI::header( $header ); # Content-length: 3002 # Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 #
header()
function just stringifies given header properties. This module can be used to generate PSGI-compatible header array references. See CGI::Header::PSGI.
CLASS METHODS
- $header = CGI::Header->new( { -type => 'text/plain', ... }[, $query] )
-
Given a header hash reference, returns a CGI::Header object which holds a reference to the original given argument:
my $header = { -type => 'text/plain' }; my $h = CGI::Header->new( $header ); $h->header; # same reference as $header
The object updates the reference when called write methods like
set()
,delete()
orclear()
:# updates $header $h->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 ); $h->delete( 'Content-Disposition' ); $h->clear;
You can also pass your query object, preceded by the header hash ref.:
my $query = CGI->new; my $h = CGI::Header->new( $header, $query ); $h->query; # => $query
NOTE: In this case,
new()
doesn't check whether property names of$header
are normalized or not at all, and so you have torehash()
the header hash reference explicitly when you aren't sure that they are normalized. - $header = CGI::Header->new( -type => 'text/plain', ... )
-
It's roughly equivalent to:
my $h = CGI::Header->new({ -type => 'text/plain', ... })->rehash;
Unlike
rehash()
, if a property name is duplicated, that property will be overwritten silently:my $h = CGI::Header->new( -Type => 'text/plain', Content_Type => 'text/html' ); $h->header->{-type}; # => "text/html"
In addition to CGI.pm-compatible HTTP header properties, you can specify '-query' property which represents your query object:
my $query = CGI->new; my $h = CGI::Header->new( -type => 'text/plain', -query => $query, ); $h->header; # => { -type => 'text/plain' } $h->query; # => $query
- $header = CGI::Header->new( $media_type )
-
A shortcut for:
my $header = CGI::Header->new({ -type => $media_type });
- $alias = CGI::Header->get_alias( $prop )
-
Returns the alias of the given property name. If the alias doesn't exist, then
undef
is returned.my $alias = CGI::Header->get_alias('content_type'); # => 'type'
- CGI::Header->lc( $str )
-
Returns the lowercased version of
$str
. UnlikeCORE::lc
, this method gets rid of an initial dash, and also transliterates dashes into underscores in$str
.my $str = CGI::Header->lc( "Foo-Bar" ); # => "foo_bar"
INSTANCE METHODS
- $query = $header->query
-
Returns your current query object.
query()
defaults to the Singleton instance of CGI.pm ($CGI::Q
). - $hashref = $header->header
-
Returns the header hash reference associated with this CGI::Header object. You can always pass the header hash to
CGI::header()
function to generate CGI response headers:print CGI::header( $header->header );
- $self = $header->rehash
-
Rebuilds the header hash to normalize parameter names without changing the reference. Returns this object itself. If parameter names aren't normalized, the methods listed below won't work as you expect.
my $h1 = $header->header; # => { # '-content_type' => 'text/plain', # 'Set-Cookie' => 'ID=123456; path=/', # 'expires' => '+3d', # '-target' => 'ResultsWindow', # '-content-length' => '3002' # } $header->rehash; my $h2 = $header->header; # same reference as $h1 # => { # '-type' => 'text/plain', # '-cookie' => 'ID=123456; path=/', # '-expires' => '+3d', # '-target' => 'ResultsWindow', # '-content_length' => '3002' # }
Normalized parameter names are:
- 1. lowercased
-
'Content-Length' -> 'content-length'
- 2. start with a dash
-
'content-length' -> '-content-length'
- 3. use underscores instead of dashes except for the first character
-
'-content-length' -> '-content_length'
CGI::header()
also accepts aliases of parameter names. This module converts them as follows:'-content_type' -> '-type' '-set_cookie' -> '-cookie' '-cookies' -> '-cookie' '-window_target' -> '-target'
If a property name is duplicated, throws an exception:
$header->header; # => { # -Type => 'text/plain', # Content_Type => 'text/html', # } $header->rehash; # die "Property '-type' already exists"
- $value = $header->get( $field )
- $value = $header->set( $field => $value )
-
Get or set the value of the header field. The header field name (
$field
) is not case sensitive. You can use underscores as a replacement for dashes in header names.# field names are case-insensitive $header->get( 'Content-Length' ); $header->get( 'content-length' );
The
$value
argument may be a plain string or a reference to an array of CGI::Cookie objects for the Set-Cookie header.$header->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 ); my $length = $header->get( 'Content-Length' ); # => 3002 # $cookie1 and $cookie2 are CGI::Cookie objects $header->set( 'Set-Cookie' => [$cookie1, $cookie2] ); my $cookies = $header->get( 'Set-Cookie' ); # => [ $cookie1, $cookie2 ]
- $bool = $header->exists( $field )
-
Returns a Boolean value telling whether the specified field exists.
