CGI::Header - Handle CGI.pm-compatible HTTP header properties
use CGI; use CGI::Header; my $query = CGI->new; # CGI.pm-compatible HTTP header properties my $header = CGI::Header->new( query => $query, header => { attachment => 'foo.gif', charset => 'utf-7', cookies => [ $cookie1, $cookie2 ], # CGI::Cookie objects expires => '+3d', nph => 1, p3p => [qw/CAO DSP LAW CURa/], target => 'ResultsWindow', type => 'image/gif' }, ); # update $header $header->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 ); # overwrite $header->delete('Content-Disposition'); # => 3002 $header->clear; # => $self $header->finalize;
This document refers to CGI::Header version 0.63.
This module is compatible with CGI.pm 3.51 or higher.
This module is a utility class to manipulate a hash reference received by CGI.pm's header()
method.
This module isn't the replacement of the header()
method, but complements CGI.pm.
This module can be used in the following situation:
For example, CGI::Application implements header_add()
method which can be used to add CGI.pm-compatible HTTP header properties. Instances of CGI.pm-based applications often hold those properties.
my $header = { type => 'text/plain' };
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 => $header ); $h->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 ); # add Content-Length header $header; # => { # 'type' => 'text/plain', # 'content-length' => '3002', # }
use CGI; print CGI::header( $header ); # Content-length: 3002 # Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 #
header()
function just stringifies given header properties. This module can be used to generate PSGI-compatible response header array references. See CGI::Header::PSGI.
Returns your current query object. This attribute defaults to the Singleton instance of CGI.pm ($CGI::Q
), which is shared by functions exported by the module.
Returns the header hash reference associated with this CGI::Header object. This attribute defaults to a reference to an empty hash.
Get or set the value of the header field. The header field name ($field
) is not case sensitive.
# field names are case-insensitive $header->get('Content-Length'); $header->get('content-length');
The $value
argument must be a plain string:
$header->set( 'Content-Length' => 3002 ); my $length = $header->get('Content-Length'); # => 3002
Returns a Boolean value telling whether the specified field exists.
if ( $header->exists('ETag') ) { ... }
Deletes the specified fields form CGI response headers. In list context it returns the values of the deleted fields. In scalar context it returns the value for the last field specified.
my $value = $header->delete('Content-Disposition'); # => 'inline'
This will remove all header properties.
Sends the response headers to the browser.
Valid multi-line header input is accepted when each line is separated with a CRLF value (\r\n
on most platforms) followed by at least one space. For example:
$header->set( Ingredients => "ham\r\n\seggs\r\n\sbacon" );
Invalid multi-line header input will trigger in an exception. When multi-line headers are received, this method will always output them back as a single line, according to the folding rules of RFC 2616: the newlines will be removed, while white space remains.
It's identical to:
print STDOUT $query->header( $header->header );
Returns a copy of this CGI::Header
object. The query
object is shared. The header
hashref is copied shallowly. It's identical to:
# surface copy my %header = %{ $original->header }; my $clone = CGI::Header->new( query => $original->query, # shares query object header => \%header );
The following methods were named after property names recognized by CGI.pm's header
method. Most of these methods can both be used to read and to set the value of a property.
If you pass an argument to the method, the property value will be set, and also the current object itself will be returned; therefore you can chain methods as follows:
$header->type('text/html')->charset('utf-8');
If no argument is supplied, the property value will be returned. If the given property doesn't exist, undef
will be returned.
Get or set the attachment
property. Can be used to turn the page into an attachment. Represents suggested name for the saved file.
$header->attachment('genome.jpg');
In this case, the outgoing header will be formatted as:
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="genome.jpg"
Get or set the charset
property. Represents the character set sent to the browser.
Get or set the cookies
property. The parameter can be a CGI::Cookie object or an arrayref which consists of CGI::Cookie objects.
Get or set the expires
property. 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' );
Get or set the nph
property. If set to a true value, will issue the correct headers to work with a NPH (no-parse-header) script.
