/usr/include/Wt/WResource is in libwt-dev 3.3.4+dfsg-6ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 | // This may look like C code, but it's really -*- C++ -*-
/*
* Copyright (C) 2008 Emweb bvba, Kessel-Lo, Belgium.
*
* See the LICENSE file for terms of use.
*/
#ifndef WRESOURCE_H_
#define WRESOURCE_H_
#include <Wt/WObject>
#include <Wt/WGlobal>
#include <Wt/WSignal>
#include <Wt/WString>
#include <iostream>
#ifdef WT_THREADED
#include <boost/thread/condition.hpp>
namespace boost {
class recursive_mutex;
}
#endif // WT_THREADED
namespace Wt {
class WebRequest;
class WebResponse;
class WebSession;
namespace Http {
class Request;
class Response;
class ResponseContinuation;
typedef boost::shared_ptr<ResponseContinuation> ResponseContinuationPtr;
}
/*! \class WResource Wt/WResource Wt/WResource
* \brief An object which can be rendered in the HTTP protocol.
*
* <h3>Usage</h3>
*
* Besides the main page, other objects may be rendered as additional
* resources, for example documents or images. Classes such as WAnchor
* or WImage can use a resource instead of a URL to provide their
* contents. Whenever the resource has changed, you should call the
* setChanged() method. setChanged() will make sure that the browser will
* use a new version of the resource by generating a new URL, and emits the
* dataChanged() signal to make those that refer to the resource aware
* that they should update their references to the new URL.
*
* You can help the browser to start a suitable helper application to
* handle the downloaded resource, or suggest to the user a suitable
* filename for saving the resource, by setting an appropriate file
* name using suggestFileName().
*
* To serve resources that you create on the fly, you need to specialize
* this class and implement handleRequest().
*
* \if cpp
* Example for a custom resource implementation:
* \code
* class MyResource : public Wt::WResource
* {
* public:
* MyResource(Wt::WObject *parent = 0)
* : Wt::WResource(parent)
* {
* suggestFileName("data.txt");
* }
*
* ~MyResource() {
* beingDeleted(); // see "Concurrency issues" below.
* }
*
* void handleRequest(const Wt::Http::Request& request,
* Wt::Http::Response& response) {
* response.setMimeType("plain/text");
* response.out() << "I am a text file." << std::endl;
* }
* };
* \endcode
* \endif
*
* <h3>Concurrency issues</h3>
*
* Because of the nature of the web, a resource may be requested one
* time or multiple times at the discretion of the browser, and
* therefore your resource should in general not have any side-effects
* except for what is needed to render its own contents. Unlike event
* notifications to a %Wt application, resource requests are not
* serialized, but are handled concurrently. You need to grab the
* application lock if you want to access or modify other widget state
* from within the resource. When deleting a resource, any pending
* request is cancelled first. For this mechanism to work you need to
* specialize the destructor and call beingDeleted(). This method may
* safely be called multiple times (i.e. from within each destructor
* in the hierachy).
*
* <h3>Continuations for asynchronous I/O</h3>
*
* With respect to I/O, the current strategy is to cache the whole
* response first in a buffer and use async I/O to push the data to
* the client, in order to free the thread while waiting for I/O on a
* possibly slow link. You do not necessarily have to provide all
* output at once, instead you can obtain a Http::ResponseContinuation
* object for a response, construct the response piecewise. A new
* request() will be made to continue the response.
*
* Example for a custom resource implementation using continuations:
* \code
class MyResource : public Wt::WResource
{
public:
MyResource(int iterations, Wt::WObject *parent = 0)
: Wt::WResource(parent),
iterations_(iterations)
{
suggestFileName("data.txt");
}
~MyResource() {
beingDeleted();
}
void handleRequest(const Wt::Http::Request& request,
Wt::Http::Response& response) {
// see if this request is for a continuation:
Wt::Http::ResponseContinuation *continuation = request.continuation();
// calculate the current start
int iteration = continuation ? boost::any_cast<int>(continuation->data()) : 0;
if (iteration == 0)
response.setMimeType("plain/text");
int last = std::min(iterations_, iteration + 100);
for (int i = iteration; i < last; ++i)
response.out() << "Data item " << i << std::endl;
// if we have not yet finished, create a continuation to serve more
if (last < iterations_) {
continuation = response.createContinuation();
// remember what to do next
continuation->setData(last);
}
}
private:
int iterations_;
};
* \endcode
*
* <h3>Global and private resources</h3>
*
* By default, a resource is private to an application: access to it
* is protected by same secret session Id that protects any other
* access to the application.
