Is there an easy way to specify all "normal" views is an ASP.NET MVC app are to have charset=utf-8
appended to the Content-Type
? View()
lacks an override that开发者_C百科 allows you to specify the Content-Type
, and ActionResult
and friends don't seem to expose anything, either. The motivation is obviously to work around Internet Explorer guessing the "correct" encoding type, which I in turn want to do to avoid UTF-7 XSS attacks.
Maybe this in your web.config will do the magic?
<configuration>
<system.web>
<globalization requestEncoding="utf-8" responseEncoding="utf-8" />
</system.web>
</configuration>
You could write an attribute for it:
public class CharsetAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute
{
public override void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext filterContext)
{
filterContext.HttpContext.Response.Headers["Content-Type"] += ";charset=utf-8";
}
}
Feel free to make it a bit smarter, but that's the general idea. Add it to your base controller class and your whole app is covered.
In MVC 5 this can do the trick:
public class ResponseCharset : ActionFilterAttribute
{
private string Charset;
public ResponseCharset(string charset = "utf-8") {
Charset = charset;
}
public override void OnActionExecuted(HttpActionExecutedContext filterContext)
{
filterContext.Response.Content.Headers.ContentType.CharSet = Charset;
}
}
Usage:
public class OrderDetailsController : ApiController
{
[ResponseCharset("utf-8")] // can be windows-1251 etc.
public Object Get(string orderId)
{
// ....
}
}
Based on @craig-stuntz 's idea.
Of course you need to ensure you give right response encoding i.e. content's encoding should match to that, specified in ResponseCharset attribute.
It helped me a lot when I was testing some mvc code with Chrome, because it does not specify encoding in the accept header.
精彩评论