1728 lines
67 KiB
Python
1728 lines
67 KiB
Python
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# Copyright (c) 2005-2009, eventlet contributors
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# Copyright (c) 2009-2018, gevent contributors
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"""
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A pure-Python, gevent-friendly WSGI server implementing HTTP/1.1.
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The server is provided in :class:`WSGIServer`, but most of the actual
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WSGI work is handled by :class:`WSGIHandler` --- a new instance is
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created for each request. The server can be customized to use
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different subclasses of :class:`WSGIHandler`.
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.. important::
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This server is intended primarily for development and testing, and
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secondarily for other "safe" scenarios where it will not be exposed to
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potentially malicious input. The code has not been security audited,
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and is not intended for direct exposure to the public Internet. For production
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usage on the Internet, either choose a production-strength server such as
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gunicorn, or put a reverse proxy between gevent and the Internet.
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.. versionchanged:: 23.9.0
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Complies more closely with the HTTP specification for chunked transfer encoding.
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In particular, we are much stricter about trailers, and trailers that
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are invalid (too long or featuring disallowed characters) forcibly close
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the connection to the client *after* the results have been sent.
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Trailers otherwise continue to be ignored and are not available to the
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WSGI application.
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"""
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from __future__ import absolute_import
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# FIXME: Can we refactor to make smallor?
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# pylint:disable=too-many-lines
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import errno
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from io import BytesIO
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import string
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import sys
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import time
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import traceback
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from datetime import datetime
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from urllib.parse import unquote
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from gevent import socket
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import gevent
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from gevent.server import StreamServer
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from gevent.hub import GreenletExit
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from gevent._compat import reraise
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from functools import partial
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unquote_latin1 = partial(unquote, encoding='latin-1')
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_no_undoc_members = True # Don't put undocumented things into sphinx
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__all__ = [
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'WSGIServer',
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'WSGIHandler',
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'LoggingLogAdapter',
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'Environ',
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'SecureEnviron',
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'WSGISecureEnviron',
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]
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MAX_REQUEST_LINE = 8192
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# Weekday and month names for HTTP date/time formatting; always English!
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_WEEKDAYNAME = ("Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat", "Sun")
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_MONTHNAME = (None, # Dummy so we can use 1-based month numbers
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"Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun",
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"Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec")
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# The contents of the "HEX" grammar rule for HTTP, upper and lowercase A-F plus digits,
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# in byte form for comparing to the network.
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_HEX = string.hexdigits.encode('ascii')
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# The characters allowed in "token" rules.
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# token = 1*tchar
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# tchar = "!" / "#" / "$" / "%" / "&" / "'" / "*"
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# / "+" / "-" / "." / "^" / "_" / "`" / "|" / "~"
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# / DIGIT / ALPHA
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# ; any VCHAR, except delimiters
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# ALPHA = %x41-5A / %x61-7A ; A-Z / a-z
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_ALLOWED_TOKEN_CHARS = frozenset(
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# Remember we have to be careful because bytestrings
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# inexplicably iterate as integers, which are not equal to bytes.
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# explicit chars then DIGIT
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(c.encode('ascii') for c in "!#$%&'*+-.^_`|~0123456789")
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# Then we add ALPHA
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) | {c.encode('ascii') for c in string.ascii_letters}
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assert b'A' in _ALLOWED_TOKEN_CHARS
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# Errors
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_ERRORS = {}
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_INTERNAL_ERROR_STATUS = '500 Internal Server Error'
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_INTERNAL_ERROR_BODY = b'Internal Server Error'
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_INTERNAL_ERROR_HEADERS = (
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('Content-Type', 'text/plain'),
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('Connection', 'close'),
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('Content-Length', str(len(_INTERNAL_ERROR_BODY)))
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)
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_ERRORS[500] = (_INTERNAL_ERROR_STATUS, _INTERNAL_ERROR_HEADERS, _INTERNAL_ERROR_BODY)
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_BAD_REQUEST_STATUS = '400 Bad Request'
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_BAD_REQUEST_BODY = ''
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_BAD_REQUEST_HEADERS = (
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('Content-Type', 'text/plain'),
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('Connection', 'close'),
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('Content-Length', str(len(_BAD_REQUEST_BODY)))
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)
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_ERRORS[400] = (_BAD_REQUEST_STATUS, _BAD_REQUEST_HEADERS, _BAD_REQUEST_BODY)
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_REQUEST_TOO_LONG_RESPONSE = b"HTTP/1.1 414 Request URI Too Long\r\nConnection: close\r\nContent-length: 0\r\n\r\n"
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_BAD_REQUEST_RESPONSE = b"HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request\r\nConnection: close\r\nContent-length: 0\r\n\r\n"
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_CONTINUE_RESPONSE = b"HTTP/1.1 100 Continue\r\n\r\n"
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def format_date_time(timestamp):
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# Return a byte-string of the date and time in HTTP format
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# .. versionchanged:: 1.1b5
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# Return a byte string, not a native string
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year, month, day, hh, mm, ss, wd, _y, _z = time.gmtime(timestamp)
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value = "%s, %02d %3s %4d %02d:%02d:%02d GMT" % (_WEEKDAYNAME[wd], day, _MONTHNAME[month], year, hh, mm, ss)
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value = value.encode("latin-1")
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return value
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class _InvalidClientInput(IOError):
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# Internal exception raised by Input indicating that the client
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# sent invalid data at the lowest level of the stream. The result
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# *should* be a HTTP 400 error.