*
* You can also deploy static resources, which are global, using
* WServer::addResource().
*
* <h3>Monitoring upload progress</h3>
*
* A resource may also handle the uploading of files (in fact,
* WFileUpload uses a WResource to do exactly that) or transmission of
* other large bodies of data being POST'ed or PUT to the resource
* URL. For these requests, it may be convenient to enable upload
* progress monitoring using setUploadProgress(), which allows you to
* be notified of data being received.
*
* \sa WAnchor, WImage
*/
class WT_API WResource : public WObject
{
public:
/*! \brief Values for the disposition type in the Content-Disposition header
*/
enum DispositionType {
NoDisposition, //!< Do not specify a disposition type
Attachment, //!< Open with a helper application or show 'Save As' dialog
Inline //!< View with a browser plugin
};
/*! \brief Creates a new resource.
*/
WResource(WObject* parent = 0);
/*! \brief Destroys the resource.
*
* When specializing a resource, you MUST call beingDeleted() from
* within the specialized destructor, in order to stop any further
* requests to the resource.
*/
~WResource();
/*! \brief Suggests a filename to the user for the data streamed by this
* resource.
*
* For resources, intended to be downloaded by the user, suggest a
* name used for saving. The filename extension may also help the
* browser to identify the correct program for opening the resource.
*
* The disposition type determines if the resource is intended to
* be opened by a plugin in the browser (Inline), or to be saved to disk
* (Attachment). NoDisposition is not a valid Content-Disposition when a
* filename is suggested; this will be rendered as Attachment.
*
* \sa setDispositionType().
*/
void suggestFileName(const Wt::WString &name,
DispositionType dispositionType = Attachment);
/*! \brief Returns the suggested file name.
*
* \sa suggestFileName();
*/
const Wt::WString& suggestedFileName() const { return suggestedFileName_; }
/*! \brief Configures the Content-Disposition header
*
* The Content-Disposition header allows to instruct the browser that a
* resource should be shown inline or as attachment. This function enables
* you to set this property.
*
* This is often used in combination with suggestFilename(). The
* Content-Disposition must not be None when a filename is given;
* if this case is encountered, None will be rendered as Attachment.
*
* \sa suggestFilename().
*/
void setDispositionType(DispositionType cd);
/*! \brief Returns the currently configured content disposition
*
* \sa setDispositionType()
*/
DispositionType dispositionType() const { return dispositionType_; }
/*! \brief Generates a new URL for this resource and emits the changed signal
*
* This does not work when the resource is deployed at an internal path using
* setInternalPath().
*/
void setChanged();
/*! \brief Sets an internal path for this resource.
*
* Using this method you can deploy the resource at a fixed path. Unless
* you deploy using cookies for session tracking (not recommended), a
* session identifier will be appended to the path.
*
* You should use internal paths that are different from internal paths
* handled by your application (WApplication::setInternalPath()), if you
* do not want a conflict between these two when the browser does not use
* AJAX (and thus url fragments for its internal paths).
*
* The default value is empty. By default the URL for a resource is
* unspecified and a URL will be generated by the library.
*
* The internal path for a static resource is the deployment path
* specified using WServer::addResource().
*/
void setInternalPath(const std::string& path);
/*! \brief Returns the internal path.
*
* \sa setInternalPath().
*/
std::string internalPath() const { return internalPath_; }
/*! \brief Generates an URL for this resource.
*
* Generates a new url that refers to this resource. The url is
* unique to assure that it is not cached by the web browser, and
* can thus be used to refer to a new "version" of the resource,
* which can be indicated by emitting the dataChanged() signal.
*
* The old urls are not invalidated by calling this method.
*/
const std::string& generateUrl();
/*! \brief Returns the current URL for this resource.
*
* Returns the url that references this resource.
*/
const std::string& url() const;
/*! \brief %Signal emitted when the data presented in this resource
* has changed.
*
* Widgets that reference the resource (such as anchors and images) will
* make sure the new data is rendered.
*
* It is better to call setChanged() than to emit this signal. setChanged
* generates a new URL for this resource to avoid caching problems and then
* emits this signal.
