I am trying to added a non-english language for a test using capybara and poltergeist. I have tried:
page.driver.headers = { 'HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE' => 'pt-BR' }
But that is not working. On the server side, 'HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE' is always 'en-US'. I have even tried adding another arbitrary header but that isn't coming through on the server side. It seems like poltergeist's header setting doesn't seem to work.
I expected that the right header to set was the same as retrieving in rails but HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE is not a valid http header (http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html). It is specific to rails.
I needed to do:
page.driver.headers = { 'ACCEPT-LANGUAGE' => 'pt-BR' }
Related
I'm trying to follow this solution to add a params parser to my rails app, but all that happens is that I now get the headers but no parameters from the body of the JSON request at all. In other words, calling params from within the controller returns this:
{"controller"=>"residences", "action"=>"create",
"user_email"=>"wjdhamilton#wibble.com",
"user_token"=>"ayAJ8kDUKjCiy1r1Mxzp"}
but I expect this as well:
{"data"=>{"type"=>"residences",
"attributes"=>{"name-number"=>"The Byre",
"street"=>"Next Door",
"town"=>"Just Dulnain Bridge",
"postcode"=>"PH1 3SY",
"country-code"=>""},
"relationships"=>{"residence-histories"=>{"data"=>nil},
"occupants"=>{"data"=>nil}}}}
Here is my initializer, which as you can see is almost identical to the one in the other post:
Rails.application.config.middleware.swap(
::ActionDispatch::ParamsParser, ::ActionDispatch::ParamsParser,
::Mime::Type.lookup("application/vnd.api+json") => Proc.new { |raw_post|
# Borrowed from action_dispatch/middleware/params_parser.rb except for
# data.deep_transform_keys!(&:underscore) :
data = ::ActiveSupport::JSON.decode(raw_post)
data = {:_json => data} unless data.is_a?(::Hash)
data = ::ActionDispatch::Request::Utils.deep_munge(data)
# Transform dash-case param keys to snake_case:
data = data.deep_transform_keys(&:underscore)
data.with_indifferent_access
}
)
Can anyone tell me where I'm going wrong? I'm running Rails 4.2.7.1
Update 1: I decided to try and use the Rails 5 solution instead, the upgrade was overdue anyway, and now things have changed slightly. Given the following request:
"user_email=mogwai%40balnaan.com
&user_token=_1o3Kpzo4gTdPC2bivy
&format=json
&data[type]=messages&data[attributes][sent-on]=2014-01-15
&data[attributes][details]=Beautiful+Shetland+Pony
&data[attributes][message-type]=card
&data[relationships][occasion][data][type]=occasions
&data[relationships][occasion][data][id]=5743
&data[relationships][person][data][type]=people
&data[relationships][person][data][id]=66475"
the ParamsParser middleware only receives the following hash:
"{user":{"email":"mogwai#balnaan.com","password":"0h!Mr5M0g5"}}
Whereas I would expect it to receive the following:
{"user_email"=>"mogwai#balnaan.com", "user_token"=>"_1o3Kpzo4gTdPC2b-ivy", "format"=>"5743", "data"=>{"type"=>"messages", "attributes"=>{"sent-on"=>"2014-01-15", "details"=>"Beautiful Shetland Pony", "message-type"=>"card"}, "relationships"=>{"occasion"=>{"data"=> "type"=>"occasions", "id"=>"5743"}}, "person"=>{"data"=>{"type"=>"people", "id"=>"66475"}}}}, "controller"=>"messages", "action"=>"create"}
The problem was caused by the tests that I had written. I had not added the Content-Type to the requests in the tests, and had not explicitly converted the payload to JSON like so (in Rails 5):
post thing_path, params: my_data.to_json, headers: { "Content-Type" => "application/vnd.api+json }
The effects of this were twofold: Firstly, since params parsers are mapped to specific media types then withholding the media type meant that rails assumed its default media type (in this case application/json) so the parser was not used to process the body of the request. What confused me was that it still passed the headers to the parser. Once I fixed that problem, I was then faced with the body in the format of the request above. That is where the explicit conversion to JSON is required. I could have avoided all of this if I had just written accurate tests!
On Rails 5, all requests includes an unique identifier accessible on application and displayed on HTTP response headers, called "X-Request-Id".
This identifier is very useful for debugging and logging, but I'm having trouble with this in a very old web client.
I tried to clear the header but it did not work.
response.headers['X-Request-Id'] = nil
How can I remove this information from headers?
You can disable it by adding this line in your config/application.rb file:
config.middleware.delete ActionDispatch::RequestId
You can disable this header information, setting by nil this request attribute.
request.request_id = nil
If I load a section of my website with Net::HTTP in Rails, will this get loaded every time or will it get cached along with the rest of the footer?
EDIT: I mean the rest of the footer is currently cached. Would the Net:HTTP results, which get rendered inside the footer, also become cached? I would like it to reload the results every time.
No, Net::HTTP will not cache anything for you. You will have to implement caching, or use a gem that does it for you. But depending on what you do with Rails, Rails can do it - look into fragment caching.
Doesn't look like it does, at least not by default as of 2011. There's also a segment in the net/http.rb file in the ruby source that has the following code commented out:
# The following example performs a conditional GET using the
# If-Modified-Since header. If the files has not been modified since the
# time in the header a Not Modified response will be returned. See RFC 2616
# section 9.3 for further details.
#
uri = URI('http://example.com/cached_response')
file = File.stat 'cached_response'
req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri)
req['If-Modified-Since'] = file.mtime.rfc2822
res = Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) {|http|
http.request(req)
}
open 'cached_response', 'w' do |io|
io.write res.body
end if res.is_a?(Net::HTTPSuccess)
The source file is dated July 9. Hope that helps.