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pass
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class _InvalidClientRequest(ValueError):
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# Internal exception raised by WSGIHandler.read_request indicating
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# that the client sent an HTTP request that cannot be parsed
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# (e.g., invalid grammar). The result *should* be an HTTP 400
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# error. It must have exactly one argument, the fully formatted
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# error string.
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def __init__(self, message):
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ValueError.__init__(self, message)
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self.formatted_message = message
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class Input(object):
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__slots__ = ('rfile', 'content_length', 'socket', 'position',
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'chunked_input', 'chunk_length', '_chunked_input_error')
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def __init__(self, rfile, content_length, socket=None, chunked_input=False):
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# pylint:disable=redefined-outer-name
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self.rfile = rfile
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self.content_length = content_length
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self.socket = socket
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self.position = 0
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self.chunked_input = chunked_input
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self.chunk_length = -1
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self._chunked_input_error = False
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def _discard(self):
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if self._chunked_input_error:
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# We are in an unknown state, so we can't necessarily discard
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# the body (e.g., if the client keeps the socket open, we could hang
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# here forever).
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# In this case, we've raised an exception and the user of this object
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# is going to close the socket, so we don't have to discard
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return
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if self.socket is None and (self.position < (self.content_length or 0) or self.chunked_input):
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# ## Read and discard body
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while 1:
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d = self.read(16384)
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if not d:
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break
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def _send_100_continue(self):
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if self.socket is not None:
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self.socket.sendall(_CONTINUE_RESPONSE)
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self.socket = None
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def _do_read(self, length=None, use_readline=False):
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if use_readline:
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reader = self.rfile.readline
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else:
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reader = self.rfile.read
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content_length = self.content_length
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if content_length is None:
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# Either Content-Length or "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" must be present in a request with a body
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# if it was chunked, then this function would have not been called
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return b''
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self._send_100_continue()
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left = content_length - self.position
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if length is None:
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length = left
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elif length > left:
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length = left
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if not length:
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return b''
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# On Python 2, self.rfile is usually socket.makefile(), which
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# uses cStringIO.StringIO. If *length* is greater than the C
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# sizeof(int) (typically 32 bits signed), parsing the argument to
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# readline raises OverflowError. StringIO.read(), OTOH, uses
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# PySize_t, typically a long (64 bits). In a bare readline()
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# case, because the header lines we're trying to read with
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# readline are typically expected to be small, we can correct
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# that failure by simply doing a smaller call to readline and
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# appending; failures in read we let propagate.
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try:
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read = reader(length)
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except OverflowError:
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if not use_readline:
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# Expecting to read more than 64 bits of data. Ouch!
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raise
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# We could loop on calls to smaller readline(), appending them
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# until we actually get a newline. For uses in this module,
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# we expect the actual length to be small, but WSGI applications
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# are allowed to pass in an arbitrary length. (This loop isn't optimal,
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# but even client applications *probably* have short lines.)
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read = b''
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while len(read) < length and not read.endswith(b'\n'):
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read += reader(MAX_REQUEST_LINE)
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self.position += len(read)
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if len(read) < length:
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if (use_readline and not read.endswith(b"\n")) or not use_readline:
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raise IOError("unexpected end of file while reading request at position %s" % (self.position,))
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return read
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def __read_chunk_length(self, rfile):
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# Read and return the next integer chunk length. If no
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# chunk length can be read, raises _InvalidClientInput.
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# Here's the production for a chunk (actually the whole body):
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# (https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7230#section-4.1)
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# chunked-body = *chunk
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# last-chunk
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# trailer-part
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# CRLF
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#
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# chunk = chunk-size [ chunk-ext ] CRLF
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# chunk-data CRLF
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# chunk-size = 1*HEXDIG
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# last-chunk = 1*("0") [ chunk-ext ] CRLF
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# trailer-part = *( header-field CRLF )
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# chunk-data = 1*OCTET ; a sequence of chunk-size octets
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#
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# chunk-ext = *( ";" chunk-ext-name [ "=" chunk-ext-val ] )
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#
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# chunk-ext-name = token
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# chunk-ext-val = token / quoted-string
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# To cope with malicious or broken clients that fail to send
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# valid chunk lines, the strategy is to read character by
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# character until we either reach a ; or newline. If at any
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# time we read a non-HEX digit, we bail. If we hit a ;,
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# indicating an chunk-extension, we'll read up to the next
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# MAX_REQUEST_LINE characters ("A server ought to limit the
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# total length of chunk extensions received") looking for the
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# CRLF, and if we don't find it, we bail. If we read more than
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# 16 hex characters, (the number needed to represent a 64-bit
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# chunk size), we bail (this protects us from a client that
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# sends an infinite stream of `F`, for example).
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buf = BytesIO()
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while 1:
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char = rfile.read(1)
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if not char:
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self._chunked_input_error = True
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raise _InvalidClientInput("EOF before chunk end reached")
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if char in (
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b'\r', # Beginning EOL
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b';', # Beginning extension
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):
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break
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if char not in _HEX: # Invalid data.
