Provided by: aolserver4-dev_4.5.1-16_amd64 bug

NAME

       Ns_ConnGetType, Ns_ConnSetType - Routines to manage the HTTP response type

SYNOPSIS

       #include "ns.h"

       char *
       Ns_ConnGetType(conn)

       void
       Ns_ConnSetType(conn, type)

ARGUMENTS

       Ns_Conn   conn   (in)      Pointer to open connection.

       char      *type  (in)      Character string with response mimetype.
_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       These  routines both manage the eventual content-type header which is generated by a later
       call to Ns_ConnFlush or Ns_ConnFlushDirect as well as  manage  the  appropriate  character
       encoding for text output types.

       char *Ns_ConnGetType(conn)
              Return  the  current HTTP mime type (e.g., "text/html; charset=iso-8859-1") or NULL
              if no type has yet been set.

       void Ns_ConnSetType(conn, type)
              Sets the mimetype of the response to the given type.  A later call to  Ns_ConnFlush
              will include a header of the form content-type: type when generating the response.

CHARSETS AND ENCODINGS

       For  text  types,  a  call  to  Ns_ConnSetType  can  also  include  an optional "charset="
       attribute.  If no charset is specified, the  server  will  append  a  default  charset  if
       specified as the outputcharset server configuration variable.

       With  a  given  or automatically appended charset for text types, the server will then set
       the output encoding to the cooresponding Tcl_Encoding, for example,  mapping  the  charset
       "iso-8859-1"  to  the  Tcl_Encoding  equivalent  "iso8859-1".   All  text  later  sent via
       Ns_ConnFlush  will  be  first  encoded  using  the  determined  Tcl_Encoding   (calls   to
       Ns_ConnFlushDirect   will   bypass   this   encoding   step).    See   the  man  pages  on
       Ns_GetCharsetEncoding for details on how these mappings are configured.

       The charset modification feature was added in  later  versions  of  AOLserver  to  support
       legacy  code  which  may  have  been sprinkled with direct calls to set text types without
       specifying the charset, e.g., calls such as:

                ns_return 200 text/html "<body>hello</body>"

EXAMPLES

       The following example demonstrates sending Japanese character data.  In this case,  assume
       "utf8string"  contains a series of UTF-8 bytes with various Japanese characters.  The call
       to Ns_ConnSetType will setup the appropriate "shiftjis" output Tcl_Encoding to  match  the
       given "shift_jis" charset:

                Ns_ConnSetStatus(conn, 200);
                Ns_ConnSetType(conn, "text/html; charset=shift_jis");
                Ns_ConnFlushDirect(conn, utf8string, -1, 0);

       The  following  demonstrates  the behavior of the default server charset encoding.  Assume
       the following is set in the config file:

                ns_section ns/server/serverName
                ns_param outputcharset iso-8859-1

       In this case, a call to Ns_ConnSetType(conn, "text/html") without a specific charset would
       be  modified  to  include  "charset=iso-8859-1".   Based  on this modification, the output
       encoding would be set to the "iso8859-1" Tcl_Encoding.

SEE ALSO

       Ns_ConnGetType(3),     Ns_ConnSetType(3),     Ns_ConnFlush(3),      Ns_ConnFlushDirect(3),
       Ns_ConnSetRequiredHeaders(3),       Ns_ConnQueueHeaders(3),      Ns_GetCharsetEncoding(3),
       Ns_GetTypeEncoding(3), ns_conn(n)

KEYWORDS

       connectionn, response, status, encoding, charset