I'm new to open-uri and trying to set an outgoing IP address using open-uri in ruby on rails. I used this post as a reference to get started. I'm porting an app from PHP where I could use CURLOPT_INTERFACE in curl_setopt. What's the best way to do this using open-uri in rails? (Doing this from the controller - not command line.)
If there's not a way to do this - any suggestions on an alternative to open-uri? My goal is to take in and parse JSON data.
What I understand from your questions is you want to hit another server from a specific IP which suggests you have a server with couple of addresses.
What I can suggest you is try to execute curl directly and do what you want to do or use a wrapper for it.
Doesn't look like open-uri can do this. But with net/https it's fairly easy.
require 'net/https'
require 'json'
uri = URI('https://jsonvat.com/')
http = Net::HTTP.new(uri.host, uri.port)
http.local_host = '1.2.3.4'
http.use_ssl = true
request = Net::HTTP::Get.new('/')
request.content_type = 'application/json'
request.initialize_http_header('Content-Type' => 'application/json')
response = http.request(request)
json = JSON.parse(response.body)
Probably you don't need the "require" lines inside Rails Controllers.
You can specify the outgoing IP address with the http.local_host line.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/24896074/1371731
https://yukimotopress.github.io/http
I'm trying to use Microsoft's Translator API in my Rails app. Unfortunately and mostly unexpected, the server answers always with an internal server error. I also tried it manually with Poster[1] and I get the same results.
In more detail, what am I doing? I'm creating an XML string which goes into the body of the request. I used the C# Example of the API documentation. Well, and then I'm just invoking the RESTservice.
My code looks like this:
xmlns1 = "http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Microsoft.MT.Web.Service.V2"
xmlns2 = "http://schemas.microsoft.com/2003/10/Serialization/Arrays"
xml_builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new(:encoding => 'UTF-8') do |xml|
xml.TranslateArrayRequest("xmlns:ms" => xmlns1, "xmlns:arr" => xmlns2) {
xml.AppId token #using temporary token instead of appId
xml.From source
xml.To target
xml.Options {
xml["ms"].ContentType {
xml.text "text/html"
}
}
xml.Texts {
translate.each do |key,val|
xml["arr"].string {
xml.text CGI::unescape(val)
}
end
}
}
end
headers = {
'Content-Type' => 'text/xml'
}
uri = URI.parse(##msTranslatorBase + "/TranslateArray" + "?appId=" + token)
req = Net::HTTP::Post.new(uri.path, headers)
req.body = xml_builder.to_xml
response = Net::HTTP.start(uri.host, uri.port) { |http| http.request(req) }
# [...]
The xml_builder produces something like the following XML. Differently to the example from the API page, I'm defining two namespaces instead of referencing them on the certain tags (mainly because I wanted to reduces the overhead) -- but this doesn't seem to be a problem, when I do it like the docu-example I also get an internal server error.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<TranslateArrayRequest xmlns:ms="http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Microsoft.MT.Web.Service.V2" xmlns:arr="http://schemas.microsoft.com/2003/10/Serialization/Arrays">
<AppId>TX83NVx0MmIxxCzHjPwo2_HgYN7lmWIBqyjruYm7YzCpwnkZL5wtS5oucxqlEFKw9</AppId>
<From>de</From>
<To>en</To>
<Options>
<ms:ContentType>text/html</ms:ContentType>
</Options>
<Texts>
<arr:string>Bitte übersetze diesen Text.</arr:string>
<arr:string>Das hier muss auch noch übersetzt werden.</arr:string>
</Texts>
</TranslateArrayRequest>
Every time I request the service it answers with
#<Net::HTTPInternalServerError 500 The server encountered an error processing the request. Please see the server logs for more details.>
... except I do some unspecified things, like using GET instead of POST, then it answers with something like "method not allowed".
I thought it might be something wrong with the XML stuff, because I can request an AppIdToken and invoke the Translate method without problems. But to me, the XML looks just fine. The documentation states that there is a schema for the expected XML:
The request body is a xml string generated according to the schema specified at http:// api.microsofttranslator.com/v2/Http.svc/help
Unfortunately, I cannot find anything on that.
So now my question(s): Am I doing something wrong? Maybe someone experienced similar situations and can report on solutions or work-arounds?
[1] Poster FF plugin > addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/poster/
Well, after lot's of trial-and-error I think I made it. So in case someone has similar problems, here is how I fixed this:
Apparently, the API is kind of fussy with the incoming XML. But since there is no schema (or at least I couldn't find the one specified in the documentation) it's kind of hard to do it the right way: the ordering of the tags is crucial!
<TranslateArrayRequest>
<AppId/>
<From/>
<Options />
<Texts/>
<To/>
</TranslateArrayRequest>
When the XML has this ordering it works. Otherwise you'll only see the useless internal server error response. Furthermore, I read a couple of times that the API also breaks if the XML contains improper UTF-8. One can force untrusted UTF-8 (e.g. coming from a user form) this way:
ic = Iconv.new('UTF-8//IGNORE', 'UTF-8')
valid_string = ic.iconv(untrusted_string + ' ')[0..-2]