Provides a robust set of parsers for dealing with HTTP Accept
, Accept-Language
, Accept-Encoding
, Accept-Charset
headers.
I've been developing some tools for building RESTful endpoints and part of that involved versioning. After reviewing the options, I settled on using the Accept: application/json;version=1
method as outlined here.
The version=1
part of the media-type
is a parameter
as defined by RFC7231 Section 3.1.1.1. After reviewing several existing different options for parsing the Accept:
header, I noticed a disturbing trend: header.split(',')
. Because parameters may contain quoted strings which contain commas, this is clearly not an appropriate way to parse the header.
I am concerned about correctness, security and performance. As such, I implemented this gem to provide a simple high level interface for both parsing and correctly interpreting these headers.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'http-accept'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install http-accept
You can then require it in your code like so:
require 'http/accept'
Here are some examples of how to parse various headers.
You can parse the incoming Accept:
header:
media_types = HTTP::Accept::MediaTypes.parse("text/html;q=0.5, application/json; version=1")
expect(media_types[0].mime_type).to be == "application/json"
expect(media_types[0].parameters).to be == {'version' => '1'}
expect(media_types[1].mime_type).to be == "text/html"
expect(media_types[1].parameters).to be == {'q' => '0.5'}
Normally, you'd want to match the media types against some set of available mime types:
module ToJSON
def content_type
HTTP::Accept::ContentType.new("application", "json", charset: 'utf-8')
end
# Used for inserting into map.
def split(*args)
content_type.split(*args)
end
def convert(object, options)
object.to_json
end
end
module ToXML
# Are you kidding?
end
map = HTTP::Accept::MediaTypes::Map.new
map << ToJSON
map << ToXML
object, media_range = map.for(media_types)
content = object.convert(model, media_range.parameters)
response = [200, {'Content-Type' => object.content_type}, [content]]
You can parse the incoming Accept-Language:
header:
languages = HTTP::Accept::Languages.parse("da, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7")
expect(languages[0].locale).to be == "da"
expect(languages[1].locale).to be == "en-gb"
expect(languages[2].locale).to be == "en"
Normally, you'd want to match the languages against some set of available localizations:
available_localizations = HTTP::Accept::Languages::Locales.new(["en-nz", "en-us"])
# Given the languages that the user wants, and the localizations available, compute the set of desired localizations.
desired_localizations = available_localizations & languages
The desired_localizations
in the example above is a subset of available_localizations
.
HTTP::Accept::Languages::Locales
provides an efficient data-structure for matching the Accept-Languages header to set of available localizations according to https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-5.3.5 and https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647#section-2.3
We welcome contributions to this project.
- Fork it.
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
). - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
). - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
). - Create new Pull Request.
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