1Perlbal::XS::HTTPHeaderUss(e3r)Contributed Perl DocumentPaetrilobnal::XS::HTTPHeaders(3)
2
3
4
6 Perlbal::XS::HTTPHeaders - Perlbal extension for processing HTTP
7 headers.
8
10 use HTTPHeaders;
11
12 my $hdr = Perlbal::XS::HTTPHeaders->new("GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nConnection: keep-alive\r\n\r\n");
13 if ($hdr->getMethod == M_GET()) {
14 print "GET: ", $hdr->getURI(), "\n";
15 print "Connection: ", $hdr->getHeader('Connection'), "\n";
16 }
17
19 This module is used to read HTTP headers from a string and to parse
20 them into an internal storage format for easy access and modification.
21 You can also ask the module to reconstitute the headers into one big
22 string, useful if you're writing a proxy and need to read and write
23 headers while maintaining the ability to modify individual parts of the
24 whole.
25
26 The goal is to be fast. This is a lot faster than doing all of the
27 text processing in Perl directly, and a lot of the flexibility of Perl
28 is maintained by implementing the library in Perl and descending from
29 Perlbal::HTTPHeaders.
30
31 Exportable constants
32 H_REQUEST
33 H_RESPONSE
34 M_GET
35 M_POST
36 M_HEAD
37 M_OPTIONS
38 M_PUT
39 M_DELETE
40
42 There are no known bugs at this time. Please report any you find!
43
45 Perlbal, and by extension this module, can be discussed by joining the
46 Perlbal mailing list on http://lists.danga.com/.
47
48 Please see the original HTTPHeaders module implemented entirely in Perl
49 in the Perlbal source tree available at http://cvs.danga.com/ in the
50 wcmtools repository perlbal/lib/Perlbal/ directory.
51
53 Mark Smith, <junior@danga.com>
54
56 Copyright (C) 2004 by Danga Interactive, Inc.
57
58 Copyright (C) 2005 by Six Apart, Ltd.
59
60 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
61 under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.4 or, at
62 your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
63
64
65
66perl v5.12.1 2010-01-15 Perlbal::XS::HTTPHeaders(3)