""" The :mod:`response` module provides :class:`Response` and :class:`ImmediateResponse` classes. `Response` is a subclass of `HttpResponse`, and can be similarly instantiated and returned from any view. It is a bit smarter than Django's `HttpResponse`, for it renders automatically its content to a serial format by using a list of :mod:`renderers`. To determine the content type to which it must render, default behaviour is to use standard HTTP Accept header content negotiation. But `Response` also supports overriding the content type by specifying an ``_accept=`` parameter in the URL. Also, `Response` will ignore `Accept` headers from Internet Explorer user agents and use a sensible browser `Accept` header instead. """ from django.template.response import SimpleTemplateResponse from django.core.handlers.wsgi import STATUS_CODE_TEXT from djangorestframework.settings import api_settings from djangorestframework.utils.mediatypes import order_by_precedence from djangorestframework.utils import MSIE_USER_AGENT_REGEX from djangorestframework import status class NotAcceptable(Exception): pass class Response(SimpleTemplateResponse): """ An HttpResponse that may include content that hasn't yet been serialized. Kwargs: - content(object). The raw content, not yet serialized. This must be native Python data that renderers can handle. (e.g.: `dict`, `str`, ...) - renderers(list/tuple). The renderers to use for rendering the response content. """ _ACCEPT_QUERY_PARAM = '_accept' # Allow override of Accept header in URL query params _IGNORE_IE_ACCEPT_HEADER = True def __init__(self, content=None, status=None, headers=None, view=None, request=None, renderers=None): # First argument taken by `SimpleTemplateResponse.__init__` is template_name, # which we don't need super(Response, self).__init__(None, status=status) self.raw_content = content self.has_content_body = content is not None self.headers = headers and headers[:] or [] self.view = view self.request = request self.renderers = renderers def get_renderers(self): """ Instantiates and returns the list of renderers the response will use. """ if self.renderers is None: renderer_classes = api_settings.DEFAULT_RENDERERS else: renderer_classes = self.renderers return [cls(self.view) for cls in renderer_classes] @property def rendered_content(self): """ The final rendered content. Accessing this attribute triggers the complete rendering cycle: selecting suitable renderer, setting response's actual content type, rendering data. """ renderer, media_type = self._determine_renderer() # Set the media type of the response self['Content-Type'] = renderer.media_type # Render the response content if self.has_content_body: return renderer.render(self.raw_content, media_type) return renderer.render() def render(self): try: return super(Response, self).render() except NotAcceptable: response = self._get_406_response() return response.render() @property def status_text(self): """ Returns reason text corresponding to our HTTP response status code. Provided for convenience. """ return STATUS_CODE_TEXT.get(self.status_code, '') def _determine_accept_list(self): """ Returns a list of accepted media types. This list is determined from : 1. overload with `_ACCEPT_QUERY_PARAM` 2. `Accept` header of the request If those are useless, a default value is returned instead. """ request = self.request if self._ACCEPT_QUERY_PARAM and request.GET.get(self._ACCEPT_QUERY_PARAM, None): # Use _accept parameter override return [request.GET.get(self._ACCEPT_QUERY_PARAM)] elif (self._IGNORE_IE_ACCEPT_HEADER and 'HTTP_USER_AGENT' in request.META and MSIE_USER_AGENT_REGEX.match(request.META['HTTP_USER_AGENT'])): # Ignore MSIE's broken accept behavior and do something sensible instead return ['text/html', '*/*'] elif 'HTTP_ACCEPT' in request.META: # Use standard HTTP Accept negotiation return [token.strip() for token in request.META['HTTP_ACCEPT'].split(',')] else: # No accept header specified return ['*/*'] def _determine_renderer(self): """ Determines the appropriate renderer for the output, given the list of accepted media types, and the :attr:`renderers` set on this class. Returns a 2-tuple of `(renderer, media_type)` See: RFC 2616, Section 14 http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html """ renderers = self.get_renderers() accepts = self._determine_accept_list() # Not acceptable response - Ignore accept header. if self.status_code == 406: return (renderers[0], renderers[0].media_type) # Check the acceptable media types against each renderer, # attempting more specific media types first # NB. The inner loop here isn't as bad as it first looks :) # Worst case is we're looping over len(accept_list) * len(self.renderers) for media_type_list in order_by_precedence(accepts): for renderer in renderers: for media_type in media_type_list: if renderer.can_handle_response(media_type): return renderer, media_type # No acceptable renderers were found raise NotAcceptable def _get_406_response(self): renderer = self.renderers[0] return Response( { 'detail': 'Could not satisfy the client\'s Accept header', 'available_types': [renderer.media_type for renderer in self.renderers] }, status=status.HTTP_406_NOT_ACCEPTABLE, view=self.view, request=self.request, renderers=[renderer])