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uri::fetch::response(3pm) [debian man page]

URI::Fetch::Response(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 URI::Fetch::Response(3pm)

NAME
URI::Fetch::Response - Feed response for URI::Fetch SYNOPSIS
use URI::Fetch; my $res = URI::Fetch->fetch('http://example.com/atom.xml') or die URI::Fetch->errstr; print $res->content; DESCRIPTION
URI::Fetch::Response encapsulates the response from fetching a feed using URI::Fetch. USAGE
$res->content The contents of the feed. $res->uri The URI of the feed. If the feed was moved, this reflects the new URI; otherwise, it will match the URI that you passed to fetch. $res->etag The ETag that was returned in the response, if any. $res->last_modified The Last-Modified date (in seconds since the epoch) that was returned in the response, if any. $res->status The status of the response, which will match one of the following enumerations: o URI::Fetch::URI_OK() o URI::Fetch::URI_MOVED_PERMANENTLY() o URI::Fetch::URI_GONE() o URI::Fetch::URI_NOT_MODIFIED() $res->http_status The HTTP status code from the response. $res->http_response The HTTP::Response object returned from the fetch. $res->is_success $res->is_redirect $res->is_error Wrappers around the "$res->response" methods of the same name, for convenience. $res->content_type The Content-Type header from the response. AUTHOR &; COPYRIGHT Please see the URI::Fetch manpage for author, copyright, and license information. perl v5.12.4 2011-08-29 URI::Fetch::Response(3pm)

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Plack::Response(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Plack::Response(3pm)

NAME
Plack::Response - Portable HTTP Response object for PSGI response SYNOPSIS
use Plack::Response; sub psgi_handler { my $env = shift; my $res = Plack::Response->new(200); $res->content_type('text/html'); $res->body("Hello World"); return $res->finalize; } DESCRIPTION
Plack::Response allows you a way to create PSGI response array ref through a simple API. METHODS
new $res = Plack::Response->new; $res = Plack::Response->new($status); $res = Plack::Response->new($status, $headers); $res = Plack::Response->new($status, $headers, $body); Creates a new Plack::Response object. status $res->status(200); $status = $res->status; Sets and gets HTTP status code. "code" is an alias. headers $headers = $res->headers; $res->headers([ 'Content-Type' => 'text/html' ]); $res->headers({ 'Content-Type' => 'text/html' }); $res->headers( HTTP::Headers->new ); Sets and gets HTTP headers of the response. Setter can take either an array ref, a hash ref or HTTP::Headers object containing a list of headers. body $res->body($body_str); $res->body([ "Hello", "World" ]); $res->body($io); Gets and sets HTTP response body. Setter can take either a string, an array ref, or an IO::Handle-like object. "content" is an alias. Note that this method doesn't automatically set Content-Length for the response. You have to set it manually if you want, with the "content_length" method (see below). header $res->header('X-Foo' => 'bar'); my $val = $res->header('X-Foo'); Shortcut for "$res->headers->header". content_type, content_length, content_encoding $res->content_type('text/plain'); $res->content_length(123); $res->content_encoding('gzip'); Shortcut for the equivalent get/set methods in "$res->headers". redirect $res->redirect($url); $res->redirect($url, 301); Sets redirect URL with an optional status code, which defaults to 302. Note that this method doesn't normalize the given URI string. Users of this module have to be responsible about properly encoding URI paths and parameters. location Gets and sets "Location" header. Note that this method doesn't normalize the given URI string in the setter. See above in "redirect" for details. cookies $res->cookies->{foo} = 123; $res->cookies->{foo} = { value => '123' }; Returns a hash reference containing cookies to be set in the response. The keys of the hash are the cookies' names, and their corresponding values are a plain string (for "value" with everything else defaults) or a hash reference that can contain keys such as "value", "domain", "expires", "path", "httponly", "secure". "expires" can take a string or an integer (as an epoch time) and does not convert string formats such as "+3M". $res->cookies->{foo} = { value => 'test', path => "/", domain => '.example.com', expires => time + 24 * 60 * 60, }; finalize $res->finalize; Returns the status code, headers, and body of this response as a PSGI response array reference. AUTHOR
Tokuhiro Matsuno Tatsuhiko Miyagawa SEE ALSO
Plack::Request perl v5.14.2 2012-06-21 Plack::Response(3pm)
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