class Protocol::Rack::Response
This wrapper takes those issues into account and adapts the rack response tuple into a {Protocol::HTTP::Response}.
- Other ‘rack.` specific header key/value pairs.
- Newline-separated header values.
- Potentially invalid body when processing a `HEAD` request.
- Potentially invalid content length.
- A `headers` callback which bypasses normal response handling.
A Rack response consisting of `[status, headers, body]` includes various rack-specific elements, including:
A wrapper for a `Rack` response.
def self.wrap(env, status, headers, meta, body, request = nil)
@parameter body [Duck(:each, :close) | Nil] The rack response body.
@parameter headers [Duck(:each)] The rack response headers.
@parameter status [Integer] The rack response status.
Wrap a rack response.
def self.wrap(env, status, headers, meta, body, request = nil) ignored = headers.extract(HOP_HEADERS) unless ignored.empty? Console.warn(self, "Ignoring hop headers!", ignored: ignored) end if hijack_body = meta['rack.hijack'] body = hijack_body end body = Body.wrap(env, status, headers, body, request&.body) if request&.head? # I thought about doing this in Output.wrap, but decided the semantics are too tricky. Specifically, the various ways a rack response body can be wrapped, and the need to invoke #close at the right point. body = ::Protocol::HTTP::Body::Head.for(body) end protocol = meta[RACK_PROTOCOL] # https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-7.4.2 # headers.add('server', "falcon/#{Falcon::VERSION}") # https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-7.1.1.2 # headers.add('date', Time.now.httpdate) return self.new(status, headers, body, protocol) end
def initialize(status, headers, body, protocol = nil)
@parameter body [Protocol::HTTP::Body] The response body.
@parameter headers [Protocol::HTTP::Headers] The response headers.
@parameter status [Integer] The response status.
Initialize the response wrapper.
def initialize(status, headers, body, protocol = nil) super(nil, status, headers, body, protocol) end