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request.py
585 lines | 21.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
Eric Hopper
Fixing up comment headers for split up code.
r2391 # hgweb/request.py - An http request from either CGI or the standalone server.
Eric Hopper
Splitting up hgweb so it's easier to change.
r2355 #
# Copyright 21 May 2005 - (c) 2005 Jake Edge <jake@edge2.net>
Vadim Gelfer
update copyrights.
r2859 # Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
Eric Hopper
Splitting up hgweb so it's easier to change.
r2355 #
Martin Geisler
updated license to be explicit about GPL version 2
r8225 # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
Matt Mackall
Update license to GPLv2+
r10263 # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
Eric Hopper
Splitting up hgweb so it's easier to change.
r2355
Yuya Nishihara
hgweb: use absolute_import
r27046 from __future__ import absolute_import
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r36832 import wsgiref.headers as wsgiheaders
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r36824 #import wsgiref.validate
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r27046
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r36824 from ..thirdparty import (
attr,
)
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r27046 from .. import (
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r36877 error,
Augie Fackler
request: coerce content-type to native str...
r34515 pycompat,
Yuya Nishihara
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r27046 util,
)
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r2355
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r36878 class multidict(object):
"""A dict like object that can store multiple values for a key.
Used to store parsed request parameters.
This is inspired by WebOb's class of the same name.
"""
def __init__(self):
# Stores (key, value) 2-tuples. This isn't the most efficient. But we
# don't rely on parameters that much, so it shouldn't be a perf issue.
# we can always add dict for fast lookups.
self._items = []
def __getitem__(self, key):
"""Returns the last set value for a key."""
for k, v in reversed(self._items):
if k == key:
return v
raise KeyError(key)
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
"""Replace a values for a key with a new value."""
try:
del self[key]
except KeyError:
pass
self._items.append((key, value))
def __delitem__(self, key):
"""Delete all values for a key."""
oldlen = len(self._items)
self._items[:] = [(k, v) for k, v in self._items if k != key]
if oldlen == len(self._items):
raise KeyError(key)
def __contains__(self, key):
return any(k == key for k, v in self._items)
def __len__(self):
return len(self._items)
def get(self, key, default=None):
try:
return self.__getitem__(key)
except KeyError:
return default
def add(self, key, value):
"""Add a new value for a key. Does not replace existing values."""
self._items.append((key, value))
def getall(self, key):
"""Obtains all values for a key."""
return [v for k, v in self._items if k == key]
def getone(self, key):
"""Obtain a single value for a key.
Raises KeyError if key not defined or it has multiple values set.
"""
vals = self.getall(key)
if not vals:
raise KeyError(key)
if len(vals) > 1:
raise KeyError('multiple values for %r' % key)
return vals[0]
def asdictoflists(self):
d = {}
for k, v in self._items:
if k in d:
d[k].append(v)
else:
d[k] = [v]
return d
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r36824 @attr.s(frozen=True)
class parsedrequest(object):
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r36873 """Represents a parsed WSGI request.
Contains both parsed parameters as well as a handle on the input stream.
"""
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r36824
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r36864 # Request method.
method = attr.ib()
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r36824 # Full URL for this request.
url = attr.ib()
# URL without any path components. Just <proto>://<host><port>.
baseurl = attr.ib()
# Advertised URL. Like ``url`` and ``baseurl`` but uses SERVER_NAME instead
# of HTTP: Host header for hostname. This is likely what clients used.
advertisedurl = attr.ib()
advertisedbaseurl = attr.ib()
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r36883 # URL scheme (part before ``://``). e.g. ``http`` or ``https``.
urlscheme = attr.ib()
# Value of REMOTE_USER, if set, or None.
remoteuser = attr.ib()
# Value of REMOTE_HOST, if set, or None.
remotehost = attr.ib()
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r36915 # Relative WSGI application path. If defined, will begin with a
# ``/``.
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r36824 apppath = attr.ib()
# List of path parts to be used for dispatch.
dispatchparts = attr.ib()
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r36914 # URL path component (no query string) used for dispatch. Can be
# ``None`` to signal no path component given to the request, an
# empty string to signal a request to the application's root URL,
# or a string not beginning with ``/`` containing the requested
# path under the application.
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r36824 dispatchpath = attr.ib()
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r36884 # The name of the repository being accessed.