*/
Signal<>& dataChanged() { return dataChanged_; }
/*! \brief Indicate interest in upload progress.
*
* When supported, you can track upload progress using this
* signal. While data is being received, and before handleRequest()
* is called, progress information is indicated using
* dataReceived().
*
* We envision that in the future support will depend on a
* combination of browser and connector. Currently only the wthttp
* connector provides support for this across all AJAX browsers. In
* the future, we are likely to implement this also using JavaScript
* File API features making it independent of connectors.
*
* The default value is \c false.
*/
void setUploadProgress(bool enabled);
/*! \brief %Signal emitted when data has been received for this resource.
*
* When this signal is emitted, you have the update lock to modify
* the application. Because there is however no corresponding
* request from the browser, any update to the user interface is not
* immediately reflected in the client. To update the client
* interface, you need to use a WTimer or enable \link
* WApplication::enableUpdates() server-push\endlink.
*
* \sa setUploadProgress()
*/
Signal< ::uint64_t, ::uint64_t >& dataReceived() { return dataReceived_; }
/*! \brief Stream the resource to a stream.
*
* This is a convenience method to serialize to a stream (for
* example a file stream).
*/
void write(WT_BOSTREAM& out,
const Http::ParameterMap& parameters = Http::ParameterMap(),
const Http::UploadedFileMap& files = Http::UploadedFileMap());
/*! \brief Handles a request.
*
* Reimplement this method so that a proper response is generated
* for the given request. From the \p request object you can
* access request parameters and whether the request is a
* continuation request. In the \p response object, you should
* set the mime type and stream the output data.
*
* A request may also concern a continuation, indicated in
* Http::Request::continuation(), in which case the next part for a
* previously created continuation should be served.
*
* While handling a request, which may happen at any time together
* with event handling, the library makes sure that the resource is
* not being concurrently deleted, but multiple requests may happend
* simultaneously for a single resource.
*/
virtual void handleRequest(const Http::Request& request,
Http::Response& response) = 0;
/*! \brief Handles a continued request being aborted.
*
* This function is only applicable to a request for which a
* response continuation was created, and indicates that the client
* has been closed (or the resource is being deleted) before the
* response was completed. This function may be reimplemented so
* that you can close any resources associated with the response
* continuation.
*
* The base implementation is empty.
*
* Note that because this function could be called from within the
* destructor, you should not forget to call beginDeleted() from the
* specialized destructor of your resource.
*/
virtual void handleAbort(const Http::Request& request);
/*! \brief Indicate that more data is available.
*
* In some occasions, data may be requested for a resource which is
* currently not yet available. Then you can suspend the response
* using a continuation which you let wait for more data.
*
* Using this method you can indicate that more data is
* available. This will resume all responses that are currently
* waiting for more data.
*
* If no responses are currently waiting for data, then this method
* has no effect.
*
* \sa ResponseContinuation::waitForMoreData()
*/
void haveMoreData();
protected:
/*! \brief Prepares the resource for deletion.
*
* When specializing a resource, you MUST call beingDeleted() from
* within the specialized destructor, in order to stop any further
* requests to the resource.
*/
void beingDeleted();
private:
struct UseLock {
UseLock();
~UseLock();
bool use(WResource *resource);
private:
WResource *resource_;
};
#ifdef WT_THREADED
boost::shared_ptr<boost::recursive_mutex> mutex_;
bool beingDeleted_;
int useCount_;
boost::condition useDone_;
#endif
Signal<void> dataChanged_;
Signal< ::uint64_t, ::uint64_t > dataReceived_;
bool trackUploadProgress_;
std::vector<Http::ResponseContinuationPtr> continuations_;
void removeContinuation(Http::ResponseContinuationPtr continuation);
Http::ResponseContinuationPtr addContinuation(Http::ResponseContinuation *c);
void doContinue(Http::ResponseContinuationPtr continuation);
void handle(WebRequest *webRequest, WebResponse *webResponse,
Http::ResponseContinuationPtr continuation
= Http::ResponseContinuationPtr());
Wt::WString suggestedFileName_;
DispositionType dispositionType_;
std::string currentUrl_;
std::string internalPath_;
friend class Http::ResponseContinuation;
friend class Http::Response;
friend class WebSession;
friend class WebController;
friend class Configuration;
};
}
#endif // WRESOURCE_H_
|