TITLE
=====

HTTP::Headers

SUBTITLE
========

Tools for working with HTTP message headers

SYNOPSIS
========

    use HTTP::Headers;
    my $headers = HTTP::Headers.new;
    $headers.Content-Type = 'text/html';
    $headers.Content-Type.charset = "UTF-8";
    $headers.Content-Length = $content.encode.bytes;

    my $CRLF = "\x0d\x0a";
    print "200 OK$CRLF;
    print $headers.as-string(:eol($CRLF));
    print $CRLF;
    print $content;

DESCRIPTION
===========

This module provides convenient tools for working with HTTP headers. An emphasis has been placed on making it easy to use in a way that helps catch errors early. It has also been built for extensibility.

Methods
=======

method new
----------

    method new(Bool :$quiet)

Constructs a new object for working with headers. The `:$quiet` option can be used to suppress all warnings normally generated by this object.

method header
-------------

    multi method header(HTTP::Header::Standard::Name $name) is rw returns HTTP::Header
    multi method header(Str $name) is rw returns HTTP::Header

This method is writable and allows the use of either the values in the `HTTP::Header::Standard::Name` enumeration or string values. In general, you should not use strings when you can use the enumeration in your code. By using the enumeration, you can find typos and other errors more quickly.

    $headers.header(Content-MIME-Type); # I forgot it's just Content-Type
    # Undeclared name:
    #     Content-MIME-Type used at line 1

The library will remind you of this best practice if you use a string when you could use an enumeration:

    $headers.header("Content-Type");
    # Calling .header(Content-Type) is preferred to .header("Content-Type") for standard HTTP headers.

If you don't want to see these, you can ask the object or the method to be quiet:

    $headers.header("Content-Type", :quiet);
    # OR during construction
    my $headers = HTTP::Headers.new(:$quiet);

When setting values on a header, you may set either a single or multiples.

    $headers.header(Content-Length) = 42;
    $headers.header(Accept) = "text/html", "text/*", "*/*";
    say $headers.as-string;
    # Accept: text/html
    # Accept: text/*
    # Accept: */*
    # Content-Length: 42

By setting with a comma, you will generate multiple headers.

You may also set headers with [DateTime](DateTime), [Instant](Instant), and [Duration](Duration) objects and it should do the right thing. For example,

    $headers.header(Date)        = DateTime.now;
    $headers.header(Retry-After) = Duration.new(120);
    say $headers.as-string;
    # Date: Thu, 14 May 2015 09:48:00 GMT
    # Retry-After: 120

When you read a header, the value returns is a [HTTP::Header](HTTP::Header) object.

    my HTTP::Header $ct = $headers.header(Content-Type);
    my HTTP::Header $xf = $headers.header("X-Foo-Custom");

This object stringifies to the value of the header (with multiple values being joined together using a comma, safe according to RFC). It also provides a bunch of additional tools for working with and manipulating the header. For example:

    $headers.header(Accept).push: "text/css", "text/js";
    $headers.header(Content-Type).charset = "UTF-8";

See [HTTP::Header](HTTP::Header) for details.

method remove-header
--------------------

    multi method remove-header($name) returns HTTP::Header
    multi method remove-headers(*@names) returns List

These methods will remove headers from the list. The removed [HTTP::Header](HTTP::Header) object is returned.

method remove-content-headers
-----------------------------

    method remove-content-headers

This method removes all the entity headers:

    Allow Content-Encoding Content-Language Content-Length
    Content-Location Content-MD5 Content-Range Content-Type
    Expires Last-Modified

as well as any that start with "Content-".

method clear
------------

    method clear

This removes all headers.

method clone
------------

    method clone

This performs a deep clone of the object.

method list
-----------

    method list

This returns all the headers stored in this object, sorted according to the RFC recommendation (general headers first, then request/response headers, then entity/content headers, and finally custom headers).

method for
----------

    method for(&code)

Provides a way to iterate over all the headers in the object.

method as-string
----------------

    method as-string(:$eol = "\n")

Returns the headers for output using the given line separator. If no line separator is given, "\n" is used.

method Str
----------

    method Str returns Str

This calls [/method as-string](/method as-string) with no arguments.

method for-PSGI
---------------

    method for-PSGI returns List

This returns the headers formatted for output from a PSGI application, as an array of Pairs.

Hash-like Operations
====================

You can also treat [HTTP::Headers](HTTP::Headers) like a hash in some ways. These are **experimental** and might be removed or changed in the future.

method postcircumfix:<{ }>
--------------------------

    method postcircumfix:<{ }>($key)

This may be used to return or assign a head value.

adverb :delete
--------------

This may be used to delete headers.

adverb :exists
--------------

This may be used to check to see if a head is set.

Convenience Methods
===================

The following methods are provided as a shortcut for [/method header](/method header) and can be used as an accessor or mutator.

    # General Headers
    method Cache-Control is rw
    method Connection is rw
    method Date is rw
    method Pragma is rw
    method Trailer is rw
    method Transfer-Encoding is rw
    method Upgrade is rw
    method Via is rw
    method Warning is rw

    # Request Headers
    method Accept is rw
    method Accept-Charset is rw
    method Accept-Encoding is rw
    method Accept-Language is rw
    method Authorization is rw
    method Expect is rw
    method From is rw
    method Host is rw
    method If-Match is rw
    method If-Modified-Since is rw
    method If-None-Match is rw
    method If-Range is rw
    method If-Unmodified-Since is rw
    method Max-Forwards is rw
    method Proxy-Authorization is rw
    method Range is rw
    method Referer is rw
    method TE is rw
    method User-Agent is rw

    # Response Headers
    method Accept-Ranges is rw
    method Age is rw
    method ETag is rw
    method Location is rw
    method Proxy-Authenticate is rw
    method Retry-After is rw
    method Server is rw
    method Vary is rw
    method WWW-Authenticate is rw

    # Entity Headers
    method Allow is rw
    method Content-Encoding is rw
    method Content-Language is rw
    method Content-Length is rw
    method Content-Location is rw
    method Content-MD5 is rw
    method Content-Range is rw
    method Content-Type is rw
    method Expires is rw
    method Last-Modified is rw

Extending HTTP::Headers
=======================

It is possible to create a sub-class of [HTTP::Headers](HTTP::Headers) more suited to your application. As a simplistic example, here's a customization that provides two new custom headers named "X-Foo" and "X-Bar" which have a default column setting of 42 when used.

    class MyApp::CustomHeaders is HTTP::Headers {
        enum MyAppHeader < X-Foo X-Bar >;

        method build-header($name, *@values) {
            if $name ~~ MyAppHeader {
                HTTP::Header::Custom.new(:name($name.Str), :42values);
            }
            else {
                nextsame;
            }
        }

        multi method header(MyAppHeader $name) is rw {
            self.header-proxy($name);
        }

        method X-Foo is rw { self.header(MyAppHeader::X-Foo) }
        method X-Bar is rw { self.header(MyAppHeader::X-Bar) }
    }

Here is a description of the methods you'll need to consider in doing this.

method build-header
-------------------

    method build-header($name, *@values) returns HTTP::Header

This is a factory method used to decide how to build the headers being stored. Here is the place where you'll want to add custom roles to your headers, instantiate any custom implementations of [HTTP::Header](HTTP::Header), etc.

It is recommended that you define it to build what you need and then use `nextsame` to handle all the remaining cases.

method header-proxy
-------------------

    method header-proxy($name) returns Proxy

This is a handy helper that allows you to easily build your own custom version of [/method header](/method header). It returns a [Proxy](Proxy) useful for building `is rw` methods similar to those in [HTTP::Headers](HTTP::Headers).