# High level events that make up HTTP/1.1 conversations. Loosely inspired by # the corresponding events in hyper-h2: # # http://python-hyper.org/h2/en/stable/api.html#events # # Don't subclass these. Stuff will break. import re from . import _headers from ._abnf import request_target from ._util import bytesify, LocalProtocolError, validate # Everything in __all__ gets re-exported as part of the h11 public API. __all__ = [ "Request", "InformationalResponse", "Response", "Data", "EndOfMessage", "ConnectionClosed", ] request_target_re = re.compile(request_target.encode("ascii")) class _EventBundle: _fields = [] _defaults = {} def __init__(self, **kwargs): _parsed = kwargs.pop("_parsed", False) allowed = set(self._fields) for kwarg in kwargs: if kwarg not in allowed: raise TypeError( "unrecognized kwarg {} for {}".format( kwarg, self.__class__.__name__ ) ) required = allowed.difference(self._defaults) for field in required: if field not in kwargs: raise TypeError( "missing required kwarg {} for {}".format( field, self.__class__.__name__ ) ) self.__dict__.update(self._defaults) self.__dict__.update(kwargs) # Special handling for some fields if "headers" in self.__dict__: self.headers = _headers.normalize_and_validate( self.headers, _parsed=_parsed ) if not _parsed: for field in ["method", "target", "http_version", "reason"]: if field in self.__dict__: self.__dict__[field] = bytesify(self.__dict__[field]) if "status_code" in self.__dict__: if not isinstance(self.status_code, int): raise LocalProtocolError("status code must be integer") # Because IntEnum objects are instances of int, but aren't # duck-compatible (sigh), see gh-72. self.status_code = int(self.status_code) self._validate() def _validate(self): pass def __repr__(self): name = self.__class__.__name__ kwarg_strs = [ "{}={}".format(field, self.__dict__[field]) for field in self._fields ] kwarg_str = ", ".join(kwarg_strs) return "{}({})".format(name, kwarg_str) # Useful for tests def __eq__(self, other): return self.__class__ == other.__class__ and self.__dict__ == other.__dict__ # This is an unhashable type. __hash__ = None class Request(_EventBundle): """The beginning of an HTTP request. Fields: .. attribute:: method An HTTP method, e.g. ``b"GET"`` or ``b"POST"``. Always a byte string. :term:`Bytes-like objects ` and native strings containing only ascii characters will be automatically converted to byte strings. .. attribute:: target The target of an HTTP request, e.g. ``b"/index.html"``, or one of the more exotic formats described in `RFC 7320, section 5.3 `_. Always a byte string. :term:`Bytes-like objects ` and native strings containing only ascii characters will be automatically converted to byte strings. .. attribute:: headers Request headers, represented as a list of (name, value) pairs. See :ref:`the header normalization rules ` for details. .. attribute:: http_version The HTTP protocol version, represented as a byte string like ``b"1.1"``. See :ref:`the HTTP version normalization rules ` for details. """ _fields = ["method", "target", "headers", "http_version"] _defaults = {"http_version": b"1.1"} def _validate(self): # "A server MUST respond with a 400 (Bad Request) status code to any # HTTP/1.1 request message that lacks a Host header field and to any # request message that contains more than one Host header field or a # Host header field with an invalid field-value." # -- https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230#section-5.4 host_count = 0 for name, value in self.headers: if name == b"host": host_count += 1 if self.http_version == b"1.1" and host_count == 0: raise LocalProtocolError("Missing mandatory Host: header") if host_count > 1: raise LocalProtocolError("Found multiple Host: headers") validate(request_target_re, self.target, "Illegal target characters") class _ResponseBase(_EventBundle): _fields = ["status_code", "headers", "http_version", "reason"] _defaults = {"http_version": b"1.1", "reason": b""} class InformationalResponse(_ResponseBase): """An HTTP informational response. Fields: .. attribute:: status_code The status code of this response, as an integer. For an :class:`InformationalResponse`, this is always in the range [100, 200). .. attribute:: headers Request headers, represented as a list of (name, value) pairs. See :ref:`the header normalization rules ` for details. .. attribute:: http_version The HTTP protocol version, represented as a byte string like ``b"1.1"``. See :ref:`the HTTP version normalization rules ` for details. .. attribute:: reason The reason phrase of this response, as a byte string. For example: ``b"OK"``, or ``b"Not Found"``. """ def _validate(self): if not (100 <= self.status_code < 200): raise LocalProtocolError( "InformationalResponse status_code should be in range " "[100, 200), not {}".format(self.status_code) ) class Response(_ResponseBase): """The beginning of an HTTP response. Fields: .. attribute:: status_code The status code of this response, as an integer. For an :class:`Response`, this is always in the range [200, 600). .. attribute:: headers Request headers, represented as a list of (name, value) pairs. See :ref:`the header normalization rules ` for details. .. attribute:: http_version The HTTP protocol version, represented as a byte string like ``b"1.1"``. See :ref:`the HTTP version normalization rules ` for details. .. attribute:: reason The reason phrase of this response, as a byte string. For example: ``b"OK"``, or ``b"Not Found"``. """ def _validate(self): if not (200 <= self.status_code < 600): raise LocalProtocolError( "Response status_code should be in range [200, 600), not {}".format( self.status_code ) ) class Data(_EventBundle): """Part of an HTTP message body. Fields: .. attribute:: data A :term:`bytes-like object` containing part of a message body. Or, if using the ``combine=False`` argument to :meth:`Connection.send`, then any object that your socket writing code knows what to do with, and for which calling :func:`len` returns the number of bytes that will be written -- see :ref:`sendfile` for details. .. attribute:: chunk_start A marker that indicates whether this data object is from the start of a chunked transfer encoding chunk. This field is ignored when when a Data event is provided to :meth:`Connection.send`: it is only valid on events emitted from :meth:`Connection.next_event`. You probably shouldn't use this attribute at all; see :ref:`chunk-delimiters-are-bad` for details. .. attribute:: chunk_end A marker that indicates whether this data object is the last for a given chunked transfer encoding chunk. This field is ignored when when a Data event is provided to :meth:`Connection.send`: it is only valid on events emitted from :meth:`Connection.next_event`. You probably shouldn't use this attribute at all; see :ref:`chunk-delimiters-are-bad` for details. """ _fields = ["data", "chunk_start", "chunk_end"] _defaults = {"chunk_start": False, "chunk_end": False} # XX FIXME: "A recipient MUST ignore (or consider as an error) any fields that # are forbidden to be sent in a trailer, since processing them as if they were # present in the header section might bypass external security filters." # https://svn.tools.ietf.org/svn/wg/httpbis/specs/rfc7230.html#chunked.trailer.part # Unfortunately, the list of forbidden fields is long and vague :-/ class EndOfMessage(_EventBundle): """The end of an HTTP message. Fields: .. attribute:: headers Default value: ``[]`` Any trailing headers attached to this message, represented as a list of (name, value) pairs. See :ref:`the header normalization rules ` for details. Must be empty unless ``Transfer-Encoding: chunked`` is in use. """ _fields = ["headers"] _defaults = {"headers": []} class ConnectionClosed(_EventBundle): """This event indicates that the sender has closed their outgoing connection. Note that this does not necessarily mean that they can't *receive* further data, because TCP connections are composed to two one-way channels which can be closed independently. See :ref:`closing` for details. No fields. """ pass