public interface ServletResponse
ServletResponse
object and passes it as an argument to the servlet's service
method.
To send binary data in a MIME body response, use the ServletOutputStream
returned by
getOutputStream()
. To send character data, use the PrintWriter
object returned by
getWriter()
. To mix binary and text data, for example, to create a multipart response, use a
ServletOutputStream
and manage the character sections manually.
The charset for the MIME body response can be specified explicitly using any of the following techniques: per
request, per web-app (using ServletContext.setRequestCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
, deployment descriptor), and per
container (for all web applications deployed in that container, using vendor specific configuration). If multiple of
the preceding techniques have been employed, the priority is the order listed. For per request, the charset for the
response can be specified explicitly using the setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
and setContentType(java.lang.String)
methods, or
implicitly using the setLocale(java.util.Locale)
method. Explicit specifications take precedence over implicit specifications.
If no charset is explicitly specified, ISO-8859-1 will be used. The setCharacterEncoding
,
setContentType
, or setLocale
method must be called before getWriter
and before
committing the response for the character encoding to be used.
See the Internet RFCs such as RFC 2045 for more information on MIME. Protocols such as SMTP and HTTP define profiles of MIME, and those standards are still evolving.
ServletOutputStream
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
flushBuffer()
Forces any content in the buffer to be written to the client.
|
int |
getBufferSize()
Returns the actual buffer size used for the response.
|
java.lang.String |
getCharacterEncoding()
Returns the name of the character encoding (MIME charset) used for the body sent in this response.
|
java.lang.String |
getContentType()
Returns the content type used for the MIME body sent in this response.
|
java.util.Locale |
getLocale()
Returns the locale specified for this response using the
setLocale(java.util.Locale) method. |
ServletOutputStream |
getOutputStream()
Returns a
ServletOutputStream suitable for writing binary data in the response. |
java.io.PrintWriter |
getWriter()
Returns a
PrintWriter object that can send character text to the client. |
boolean |
isCommitted()
Returns a boolean indicating if the response has been committed.
|
void |
reset()
Clears any data that exists in the buffer as well as the status code, headers.
|
void |
resetBuffer()
Clears the content of the underlying buffer in the response without clearing headers or status code.
|
void |
setBufferSize(int size)
Sets the preferred buffer size for the body of the response.
|
void |
setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String charset)
Sets the character encoding (MIME charset) of the response being sent to the client, for example, to UTF-8.
|
void |
setContentLength(int len)
Sets the length of the content body in the response In HTTP servlets, this method sets the HTTP Content-Length
header.
|
void |
setContentLengthLong(long len)
Sets the length of the content body in the response In HTTP servlets, this method sets the HTTP Content-Length
header.
|
void |
setContentType(java.lang.String type)
Sets the content type of the response being sent to the client, if the response has not been committed yet.
|
void |
setLocale(java.util.Locale loc)
Sets the locale of the response, if the response has not been committed yet.
|
java.lang.String getCharacterEncoding()
ServletContext.setResponseCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
, deployment descriptor), and per container (for
all web applications deployed in that container, using vendor specific configuration). The first one of these methods
that yields a result is returned. Per-request, the charset for the response can be specified explicitly using the
setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
and setContentType(java.lang.String)
methods, or implicitly using the
setLocale(java.util.Locale) method. Explicit specifications take precedence over implicit specifications. Calls made
to these methods after getWriter
has been called or after the response has been committed have no effect
on the character encoding. If no character encoding has been specified, ISO-8859-1
is returned.
See RFC 2047 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2047.txt) for more information about character encoding and MIME.
