LWP::MediaTypes - guess media type for a file or a URL
use LWP::MediaTypes qw(guess_media_type); $type = guess_media_type("/tmp/foo.gif");
This module provides functions for handling media (also known as MIME) types and encodings. The mapping from file extensions to media types is defined by the media.types file. If the ~/.media.types file exists it is used instead. For backwards compatibility we will also look for ~/.mime.types.
The following functions are exported by default:
This function tries to guess media type and encoding for a file or a URI.
It returns the content type, which is a string like "text/html"
.
In array context it also returns any content encodings applied (in the
order used to encode the file). You can pass a URI object
reference, instead of the file name.
If the type can not be deduced from looking at the file name,
then guess_media_type() will let the -T
Perl operator take a look.
If this works (and -T
returns a TRUE value) then we return
text/plain as the type, otherwise we return
application/octet-stream as the type.
The optional second argument should be a reference to a HTTP::Headers object or any object that implements the $obj->header method in a similar way. When it is present the values of the 'Content-Type' and 'Content-Encoding' will be set for this header.
This function will return all suffixes that can be used to denote the specified media type(s). Wildcard types can be used. In a scalar context it will return the first suffix found. Examples:
@suffixes = media_suffix('image/*', 'audio/basic'); $suffix = media_suffix('text/html');
The following functions are only exported by explicit request:
Associate a list of file extensions with the given media type. Example:
add_type("x-world/x-vrml" => qw(wrl vrml));
Associate a list of file extensions with an encoding type. Example:
add_encoding("x-gzip" => "gz");
Parse media types files and add the type mappings found there. Example:
read_media_types("conf/mime.types");
Copyright 1995-1999 Gisle Aas.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.