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self._chunked_input_error = True
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raise _InvalidClientInput("Non-hex data", char)
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buf.write(char)
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if buf.tell() > 16: # Too many hex bytes
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self._chunked_input_error = True
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raise _InvalidClientInput("Chunk-size too large.")
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if char == b';':
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i = 0
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while i < MAX_REQUEST_LINE:
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char = rfile.read(1)
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if char == b'\r':
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break
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i += 1
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else:
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# we read more than MAX_REQUEST_LINE without
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# hitting CR
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self._chunked_input_error = True
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raise _InvalidClientInput("Too large chunk extension")
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if char == b'\r':
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# We either got here from the main loop or from the
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# end of an extension
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self.__read_chunk_size_crlf(rfile, newline_only=True)
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result = int(buf.getvalue(), 16)
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if result == 0:
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# The only time a chunk size of zero is allowed is the final
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# chunk. It is either followed by another \r\n, or some trailers
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# which are then followed by \r\n.
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while self.__read_chunk_trailer(rfile):
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pass
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return result
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# Trailers have the following production (they are a header-field followed by CRLF)
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# See above for the definition of "token".
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#
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# header-field = field-name ":" OWS field-value OWS
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# field-name = token
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# field-value = *( field-content / obs-fold )
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# field-content = field-vchar [ 1*( SP / HTAB ) field-vchar ]
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# field-vchar = VCHAR / obs-text
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# obs-fold = CRLF 1*( SP / HTAB )
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# ; obsolete line folding
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# ; see Section 3.2.4
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def __read_chunk_trailer(self, rfile, ):
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# With rfile positioned just after a \r\n, read a trailer line.
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# Return a true value if a non-empty trailer was read, and
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# return false if an empty trailer was read (meaning the trailers are
|
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# done).
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# If a single line exceeds the MAX_REQUEST_LINE, raise an exception.
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# If the field-name portion contains invalid characters, raise an exception.
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i = 0
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empty = True
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seen_field_name = False
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while i < MAX_REQUEST_LINE:
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char = rfile.read(1)
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if char == b'\r':
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# Either read the next \n or raise an error.
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self.__read_chunk_size_crlf(rfile, newline_only=True)
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break
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# Not a \r, so we are NOT an empty chunk.
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empty = False
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if char == b':' and i > 0:
|
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# We're ending the field-name part; stop validating characters.
|
||
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# Unless : was the first character...
|
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seen_field_name = True
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if not seen_field_name and char not in _ALLOWED_TOKEN_CHARS:
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raise _InvalidClientInput('Invalid token character: %r' % (char,))
|
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i += 1
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else:
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# We read too much
|
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self._chunked_input_error = True
|
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raise _InvalidClientInput("Too large chunk trailer")
|
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return not empty
|
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def __read_chunk_size_crlf(self, rfile, newline_only=False):
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# Also for safety, correctly verify that we get \r\n when expected.
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if not newline_only:
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char = rfile.read(1)
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if char != b'\r':
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self._chunked_input_error = True
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raise _InvalidClientInput("Line didn't end in CRLF: %r" % (char,))
|
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char = rfile.read(1)
|
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if char != b'\n':
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self._chunked_input_error = True
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raise _InvalidClientInput("Line didn't end in LF: %r" % (char,))
|
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def _chunked_read(self, length=None, use_readline=False):
|
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# pylint:disable=too-many-branches
|
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rfile = self.rfile
|
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self._send_100_continue()
|
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if length == 0:
|
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return b""
|
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if use_readline:
|
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reader = self.rfile.readline
|
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else:
|
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reader = self.rfile.read
|
||
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response = []
|
||
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while self.chunk_length != 0:
|
||
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maxreadlen = self.chunk_length - self.position
|
||
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if length is not None and length < maxreadlen:
|
||
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maxreadlen = length
|
||
|
|
||
|
if maxreadlen > 0:
|
||
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data = reader(maxreadlen)
|
||
|
if not data:
|
||
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self.chunk_length = 0
|
||
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self._chunked_input_error = True
|
||
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raise IOError("unexpected end of file while parsing chunked data")
|
||
|
|
||
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datalen = len(data)
|
||
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response.append(data)
|
||
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|
||
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self.position += datalen
|
||
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if self.chunk_length == self.position:
|
||
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self.__read_chunk_size_crlf(rfile)
|
||
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|
||
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if length is not None:
|
||
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length -= datalen
|
||
|
if length == 0:
|
||
|
break
|
||
|
if use_readline and data[-1] == b"\n"[0]:
|
||
|
break
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
# We're at the beginning of a chunk, so we need to
|
||
|
# determine the next size to read
|
||
|
self.chunk_length = self.__read_chunk_length(rfile)
