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I have read the thread output image in a Kohana 3.2 view, but the code doesn't work on my computer.

I wrote an action that outputs an image to the browser (If I changed the super class to Controller, it still doesn't work.), the code is like:

class Controller_Portal extends Controller_Template {
    public function action_view() {
        $filename = "E:\workspace\myphoto.jpg";

        $this->response->headers('Content-Type', File::mime($filename))
            ->send_headers()  // If I remove this line, It still doesn't work
            ->body(file_get_contents($filename));

        exit;
    }
}

4 Answers 4

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It works after I added $this->auto_render = FALSE; in the action and removed the exit; at the end.

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  • I've merged your unregistered account into this one, you can now accept this answer as the correct answer.
    – user50049
    Sep 12, 2011 at 12:17
1

You should use send_file()

$this->response->send_file($filename, NULL, array('inline' => true));

After the call of this method no any processing can be done, method calls exit when file was sent.

0

There seems to be a working, accepted answer in this SO question, so it's probably worth trying the exact code used there and see if it works.

The only difference seems to be removed the ->send_header() fragment, but you never know :)

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  • hello, I have tried to remove the ->send_headers(), the action still doesn't function.
    – Steve Ruan
    Sep 11, 2011 at 3:09
  • Fair enough. The only other thing I'd be able to suggest is just quickly echoing File::mime($filename) to make sure it's definitely getting the right file. Other than that, over to anyone more familiar with Ko3.2 - I use 3.0 and 2.3
    – Joe
    Sep 11, 2011 at 3:13
0

@atma: Totally correct with send file but: This is not fully true. You can of course do any processing after the exit is called. There are several methods. First of all could be an callback given to: register_shutdown_function() the other method would be to create a "post processing class", which has "function __destruct()" which gets called after the exit is called.

Just my 2 cents :)

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