Provided by: libcatalyst-perl_5.90103-1_all bug

NAME

       Catalyst::Response - stores output responding to the current client request

SYNOPSIS

           $res = $c->response;
           $res->body;
           $res->code;
           $res->content_encoding;
           $res->content_length;
           $res->content_type;
           $res->cookies;
           $res->header;
           $res->headers;
           $res->output;
           $res->redirect;
           $res->status;
           $res->write;

DESCRIPTION

       This is the Catalyst Response class, which provides methods for responding to the current
       client request. The appropriate Catalyst::Engine for your environment will turn the
       Catalyst::Response into a HTTP Response and return it to the client.

METHODS

   $res->body( $text | $fh | $iohandle_object )
           $c->response->body('Catalyst rocks!');

       Sets or returns the output (text or binary data). If you are returning a large body, you
       might want to use a IO::Handle type of object (Something that implements the getline
       method in the same fashion), or a filehandle GLOB. These will be passed down to the PSGI
       handler you are using and might be optimized using server specific abilities (for example
       Twiggy will attempt to server a real local file in a non blocking manner).

       If you are using a filehandle as the body response you are responsible for making sure it
       conforms to the PSGI specification with regards to content encoding.  Unlike with scalar
       body values or when using the streaming interfaces we currently do not attempt to
       normalize and encode your filehandle.  In general this means you should be sure to be
       sending bytes not UTF8 decoded multibyte characters.

       Most of the time when you do:

           open(my $fh, '<:raw', $path);

       You should be fine.  If you open a filehandle with a PerlIO layer you probably are not
       fine.  You can usually fix this by explicitly using binmode to set the IOLayer to :raw.
       Its possible future versions of Catalyst will try to 'do the right thing'.

       When using a IO::Handle type of object and no content length has been already set in the
       response headers Catalyst will make a reasonable attempt to determine the size of the
       Handle. Depending on the implementation of your handle object, setting the content length
       may fail. If it is at all possible for you to determine the content length of your handle
       object, it is recommended that you set the content length in the response headers
       yourself, which will be respected and sent by Catalyst in the response.

       Please note that the object needs to implement "getline", not just "read".  Older versions
       of Catalyst expected your filehandle like objects to do read.  If you have code written
       for this expectation and you cannot change the code to meet the PSGI specification, you
       can try the following middleware Plack::Middleware::AdaptFilehandleRead which will attempt
       to wrap your object in an interface that so conforms.

       Starting from version 5.90060, when using an IO::Handle object, you may want to use
       Plack::Middleware::XSendfile, to delegate the actual serving to the frontend server. To do
       so, you need to pass to "body" an IO object with a "path" method. This can be achieved in
       two ways.

       Either using Plack::Util:

         my $fh = IO::File->new($file, 'r');
         Plack::Util::set_io_path($fh, $file);

       Or using IO::File::WithPath

         my $fh = IO::File::WithPath->new($file, 'r');

       And then passing the filehandle to body and setting headers, if needed.

         $c->response->body($fh);
         $c->response->headers->content_type('text/plain');
         $c->response->headers->content_length(-s $file);
         $c->response->headers->last_modified((stat($file))[9]);

       Plack::Middleware::XSendfile can be loaded in the application so:

        __PACKAGE__->config(
            psgi_middleware => [
                'XSendfile',
                # other middlewares here...
               ],
        );

       Beware that loading the middleware without configuring the webserver to set the request
       header "X-Sendfile-Type" to a supported type ("X-Accel-Redirect" for nginx, "X-Sendfile"
       for Apache and Lighttpd), could lead to the disclosure of private paths to malicious
       clients setting that header.

       Nginx needs the additional X-Accel-Mapping header to be set in the webserver
       configuration, so the middleware will replace the absolute path of the IO object with the
       internal nginx path. This is also useful to prevent a buggy app to server random files
       from the filesystem, as it's an internal redirect.

