public function AjaxResponseSubscriber::onResponse in Zircon Profile 8
Same name and namespace in other branches
- 8.0 core/lib/Drupal/Core/EventSubscriber/AjaxResponseSubscriber.php \Drupal\Core\EventSubscriber\AjaxResponseSubscriber::onResponse()
Renders the ajax commands right before preparing the result.
Parameters
\Symfony\Component\HttpKernel\Event\FilterResponseEvent $event: The response event, which contains the possible AjaxResponse object.
File
- core/
lib/ Drupal/ Core/ EventSubscriber/ AjaxResponseSubscriber.php, line 64 - Contains \Drupal\Core\EventSubscriber\AjaxResponseSubscriber.
Class
- AjaxResponseSubscriber
- Response subscriber to handle AJAX responses.
Namespace
Drupal\Core\EventSubscriberCode
public function onResponse(FilterResponseEvent $event) {
$response = $event
->getResponse();
if ($response instanceof AjaxResponse) {
$this->ajaxResponseAttachmentsProcessor
->processAttachments($response);
// IE 9 does not support XHR 2 (http://caniuse.com/#feat=xhr2), so
// for that browser, jquery.form submits requests containing a file upload
// via an IFRAME rather than via XHR. Since the response is being sent to
// an IFRAME, it must be formatted as HTML. Specifically:
// - It must use the text/html content type or else the browser will
// present a download prompt. Note: This applies to both file uploads
// as well as any ajax request in a form with a file upload form.
// - It must place the JSON data into a textarea to prevent browser
// extensions such as Linkification and Skype's Browser Highlighter
// from applying HTML transformations such as URL or phone number to
// link conversions on the data values.
//
// Since this affects the format of the output, it could be argued that
// this should be implemented as a separate Accept MIME type. However,
// that would require separate variants for each type of AJAX request
// (e.g., drupal-ajax, drupal-dialog, drupal-modal), so for expediency,
// this browser workaround is implemented via a GET or POST parameter.
//
// @see http://malsup.com/jquery/form/#file-upload
// @see https://www.drupal.org/node/1009382
// @see https://www.drupal.org/node/2339491
// @see Drupal.ajax.prototype.beforeSend()
$accept = $event
->getRequest()->headers
->get('accept');
if (strpos($accept, 'text/html') !== FALSE) {
$response->headers
->set('Content-Type', 'text/html; charset=utf-8');
// Browser IFRAMEs expect HTML. Browser extensions, such as Linkification
// and Skype's Browser Highlighter, convert URLs, phone numbers, etc.
// into links. This corrupts the JSON response. Protect the integrity of
// the JSON data by making it the value of a textarea.
// @see http://malsup.com/jquery/form/#file-upload
// @see https://www.drupal.org/node/1009382
$response
->setContent('<textarea>' . $response
->getContent() . '</textarea>');
}
// User-uploaded files cannot set any response headers, so a custom header
// is used to indicate to ajax.js that this response is safe. Note that
// most Ajax requests bound using the Form API will be protected by having
// the URL flagged as trusted in Drupal.settings, so this header is used
// only for things like custom markup that gets Ajax behaviors attached.
$response->headers
->set('X-Drupal-Ajax-Token', 1);
}
}