reponame = attr.ib()
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r36824 # Raw query string (part after "?" in URL).
querystring = attr.ib()
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r36878 # multidict of query string parameters.
qsparams = attr.ib()
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r36832 # wsgiref.headers.Headers instance. Operates like a dict with case
# insensitive keys.
headers = attr.ib()
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r36873 # Request body input stream.
bodyfh = attr.ib()
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r36925 # WSGI environment dict, unmodified.
rawenv = attr.ib()
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r36824
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r36928 def parserequestfromenv(env, reponame=None, altbaseurl=None):
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r36824 """Parse URL components from environment variables.
WSGI defines request attributes via environment variables. This function
parses the environment variables into a data structure.
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r36913
If ``reponame`` is defined, the leading path components matching that
string are effectively shifted from ``PATH_INFO`` to ``SCRIPT_NAME``.
This simulates the world view of a WSGI application that processes
requests from the base URL of a repo.
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r36916
If ``altbaseurl`` (typically comes from ``web.baseurl`` config option)
is defined, it is used - instead of the WSGI environment variables - for
constructing URL components up to and including the WSGI application path.
For example, if the current WSGI application is at ``/repo`` and a request
is made to ``/rev/@`` with this argument set to
``http://myserver:9000/prefix``, the URL and path components will resolve as
if the request were to ``http://myserver:9000/prefix/rev/@``. In other
words, ``wsgi.url_scheme``, ``SERVER_NAME``, ``SERVER_PORT``, and
``SCRIPT_NAME`` are all effectively replaced by components from this URL.
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r36824 """
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r36916 # PEP 3333 defines the WSGI spec and is a useful reference for this code.
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r36824
# We first validate that the incoming object conforms with the WSGI spec.
# We only want to be dealing with spec-conforming WSGI implementations.
# TODO enable this once we fix internal violations.
#wsgiref.validate.check_environ(env)
# PEP-0333 states that environment keys and values are native strings
# (bytes on Python 2 and str on Python 3). The code points for the Unicode
# strings on Python 3 must be between \00000-\000FF. We deal with bytes
# in Mercurial, so mass convert string keys and values to bytes.
if pycompat.ispy3:
env = {k.encode('latin-1'): v for k, v in env.iteritems()}
env = {k: v.encode('latin-1') if isinstance(v, str) else v
for k, v in env.iteritems()}
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r36916 if altbaseurl:
altbaseurl = util.url(altbaseurl)
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r36824 # https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0333/#environ-variables defines
# the environment variables.
# https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0333/#url-reconstruction defines
# how URLs are reconstructed.
fullurl = env['wsgi.url_scheme'] + '://'
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r36916
if altbaseurl and altbaseurl.scheme:
advertisedfullurl = altbaseurl.scheme + '://'
else:
advertisedfullurl = fullurl
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r36824
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r36916 def addport(s, port):
if s.startswith('https://'):
if port != '443':
s += ':' + port
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r36824 else:
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r36916 if port != '80':
s += ':' + port
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r36824
return s
if env.get('HTTP_HOST'):
fullurl += env['HTTP_HOST']
else:
fullurl += env['SERVER_NAME']
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r36916 fullurl = addport(fullurl, env['SERVER_PORT'])
if altbaseurl and altbaseurl.host:
advertisedfullurl += altbaseurl.host
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r36824
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r36916 if altbaseurl.port:
port = altbaseurl.port
elif altbaseurl.scheme == 'http' and not altbaseurl.port:
port = '80'
elif altbaseurl.scheme == 'https' and not altbaseurl.port:
port = '443'
else:
port = env['SERVER_PORT']
advertisedfullurl = addport(advertisedfullurl, port)
else:
advertisedfullurl += env['SERVER_NAME']
advertisedfullurl = addport(advertisedfullurl, env['SERVER_PORT'])
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r36824
baseurl = fullurl
advertisedbaseurl = advertisedfullurl
fullurl += util.urlreq.quote(env.get('SCRIPT_NAME', ''))
fullurl += util.urlreq.quote(env.get('PATH_INFO', ''))
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r36916
if altbaseurl:
path = altbaseurl.path or ''
if path and not path.startswith('/'):
path = '/' + path
advertisedfullurl += util.urlreq.quote(path)
else:
advertisedfullurl += util.urlreq.quote(env.get('SCRIPT_NAME', ''))
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r36824 advertisedfullurl += util.urlreq.quote(env.get('PATH_INFO', ''))
if env.get('QUERY_STRING'):
fullurl += '?' + env['QUERY_STRING']
advertisedfullurl += '?' + env['QUERY_STRING']
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r36913 # If ``reponame`` is defined, that must be a prefix on PATH_INFO
