org.apache.http.message.LineFormatter Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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* distributed with this work for additional information
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* to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
* "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
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*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
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* KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
* specific language governing permissions and limitations
* under the License.
* ====================================================================
*
* This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many
* individuals on behalf of the Apache Software Foundation. For more
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* .
*
*/
package org.apache.http.message;
import org.apache.http.Header;
import org.apache.http.ProtocolVersion;
import org.apache.http.RequestLine;
import org.apache.http.StatusLine;
import org.apache.http.util.CharArrayBuffer;
/**
* Interface for formatting elements of the HEAD section of an HTTP message.
* This is the complement to {@link LineParser}.
* There are individual methods for formatting a request line, a
* status line, or a header line. The formatting does not include the
* trailing line break sequence CR-LF.
* Instances of this interface are expected to be stateless and thread-safe.
*
*
* The formatted lines are returned in memory, the formatter does not depend
* on any specific IO mechanism.
* In order to avoid unnecessary creation of temporary objects,
* a buffer can be passed as argument to all formatting methods.
* The implementation may or may not actually use that buffer for formatting.
* If it is used, the buffer will first be cleared by the
* {@code formatXXX} methods.
* The argument buffer can always be re-used after the call. The buffer
* returned as the result, if it is different from the argument buffer,
* MUST NOT be modified.
*
*
* @since 4.0
*/
public interface LineFormatter {
/**
* Formats a protocol version.
* This method does not follow the general contract for
* {@code buffer} arguments.
* It does not clear the argument buffer, but appends instead.
* The returned buffer can always be modified by the caller.
* Because of these differing conventions, it is not named
* {@code formatProtocolVersion}.
*
* @param buffer a buffer to which to append, or {@code null}
* @param version the protocol version to format
*
* @return a buffer with the formatted protocol version appended.
* The caller is allowed to modify the result buffer.
* If the {@code buffer} argument is not {@code null},
* the returned buffer is the argument buffer.
*/
CharArrayBuffer appendProtocolVersion(CharArrayBuffer buffer,
ProtocolVersion version);
/**
* Formats a request line.
*
* @param buffer a buffer available for formatting, or
* {@code null}.
* The buffer will be cleared before use.
* @param reqline the request line to format
*
* @return the formatted request line
*/
CharArrayBuffer formatRequestLine(CharArrayBuffer buffer,
RequestLine reqline);
/**
* Formats a status line.
*
* @param buffer a buffer available for formatting, or
* {@code null}.
* The buffer will be cleared before use.
* @param statline the status line to format
*
* @return the formatted status line
*
* @throws org.apache.http.ParseException in case of a parse error
*/
CharArrayBuffer formatStatusLine(CharArrayBuffer buffer,
StatusLine statline);
/**
* Formats a header.
* Due to header continuation, the result may be multiple lines.
* In order to generate well-formed HTTP, the lines in the result
* must be separated by the HTTP line break sequence CR-LF.
* There is no trailing CR-LF in the result.
*
* See the class comment for details about the buffer argument.
*
*
* @param buffer a buffer available for formatting, or
* {@code null}.
* The buffer will be cleared before use.
* @param header the header to format
*
* @return a buffer holding the formatted header, never {@code null}.
* The returned buffer may be different from the argument buffer.
*
* @throws org.apache.http.ParseException in case of a parse error
*/
CharArrayBuffer formatHeader(CharArrayBuffer buffer,
Header header);
}