if ( $header->exists('ETag') ) { ... }
- $value = $header->delete( $field )
-
Deletes the specified field form CGI response headers. Returns the value of the deleted field.
my $value = $header->delete( 'Content-Disposition' ); # => 'inline'
- $self = $header->clear
-
This will remove all header fields.
- $bool = $header->is_empty
-
Returns true if the header contains no key-value pairs.
$header->clear; if ( $header->is_empty ) { # true ... }
- $clone = $header->clone
-
Returns a copy of this CGI::Header object. It's identical to:
my %copy = %{ $header->header }; # shallow copy my $clone = CGI::Header->new( \%copy, $header->query );
- $filename = $header->attachment
- $header->attachment( $filename )
-
Can be used to turn the page into an attachment. Represents suggested name for the saved file.
$header->attachment( 'genome.jpg' ); my $filename = $header->attachment; # => "genome.jpg"
In this case, the outgoing header will be formatted as:
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="genome.jpg"
-
Represents P3P tags. The parameter can be an array or a space-delimited string. Returns a list of P3P tags. (In scalar context, returns the number of P3P tags.)
$header->p3p_tags(qw/CAO DSP LAW CURa/); # or $header->p3p_tags( 'CAO DSP LAW CURa' ); my @tags = $header->p3p_tags; # => ("CAO", "DSP", "LAW", "CURa") my $size = $header->p3p_tags; # => 4
In this case, the outgoing header will be formatted as:
P3P: policyref="/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="CAO DSP LAW CURa"
- $format = $header->expires
- $header->expires( $format )
-
The Expires header gives the date and time after which the entity should be considered stale. You can specify an absolute or relative expiration interval. The following forms are all valid for this field:
$header->expires( '+30s' ); # 30 seconds from now $header->expires( '+10m' ); # ten minutes from now $header->expires( '+1h' ); # one hour from now $header->expires( 'now' ); # immediately $header->expires( '+3M' ); # in three months $header->expires( '+10y' ); # in ten years time # at the indicated time & date $header->expires( 'Thu, 25 Apr 1999 00:40:33 GMT' );
- $header->nph
-
If set to a true value, will issue the correct headers to work with a NPH (no-parse-header) script.
$header->nph( 1 );
- @fields = $header->field_names
-
Returns the list of distinct field names present in the header in a random order. The field names have case as returned by
CGI::header()
.my @fields = $header->field_names; # => ( 'Set-Cookie', 'Content-length', 'Content-Type' )
- $self = $header->each( \&callback )
-
Apply a subroutine to each header field in turn. The callback routine is called with two parameters; the name of the field and a value. If the Set-Cookie header is multi-valued, then the routine is called once for each value. Any return values of the callback routine are ignored.
my @lines; $header->each(sub { my ( $field, $value ) = @_; push @lines, "$field: $value"; }); print join @lines, "\n"; # Content-length: 3002 # Content-Type: text/plain
- @headers = $header->flatten
-
Returns pairs of fields and values.