|
||
|
self.position = 0
|
||
|
# If chunk_length was 0, we already read any trailers and
|
||
|
# validated that we have ended with \r\n\r\n.
|
||
|
|
||
|
return b''.join(response)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def read(self, length=None):
|
||
|
if length is not None and length < 0:
|
||
|
length = None
|
||
|
if self.chunked_input:
|
||
|
return self._chunked_read(length)
|
||
|
return self._do_read(length)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def readline(self, size=None):
|
||
|
if size is not None and size < 0:
|
||
|
size = None
|
||
|
if self.chunked_input:
|
||
|
return self._chunked_read(size, True)
|
||
|
return self._do_read(size, use_readline=True)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def readlines(self, hint=None):
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=unused-argument
|
||
|
return list(self)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __iter__(self):
|
||
|
return self
|
||
|
|
||
|
def next(self):
|
||
|
line = self.readline()
|
||
|
if not line:
|
||
|
raise StopIteration
|
||
|
return line
|
||
|
__next__ = next
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
import mimetools
|
||
|
headers_factory = mimetools.Message
|
||
|
except ImportError:
|
||
|
# adapt Python 3 HTTP headers to old API
|
||
|
from http import client # pylint:disable=import-error
|
||
|
|
||
|
class OldMessage(client.HTTPMessage):
|
||
|
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
|
||
|
super(client.HTTPMessage, self).__init__(**kwargs) # pylint:disable=bad-super-call
|
||
|
self.status = ''
|
||
|
|
||
|
def getheader(self, name, default=None):
|
||
|
return self.get(name, default)
|
||
|
|
||
|
@property
|
||
|
def headers(self):
|
||
|
for key, value in self._headers:
|
||
|
yield '%s: %s\r\n' % (key, value)
|
||
|
|
||
|
@property
|
||
|
def typeheader(self):
|
||
|
return self.get('content-type')
|
||
|
|
||
|
def headers_factory(fp, *args): # pylint:disable=unused-argument
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
ret = client.parse_headers(fp, _class=OldMessage)
|
||
|
except client.LineTooLong:
|
||
|
ret = OldMessage()
|
||
|
ret.status = 'Line too long'
|
||
|
return ret
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class WSGIHandler(object):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Handles HTTP requests from a socket, creates the WSGI environment, and
|
||
|
interacts with the WSGI application.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is the default value of :attr:`WSGIServer.handler_class`.
|
||
|
This class may be subclassed carefully, and that class set on a
|
||
|
:class:`WSGIServer` instance through a keyword argument at
|
||
|
construction time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instances are constructed with the same arguments as passed to the
|
||
|
server's :meth:`WSGIServer.handle` method followed by the server
|
||
|
itself. The application and environment are obtained from the server.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=too-many-instance-attributes
|
||
|
|
||
|
protocol_version = 'HTTP/1.1'
|
||
|
|
||
|
def MessageClass(self, *args):
|
||
|
return headers_factory(*args)
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Attributes reset at various times for each request; not public
|
||
|
# documented. Class attributes to keep the constructor fast
|
||
|
# (but not make lint tools complain)
|
||
|
|
||
|
status = None # byte string: b'200 OK'
|
||
|
_orig_status = None # native string: '200 OK'
|
||
|
response_headers = None # list of tuples (b'name', b'value')
|
||
|
code = None # Integer parsed from status
|
||
|
provided_date = None
|
||
|
provided_content_length = None
|
||
|
close_connection = False
|
||
|
time_start = 0 # time.time() when begin handling request
|
||
|
time_finish = 0 # time.time() when done handling request
|
||
|
headers_sent = False # Have we already sent headers?
|
||
|
response_use_chunked = False # Write with transfer-encoding chunked
|
||
|
# Was the connection upgraded? We shouldn't try to chunk writes in that
|
||
|
# case.
|
||
|
connection_upgraded = False
|
||
|
environ = None # Dict from self.get_environ
|
||
|
application = None # application callable from self.server.application
|
||
|
requestline = None # native str 'GET / HTTP/1.1'
|
||
|
response_length = 0 # How much data we sent
|
||
|
result = None # The return value of the WSGI application
|
||
|
wsgi_input = None # Instance of Input()
|
||
|
content_length = 0 # From application-provided headers Incoming
|
||
|
# request headers, instance of MessageClass (gunicorn uses hasattr
|
||
|
# on this so the default value needs to be compatible with the
|
||
|
# API)
|
||
|
headers = headers_factory(BytesIO())
|
||
|
request_version = None # str: 'HTTP 1.1'
|
||
|
command = None # str: 'GET'
|
||
|
path = None # str: '/'
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, sock, address, server, rfile=None):
|
||
|
# Deprecation: The rfile kwarg was introduced in 1.0a1 as part
|
||
|
# of a refactoring. It was never documented or used. It is
|
||
|
# considered DEPRECATED and may be removed in the future. Its
|
||
|
# use is not supported.
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.socket = sock
|
||
|
self.client_address = address
|
||
|
self.server = server
|
||
|
if rfile is None:
|
||
|
self.rfile = sock.makefile('rb', -1)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self.rfile = rfile
|
||
|
|
||
|
def handle(self):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
The main request handling method, called by the server.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This method runs a request handling loop, calling
|
||
|
:meth:`handle_one_request` until all requests on the
|
||
|
connection have been handled (that is, it implements
|
||
|
keep-alive).