       An nginx configuration for FastCGI could look so:

        server {
            server_name example.com;
            root /my/app/root;
            location /private/repo/ {
                internal;
                alias /my/app/repo/;
            }
            location /private/staging/ {
                internal;
                alias /my/app/staging/;
            }
            location @proxy {
                include /etc/nginx/fastcgi_params;
                fastcgi_param SCRIPT_NAME '';
                fastcgi_param PATH_INFO   $fastcgi_script_name;
                fastcgi_param HTTP_X_SENDFILE_TYPE X-Accel-Redirect;
                fastcgi_param HTTP_X_ACCEL_MAPPING /my/app=/private;
                fastcgi_pass  unix:/my/app/run/app.sock;
           }
        }

       In the example above, passing filehandles with a local path matching /my/app/staging or
       /my/app/repo will be served by nginx. Passing paths with other locations will lead to an
       internal server error.

       Setting the body to a filehandle without the "path" method bypasses the middleware
       completely.

       For Apache and Lighttpd, the mapping doesn't apply and setting the X-Sendfile-Type is
       enough.

   $res->has_body
       Predicate which returns true when a body has been set.

   $res->code
       Alias for $res->status.

   $res->content_encoding
       Shortcut for $res->headers->content_encoding.

   $res->content_length
       Shortcut for $res->headers->content_length.

   $res->content_type
       Shortcut for $res->headers->content_type.

       This value is typically set by your view or plugin. For example,
       Catalyst::Plugin::Static::Simple will guess the mime type based on the file it found,
       while Catalyst::View::TT defaults to "text/html".

   $res->content_type_charset
       Shortcut for $res->headers->content_type_charset;

   $res->cookies
       Returns a reference to a hash containing cookies to be set. The keys of the hash are the
       cookies' names, and their corresponding values are hash references used to construct a
       CGI::Simple::Cookie object.

           $c->response->cookies->{foo} = { value => '123' };

       The keys of the hash reference on the right correspond to the CGI::Simple::Cookie
       parameters of the same name, except they are used without a leading dash.  Possible
       parameters are:

       value
       expires
       domain
       path
       secure
       httponly

   $res->header
       Shortcut for $res->headers->header.

   $res->headers
       Returns an HTTP::Headers object, which can be used to set headers.

           $c->response->headers->header( 'X-Catalyst' => $Catalyst::VERSION );

   $res->output
       Alias for $res->body.

   $res->redirect( $url, $status )
       Causes the response to redirect to the specified URL. The default status is 302.

           $c->response->redirect( 'http://slashdot.org' );
           $c->response->redirect( 'http://slashdot.org', 307 );

       This is a convenience method that sets the Location header to the redirect destination,
       and then sets the response status.  You will want to " return " or "$c->detach()" to
       interrupt the normal processing flow if you want the redirect to occur straight away.

       Note: do not give a relative URL as $url, i.e: one that is not fully qualified (=
       "http://...", etc.) or that starts with a slash (= "/path/here"). While it may work, it is
       not guaranteed to do the right thing and is not a standard behaviour. You may opt to use
       uri_for() or uri_for_action() instead.

       Note: If $url is an object that does ->as_string (such as URI, which is what you get from
       ->uri_for) we automatically call that to stringify.  This should ease the common case
       usage

           return $c->res->redirect( $c->uri_for(...));

   $res->location
       Sets or returns the HTTP 'Location'.

   $res->status
       Sets or returns the HTTP status.

           $c->response->status(404);

       $res->code is an alias for this, to match HTTP::Response->code.

   $res->write( $data )
       Writes $data to the output stream.  Calling this method will finalize your headers and
       send the headers and status code response to the client (so changing them afterwards is a
       waste... be sure to set your headers correctly first).

       You may call this as often as you want throughout your response cycle.  You may even set a
       'body' afterward.  So for example you might write your HTTP headers and the HEAD section
       of your document and then set the body from a template driven from a database.  In some
       cases this can seem to the client as if you had a faster overall response (but note that
       unless your server support chunked body your content is likely to get queued anyway
       (Starman and most other http 1.1 webservers support this).

       If there is an encoding set, we encode each line of the response (the default encoding is
       UTF-8).

   $res->unencoded_write( $data )
       Works just like ->write but we don't apply any content encoding to $data.  Use this if you
       are already encoding the $data or the data is arriving from an encoded storage.