# $cookie1 and $cookie2 are CGI::Cookie objects my $header = CGI::Header->new( -cookie => [$cookie1, $cookie2] ); $header->flatten; # => ( # "Set-Cookie" => "$cookie1", # "Set-Cookie" => "$cookie2", # ... # ) $header->flatten(1); # => ( # "Set-Cookie" => $cookie1, # "Set-Cookie" => $cookie2, # ... # ) $header->flatten(0); # => ( # "Set-Cookie" => [$cookie1, $cookie2], # ... # )
- $header->as_string
-
A shortcut for:
$header->query->header( $header->header );
TYING A HASH
use CGI::Header;
my $header = { -type => 'text/plain' };
tie my %header => 'CGI::Header' => $header;
# update $header
$header{'Content-Length'} = 3002;
delete $header{'Content-Disposition'};
%header = ();
tied( %header )->header; # same reference as $header
Above methods are aliased as follows:
TIEHASH -> new
FETCH -> get
STORE -> set
DELETE -> delete
CLEAR -> clear
EXISTS -> exists
SCALAR -> !is_empty
You can also iterate through the tied hash:
my @fields = keys %header;
my @values = values %header;
my ( $field, $value ) = each %header;
See also perltie.
OVERLOADED OPERATORS
The following operators are overloaded:
"" -> as_string
bool -> SCALAR
EXAMPLES
WRITING Blosxom PLUGINS
The following plugin just adds the Content-Length header to CGI response headers sent by blosxom.cgi:
package content_length;
use CGI::Header;
sub start {
!$blosxom::static_entries;
}
sub last {
my $h = CGI::Header->new( $blosxom::header );
$h->set( 'Content-Length' => length $blosxom::output );
}
1;
Since Blosxom depends on the procedural interface of CGI.pm, you don't have to pass $query
to new()
in this case.
CONVERTING TO HTTP::Headers OBJECTS
use CGI::Header;
use HTTP::Headers;
my @header_props = ( -type => 'text/plain', ... );
my $h = HTTP::Headers->new( CGI::Header->new(@header_props)->flatten );
$h->header( 'Content-Type' ); # => "text/plain"
LIMITATIONS
Since the following strings conflict with property names, you can't use them as field names ($field
):
"Attachment"
"Charset"
"Cookie"
"Cookies"
"NPH"
"Target"
"Type"
- Content-Type
-
You can set the Content-Type header to neither undef nor an empty:
# wrong $header->set( 'Content-Type' => undef ); $header->set( 'Content-Type' => q{} );
Use delete() instead:
$header->delete('Content-Type');
- Date
-
If one of the following conditions is met, the Date header will be set automatically, and also the header field will become read-only:
if ( $header->nph or $header->get('Set-Cookie') or $header->expires ) { my $date = $header->get('Date'); # => HTTP-Date (current time) $header->set( 'Date' => 'Thu, 25 Apr 1999 00:40:33 GMT' ); # wrong $header->delete('Date'); # wrong }
- Expires
-
You can't assign to the Expires header directly because the following behavior will surprise us:
# wrong $header->set( 'Expires' => '+3d' ); my $value = $header->get('Expires'); # => "Thu, 25 Apr 1999 00:40:33 GMT" (not "+3d")
Use expires() instead:
$header->expires('+3d');
- P3P
-
You can't assign to the P3P header directly:
# wrong $header->set( 'P3P' => '/path/to/p3p.xml' );
CGI::header()
restricts where the policy-reference file is located, and so you can't modify the location (/w3c/p3p.xml
). You're allowed to set P3P tags usingp3p_tags()
. - Pragma
-
If the following condition is met, the Pragma header will be set automatically, and also the header field will become read-only:
if ( $header->query->cache ) { my $pragma = $header->get('Pragma'); # => 'no-cache' $header->set( 'Pragma' => 'no-cache' ); # wrong $header->delete('Pragma'); # wrong }
- Server
-
If the following condition is met, the Server header will be set automatically, and also the header field will become read-only:
if ( $header->nph ) { my $server = $header->get('Server'); # => $header->query->server_software $header->set( 'Server' => 'Apache/1.3.27 (Unix)' ); # wrong $header->delete( 'Server' ); # wrong }
SEE ALSO
CGI, Plack::Util::headers(), HTTP::Headers
BUGS
There are no known bugs in this module. Please report problems to ANAZAWA (anazawa@cpan.org). Patches are welcome.
AUTHOR
Ryo Anazawa (anazawa@cpan.org)
LICENSE
This module is free software; you can redistibute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.