String
specifying the name of the character encoding, for example, UTF-8
java.lang.String getContentType()
setContentType(java.lang.String)
before the response is committed. If no content type has been specified, this
method returns null. If a content type has been specified, and a character encoding has been explicitly or implicitly
specified as described in getCharacterEncoding()
or getWriter()
has been called, the charset parameter
is included in the string returned. If no character encoding has been specified, the charset parameter is omitted.String
specifying the content type, for example, text/html; charset=UTF-8
, or
nullServletOutputStream getOutputStream() throws java.io.IOException
ServletOutputStream
suitable for writing binary data in the response. The servlet container does
not encode the binary data.
Calling flush() on the ServletOutputStream commits the response.
Either this method or getWriter()
may be called to write the body, not both, except when reset()
has
been called.
ServletOutputStream
for writing binary datajava.lang.IllegalStateException
- if the getWriter
method has been called on this responsejava.io.IOException
- if an input or output exception occurredgetWriter()
,
reset()
java.io.PrintWriter getWriter() throws java.io.IOException
PrintWriter
object that can send character text to the client. The PrintWriter
uses the character encoding returned by getCharacterEncoding()
. If the response's character encoding has not
been specified as described in getCharacterEncoding
(i.e., the method just returns the default value
ISO-8859-1
), getWriter
updates it to ISO-8859-1
.
Calling flush() on the PrintWriter
commits the response.
Either this method or getOutputStream()
may be called to write the body, not both, except when reset()
has been called.
PrintWriter
object that can return character data to the clientjava.io.UnsupportedEncodingException
- if the character encoding returned by
getCharacterEncoding
cannot be usedjava.lang.IllegalStateException
- if the getOutputStream
method has already been called for this response
objectjava.io.IOException
- if an input or output exception occurredgetOutputStream()
,
setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
,
reset()
void setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String charset)
ServletContext.setResponseCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
, the
deployment descriptor, or using the setContentType(java.lang.String)
or setLocale(java.util.Locale)
methods, the value set in this
method overrides all of those values. Calling setContentType(java.lang.String)
with the String
of
text/html
and calling this method with the String
of UTF-8
is equivalent to
calling setContentType(java.lang.String)
with the String
of text/html; charset=UTF-8
.
This method can be called repeatedly to change the character encoding. This method has no effect if it is called
after getWriter
has been called or after the response has been committed.
If calling this method has an effect (as per the previous paragraph), calling this method with null
clears
any character encoding set via a previous call to this method, setContentType(java.lang.String)
or setLocale(java.util.Locale)
but does
not affect any default character encoding configured via ServletContext.setResponseCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
or the
deployment descriptor.
If this method is called with an invalid or unrecognised character encoding, then a subsequent call to
getWriter()
will throw a UnsupportedEncodingException
. Content for an unknown encoding can be sent
with the ServletOutputStream
returned from getOutputStream()
.
Containers may choose to log calls to this method that use an invalid or unrecognised character encoding.
Containers must communicate the character encoding used for the servlet response's writer to the client if the
protocol provides a way for doing so. In the case of HTTP, the character encoding is communicated as part of the
Content-Type
header for text media types. Note that the character encoding cannot be communicated via
HTTP headers if the servlet does not specify a content type; however, it is still used to encode text written via the
servlet response's writer.
charset
- a String specifying only the character set defined by IANA Character Sets
(http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets) or null
setContentType(java.lang.String)
,
setLocale(java.util.Locale)
void setContentLength(int len)
len
- an integer specifying the length of the content being returned to the client; sets the Content-Length
headervoid setContentLengthLong(long len)
len
- a long specifying the length of the content being returned to the client; sets the Content-Length headervoid setContentType(java.lang.String type)
text/html;charset=UTF-8
. The
response's character encoding is only set from the given content type if this method is called before
getWriter()
is called.
This method may be called repeatedly to change content type and character encoding. This method has no effect if
called after the response has been committed. It does not set the response's character encoding if it is called after
getWriter
has been called or after the response has been committed.
If calling this method has an effect (as per the previous paragraph), calling this method with null
clears
any content type set via a previous call to this method and clears any character encoding set via a previous call to
this method, setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
or setLocale(java.util.Locale)
but does not affect any default character encoding
configured via ServletContext.setResponseCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
or the deployment descriptor.