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
while self.socket is not None:
|
||
|
self.time_start = time.time()
|
||
|
self.time_finish = 0
|
||
|
|
||
|
result = self.handle_one_request()
|
||
|
if result is None:
|
||
|
break
|
||
|
if result is True:
|
||
|
continue
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.status, response_body = result # pylint:disable=unpacking-non-sequence
|
||
|
self.socket.sendall(response_body)
|
||
|
if self.time_finish == 0:
|
||
|
self.time_finish = time.time()
|
||
|
self.log_request()
|
||
|
break
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
if self.socket is not None:
|
||
|
_sock = getattr(self.socket, '_sock', None) # Python 3
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
# read out request data to prevent error: [Errno 104] Connection reset by peer
|
||
|
if _sock:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
# socket.recv would hang
|
||
|
_sock.recv(16384)
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
_sock.close()
|
||
|
self.socket.close()
|
||
|
except socket.error:
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
self.__dict__.pop('socket', None)
|
||
|
self.__dict__.pop('rfile', None)
|
||
|
self.__dict__.pop('wsgi_input', None)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _check_http_version(self):
|
||
|
version_str = self.request_version
|
||
|
if not version_str.startswith("HTTP/"):
|
||
|
return False
|
||
|
version = tuple(int(x) for x in version_str[5:].split(".")) # "HTTP/"
|
||
|
if version[1] < 0 or version < (0, 9) or version >= (2, 0):
|
||
|
return False
|
||
|
return True
|
||
|
|
||
|
def read_request(self, raw_requestline):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Parse the incoming request.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Parses various headers into ``self.headers`` using
|
||
|
:attr:`MessageClass`. Other attributes that are set upon a successful
|
||
|
return of this method include ``self.content_length`` and ``self.close_connection``.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param str raw_requestline: A native :class:`str` representing
|
||
|
the request line. A processed version of this will be stored
|
||
|
into ``self.requestline``.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:raises ValueError: If the request is invalid. This error will
|
||
|
not be logged as a traceback (because it's a client issue, not a server problem).
|
||
|
:return: A boolean value indicating whether the request was successfully parsed.
|
||
|
This method should either return a true value or have raised a ValueError
|
||
|
with details about the parsing error.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1b6
|
||
|
Raise the previously documented :exc:`ValueError` in more cases instead of returning a
|
||
|
false value; this allows subclasses more opportunity to customize behaviour.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=too-many-branches
|
||
|
self.requestline = raw_requestline.rstrip()
|
||
|
words = self.requestline.split()
|
||
|
if len(words) == 3:
|
||
|
self.command, self.path, self.request_version = words
|
||
|
if not self._check_http_version():
|
||
|
raise _InvalidClientRequest('Invalid http version: %r' % (raw_requestline,))
|
||
|
elif len(words) == 2:
|
||
|
self.command, self.path = words
|
||
|
if self.command != "GET":
|
||
|
raise _InvalidClientRequest('Expected GET method; Got command=%r; path=%r; raw=%r' % (
|
||
|
self.command, self.path, raw_requestline,))
|
||
|
self.request_version = "HTTP/0.9"
|
||
|
# QQQ I'm pretty sure we can drop support for HTTP/0.9
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
raise _InvalidClientRequest('Invalid HTTP method: %r' % (raw_requestline,))
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.headers = self.MessageClass(self.rfile, 0)
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.headers.status:
|
||
|
raise _InvalidClientRequest('Invalid headers status: %r' % (self.headers.status,))
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.headers.get("transfer-encoding", "").lower() == "chunked":
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
del self.headers["content-length"]
|
||
|
except KeyError:
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
|
||
|
content_length = self.headers.get("content-length")
|
||
|
if content_length is not None:
|
||
|
content_length = int(content_length)
|
||
|
if content_length < 0:
|
||
|
raise _InvalidClientRequest('Invalid Content-Length: %r' % (content_length,))
|
||
|
|
||
|
if content_length and self.command in ('HEAD', ):
|
||
|
raise _InvalidClientRequest('Unexpected Content-Length')
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.content_length = content_length
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.request_version == "HTTP/1.1":
|
||
|
conntype = self.headers.get("Connection", "").lower()
|
||
|
self.close_connection = (conntype == 'close') # pylint:disable=superfluous-parens
|
||
|
elif self.request_version == 'HTTP/1.0':
|
||
|
conntype = self.headers.get("Connection", "close").lower()
|
||
|
self.close_connection = (conntype != 'keep-alive') # pylint:disable=superfluous-parens
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
# XXX: HTTP 0.9. We should drop support
|
||
|
self.close_connection = True
|
||
|
|
||
|
return True
|
||
|
|
||
|
_print_unexpected_exc = staticmethod(traceback.print_exc)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def log_error(self, msg, *args):
|
||
|
if not args:
|
||
|
# Already fully formatted, no need to do it again; msg
|
||
|
# might contain % chars that would lead to a formatting
|
||
|
# error.
|
||
|
message = msg
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
message = msg % args
|
||
|
except Exception: # pylint:disable=broad-except
|
||
|
self._print_unexpected_exc()
|
||
|
message = '%r %r' % (msg, args)
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
message = '%s: %s' % (self.socket, message)
|
||
|
except Exception: # pylint:disable=broad-except
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.server.error_log.write(message + '\n')
|
||
|
except Exception: # pylint:disable=broad-except
|
||
|
self._print_unexpected_exc()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def read_requestline(self):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Read and return the HTTP request line.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Under both Python 2 and 3, this should return the native
|
||
|
``str`` type; under Python 3, this probably means the bytes read
|
||
|
from the network need to be decoded (using the ISO-8859-1 charset, aka
|
||
|
latin-1).
