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rails--rails/actionpack/lib/action_controller/base/mime_responds.rb
José Valim 7e280c3bff Remove Mime::ALL from Mime::SET.
Signed-off-by: Yehuda Katz <wycats@gmail.com>
2009-07-29 12:06:02 -07:00

247 lines
7.8 KiB
Ruby

module ActionController #:nodoc:
module MimeResponds #:nodoc:
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
included do
class_inheritable_reader :mimes_for_respond_to
respond_to # Set mimes_for_respond_to hash
end
module ClassMethods
# Defines mimes that are rendered by default when invoking respond_with.
#
# Examples:
#
# respond_to :html, :xml, :json
#
# All actions on your controller will respond to :html, :xml and :json.
#
# But if you want to specify it based on your actions, you can use only and
# except:
#
# respond_to :html
# respond_to :xml, :json, :except => [ :edit ]
#
# The definition above explicits that all actions respond to :html. And all
# actions except :edit respond to :xml and :json.
#
# You can specify also only parameters:
#
# respond_to :rjs, :only => :create
#
def respond_to(*mimes)
options = mimes.extract_options!
mimes_hash = {}
only_actions = Array(options.delete(:only))
except_actions = Array(options.delete(:except))
mimes.each do |mime|
mime = mime.to_sym
mimes_hash[mime] = {}
mimes_hash[mime][:only] = only_actions unless only_actions.empty?
mimes_hash[mime][:except] = except_actions unless except_actions.empty?
end
write_inheritable_hash(:mimes_for_respond_to, mimes_hash)
end
# Clear all mimes in respond_to.
#
def clear_respond_to!
mimes_for_respond_to.each { |k,v| mimes[k] = { :only => [] } }
end
end
# Without web-service support, an action which collects the data for displaying a list of people
# might look something like this:
#
# def index
# @people = Person.find(:all)
# end
#
# Here's the same action, with web-service support baked in:
#
# def index
# @people = Person.find(:all)
#
# respond_to do |format|
# format.html
# format.xml { render :xml => @people.to_xml }
# end
# end
#
# What that says is, "if the client wants HTML in response to this action, just respond as we
# would have before, but if the client wants XML, return them the list of people in XML format."
# (Rails determines the desired response format from the HTTP Accept header submitted by the client.)
#
# Supposing you have an action that adds a new person, optionally creating their company
# (by name) if it does not already exist, without web-services, it might look like this:
#
# def create
# @company = Company.find_or_create_by_name(params[:company][:name])
# @person = @company.people.create(params[:person])
#
# redirect_to(person_list_url)
# end
#
# Here's the same action, with web-service support baked in:
#
# def create
# company = params[:person].delete(:company)
# @company = Company.find_or_create_by_name(company[:name])
# @person = @company.people.create(params[:person])
#
# respond_to do |format|
# format.html { redirect_to(person_list_url) }
# format.js
# format.xml { render :xml => @person.to_xml(:include => @company) }
# end
# end
#
# If the client wants HTML, we just redirect them back to the person list. If they want Javascript
# (format.js), then it is an RJS request and we render the RJS template associated with this action.
# Lastly, if the client wants XML, we render the created person as XML, but with a twist: we also
# include the person's company in the rendered XML, so you get something like this:
#
# <person>
# <id>...</id>
# ...
# <company>
# <id>...</id>
# <name>...</name>
# ...
# </company>
# </person>
#
# Note, however, the extra bit at the top of that action:
#
# company = params[:person].delete(:company)
# @company = Company.find_or_create_by_name(company[:name])
#
# This is because the incoming XML document (if a web-service request is in process) can only contain a
# single root-node. So, we have to rearrange things so that the request looks like this (url-encoded):
#
# person[name]=...&person[company][name]=...&...
#
# And, like this (xml-encoded):
#
# <person>
# <name>...</name>
# <company>
# <name>...</name>
# </company>
# </person>
#
# In other words, we make the request so that it operates on a single entity's person. Then, in the action,
# we extract the company data from the request, find or create the company, and then create the new person
# with the remaining data.
#
# Note that you can define your own XML parameter parser which would allow you to describe multiple entities
# in a single request (i.e., by wrapping them all in a single root node), but if you just go with the flow
# and accept Rails' defaults, life will be much easier.
#
# If you need to use a MIME type which isn't supported by default, you can register your own handlers in
# environment.rb as follows.
#
# Mime::Type.register "image/jpg", :jpg
def respond_to(*mimes, &block)
responder = Responder.new
block.call(responder) if block_given?
mimes = collect_mimes_from_class_level if mimes.empty?
mimes.each { |mime| responder.send(mime) }
if format = request.negotiate_mime(responder.order)
# TODO It should be just: self.formats = [ :foo ]
self.formats = [format.to_sym]
self.content_type = format
self.template.formats = [format.to_sym]
if response = responder.response_for(format)
response.call
else
default_render
end
else
head :not_acceptable
end
end
protected
# Collect mimes declared in the class method respond_to valid for the
# current action.
#
def collect_mimes_from_class_level #:nodoc:
action = action_name.to_sym
mimes_for_respond_to.keys.select do |mime|
config = mimes_for_respond_to[mime]
if config[:except]
!config[:except].include?(action)
elsif config[:only]
config[:only].include?(action)
else
true
end
end
end
class Responder #:nodoc:
attr_accessor :order
def initialize
@order, @responses = [], {}
end
def any(*args, &block)
if args.any?
args.each { |type| send(type, &block) }
else
custom(Mime::ALL, &block)
end
end
alias :all :any
def custom(mime_type, &block)
mime_type = mime_type.is_a?(Mime::Type) ? mime_type : Mime::Type.lookup(mime_type.to_s)
@order << mime_type
@responses[mime_type] ||= block
end
def response_for(mime)
@responses[mime] || @responses[Mime::ALL]
end
def self.generate_method_for_mime(mime)
sym = mime.is_a?(Symbol) ? mime : mime.to_sym
const = sym.to_s.upcase
class_eval <<-RUBY, __FILE__, __LINE__ + 1
def #{sym}(&block) # def html(&block)
custom(Mime::#{const}, &block) # custom(Mime::HTML, &block)
end # end
RUBY
end
Mime::SET.each do |mime|
generate_method_for_mime(mime)
end
def method_missing(symbol, &block)
mime_constant = Mime.const_get(symbol.to_s.upcase)
if Mime::SET.include?(mime_constant)
self.class.generate_method_for_mime(mime_constant)
send(symbol, &block)
else
super
end
end
end
end
end