If this method is called with an invalid or unrecognised character encoding, then a subsequent call to
getWriter()
will throw a UnsupportedEncodingException
. Content for an unknown encoding can be sent
with the ServletOutputStream
returned from getOutputStream()
.
Containers may choose to log calls to this method that use an invalid or unrecognised character encoding.
Containers must communicate the content type and the character encoding used for the servlet response's writer to the
client if the protocol provides a way for doing so. In the case of HTTP, the Content-Type
header is
used.
type
- a String
specifying the MIME type of the content or null
setLocale(java.util.Locale)
,
setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
,
getOutputStream()
,
getWriter()
void setBufferSize(int size)
getBufferSize
.
A larger buffer allows more content to be written before anything is actually sent, thus providing the servlet with more time to set appropriate status codes and headers. A smaller buffer decreases server memory load and allows the client to start receiving data more quickly.
This method must be called before any response body content is written; if content has been written or the response
object has been committed, this method throws an IllegalStateException
.
size
- the preferred buffer sizejava.lang.IllegalStateException
- if this method is called after content has been writtengetBufferSize()
,
flushBuffer()
,
isCommitted()
,
reset()
int getBufferSize()
setBufferSize(int)
,
flushBuffer()
,
isCommitted()
,
reset()
void flushBuffer() throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOException
- if the act of flushing the buffer cannot be completed.setBufferSize(int)
,
getBufferSize()
,
isCommitted()
,
reset()
void resetBuffer()
IllegalStateException
.setBufferSize(int)
,
getBufferSize()
,
isCommitted()
,
reset()
boolean isCommitted()
setBufferSize(int)
,
getBufferSize()
,
flushBuffer()
,
reset()
void reset()
getWriter()
or getOutputStream()
is also cleared. It is legal, for instance, to call
getWriter()
, reset()
and then getOutputStream()
. If getWriter()
or
getOutputStream()
have been called before this method, then the corrresponding returned Writer or OutputStream
will be staled and the behavior of using the stale object is undefined. If the response has been committed, this
method throws an IllegalStateException
.java.lang.IllegalStateException
- if the response has already been committedsetBufferSize(int)
,
getBufferSize()
,
flushBuffer()
,
isCommitted()
void setLocale(java.util.Locale loc)
setContentType(java.lang.String)
or setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
, getWriter
hasn't been called yet, and the
response hasn't been committed yet. If the deployment descriptor contains a locale-encoding-mapping-list
element, and that element provides a mapping for the given locale, that mapping is used. Otherwise, the mapping from
locale to character encoding is container dependent.
This method may be called repeatedly to change locale and character encoding. The method has no effect if called
after the response has been committed. It does not set the response's character encoding if it is called after
setContentType(java.lang.String)
has been called with a charset specification, after setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
has been
called, after getWriter
has been called, or after the response has been committed.
If calling this method has an effect on the locale (as per the previous paragraph), calling this method with
null
clears any locale set via a previous call to this method. If calling this method has an effect on the
character encoding, calling this method with null
clears the previously set character encoding.
Containers must communicate the locale and the character encoding used for the servlet response's writer to the
client if the protocol provides a way for doing so. In the case of HTTP, the locale is communicated via the
Content-Language
header, the character encoding as part of the Content-Type
header for text
media types. Note that the character encoding cannot be communicated via HTTP headers if the servlet does not specify
a content type; however, it is still used to encode text written via the servlet response's writer.
loc
- the locale of the response or {code @null}getLocale()
,
setContentType(java.lang.String)
,
setCharacterEncoding(java.lang.String)
java.util.Locale getLocale()
setLocale(java.util.Locale)
method. Calls made to
setLocale
after the response is committed have no effect. If no locale has been specified, the
container's default locale is returned.setLocale(java.util.Locale)