Reputation: 231
I'm creating a java web application runing on a Tomcat server.
One of the functions fill in a StringBuffer variable with data.
At the end, I would like to propose the user to download the generated content packaged in a text file. This without having to store the file on the server.
I've been searching for a code snippet but couldn't find anything corresponding ...
I hope I've been clear enough on my problem.
Thanks in advance,
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1563
Reputation: 12135
You have to send a content-type along with the response, so that the browser knows what to do with the body of the response.
Normal text has the content-type text/plain
, html is text/html
. Images are image/gif
and so on. For an unknown mime type you normally set "application/octet", which afaik every browser treats as a download. But I recommend to use the propery content type, so the browser might start a matching application to handle the content (e.g. Office for Documents or XML Editor for XML Files ..)
To send a filename along, which the browser suggests for saving, use the following header (example):
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="downloaded.pdf"
For sending custom headers, use the setHeader() method in the response object.
Upvotes: 0