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However, in accepting such obligations, You may act only * on Your own behalf and on Your sole responsibility, not on behalf * of any other Contributor, and only if You agree to indemnify, * defend, and hold each Contributor harmless for any liability * incurred by, or claims asserted against, such Contributor by reason * of your accepting any such warranty or additional liability. * * END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS * * APPENDIX: How to apply the Apache License to your work. * * To apply the Apache License to your work, attach the following * boilerplate notice, with the fields enclosed by brackets "{}" * replaced with your own identifying information. (Don't include * the brackets!) The text should be enclosed in the appropriate * comment syntax for the file format. We also recommend that a * file or class name and description of purpose be included on the * same "printed page" as the copyright notice for easier * identification within third-party archives. * * Copyright 2014 Edgar Espina * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package org.jooby; import static java.util.Objects.requireNonNull; import javax.annotation.Nonnull; import java.util.function.Supplier; /** * A {@link Result} builder with some utility static methods. * * @author edgar * @since 0.5.0 */ public class Results { /** * Set the result * * @param entity A result value. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result with(final Object entity) { return new Result().set(entity); } /** * Set the result * * @param entity A result value. * @param status A HTTP status. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result with(final Object entity, final Status status) { return new Result().status(status).set(entity); } /** * Set the result * * @param entity A result value. * @param status A HTTP status. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result with(final Object entity, final int status) { return with(entity, Status.valueOf(status)); } /** * Set the response status. * * @param status A status! * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result with(final Status status) { requireNonNull(status, "A HTTP status is required."); return new Result().status(status); } /** * Set the response status. * * @param status A status! * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result with(final int status) { requireNonNull(status, "A HTTP status is required."); return new Result().status(status); } /** * @return A new result with {@link Status#OK}. */ @Nonnull public static Result ok() { return with(Status.OK); } /** * @param view View to render. * @return A new view. */ @Nonnull public static View html(final String view) { return new View(view); } /** * @param entity A result content! * @return A new json result. */ @Nonnull public static Result json(final Object entity) { return with(entity, 200).type(MediaType.json); } /** * @param entity A result content! * @return A new json result. */ @Nonnull public static Result xml(final Object entity) { return with(entity, 200).type(MediaType.xml); } /** * @param entity A result content! * @return A new result with {@link Status#OK} and given content. */ @Nonnull public static Result ok(final Object entity) { return ok().set(entity); } /** * @return A new result with {@link Status#ACCEPTED}. */ @Nonnull public static Result accepted() { return with(Status.ACCEPTED); } /** * @param content A result content! * @return A new result with {@link Status#ACCEPTED}. */ @Nonnull public static Result accepted(final Object content) { return accepted().set(content); } /** * @return A new result with {@link Status#NO_CONTENT}. */ @Nonnull public static Result noContent() { return with(Status.NO_CONTENT); } /** * Redirect to the given url with status code defaulting to {@link Status#FOUND}. * *
   *  rsp.redirect("/foo/bar");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("../login");
   * 
* * Redirects can be a fully qualified URI for redirecting to a different site: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("http://google.com");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the root of the host name. For example, if you were * on http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect to /admin would * land you at http://example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("/admin");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the current URL. A redirection of post/new, from * http://example.com/blog/admin/ (notice the trailing slash), would give you * http://example.com/blog/admin/post/new. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("post/new");
   * 
* * Redirecting to post/new from http://example.com/blog/admin (no trailing slash), * will take you to http://example.com/blog/post/new. * *

* If you found the above behavior confusing, think of path segments as directories (have trailing * slashes) and files, it will start to make sense. *

* * Pathname relative redirects are also possible. If you were on * http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect would land you at * http//example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("..");
   * 
* * A back redirection will redirect the request back to the Referer, defaulting to * / when missing. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("back");
   * 
* * @param location A location. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result redirect(final String location) { return redirect(Status.FOUND, location); } /** * Redirect to the given url with status code defaulting to {@link Status#FOUND}. * *
   *  rsp.redirect("/foo/bar");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("../login");
   * 
* * Redirects can be a fully qualified URI for redirecting to a different site: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("http://google.com");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the root of the host name. For example, if you were * on http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect to /admin would * land you at http://example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("/admin");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the current URL. A redirection of post/new, from * http://example.com/blog/admin/ (notice the trailing slash), would give you * http://example.com/blog/admin/post/new. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("post/new");
   * 
* * Redirecting to post/new from http://example.com/blog/admin (no trailing slash), * will take you to http://example.com/blog/post/new. * *