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
line = self.rfile.readline(MAX_REQUEST_LINE)
|
||
|
line = line.decode('latin-1')
|
||
|
return line
|
||
|
|
||
|
def handle_one_request(self):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Handles one HTTP request using ``self.socket`` and ``self.rfile``.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Each invocation of this method will do several things, including (but not limited to):
|
||
|
|
||
|
- Read the request line using :meth:`read_requestline`;
|
||
|
- Read the rest of the request, including headers, with :meth:`read_request`;
|
||
|
- Construct a new WSGI environment in ``self.environ`` using :meth:`get_environ`;
|
||
|
- Store the application in ``self.application``, retrieving it from the server;
|
||
|
- Handle the remainder of the request, including invoking the application,
|
||
|
with :meth:`handle_one_response`
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are several possible return values to indicate the state
|
||
|
of the client connection:
|
||
|
|
||
|
- ``None``
|
||
|
The client connection is already closed or should
|
||
|
be closed because the WSGI application or client set the
|
||
|
``Connection: close`` header. The request handling
|
||
|
loop should terminate and perform cleanup steps.
|
||
|
- (status, body)
|
||
|
An HTTP status and body tuple. The request was in error,
|
||
|
as detailed by the status and body. The request handling
|
||
|
loop should terminate, close the connection, and perform
|
||
|
cleanup steps. Note that the ``body`` is the complete contents
|
||
|
to send to the client, including all headers and the initial
|
||
|
status line.
|
||
|
- ``True``
|
||
|
The literal ``True`` value. The request was successfully handled
|
||
|
and the response sent to the client by :meth:`handle_one_response`.
|
||
|
The connection remains open to process more requests and the connection
|
||
|
handling loop should call this method again. This is the typical return
|
||
|
value.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. seealso:: :meth:`handle`
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1b6
|
||
|
Funnel exceptions having to do with invalid HTTP requests through
|
||
|
:meth:`_handle_client_error` to allow subclasses to customize. Note that
|
||
|
this is experimental and may change in the future.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=too-many-return-statements
|
||
|
if self.rfile.closed:
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.requestline = self.read_requestline()
|
||
|
# Account for old subclasses that haven't done this
|
||
|
if isinstance(self.requestline, bytes):
|
||
|
self.requestline = self.requestline.decode('latin-1')
|
||
|
except socket.error:
|
||
|
# "Connection reset by peer" or other socket errors aren't interesting here
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
if not self.requestline:
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.response_length = 0
|
||
|
|
||
|
if len(self.requestline) >= MAX_REQUEST_LINE:
|
||
|
return ('414', _REQUEST_TOO_LONG_RESPONSE)
|
||
|
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
# for compatibility with older versions of pywsgi, we pass self.requestline as an argument there
|
||
|
# NOTE: read_request is supposed to raise ValueError on invalid input; allow old
|
||
|
# subclasses that return a False value instead.
|
||
|
# NOTE: This can mutate the value of self.headers, so self.get_environ() must not be
|
||
|
# called until AFTER this call is done.
|
||
|
if not self.read_request(self.requestline):
|
||
|
return ('400', _BAD_REQUEST_RESPONSE)
|
||
|
except Exception as ex: # pylint:disable=broad-except
|
||
|
# Notice we don't use self.handle_error because it reports
|
||
|
# a 500 error to the client, and this is almost certainly
|
||
|
# a client error.
|
||
|
# Provide a hook for subclasses.
|
||
|
return self._handle_client_error(ex)
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.environ = self.get_environ()
|
||
|
self.application = self.server.application
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.handle_one_response()
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.close_connection:
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.rfile.closed:
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
return True # read more requests
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _connection_upgrade_requested(self):
|
||
|
if self.headers.get('Connection', '').lower() == 'upgrade':
|
||
|
return True
|
||
|
if self.headers.get('Upgrade', '').lower() == 'websocket':
|
||
|
return True
|
||
|
return False
|
||
|
|
||
|
def finalize_headers(self):
|
||
|
if self.provided_date is None:
|
||
|
self.response_headers.append((b'Date', format_date_time(time.time())))
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.connection_upgraded = self.code == 101
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.code not in (304, 204):
|
||
|
# the reply will include message-body; make sure we have either Content-Length or chunked
|
||
|
if self.provided_content_length is None:
|
||
|
if hasattr(self.result, '__len__'):
|
||
|
total_len = sum(len(chunk) for chunk in self.result)
|
||
|
total_len_str = str(total_len)
|
||
|
total_len_str = total_len_str.encode("latin-1")
|
||
|
self.response_headers.append((b'Content-Length', total_len_str))
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self.response_use_chunked = (
|
||
|
not self.connection_upgraded
|
||
|
and self.request_version != 'HTTP/1.0'
|
||
|
)
|
||
|
if self.response_use_chunked:
|
||
|
self.response_headers.append((b'Transfer-Encoding', b'chunked'))
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _sendall(self, data):
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.socket.sendall(data)
|
||
|
except socket.error as ex:
|
||
|
self.status = 'socket error: %s' % ex
|
||
|
if self.code > 0:
|
||
|
self.code = -self.code
|
||
|
raise
|
||
|
self.response_length += len(data)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _write(self, data,
|
||
|
_bytearray=bytearray):
|
||
|
if not data:
