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rails--rails/actionpack/lib/action_controller/base/streaming.rb
Carl Lerche & Yehuda Katz 906aebceed Bring abstract_controller up to date with rails/master
Resolved all the conflicts since 2.3.0 -> HEAD. Following is a list
of commits that could not be applied cleanly or are obviated with the
abstract_controller refactor. They all need to be revisited to ensure
that fixes made in 2.3 do not reappear in 3.0:

2259ecf368
AR not available
  * This will be reimplemented with ActionORM or equivalent

06182ea02e
implicitly rendering a js response should not use the default layout
[#1844 state:resolved]
  * This will be handled generically

893e9eb995
Improve view rendering performance in development mode and reinstate
template recompiling in production [#1909 state:resolved]
  * We will need to reimplement rails-dev-boost on top of the refactor;
    the changes here are very implementation specific and cannot be
    cleanly applied. The following commits are implicated:

      199e750d46
      3942cb406e
      f8ea9f85d4
      e3b166aab3
      ae9f258e03
      44423126c6

0cb020b4d6
workaround for picking layouts based on wrong view_paths
[#1974 state:resolved]
  * The specifics of this commit no longer apply. Since it is a two-line
    commit, we will reimplement this change.

8c5cc66a83
make action_controller/layouts pick templates from the current instance's
view_paths instead of the class view_paths [#1974 state:resolved]
  * This does not apply at all. It should be trivial to apply the feature
    to the reimplemented ActionController::Base.

87e8b16246
fix HTML fallback for explicit templates [#2052 state:resolved]
  * There were a number of patches related to this that simply compounded
    each other. Basically none of them apply cleanly, and the underlying
    issue needs to be revisited. After discussing the underlying problem
    with Koz, we will defer these fixes for further discussion.
2009-04-13 15:18:45 -07:00