$header->nph(1);
Get or set the p3p
property. The parameter can be an arrayref or a space-delimited string.
$header->p3p([qw/CAO DSP LAW CURa/]); # or $header->p3p('CAO DSP LAW CURa');
In this case, the outgoing header will be formatted as:
P3P: policyref="/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="CAO DSP LAW CURa"
Get or set the Status header.
$header->status('304 Not Modified');
Get or set the Window-Target header.
$header->target('ResultsWindow');
Get or set the type
property. Represents the media type of the message content.
$header->type('text/html');
Normalized property names are:
'Content-Length' -> 'content-length'
'content_length' -> 'content-length'
CGI.pm's header
method also accepts aliases of property names. This module converts them as follows:
'content-type' -> 'type' 'cookie' -> 'cookies'
If a property name is duplicated, throws an exception:
my $header = CGI::Header->new( header => { -Type => 'text/plain', Content_Type => 'text/html', } ); # die "Property 'type' already exists"
The following plugin just adds the Content-Length header to CGI response headers sent by blosxom.cgi:
package content_length; use Blosxom::Header; sub start { !$blosxom::static_entries; } sub last { my $h = Blosxom::Header->instance; $h->set( 'Content-Length' => length $blosxom::output ); }
Blosxom::Header
is defined as follows:
package Blosxom::Header; use parent 'CGI::Header'; use Carp qw/croak/; our $INSTANCE; sub new { my $class = shift; croak "Private method 'new' called for $class"; } sub instance { my $class = shift; $INSTANCE ||= $class->SUPER::new( header => $blosxom::header ); } sub has_instance { $INSTANCE; }
Since Blosxom depends on the procedural interface of CGI.pm, you don't have to pass $query
to new()
in this case.
It's up to you to decide how to manage HTTP cookies. The following method behaves like Mojo::Message::Response's cookies
method:
use parent 'CGI::Header'; use CGI::Cookie; sub cookies { my $self = shift; my $cookies = $self->header->{cookies} ||= []; return $cookies unless @_; if ( ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' ) { push @$cookies, map { CGI::Cookie->new($_) } @_; } else { push @$cookies, CGI::Cookie->new( @_ ); } $self; }
You can use the cookies
method as follows:
# get an arrayref which consists of CGI::Cookie objects my $cookies = $header->cookies; # push a CGI::Cookie object onto the "cookies" property $header->cookies( ID => 123456 ); $header->cookies({ name => 'ID', value => 123456 });
Since CGI::Simple is "a relatively lightweight drop in replacement for CGI.pm", this module is compatible with the module. If you're using the procedural interface of the module (CGI::Simple::Standard), you need to override the _build_query
method as follows:
use parent 'CGI::Header'; use CGI::Simple::Standard; sub _build_query { # NOTE: loader() is designed for debugging CGI::Simple::Standard->loader('_cgi_object'); }
Since the following strings conflict with property names, you can't use them as field names ($field
):
"Attachment" "Charset" "Cookie" "Cookies" "NPH" "Target" "Type"
If you don't want to send the Content-Type header, set the type
property to an empty string, though it's far from intuitive manipulation:
$header->type(q{}); # doesn't work as you expect $header->delete('Content-Type'); $header->type(undef);
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->cookie or $header->expires ) { $header->set( 'Date' => 'Thu, 25 Apr 1999 00:40:33 GMT' ); # wrong $header->delete('Date'); # wrong }
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 using p3p()
.
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 ) { $header->set( 'Pragma' => 'no-cache' ); # wrong $header->delete('Pragma'); # wrong }
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 ) { $header->set( 'Server' => 'Apache/1.3.27 (Unix)' ); # wrong $header->delete('Server'); # wrong }
There are no known bugs in this module. Please report problems to ANAZAWA (anazawa@cpan.org). Patches are welcome.
Ryo Anazawa (anazawa@cpan.org)
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.