|
||
|
# The application/middleware are allowed to yield
|
||
|
# empty bytestrings.
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.response_use_chunked:
|
||
|
# Write the chunked encoding header
|
||
|
header_str = b'%x\r\n' % len(data)
|
||
|
towrite = _bytearray(header_str)
|
||
|
|
||
|
# data
|
||
|
towrite += data
|
||
|
# trailer
|
||
|
towrite += b'\r\n'
|
||
|
self._sendall(towrite)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self._sendall(data)
|
||
|
|
||
|
ApplicationError = AssertionError
|
||
|
|
||
|
def write(self, data):
|
||
|
# The write() callable we return from start_response.
|
||
|
# https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3333/#the-write-callable
|
||
|
# Supposed to do pretty much the same thing as yielding values
|
||
|
# from the application's return.
|
||
|
if self.code in (304, 204) and data:
|
||
|
raise self.ApplicationError('The %s response must have no body' % self.code)
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.headers_sent:
|
||
|
self._write(data)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
if not self.status:
|
||
|
raise self.ApplicationError("The application did not call start_response()")
|
||
|
self._write_with_headers(data)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _write_with_headers(self, data):
|
||
|
self.headers_sent = True
|
||
|
self.finalize_headers()
|
||
|
|
||
|
# self.response_headers and self.status are already in latin-1, as encoded by self.start_response
|
||
|
towrite = bytearray(b'HTTP/1.1 ')
|
||
|
towrite += self.status
|
||
|
towrite += b'\r\n'
|
||
|
for header, value in self.response_headers:
|
||
|
towrite += header
|
||
|
towrite += b': '
|
||
|
towrite += value
|
||
|
towrite += b"\r\n"
|
||
|
|
||
|
towrite += b'\r\n'
|
||
|
self._sendall(towrite)
|
||
|
# No need to copy the data into towrite; we may make an extra syscall
|
||
|
# but the copy time could be substantial too, and it reduces the chances
|
||
|
# of sendall being able to send everything in one go
|
||
|
self._write(data)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def start_response(self, status, headers, exc_info=None):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.2a1
|
||
|
Avoid HTTP header injection by raising a :exc:`ValueError`
|
||
|
if *status* or any *header* name or value contains a carriage
|
||
|
return or newline.
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1b5
|
||
|
Pro-actively handle checking the encoding of the status line
|
||
|
and headers during this method. On Python 2, avoid some
|
||
|
extra encodings.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=too-many-branches,too-many-statements
|
||
|
if exc_info:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
if self.headers_sent:
|
||
|
# Re-raise original exception if headers sent
|
||
|
reraise(*exc_info)
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
# Avoid dangling circular ref
|
||
|
exc_info = None
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Pep 3333, "The start_response callable":
|
||
|
# https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3333/#the-start-response-callable
|
||
|
# "Servers should check for errors in the headers at the time
|
||
|
# start_response is called, so that an error can be raised
|
||
|
# while the application is still running." Here, we check the encoding.
|
||
|
# This aids debugging: headers especially are generated programmatically
|
||
|
# and an encoding error in a loop or list comprehension yields an opaque
|
||
|
# UnicodeError without any clue which header was wrong.
|
||
|
# Note that this results in copying the header list at this point, not modifying it,
|
||
|
# although we are allowed to do so if needed. This slightly increases memory usage.
|
||
|
# We also check for HTTP Response Splitting vulnerabilities
|
||
|
response_headers = []
|
||
|
header = None
|
||
|
value = None
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
for header, value in headers:
|
||
|
if not isinstance(header, str):
|
||
|
raise UnicodeError("The header must be a native string", header, value)
|
||
|
if not isinstance(value, str):
|
||
|
raise UnicodeError("The value must be a native string", header, value)
|
||
|
if '\r' in header or '\n' in header:
|
||
|
raise ValueError('carriage return or newline in header name', header)
|
||
|
if '\r' in value or '\n' in value:
|
||
|
raise ValueError('carriage return or newline in header value', value)
|
||
|
# Either we're on Python 2, in which case bytes is correct, or
|
||
|
# we're on Python 3 and the user screwed up (because it should be a native
|
||
|
# string). In either case, make sure that this is latin-1 compatible. Under
|
||
|
# Python 2, bytes.encode() will take a round-trip through the system encoding,
|
||
|
# which may be ascii, which is not really what we want. However, the latin-1 encoding
|
||
|
# can encode everything except control characters and the block from 0x7F to 0x9F, so
|
||
|
# explicitly round-tripping bytes through the encoding is unlikely to be of much
|
||
|
# benefit, so we go for speed (the WSGI spec specifically calls out allowing the range
|
||
|
# from 0x00 to 0xFF, although the HTTP spec forbids the control characters).
|
||
|
# Note: Some Python 2 implementations, like Jython, may allow non-octet (above 255) values
|
||
|
# in their str implementation; this is mentioned in the WSGI spec, but we don't
|
||
|
# run on any platform like that so we can assume that a str value is pure bytes.
|
||
|
response_headers.append((header.encode("latin-1"),
|
||
|
value.encode("latin-1")))
|
||
|
except UnicodeEncodeError:
|
||
|
# If we get here, we're guaranteed to have a header and value
|
||
|
raise UnicodeError("Non-latin1 header", repr(header), repr(value))
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Same as above
|
||
|
if not isinstance(status, str):
|
||
|
raise UnicodeError("The status string must be a native string")
|
||
|
if '\r' in status or '\n' in status:
|
||
|
raise ValueError("carriage return or newline in status", status)
|
||
|
# don't assign to anything until the validation is complete, including parsing the
|
||
|
# code
|
||
|
code = int(status.split(' ', 1)[0])
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.status = status.encode("latin-1")
|
||
|
self._orig_status = status # Preserve the native string for logging
|
||
|
self.response_headers = response_headers
|
||
|
self.code = code
|
||
|
|
||
|
provided_connection = None # Did the wsgi app give us a Connection header?