* If you found the above behavior confusing, think of path segments as directories (have trailing * slashes) and files, it will start to make sense. *

* * Pathname relative redirects are also possible. If you were on * http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect would land you at * http//example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("..");
   * 
* * A back redirection will redirect the request back to the Referer, defaulting to * / when missing. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("back");
   * 
* * @param location A location. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result tempRedirect(final String location) { return redirect(Status.TEMPORARY_REDIRECT, location); } /** * Redirect to the given url with status code defaulting to {@link Status#FOUND}. * *
   *  rsp.redirect("/foo/bar");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("../login");
   * 
* * Redirects can be a fully qualified URI for redirecting to a different site: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("http://google.com");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the root of the host name. For example, if you were * on http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect to /admin would * land you at http://example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("/admin");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the current URL. A redirection of post/new, from * http://example.com/blog/admin/ (notice the trailing slash), would give you * http://example.com/blog/admin/post/new. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("post/new");
   * 
* * Redirecting to post/new from http://example.com/blog/admin (no trailing slash), * will take you to http://example.com/blog/post/new. * *

* If you found the above behavior confusing, think of path segments as directories (have trailing * slashes) and files, it will start to make sense. *

* * Pathname relative redirects are also possible. If you were on * http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect would land you at * http//example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("..");
   * 
* * A back redirection will redirect the request back to the Referer, defaulting to * / when missing. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("back");
   * 
* * @param location A location. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result moved(final String location) { return redirect(Status.MOVED_PERMANENTLY, location); } /** * Redirect to the given url with status code defaulting to {@link Status#FOUND}. * *
   *  rsp.redirect("/foo/bar");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("http://example.com");
   *  rsp.redirect("../login");
   * 
* * Redirects can be a fully qualified URI for redirecting to a different site: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("http://google.com");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the root of the host name. For example, if you were * on http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect to /admin would * land you at http://example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("/admin");
   * 
* * Redirects can be relative to the current URL. A redirection of post/new, from * http://example.com/blog/admin/ (notice the trailing slash), would give you * http://example.com/blog/admin/post/new. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("post/new");
   * 
* * Redirecting to post/new from http://example.com/blog/admin (no trailing slash), * will take you to http://example.com/blog/post/new. * *

* If you found the above behavior confusing, think of path segments as directories (have trailing * slashes) and files, it will start to make sense. *

* * Pathname relative redirects are also possible. If you were on * http://example.com/admin/post/new, the following redirect would land you at * http//example.com/admin: * *
   *   rsp.redirect("..");
   * 
* * A back redirection will redirect the request back to the Referer, defaulting to * / when missing. * *
   *   rsp.redirect("back");
   * 
* * @param location A location. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result seeOther(final String location) { return redirect(Status.SEE_OTHER, location); } /** * Performs content-negotiation on the Accept HTTP header on the request object. It select a * handler for the request, based on the acceptable types ordered by their quality values. * If the header is not specified, the first callback is invoked. When no match is found, * the server responds with 406 "Not Acceptable", or invokes the default callback: {@code ** / *}. * *
   *   get("/jsonOrHtml", () {@literal ->}
   *     Results
   *         .when("text/html", () {@literal ->} Results.html("view").put("model", model)))
   *         .when("application/json", () {@literal ->} model)
   *         .when("*", () {@literal ->} {throw new Err(Status.NOT_ACCEPTABLE);})
   *   );
   * 
* * @param type A media type. * @param supplier A result supplier. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result when(final String type, final Supplier supplier) { return new Result().when(type, supplier); } /** * Performs content-negotiation on the Accept HTTP header on the request object. It select a * handler for the request, based on the acceptable types ordered by their quality values. * If the header is not specified, the first callback is invoked. When no match is found, * the server responds with 406 "Not Acceptable", or invokes the default callback: {@code ** / *}. * *
   *   get("/jsonOrHtml", () {@literal ->}
   *     Results
   *         .when("text/html", () {@literal ->} Results.html("view").put("model", model)))
   *         .when("application/json", () {@literal ->} model)
   *         .when("*", () {@literal ->} {throw new Err(Status.NOT_ACCEPTABLE);})
   *   );
   * 
* * @param type A media type. * @param supplier A result supplier. * @return A new result. */ @Nonnull public static Result when(final MediaType type, final Supplier supplier) { return new Result().when(type, supplier); } /** * Produces a redirect (302) status code and set the Location header too. * * @param status A HTTP redirect status. * @param location A location. * @return A new result. */ private static Result redirect(final Status status, final String location) { requireNonNull(location, "A location is required."); return with(status).header("location", location); } }