NAME
Apache::Response - Perl API for Apache HTTP request response methods
Synopsis
use Apache::Response ();
$r->custom_response(Apache::FORBIDDEN, "No Entry today");
$etag = $r->make_etag($force_weak);
$r->set_etag();
$status = $r->meets_conditions();
$mtime_rat = $r->rationalize_mtime($mtime);
$r->set_last_modified($mtime);
$r->update_mtime($mtime);
$r->send_cgi_header($buffer);
$r->set_content_length($length);
$ret = $r->set_keepalive();
Description
Apache::Response
provides the Apache request object utilities API for dealing with HTTP response generation process.
API
Apache::Response
provides the following functions and/or methods:
custom_response
Install a custom response handler for a given status
$r->custom_response($status, $string);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$status
(Apache::Const constant
) -
The status for which the custom response should be used (e.g.
Apache::AUTH_REQUIRED
) - arg2:
$string
(string) -
The custom response to use. This can be a static string, or a URL, full or just the uri path (/foo/bar.txt).
- ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
custom_response()
doesn't alter the response code, but is used to replace the standard response body. For example, here is how to change the response body for the access handler failure:
package MyApache::MyShop;
use Apache::Response ();
use Apache::Const -compile => qw(FORBIDDEN OK);
sub access {
my $r = shift;
if (MyApache::MyShop::tired_squirrels()) {
$r->custom_response(Apache::FORBIDDEN,
"It's siesta time, please try later");
return Apache::FORBIDDEN;
}
return Apache::OK;
}
...
# httpd.conf
PerlModule MyApache::MyShop
<Location /TestAPI__custom_response>
AuthName dummy
AuthType none
PerlAccessHandler MyApache::MyShop::access
PerlResponseHandler MyApache::MyShop::response
</Location>
When squirrels can't run any more, the handler will return 403, with the custom message:
It's siesta time, please try later
make_etag
Construct an entity tag from the resource information. If it's a real file, build in some of the file characteristics.
$etag = $r->make_etag($force_weak);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$force_weak
(number) -
Force the entity tag to be weak - it could be modified again in as short an interval.
- ret:
$etag
(string) -
The entity tag
- since: 1.99_10
meets_conditions
Implements condition GET
rules for HTTP/1.1 specification. This function inspects the client headers and determines if the response fulfills the specified requirements.
$status = $r->meets_conditions();
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- ret:
$status
(Apache::Const status constant
) -
Apache::OK
if the response fulfills the condition GET rules. Otherwise some other status code (which should be returned to Apache). - since: 1.99_10
Refer to the Generating Correct HTTP Headers document for an indepth discussion of this method.
rationalize_mtime
Return the latest rational time from a request/mtime pair.
$mtime_rat = $r->rationalize_mtime($mtime);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$mtime
(number) -
The last modified time
- ret:
$mtime_rat
(number) -
the latest rational time from a request/mtime pair. Mtime is returned unless it's in the future, in which case we return the current time.
- since: 1.99_10
send_cgi_header
Parse the header
$r->send_cgi_header($buffer);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) - arg1:
$buffer
(string) -
headers and optionally a response body
- ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
This method is really for back-compatibility with mod_perl 1.0. It's very inefficient to send headers this way, because of the parsing overhead.
If there is a response body following the headers it'll be handled too (as if it was sent via print()
).
Notice that if only HTTP headers are included they won't be sent until some body is sent (again the "send" part is retained from the mod_perl 1.0 method).
set_content_length
Set the content length for this request.
$r->set_content_length($length);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$length
(integer) -
The new content length
- ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
set_etag
Set the E-tag outgoing header
$r->set_etag();
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) - ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
set_keepalive
Set the keepalive status for this request
$ret = $r->set_keepalive();
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- ret:
$ret
( boolean ) -
true if keepalive can be set, false otherwise
- since: 1.99_10
It's called by ap_http_header_filter()
. For the complete complicated logic implemented by this method see httpd-2.0/server/http_protocol.c.
set_last_modified
sets the Last-Modified
response header field to the value of the mtime field in the request structure -- rationalized to keep it from being in the future.
$r->set_last_modified($mtime);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) - opt arg1:
$mtime
( time in microseconds ) -
if the
$mtime
argument is passed, $r->update_mtime will be first run with that argument. - ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
update_mtime
Set the $r->mtime
field to the specified value if it's later than what's already there.
$r->update_mtime($mtime);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$mtime
( time in microseconds ) - ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
See also: $r->set_last_modified.
Unsupported API
Apache::Response
also provides auto-generated Perl interface for a few other methods which aren't tested at the moment and therefore their API is a subject to change. These methods will be finalized later as a need arises. If you want to rely on any of the following methods please contact the the mod_perl development mailing list so we can help each other take the steps necessary to shift the method to an officially supported API.
send_error_response
Send an "error" response back to client. It is used for any response that can be generated by the server from the request record. This includes all 204 (no content), 3xx (redirect), 4xx (client error), and 5xx (server error) messages that have not been redirected to another handler via the ErrorDocument feature.
$r->send_error_response($recursive_error);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$recursive_error
( boolean ) -
the error status in case we get an error in the process of trying to deal with an
ErrorDocument
to handle some other error. In that case, we print the default report for the first thing that went wrong, and more briefly report on the problem with theErrorDocument
. - ret: no return value
- since: 1.99_10
META: it's really an internal Apache method, I'm not quite sure how can it be used externally.
send_mmap
META: Autogenerated - needs to be reviewed/completed
Send an MMAP'ed file to the client
$ret = $r->send_mmap($mm, $offset, $length);
- obj:
$r
(Apache::RequestRec object
) -
The current request
- arg1:
$mm
(APR::Mmap
) -
The MMAP'ed file to send
- arg2:
$offset
(number) -
The offset into the MMAP to start sending
- arg3:
$length
(integer) -
The amount of data to send
- ret:
$ret
(integer) -
The number of bytes sent
- since: 1.99_10
META: requires a working APR::Mmap, which is not supported at the moment.
See Also
Copyright
mod_perl 2.0 and its core modules are copyrighted under The Apache Software License, Version 2.0.