HTTP::Message - Class encapsulating
HTTP messages
A HTTP::Message object contains some headers and a content (body). The class is abstract,
i.e. it only used as a base class for
HTTP::Request and HTTP::Response and should never instantiated as itself.
This is the object constructor. It should only be called internally by this
library. External code should construct HTTP::Request or
HTTP::Response objects.
Returns a copy of the object.
Sets the
HTTP protocol used for the message. The protocol is a string like
``HTTP/1.0'' or
``HTTP/1.1''.
The content method sets the content if an argument is given.
If no argument is given the content is not touched. In either case the
previous content is returned.
The add_content methods appends more data to the end of the
previous content.
The content_ref method will return a reference to content
string. It can be more efficient to access the content this way if the
content is huge, and it can be used for direct manipulation of the content,
for instance:
${$res->content_ref} =~ s/\bfoo\b/bar/g;
All unknown HTTP::Message methods are delegated to the
HTTP::Headers object that is part of every message. This allows convenient access to
these methods. Refer to Headers for details of these methods:
$mess->header($field => $val);
$mess->scan(&doit);
$mess->push_header($field => $val);
$mess->remove_header($field);
$mess->date;
$mess->expires;
$mess->if_modified_since;
$mess->last_modified;
$mess->content_type;
$mess->content_encoding;
$mess->content_length;
$mess->title;
$mess->user_agent;
$mess->server;
$mess->from;
$mess->referer;
$mess->www_authenticate;
$mess->authorization;
$mess->authorization_basic;
Call the HTTP::Headers->as_string() method for the headers in the
message.