Provided by: liburi-fetch-perl_0.15-1_all bug

NAME

       URI::Fetch::Response - Feed response for URI::Fetch

SYNOPSIS

           use URI::Fetch;
           my $res = URI::Fetch->fetch('http://example.com/atom.xml')
               or die URI::Fetch->errstr;
           print $res->content;

DESCRIPTION

       URI::Fetch::Response encapsulates the response from fetching a feed using URI::Fetch.

USAGE

   $res->content
       The contents of the feed.

   $res->uri
       The URI of the feed. If the feed was moved, this reflects the new URI; otherwise, it will
       match the URI that you passed to fetch.

   $res->etag
       The ETag that was returned in the response, if any.

   $res->last_modified
       The Last-Modified date (in seconds since the epoch) that was returned in the response, if
       any.

   $res->status
       The status of the response, which will match one of the following enumerations:

       •   URI::Fetch::URI_OK()URI::Fetch::URI_MOVED_PERMANENTLY()URI::Fetch::URI_GONE()URI::Fetch::URI_NOT_MODIFIED()

   $res->http_status
       The HTTP status code from the response.

   $res->http_response
       The HTTP::Response object returned from the fetch.

   $res->is_success
   $res->is_redirect
   $res->is_error
       Wrappers around the "$res->response" methods of the same name, for convenience.

       Note: there is one difference from the behaviour of HTTP::Response.  If you are using a
       cache and get a 304 response, but the data is retrieved from the cache, then "is_success"
       will return true, because "res->content" is usable.

   $res->content_type
       The Content-Type header from the response.

AUTHOR & COPYRIGHT

       Please see the URI::Fetch manpage for author, copyright, and license information.