   $res->write_fh
       Returns an instance of Catalyst::Response::Writer, which is a lightweight decorator over
       the PSGI $writer object (see PSGI.pod\Delayed-Response-and-Streaming-Body).

       In addition to proxying the "write" and "close" method from the underlying PSGI writer,
       this proxy object knows any application wide encoding, and provides a method
       "write_encoded" that will properly encode your written lines based upon your encoding
       settings.  By default in Catalyst responses are UTF-8 encoded and this is the encoding
       used if you respond via "write_encoded".  If you want to handle encoding yourself, you can
       use the "write" method directly.

       Encoding only applies to content types for which it matters.  Currently the following
       content types are assumed to need encoding: text (including HTML), xml and javascript.

       We provide access to this object so that you can properly close over it for use in
       asynchronous and nonblocking applications.  For example (assuming you are using a
       supporting server, like Twiggy:

           package AsyncExample::Controller::Root;

           use Moose;

           BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller' }

           sub prepare_cb {
             my $write_fh = pop;
             return sub {
               my $message = shift;
               $write_fh->write("Finishing: $message\n");
               $write_fh->close;
             };
           }

           sub anyevent :Local :Args(0) {
             my ($self, $c) = @_;
             my $cb = $self->prepare_cb($c->res->write_fh);

             my $watcher;
             $watcher = AnyEvent->timer(
               after => 5,
               cb => sub {
                 $cb->(scalar localtime);
                 undef $watcher; # cancel circular-ref
               });
           }

       Like the 'write' method, calling this will finalize headers. Unlike 'write' when you can
       this it is assumed you are taking control of the response so the body is never finalized
       (there isn't one anyway) and you need to call the close method.

   $res->print( @data )
       Prints @data to the output stream, separated by $,.  This lets you pass the response
       object to functions that want to write to an IO::Handle.

   $self->finalize_headers($c)
       Writes headers to response if not already written

   from_psgi_response
       Given a PSGI response (either three element ARRAY reference OR coderef expecting a
       $responder) set the response from it.

       Properly supports streaming and delayed response and / or async IO if running under an
       expected event loop.

       If passed an object, will expect that object to do a method "as_psgi".

       Example:

           package MyApp::Web::Controller::Test;

           use base 'Catalyst::Controller';
           use Plack::App::Directory;

           my $app = Plack::App::Directory->new({ root => "/path/to/htdocs" })
             ->to_app;

           sub myaction :Local Args {
             my ($self, $c) = @_;
             $c->res->from_psgi_response($app->($c->req->env));
           }

       Please note this does not attempt to map or nest your PSGI application under the
       Controller and Action namespace or path. You may wish to review 'PSGI Helpers' under
       Catalyst::Utils for help in properly nesting applications.

       NOTE If your external PSGI application returns a response that has a character set
       associated with the content type (such as "text/html; charset=UTF-8") we set
       $c->clear_encoding to remove any additional content type encoding processing later in the
       application (this is done to avoid double encoding issues).

   encodable_content_type
       This is a regular expression used to determine of the current content type should be
       considered encodable.  Currently we apply default encoding (usually UTF8) to text type
       contents.  Here's the default regular expression:

       This would match content types like:

           text/plain
           text/html
           text/xml
           application/javascript
           application/xml
           application/vnd.user+xml

       NOTE: We don't encode JSON content type responses by default since most of the JSON
       serializers that are commonly used for this task will do so automatically and we don't
       want to double encode.  If you are not using a tool like JSON to produce JSON type
       content, (for example you are using a template system, or creating the strings manually)
       you will need to either encoding the body yourself:

           $c->response->body( $c->encoding->encode( $body, $c->_encode_check ) );

       Or you can alter the regular expression using this attribute.

   encodable_response
       Given a Catalyst::Response return true if its one that can be encoded.

            make sure there is an encoding set on the response
            make sure the content type is encodable
            make sure no content type charset has been already set to something different from the global encoding
            make sure no content encoding is present.

       Note this does not inspect a body since we do allow automatic encoding on streaming type
       responses.

   DEMOLISH
       Ensures that the response is flushed and closed at the end of the request.

   meta
       Provided by Moose

AUTHORS

       Catalyst Contributors, see Catalyst.pm

COPYRIGHT

       This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.