# Code to read HTTP data # # Strategy: each writer takes an event + a write-some-bytes function, which is # calls. # # WRITERS is a dict describing how to pick a reader. It maps states to either: # - a writer # - or, for body writers, a dict of framin-dependent writer factories from ._events import Data, EndOfMessage from ._state import CLIENT, IDLE, SEND_BODY, SEND_RESPONSE, SERVER from ._util import LocalProtocolError __all__ = ["WRITERS"] def write_headers(headers, write): # "Since the Host field-value is critical information for handling a # request, a user agent SHOULD generate Host as the first header field # following the request-line." - RFC 7230 raw_items = headers._full_items for raw_name, name, value in raw_items: if name == b"host": write(b"%s: %s\r\n" % (raw_name, value)) for raw_name, name, value in raw_items: if name != b"host": write(b"%s: %s\r\n" % (raw_name, value)) write(b"\r\n") def write_request(request, write): if request.http_version != b"1.1": raise LocalProtocolError("I only send HTTP/1.1") write(b"%s %s HTTP/1.1\r\n" % (request.method, request.target)) write_headers(request.headers, write) # Shared between InformationalResponse and Response def write_any_response(response, write): if response.http_version != b"1.1": raise LocalProtocolError("I only send HTTP/1.1") status_bytes = str(response.status_code).encode("ascii") # We don't bother sending ascii status messages like "OK"; they're # optional and ignored by the protocol. (But the space after the numeric # status code is mandatory.) # # XX FIXME: could at least make an effort to pull out the status message # from stdlib's http.HTTPStatus table. Or maybe just steal their enums # (either by import or copy/paste). We already accept them as status codes # since they're of type IntEnum < int. write(b"HTTP/1.1 %s %s\r\n" % (status_bytes, response.reason)) write_headers(response.headers, write) class BodyWriter: def __call__(self, event, write): if type(event) is Data: self.send_data(event.data, write) elif type(event) is EndOfMessage: self.send_eom(event.headers, write) else: # pragma: no cover assert False # # These are all careful not to do anything to 'data' except call len(data) and # write(data). This allows us to transparently pass-through funny objects, # like placeholder objects referring to files on disk that will be sent via # sendfile(2). # class ContentLengthWriter(BodyWriter): def __init__(self, length): self._length = length def send_data(self, data, write): self._length -= len(data) if self._length < 0: raise LocalProtocolError("Too much data for declared Content-Length") write(data) def send_eom(self, headers, write): if self._length != 0: raise LocalProtocolError("Too little data for declared Content-Length") if headers: raise LocalProtocolError("Content-Length and trailers don't mix") class ChunkedWriter(BodyWriter): def send_data(self, data, write): # if we encoded 0-length data in the naive way, it would look like an # end-of-message. if not data: return write(b"%x\r\n" % len(data)) write(data) write(b"\r\n") def send_eom(self, headers, write): write(b"0\r\n") write_headers(headers, write) class Http10Writer(BodyWriter): def send_data(self, data, write): write(data) def send_eom(self, headers, write): if headers: raise LocalProtocolError("can't send trailers to HTTP/1.0 client") # no need to close the socket ourselves, that will be taken care of by # Connection: close machinery WRITERS = { (CLIENT, IDLE): write_request, (SERVER, IDLE): write_any_response, (SERVER, SEND_RESPONSE): write_any_response, SEND_BODY: { "chunked": ChunkedWriter, "content-length": ContentLengthWriter, "http/1.0": Http10Writer, }, }