On 16 March 2012 08:47, Nala Ginrut <
address@hidden> wrote:
> Well, I saw your point. So read-response-body is defined to read the whole
> body, and shouldn't return anything when it didn't get all the data.
> For this reason, one should use bytevector handler to get the data on one's
> own rather than read-response-body.
> Well, I just thought read-response-body is the only API to get body, at
> least from the manual, I can only get this conclusion. But in fact, the
> worth of read-response-body is very limited. It just a simple procedure to
> get a simple page or few data.
> If possible, I wish the manual can add few words to notice this.
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 3:32 PM, Daniel Hartwig <
address@hidden> wrote:
>>
>> On 16 March 2012 13:54, Nala Ginrut <
address@hidden> wrote:
>> > This patch will return any data get-bytevector-n received and throw
>> > error
>> > when get <eof>.
>> > Actually, it's not the same feature in the old version thread
>> >
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guile-devel/2012-03/msg00116.html
>> > The old version is complicated because it catches *any* exception and
>> > return
>> > the received data within exception.
>> > But this new version is an easy one.
>>
>> Yes, it looks much nicer :-)
>>
>> > My point is, read-response-body is a low level procedure, so we
>> > shouldn't
>> > make it complex. But our current doesn't return received data when
>> > the received data is less than the content-length. I think it should
>> > return
>> > it, and let the user determine whether it's an error or continue
>> > reading.
>>
>> So r-r-b is a really a two-liner:
>>
>> - read response body from port;
>> - make sure the complete response has been read.
>>
>> This combination is the utility of the procedure: it guarentees that
>> the data it returns comprises the complete response body.
>>
>> With your proposed change, that guarentee no longer holds. The caller
>> now must perform their own checks on the response data size, making
>> your function effectively this:
>>
>> - read response body data from port.
>>
>> So what is the utility of calling a procedure to do that over, say,
>> reading from the port directly? [pointed out earlier in this thread]
>
>