Class | ActionController::AbstractResponse |
In: |
lib/action_controller/response.rb
|
Parent: | Object |
Represents an HTTP response generated by a controller action. One can use an ActionController::AbstractResponse object to retrieve the current state of the response, or customize the response. An AbstractResponse object can either represent a "real" HTTP response (i.e. one that is meant to be sent back to the web browser) or a test response (i.e. one that is generated from integration tests). See CgiResponse and TestResponse, respectively.
AbstractResponse is mostly a Ruby on Rails framework implement detail, and should never be used directly in controllers. Controllers should use the methods defined in ActionController::Base instead. For example, if you want to set the HTTP response‘s content MIME type, then use ActionControllerBase#headers instead of AbstractResponse#headers.
Nevertheless, integration tests may want to inspect controller responses in more detail, and that‘s when AbstractResponse can be useful for application developers. Integration test methods such as ActionController::Integration::Session#get and ActionController::Integration::Session#post return objects of type TestResponse (which are of course also of type AbstractResponse).
For example, the following demo integration "test" prints the body of the controller response to the console:
class DemoControllerTest < ActionController::IntegrationTest def test_print_root_path_to_console get('/') puts @response.body end end
DEFAULT_HEADERS | = | { "Cache-Control" => "no-cache" } |
assigns | [RW] | |
body | [RW] | The body content (e.g. HTML) of the response, as a String. |
cookies | [RW] | |
headers | [RW] | The headers of the response, as a Hash. It maps header names to header values. |
layout | [RW] | |
redirected_to | [RW] | |
redirected_to_method_params | [RW] | |
request | [RW] | |
session | [RW] | |
template | [RW] |
Set the charset of the Content-Type header. Set to nil to remove it. If no content type is set, it defaults to HTML.
Sets the HTTP response‘s content MIME type. For example, in the controller you could write this:
response.content_type = "text/plain"
If a character set has been defined for this response (see charset=) then the character set information will also be included in the content type information.