问题
I'm using http.FileServer to serve a directory of mp3 files, which my template then src
in javascript. The response, however, uses the Content-Type
text/html
instead of audio/mpeg
. How do I set the mime type which the FileServer responds with, I saw this question Setting the 'charset' property on the Content-Type header in the golang HTTP FileServer , but I'm still not sure how to override the mime type.
My code looks like the following:
fs := http.FileServer(http.Dir(dir))
http.Handle("/media", http.StripPrefix("/media", fs))
http.HandleFunc("/", p.playlistHandler)
http.ListenAndServe(":5177", nil)
and the error I get is:
HTTP "Content-Type" of "text/html" is not supported. Load of media resource http://localhost:5177/media/sample1.mp3 failed.
回答1:
It's not a problem of content types. Your fs
handler isn't getting called when you request the mp3. You need to add a /
to your pattern /media
and the strip prefix like this
http.Handle("/media/", http.StripPrefix("/media/", fs))
The reason is in the documentation of net/http.ServeMux
Patterns name fixed, rooted paths, like "/favicon.ico", or rooted subtrees, like "/images/" (note the trailing slash). Longer patterns take precedence over shorter ones, so that if there are handlers registered for both "/images/" and "/images/thumbnails/", the latter handler will be called for paths beginning "/images/thumbnails/" and the former will receive requests for any other paths in the "/images/" subtree.
With just /media
you're registering a handler for a path but with a trailing slash it considers it a rooted subtree
and will serve requests under that tree.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39520045/http-fileserver-response-with-wrong-mime-content-type