179 lines
8.7 KiB
Ruby

module ActionController #:nodoc:
# Methods for sending arbitrary data and for streaming files to the browser,
# instead of rendering.
module Streaming
DEFAULT_SEND_FILE_OPTIONS = {
:type => 'application/octet-stream'.freeze,
:disposition => 'attachment'.freeze,
:stream => true,
:buffer_size => 4096,
:x_sendfile => false
}.freeze
X_SENDFILE_HEADER = 'X-Sendfile'.freeze
protected
# Sends the file, by default streaming it 4096 bytes at a time. This way the
# whole file doesn't need to be read into memory at once. This makes it
# feasible to send even large files. You can optionally turn off streaming
# and send the whole file at once.
#
# Be careful to sanitize the path parameter if it is coming from a web
# page. <tt>send_file(params[:path])</tt> allows a malicious user to
# download any file on your server.
#
# Options:
# * <tt>:filename</tt> - suggests a filename for the browser to use.
# Defaults to <tt>File.basename(path)</tt>.
# * <tt>:type</tt> - specifies an HTTP content type. Defaults to 'application/octet-stream'. You can specify
# either a string or a symbol for a registered type register with <tt>Mime::Type.register</tt>, for example :json
# * <tt>:length</tt> - used to manually override the length (in bytes) of the content that
# is going to be sent to the client. Defaults to <tt>File.size(path)</tt>.
# * <tt>:disposition</tt> - specifies whether the file will be shown inline or downloaded.
# Valid values are 'inline' and 'attachment' (default).
# * <tt>:stream</tt> - whether to send the file to the user agent as it is read (+true+)
# or to read the entire file before sending (+false+). Defaults to +true+.
# * <tt>:buffer_size</tt> - specifies size (in bytes) of the buffer used to stream the file.
# Defaults to 4096.
# * <tt>:status</tt> - specifies the status code to send with the response. Defaults to '200 OK'.
# * <tt>:url_based_filename</tt> - set to +true+ if you want the browser guess the filename from
# the URL, which is necessary for i18n filenames on certain browsers
# (setting <tt>:filename</tt> overrides this option).
# * <tt>:x_sendfile</tt> - uses X-Sendfile to send the file when set to +true+. This is currently
# only available with Lighttpd/Apache2 and specific modules installed and activated. Since this
# uses the web server to send the file, this may lower memory consumption on your server and
# it will not block your application for further requests.
# See http://blog.lighttpd.net/articles/2006/07/02/x-sendfile and
# http://tn123.ath.cx/mod_xsendfile/ for details. Defaults to +false+.
#
# The default Content-Type and Content-Disposition headers are
# set to download arbitrary binary files in as many browsers as
# possible. IE versions 4, 5, 5.5, and 6 are all known to have
# a variety of quirks (especially when downloading over SSL).
#
# Simple download:
#
# send_file '/path/to.zip'
#
# Show a JPEG in the browser:
#
# send_file '/path/to.jpeg', :type => 'image/jpeg', :disposition => 'inline'
#
# Show a 404 page in the browser:
#
# send_file '/path/to/404.html', :type => 'text/html; charset=utf-8', :status => 404
#
# Read about the other Content-* HTTP headers if you'd like to
# provide the user with more information (such as Content-Description) in
# http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.11.
#
# Also be aware that the document may be cached by proxies and browsers.
# The Pragma and Cache-Control headers declare how the file may be cached
# by intermediaries. They default to require clients to validate with
# the server before releasing cached responses. See
# http://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/ for an overview of web caching and
# http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.9
# for the Cache-Control header spec.
def send_file(path, options = {}) #:doc:
raise MissingFile, "Cannot read file #{path}" unless File.file?(path) and File.readable?(path)
options[:length] ||= File.size(path)
options[:filename] ||= File.basename(path) unless options[:url_based_filename]
send_file_headers! options
@performed_render = false
if options[:x_sendfile]
logger.info "Sending #{X_SENDFILE_HEADER} header #{path}" if logger
head options[:status], X_SENDFILE_HEADER => path
else
if options[:stream]
render :status => options[:status], :text => Proc.new { |response, output|
logger.info "Streaming file #{path}" unless logger.nil?
len = options[:buffer_size] || 4096
File.open(path, 'rb') do |file|
while buf = file.read(len)
output.write(buf)
end
end
}
else
logger.info "Sending file #{path}" unless logger.nil?
File.open(path, 'rb') { |file| render :status => options[:status], :text => file.read }
end
end
end
# Sends the given binary data to the browser. This method is similar to
# <tt>render :text => data</tt>, but also allows you to specify whether
# the browser should display the response as a file attachment (i.e. in a
# download dialog) or as inline data. You may also set the content type,
# the apparent file name, and other things.
#
# Options:
# * <tt>:filename</tt> - suggests a filename for the browser to use.
# * <tt>:type</tt> - specifies an HTTP content type. Defaults to 'application/octet-stream'. You can specify
# either a string or a symbol for a registered type register with <tt>Mime::Type.register</tt>, for example :json
# * <tt>:disposition</tt> - specifies whether the file will be shown inline or downloaded.
# Valid values are 'inline' and 'attachment' (default).
# * <tt>:status</tt> - specifies the status code to send with the response. Defaults to '200 OK'.
#
# Generic data download:
#
# send_data buffer
#
# Download a dynamically-generated tarball:
#
# send_data generate_tgz('dir'), :filename => 'dir.tgz'
#
# Display an image Active Record in the browser:
#
# send_data image.data, :type => image.content_type, :disposition => 'inline'
#
# See +send_file+ for more information on HTTP Content-* headers and caching.
#
# <b>Tip:</b> if you want to stream large amounts of on-the-fly generated
# data to the browser, then use <tt>render :text => proc { ... }</tt>
# instead. See ActionController::Base#render for more information.
def send_data(data, options = {}) #:doc:
logger.info "Sending data #{options[:filename]}" if logger
send_file_headers! options.merge(:length => data.size)
@performed_render = false
render :status => options[:status], :text => data
end
private
def send_file_headers!(options)
options.update(DEFAULT_SEND_FILE_OPTIONS.merge(options))
[:length, :type, :disposition].each do |arg|
raise ArgumentError, ":#{arg} option required" if options[arg].nil?
end
disposition = options[:disposition].dup || 'attachment'
disposition <<= %(; filename="#{options[:filename]}") if options[:filename]
content_type = options[:type]
if content_type.is_a?(Symbol)
raise ArgumentError, "Unknown MIME type #{options[:type]}" unless Mime::EXTENSION_LOOKUP.has_key?(content_type.to_s)
content_type = Mime::Type.lookup_by_extension(content_type.to_s)
end
content_type = content_type.to_s.strip # fixes a problem with extra '\r' with some browsers
headers.merge!(
'Content-Length' => options[:length],
'Content-Type' => content_type,
'Content-Disposition' => disposition,
'Content-Transfer-Encoding' => 'binary'
)
# Fix a problem with IE 6.0 on opening downloaded files:
# If Cache-Control: no-cache is set (which Rails does by default),
# IE removes the file it just downloaded from its cache immediately
# after it displays the "open/save" dialog, which means that if you
# hit "open" the file isn't there anymore when the application that
# is called for handling the download is run, so let's workaround that
headers['Cache-Control'] = 'private' if headers['Cache-Control'] == 'no-cache'
end
end
end