Package org.forgerock.http.header
Class CookieHeader
java.lang.Object
org.forgerock.http.protocol.Header
org.forgerock.http.header.CookieHeader
Processes the
Cookie
request message header. For
more information, see the original Netscape specification, RFC 2109 and RFC 2965.
Note: This implementation is designed to be forgiving when parsing malformed cookies.
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Field Summary
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Constructor Summary
ConstructorDescriptionConstructs a new empty header.CookieHeader
(List<Cookie> cookies) Constructs a new header with the provided cookies. -
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionReturns the cookies' request list.getName()
Returns the name of the header, as it would canonically appear within an HTTP message.Returns the header as a list of strings.static CookieHeader
Constructs a new header, initialized from the specified string value.static CookieHeader
Constructs a new header, initialized from the specified request message.Methods inherited from class org.forgerock.http.protocol.Header
equals, getFirstValue, hashCode, toString
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Field Details
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NAME
The name of this header.- See Also:
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Constructor Details
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CookieHeader
public CookieHeader()Constructs a new empty header. -
CookieHeader
Constructs a new header with the provided cookies.- Parameters:
cookies
- The cookies.
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Method Details
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valueOf
Constructs a new header, initialized from the specified request message.- Parameters:
message
- The request message to initialize the header from.- Returns:
- The parsed header.
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valueOf
Constructs a new header, initialized from the specified string value.- Parameters:
string
- The value to initialize the header from.- Returns:
- The parsed header.
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getCookies
Returns the cookies' request list.- Returns:
- The cookies' request list.
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getName
Description copied from class:Header
Returns the name of the header, as it would canonically appear within an HTTP message. -
getValues
Description copied from class:Header
Returns the header as a list of strings. If the header has no values then it must return an empty list, never null. EachString
should represent the value component of the key-value pair that makes up the HTTP header - as such, for someHeader
implementations each String in thisList
may contain multiple token-separated values.The
List
returned from this method should not be expected to be mutable. However, some subclasses ofHeader
may choose to implement it as such.
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