# that represents the repository being dispatched to. When computing
# the dispatch info, we ignore these leading path components.
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r36824
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r36916 if altbaseurl:
apppath = altbaseurl.path or ''
if apppath and not apppath.startswith('/'):
apppath = '/' + apppath
else:
apppath = env.get('SCRIPT_NAME', '')
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r36824
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r36913 if reponame:
repoprefix = '/' + reponame.strip('/')
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r36826
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r36913 if not env.get('PATH_INFO'):
raise error.ProgrammingError('reponame requires PATH_INFO')
if not env['PATH_INFO'].startswith(repoprefix):
raise error.ProgrammingError('PATH_INFO does not begin with repo '
'name: %s (%s)' % (env['PATH_INFO'],
reponame))
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r36824
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r36913 dispatchpath = env['PATH_INFO'][len(repoprefix):]
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r36824
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r36913 if dispatchpath and not dispatchpath.startswith('/'):
raise error.ProgrammingError('reponame prefix of PATH_INFO does '
'not end at path delimiter: %s (%s)' %
(env['PATH_INFO'], reponame))
apppath = apppath.rstrip('/') + repoprefix
dispatchparts = dispatchpath.strip('/').split('/')
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r36914 dispatchpath = '/'.join(dispatchparts)
elif 'PATH_INFO' in env:
if env['PATH_INFO'].strip('/'):
dispatchparts = env['PATH_INFO'].strip('/').split('/')
dispatchpath = '/'.join(dispatchparts)
else:
dispatchparts = []
dispatchpath = ''
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r36824 else:
dispatchparts = []
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r36914 dispatchpath = None
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r36824
querystring = env.get('QUERY_STRING', '')
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r36827 # We store as a list so we have ordering information. We also store as
# a dict to facilitate fast lookup.
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r36878 qsparams = multidict()
for k, v in util.urlreq.parseqsl(querystring, keep_blank_values=True):
qsparams.add(k, v)
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r36827
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r36832 # HTTP_* keys contain HTTP request headers. The Headers structure should
# perform case normalization for us. We just rewrite underscore to dash
# so keys match what likely went over the wire.
headers = []
for k, v in env.iteritems():
if k.startswith('HTTP_'):
headers.append((k[len('HTTP_'):].replace('_', '-'), v))
headers = wsgiheaders.Headers(headers)
Gregory Szorc
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r36863 # This is kind of a lie because the HTTP header wasn't explicitly
# sent. But for all intents and purposes it should be OK to lie about
# this, since a consumer will either either value to determine how many
# bytes are available to read.
if 'CONTENT_LENGTH' in env and 'HTTP_CONTENT_LENGTH' not in env:
headers['Content-Length'] = env['CONTENT_LENGTH']
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r36928 bodyfh = env['wsgi.input']
if 'Content-Length' in headers:
bodyfh = util.cappedreader(bodyfh, int(headers['Content-Length']))
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r36873
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r36864 return parsedrequest(method=env['REQUEST_METHOD'],
url=fullurl, baseurl=baseurl,
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r36824 advertisedurl=advertisedfullurl,
advertisedbaseurl=advertisedbaseurl,
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r36883 urlscheme=env['wsgi.url_scheme'],
remoteuser=env.get('REMOTE_USER'),
remotehost=env.get('REMOTE_HOST'),
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r36824 apppath=apppath,
dispatchparts=dispatchparts, dispatchpath=dispatchpath,
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r36913 reponame=reponame,
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r36827 querystring=querystring,
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r36878 qsparams=qsparams,
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r36873 headers=headers,
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r36925 bodyfh=bodyfh,
rawenv=env)
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r36824
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r36891 class offsettrackingwriter(object):
"""A file object like object that is append only and tracks write count.
