Patrick Jierald Francisco Juan e13d022e26 | 10 months ago | |
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LICENSE | 10 months ago | |
README.md | 10 months ago | |
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package.json | 10 months ago |
README.md
content-disposition
Create and parse HTTP Content-Disposition
header
Installation
$ npm install content-disposition
API
var contentDisposition = require('content-disposition')
contentDisposition(filename, options)
Create an attachment Content-Disposition
header value using the given file name,
if supplied. The filename
is optional and if no file name is desired, but you
want to specify options
, set filename
to undefined
.
res.setHeader('Content-Disposition', contentDisposition('∫ maths.pdf'))
note HTTP headers are of the ISO-8859-1 character set. If you are writing this
header through a means different from setHeader
in Node.js, you'll want to specify
the 'binary'
encoding in Node.js.
Options
contentDisposition
accepts these properties in the options object.
fallback
If the filename
option is outside ISO-8859-1, then the file name is actually
stored in a supplemental field for clients that support Unicode file names and
a ISO-8859-1 version of the file name is automatically generated.
This specifies the ISO-8859-1 file name to override the automatic generation or
disables the generation all together, defaults to true
.
- A string will specify the ISO-8859-1 file name to use in place of automatic generation.
false
will disable including a ISO-8859-1 file name and only include the Unicode version (unless the file name is already ISO-8859-1).true
will enable automatic generation if the file name is outside ISO-8859-1.
If the filename
option is ISO-8859-1 and this option is specified and has a
different value, then the filename
option is encoded in the extended field
and this set as the fallback field, even though they are both ISO-8859-1.
type
Specifies the disposition type, defaults to "attachment"
. This can also be
"inline"
, or any other value (all values except inline are treated like
attachment
, but can convey additional information if both parties agree to
it). The type is normalized to lower-case.
contentDisposition.parse(string)
var disposition = contentDisposition.parse('attachment; filename="EURO rates.txt"; filename*=UTF-8\'\'%e2%82%ac%20rates.txt')
Parse a Content-Disposition
header string. This automatically handles extended
("Unicode") parameters by decoding them and providing them under the standard
parameter name. This will return an object with the following properties (examples
are shown for the string 'attachment; filename="EURO rates.txt"; filename*=UTF-8\'\'%e2%82%ac%20rates.txt'
):
-
type
: The disposition type (always lower case). Example:'attachment'
-
parameters
: An object of the parameters in the disposition (name of parameter always lower case and extended versions replace non-extended versions). Example:{filename: "€ rates.txt"}
Examples
Send a file for download
var contentDisposition = require('content-disposition')
var destroy = require('destroy')
var fs = require('fs')
var http = require('http')
var onFinished = require('on-finished')
var filePath = '/path/to/public/plans.pdf'
http.createServer(function onRequest (req, res) {
// set headers
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'application/pdf')
res.setHeader('Content-Disposition', contentDisposition(filePath))
// send file
var stream = fs.createReadStream(filePath)
stream.pipe(res)
onFinished(res, function () {
destroy(stream)
})
})
Testing
$ npm test
References
- RFC 2616: Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1
- RFC 5987: Character Set and Language Encoding for Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Header Field Parameters
- RFC 6266: Use of the Content-Disposition Header Field in the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
- Test Cases for HTTP Content-Disposition header field (RFC 6266) and the Encodings defined in RFCs 2047, 2231 and 5987