开发者

Set Response Status Code [duplicate]

This question already has answers here: 开发者_JAVA技巧 PHP: How to send HTTP response code? (8 answers) Closed 6 years ago.

I have an API call for which I need to be able to run some checks and potentially return various status codes. I don't need custom views or anything, I just need to return the proper code. If the user hasn't passed proper credentials, I need to return a 401 status. If they haven't sent a supported request format, I need to return a 400 status.

Because it's an API, all I really want to do is set the response status and exit with a simple, stupid message about why the request failed (probably using a exit). Just enough to get the job done, but I haven't been able to get this to work right. I've tried using PHP's header() and Cake's $this->header() (this is all in the controller), but although I get the exit message, the header shows a 200 OK status.

Using the code below, I get the message, but the header isn't set. What am I missing?

  if( !$this->auth_api() ) {
    header( '401 Not Authorized' );
    exit( 'Not authorized' );
  }


PHP <=5.3

The header() function has a parameter for status code. If you specify it, the server will take care of it from there.

header('HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized', true, 401);

PHP >=5.4

See Gajus' answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/14223222/362536


Since PHP 5.4 you can use http_response_code.

http_response_code(404);

This will take care of setting the proper HTTP headers.

If you are running PHP < 5.4 then you have two options:

  1. Upgrade.
  2. Use this http_response_code function implemented in PHP.


Why not using Cakes Response Class? You can set the status code of the response simply by this:

$this->response->statusCode(200);

Then just render a file with the error message, which suits best with JSON.


I don't think you're setting the header correctly, try this:

header('HTTP/1.0 401 Unauthorized');


I had the same issue with CakePHP 2.0.1

I tried using

header( 'HTTP/1.1 400 BAD REQUEST' );

and

$this->header( 'HTTP/1.1 400 BAD REQUEST' );

However, neither of these solved my issue.

I did eventually resolve it by using

$this->header( 'HTTP/1.1 400: BAD REQUEST' );

After that, no errors or warning from php / CakePHP.

*edit: In the last $this->header function call, I put a colon (:) between the 400 and the description text of the error.


As written before, but for beginner like me don't forget to include the return.

$this->response->statusCode(200);
return $this->response;
0

上一篇:

下一篇:

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消

最新问答

问答排行榜