36

The title is pretty self-explanatory. Is there any way to get the headers (except for Rack::Request.env[])?

3 Answers 3

42

The HTTP headers are available in the Rack environment passed to your app:

HTTP_ Variables: Variables corresponding to the client-supplied HTTP request headers (i.e., variables whose names begin with HTTP_). The presence or absence of these variables should correspond with the presence or absence of the appropriate HTTP header in the request.

So the HTTP headers are prefixed with "HTTP_" and added to the hash.

Here's a little program that extracts and displays them:

require 'rack'

app = Proc.new do |env|
  headers = env.select {|k,v| k.start_with? 'HTTP_'}
    .collect {|key, val| [key.sub(/^HTTP_/, ''), val]}
    .collect {|key, val| "#{key}: #{val}<br>"}
    .sort
  [200, {'Content-Type' => 'text/html'}, headers]
end

Rack::Server.start :app => app, :Port => 8080

When I run this, in addition to the HTTP headers as shown by Chrome or Firefox, there is a "VERSION: HTPP/1.1" (i.e. an entry with key "HTTP_VERSION" and value "HTTP/1.1" is being added to the env hash).

5
  • 3
    Ah, so it's basically env anyway :). What I dislike are the upcased names with some chars replaced. Well, I guess I will have to get away with it....
    – PJK
    Jun 11, 2011 at 21:34
  • @PJK well the names should be case insensitive anyway: w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec4.html#sec4.2. What characters are being replaced? Are you trying to use characters from outside the ASCII chracter set? Header names should be ASCII only.
    – matt
    Jun 11, 2011 at 22:16
  • 2
    I know, it is just a matter of convenience... For instance, X-Build becomes HTTP_X_BUILD, which means X_Build and X-BUILD should be equivalent but (I've been told that) browsers differentiate between these two alternatives.
    – PJK
    Jun 11, 2011 at 22:29
  • 3
    @PJK I see: - is being changed to _. I guess that's to remain compatible with CGI (an environment variable can't contain -). But the response headers shouldn't be affected.
    – matt
    Jun 11, 2011 at 23:47
  • Link to Rack environment documentation that's not broken: github.com/rack/rack/blob/master/SPEC.rdoc#the-environment-
    – salomvary
    Jan 14, 2021 at 11:36
7

Based on @matt's answer, but this really gives you the request headers in a hash as requested in the question:

headers = Hash[*env.select {|k,v| k.start_with? 'HTTP_'}
  .collect {|k,v| [k.sub(/^HTTP_/, ''), v]}
  .collect {|k,v| [k.split('_').collect(&:capitalize).join('-'), v]}
  .sort
  .flatten]

Depending on what key convention you prefer you might want to use something else instead of :capitalize.

6

Like @Gavriel's answer, but using transform_keys (simpler):

class Request
  def headers
    env.select { |k,v| k.start_with? 'HTTP_'}.
      transform_keys { |k| k.sub(/^HTTP_/, '').split('_').map(&:capitalize).join('-') }
  end
end

You can even make it so lookups still work even if the case is different:

  def headers
    env.
      select { |k,v| k.start_with? 'HTTP_'}.
      transform_keys { |k| k.sub(/^HTTP_/, '').split('_').map(&:capitalize).join('-') }.
      sort.to_h.
      tap do |headers|
        headers.define_singleton_method :[] do |k|
          super(k.split(/[-_]/).map(&:capitalize).join('-'))
        end
      end
  end

So for example, even if headers normalizes the keys so it returns this:

{
  Dnt: '1',
  Etag: 'W/"ec4454af5ae1bacff1afc5a06a2133f4"',
  'X-Xss-Protection': '1; mode=block',
}

you can still look up headers using the more natural/common names for these headers:

headers['DNT']
headers['ETag']
headers['X-XSS-Protection']
7
  • in your example, shouldn't it be 'Dnt': '1' instead of Dnt: '1'?
    – Ron Klein
    May 21, 2019 at 6:13
  • @RonKlein Dnt: is correct. Using 'Dnt': is JSON not ruby. Aug 13, 2019 at 20:01
  • @MarlinPierce Well it is syntactically correct Ruby but it's not what the code produces. @RonKlein is right, it should be 'Dnt': '1', The keys here are strings from start to end. Capitalized literals denote constants in Ruby. Nov 5, 2019 at 10:42
  • @ArnaudMeuret Now, I think you are mixing up Constants and Literals. In ruby, 'Dnt': resolves to the symbol :Dnt. If you want string keys, you need { 'Dnt' => '1' }. This will show you that 'Dnt': is a symbol, { 'Dnt': '1' }.each_pair { |key, value| puts key.inspect }. Nov 6, 2019 at 18:49
  • @ArnaudMeuret another way to see this, is that Dnt='Knock';{ 'Dnt': 1, 'Dnt' => 2, Dnt => 3 } evaluates to {:Dnt=>1, "Dnt"=>2, "Knock"=>3}. Nov 6, 2019 at 18:56

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