Instances are bound to a callable. This callable is called with data
whenever a ``write()`` is attempted.
Instances track the amount of written data so they can answer ``tell()``
requests.
The intent of this class is to wrap the ``write()`` function returned by
a WSGI ``start_response()`` function. Since ``write()`` is a callable and
not a file object, it doesn't implement other file object methods.
"""
def __init__(self, writefn):
self._write = writefn
self._offset = 0
def write(self, s):
res = self._write(s)
# Some Python objects don't report the number of bytes written.
if res is None:
self._offset += len(s)
else:
self._offset += res
def flush(self):
pass
def tell(self):
return self._offset
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r36877 class wsgiresponse(object):
"""Represents a response to a WSGI request.
A response consists of a status line, headers, and a body.
Consumers must populate the ``status`` and ``headers`` fields and
make a call to a ``setbody*()`` method before the response can be
issued.
When it is time to start sending the response over the wire,
``sendresponse()`` is called. It handles emitting the header portion
of the response message. It then yields chunks of body data to be
written to the peer. Typically, the WSGI application itself calls
and returns the value from ``sendresponse()``.
"""
def __init__(self, req, startresponse):
"""Create an empty response tied to a specific request.
``req`` is a ``parsedrequest``. ``startresponse`` is the
``start_response`` function passed to the WSGI application.
"""
self._req = req
self._startresponse = startresponse
self.status = None
self.headers = wsgiheaders.Headers([])
self._bodybytes = None
self._bodygen = None
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r36892 self._bodywillwrite = False
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r36877 self._started = False
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r36892 self._bodywritefn = None
def _verifybody(self):
if (self._bodybytes is not None or self._bodygen is not None
or self._bodywillwrite):
raise error.ProgrammingError('cannot define body multiple times')
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r36877
def setbodybytes(self, b):
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r36894 """Define the response body as static bytes.
The empty string signals that there is no response body.
"""
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r36892 self._verifybody()
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r36877 self._bodybytes = b
self.headers['Content-Length'] = '%d' % len(b)
def setbodygen(self, gen):
"""Define the response body as a generator of bytes."""
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r36892 self._verifybody()
self._bodygen = gen
def setbodywillwrite(self):
"""Signal an intent to use write() to emit the response body.
**This is the least preferred way to send a body.**
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r36877
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r36892 It is preferred for WSGI applications to emit a generator of chunks
constituting the response body. However, some consumers can't emit
data this way. So, WSGI provides a way to obtain a ``write(data)``
function that can be used to synchronously perform an unbuffered
write.
Calling this function signals an intent to produce the body in this
manner.
"""
self._verifybody()
self._bodywillwrite = True
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r36877
def sendresponse(self):
"""Send the generated response to the client.
Before this is called, ``status`` must be set and one of
``setbodybytes()`` or ``setbodygen()`` must be called.
Calling this method multiple times is not allowed.
"""
if self._started:
raise error.ProgrammingError('sendresponse() called multiple times')
self._started = True
if not self.status:
raise error.ProgrammingError('status line not defined')
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r36892 if (self._bodybytes is None and self._bodygen is None
and not self._bodywillwrite):
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r36877 raise error.ProgrammingError('response body not defined')
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r36894 # RFC 7232 Section 4.1 states that a 304 MUST generate one of
