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Multipart is a way of forming HTTP requests or responses to contain multiple distinct parts.
Such an approach allows a request to contain multiple different pieces of data with potentially conflicting data types in a single response payload.
It is typically used either in HTML forms, or when uploading multiple files.
How multipart messages work
The structure of a multipart request is typically consistent of:
- A Header: Typically
multipart/form-data;boundary=<boundary>
, This defines the HTTP message as being multipart, as well as defining the separator used to distinguish the different parts. - 1 or more parts:
--<boundary>
- Part header: typically
content-disposition: mime/type; name="<fieldname>"
(mime/type
should be replaced with the actual mime-type), can also contain afilename
property (separated from the rest by a;
and structured similarly to thename
property) - Value
--<boundary>--
Multipart messages in Crow
Crow supports multipart requests and responses though crow::multipart::message
.
A message can be created either by defining the headers, boundary, and individual parts and using them to create the message. or simply by reading a crow::request
.
Once a multipart message has been made, the individual parts can be accessed throughout msg.parts
, parts
is an std::vector
.
Part headers are organized in a similar way to request and response headers, and can be retrieved via crow::multipart::get_header_object("header-key")
. This function returns a crow::multipart::header
object.
The message's individual body parts can be accessed by name using msg.get_part_by_name("part-name")
.
For more info on Multipart messages, go here