require "ftw/namespace" require "ftw/http/headers" require "ftw/crlf" # HTTP Message, RFC2616 # For specification, see RFC2616 section 4: # # You probably won't use this class much. Instead, check out {FTW::Request} and {FTW::Response} module FTW::HTTP::Message include FTW::CRLF # The HTTP headers - See {FTW::HTTP::Headers}. # RFC2616 5.3 - attr_reader :headers # The HTTP version. See {VALID_VERSIONS} for valid versions. # This will always be a Numeric object. # Both Request and Responses have version, so put it in the parent class. attr_accessor :version # HTTP Versions that are valid. VALID_VERSIONS = [1.0, 1.1] private # A new HTTP message. def initialize @headers = FTW::HTTP::Headers.new @body = nil end # def initialize # Get a header value by field name. # # @param [String] the name of the field. (case insensitive) def [](field) return @headers[field] end # def [] # Set a header field # # @param [String] the name of the field. (case insensitive) # @param [String] the value to set for this field def []=(field, value) @headers[field] = value end # def []= # Set the body of this message # # The 'message_body' can be an IO-like object, Enumerable, or String. # # See RFC2616 section 4.3: def body=(message_body) # TODO(sissel): if message_body is a string, set Content-Length header # TODO(sissel): if it's an IO object, set Transfer-Encoding to chunked # TODO(sissel): if it responds to each or appears to be Enumerable, then # set Transfer-Encoding to chunked. if message_body.respond_to?(:read) or message_body.respond_to?(:each) headers["Transfer-Encoding"] = "chunked" else headers["Content-Length"] = message_body.length end @body = message_body end # def body= # Get the body of this message # # Returns an Enumerable, IO-like object, or String, depending on how this # message was built. def body # TODO(sissel): verification todos follow... # TODO(sissel): RFC2616 section 4.3 - if there is a message body # then one of "Transfer-Encoding" *or* "Content-Length" MUST be present. # otherwise, if neither header is present, no body is present. # TODO(sissel): Responses to HEAD requests or those with status 1xx, 204, # or 304 MUST NOT have a body. All other requests have a message body, # even if that body is of zero length. return @body end # def body # Should this message have a content? # # In HTTP 1.1, there is a body if response sets Content-Length *or* # Transfer-Encoding, it has a body. Otherwise, there is no body. def content? return (headers.include?("Content-Length") and headers["Content-Length"].to_i > 0) \ || headers.include?("Transfer-Encoding") end # def content? # Does this message have a body? def body? return !@body.nil? end # def body? # Set the HTTP version. Must be a valid version. See VALID_VERSIONS. def version=(ver) # Accept string "1.0" or simply "1", etc. ver = ver.to_f if !ver.is_a?(Float) if !VALID_VERSIONS.include?(ver) raise ArgumentError.new("#{self.class.name}#version = #{ver.inspect} is" \ "invalid. It must be a number, one of #{VALID_VERSIONS.join(", ")}") end @version = ver end # def version= # Serialize this Request according to RFC2616 # Note: There is *NO* trailing CRLF. This is intentional. # The RFC defines: # generic-message = start-line # *(message-header CRLF) # CRLF # [ message-body ] # Thus, the CRLF between header and body is not part of the header. def to_s return [start_line, @headers].join(CRLF) end public(:initialize, :headers, :version, :version=, :[], :[]=, :body=, :body, :content?, :body?, :to_s) end # class FTW::HTTP::Message