# {Cache-Control, Content-Location, Date, ETag, Expires, Vary}
# and SHOULD NOT generate other headers unless they could be used
# to guide cache updates. Furthermore, RFC 7230 Section 3.3.2
# states that no response body can be issued. Content-Length can
# be sent. But if it is present, it should be the size of the response
# that wasn't transferred.
if self.status.startswith('304 '):
# setbodybytes('') will set C-L to 0. This doesn't conform with the
# spec. So remove it.
if self.headers.get('Content-Length') == '0':
del self.headers['Content-Length']
# Strictly speaking, this is too strict. But until it causes
# problems, let's be strict.
badheaders = {k for k in self.headers.keys()
if k.lower() not in ('date', 'etag', 'expires',
'cache-control',
'content-location',
'vary')}
if badheaders:
raise error.ProgrammingError(
'illegal header on 304 response: %s' %
', '.join(sorted(badheaders)))
if self._bodygen is not None or self._bodywillwrite:
raise error.ProgrammingError("must use setbodybytes('') with "
"304 responses")
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r36877 # Various HTTP clients (notably httplib) won't read the HTTP response
# until the HTTP request has been sent in full. If servers (us) send a
# response before the HTTP request has been fully sent, the connection
# may deadlock because neither end is reading.
#
# We work around this by "draining" the request data before
# sending any response in some conditions.
drain = False
close = False
# If the client sent Expect: 100-continue, we assume it is smart enough
# to deal with the server sending a response before reading the request.
# (httplib doesn't do this.)
if self._req.headers.get('Expect', '').lower() == '100-continue':
pass
# Only tend to request methods that have bodies. Strictly speaking,
# we should sniff for a body. But this is fine for our existing
# WSGI applications.
elif self._req.method not in ('POST', 'PUT'):
pass
else:
# If we don't know how much data to read, there's no guarantee
# that we can drain the request responsibly. The WSGI
# specification only says that servers *should* ensure the
# input stream doesn't overrun the actual request. So there's
# no guarantee that reading until EOF won't corrupt the stream
# state.
if not isinstance(self._req.bodyfh, util.cappedreader):
close = True
else:
# We /could/ only drain certain HTTP response codes. But 200 and
# non-200 wire protocol responses both require draining. Since
# we have a capped reader in place for all situations where we
# drain, it is safe to read from that stream. We'll either do
# a drain or no-op if we're already at EOF.
drain = True
if close:
self.headers['Connection'] = 'Close'
if drain:
assert isinstance(self._req.bodyfh, util.cappedreader)
while True:
chunk = self._req.bodyfh.read(32768)
if not chunk:
break
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r36892 write = self._startresponse(pycompat.sysstr(self.status),
self.headers.items())
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r36877 if self._bodybytes:
yield self._bodybytes
elif self._bodygen:
for chunk in self._bodygen:
yield chunk
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r36892 elif self._bodywillwrite:
self._bodywritefn = write
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r36877 else:
error.ProgrammingError('do not know how to send body')
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r36892 def getbodyfile(self):
"""Obtain a file object like object representing the response body.
For this to work, you must call ``setbodywillwrite()`` and then
``sendresponse()`` first. ``sendresponse()`` is a generator and the
function won't run to completion unless the generator is advanced. The
generator yields not items. The easiest way to consume it is with
``list(res.sendresponse())``, which should resolve to an empty list -
``[]``.
"""
if not self._bodywillwrite:
raise error.ProgrammingError('must call setbodywillwrite() first')
if not self._started:
raise error.ProgrammingError('must call sendresponse() first; did '
'you remember to consume it since it '
'is a generator?')
assert self._bodywritefn
return offsettrackingwriter(self._bodywritefn)
Dirkjan Ochtman
Less indirection in the WSGI web interface. This simplifies some code, and makes it more compliant with WSGI.
r5566 def wsgiapplication(app_maker):
Dirkjan Ochtman
hgweb: return iterable, add deprecation note
r5887 '''For compatibility with old CGI scripts. A plain hgweb() or hgwebdir()
can and should now be used as a WSGI application.'''
Thomas Arendsen Hein
Removed tabs and trailing whitespace in python files
r5760 application = app_maker()
def run_wsgi(env, respond):
Dirkjan Ochtman
hgweb: return iterable, add deprecation note
r5887 return application(env, respond)
Thomas Arendsen Hein
Removed tabs and trailing whitespace in python files
r5760 return run_wsgi