Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
126 lines (82 loc) · 4.35 KB

readme.md

File metadata and controls

126 lines (82 loc) · 4.35 KB

HTTP::Accept

Provides a robust set of parsers for dealing with HTTP Accept, Accept-Language, Accept-Encoding, Accept-Charset headers.

Development Status

Motivation

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.

Installation

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'

Usage

Here are some examples of how to parse various headers.

Parsing Accept: 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]]

Parsing Accept-Language: headers

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

Contributing

We welcome contributions to this project.

  1. Fork it.
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature).
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature').
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature).
  5. Create new Pull Request.

Developer Certificate of Origin

This project uses the Developer Certificate of Origin. All contributors to this project must agree to this document to have their contributions accepted.

Contributor Covenant

This project is governed by the Contributor Covenant. All contributors and participants agree to abide by its terms.