|
||
|
self.provided_date = None
|
||
|
self.provided_content_length = None
|
||
|
|
||
|
for header, value in headers:
|
||
|
header = header.lower()
|
||
|
if header == 'connection':
|
||
|
provided_connection = value
|
||
|
elif header == 'date':
|
||
|
self.provided_date = value
|
||
|
elif header == 'content-length':
|
||
|
self.provided_content_length = value
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.request_version == 'HTTP/1.0' and provided_connection is None:
|
||
|
conntype = b'close' if self.close_connection else b'keep-alive'
|
||
|
response_headers.append((b'Connection', conntype))
|
||
|
elif provided_connection == 'close':
|
||
|
self.close_connection = True
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.code in (304, 204):
|
||
|
if self.provided_content_length is not None and self.provided_content_length != '0':
|
||
|
msg = 'Invalid Content-Length for %s response: %r (must be absent or zero)' % (self.code, self.provided_content_length)
|
||
|
msg = msg.encode('latin-1')
|
||
|
raise self.ApplicationError(msg)
|
||
|
|
||
|
return self.write
|
||
|
|
||
|
def log_request(self):
|
||
|
self.server.log.write(self.format_request() + '\n')
|
||
|
|
||
|
def format_request(self):
|
||
|
now = datetime.now().replace(microsecond=0)
|
||
|
length = self.response_length or '-'
|
||
|
if self.time_finish:
|
||
|
delta = '%.6f' % (self.time_finish - self.time_start)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
delta = '-'
|
||
|
client_address = self.client_address[0] if isinstance(self.client_address, tuple) else self.client_address
|
||
|
return '%s - - [%s] "%s" %s %s %s' % (
|
||
|
client_address or '-',
|
||
|
now,
|
||
|
self.requestline or '',
|
||
|
# Use the native string version of the status, saved so we don't have to
|
||
|
# decode. But fallback to the encoded 'status' in case of subclasses
|
||
|
# (Is that really necessary? At least there's no overhead.)
|
||
|
(self._orig_status or self.status or '000').split()[0],
|
||
|
length,
|
||
|
delta)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def process_result(self):
|
||
|
for data in self.result:
|
||
|
if data:
|
||
|
self.write(data)
|
||
|
if self.status and not self.headers_sent:
|
||
|
# In other words, the application returned an empty
|
||
|
# result iterable (and did not use the write callable)
|
||
|
# Trigger the flush of the headers.
|
||
|
self.write(b'')
|
||
|
if self.response_use_chunked:
|
||
|
self._sendall(b'0\r\n\r\n')
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def run_application(self):
|
||
|
assert self.result is None
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.result = self.application(self.environ, self.start_response)
|
||
|
self.process_result()
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
close = getattr(self.result, 'close', None)
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
if close is not None:
|
||
|
close()
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
# Discard the result. If it's a generator this can
|
||
|
# free a lot of hidden resources (if we failed to iterate
|
||
|
# all the way through it---the frames are automatically
|
||
|
# cleaned up when StopIteration is raised); but other cases
|
||
|
# could still free up resources sooner than otherwise.
|
||
|
close = None
|
||
|
self.result = None
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: These errors are silently ignored by :meth:`handle_one_response` to avoid producing
|
||
|
#: excess log entries on normal operating conditions. They indicate
|
||
|
#: a remote client has disconnected and there is little or nothing
|
||
|
#: this process can be expected to do about it. You may change this
|
||
|
#: value in a subclass.
|
||
|
#:
|
||
|
#: The default value includes :data:`errno.EPIPE` and :data:`errno.ECONNRESET`.
|
||
|
#: On Windows this also includes :data:`errno.WSAECONNABORTED`.
|
||
|
#:
|
||
|
#: This is a provisional API, subject to change. See :pr:`377`, :pr:`999`
|
||
|
#: and :issue:`136`.
|
||
|
#:
|
||
|
#: .. versionadded:: 1.3
|
||
|
ignored_socket_errors = (errno.EPIPE, errno.ECONNRESET)
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
ignored_socket_errors += (errno.WSAECONNABORTED,)
|
||
|
except AttributeError:
|
||
|
pass # Not windows
|
||
|
|
||
|
def handle_one_response(self):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Invoke the application to produce one response.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is called by :meth:`handle_one_request` after all the
|
||
|
state for the request has been established. It is responsible
|
||
|
for error handling.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
self.time_start = time.time()
|
||
|
self.status = None
|
||
|
self.headers_sent = False
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.result = None
|
||
|
self.response_use_chunked = False
|
||
|
self.connection_upgraded = False
|
||
|
self.response_length = 0
|
||
|
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.run_application()
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.wsgi_input._discard()
|
||
|
except _InvalidClientInput:
|
||
|
# This one is deliberately raised to the outer
|
||
|
# scope, because, with the incoming stream in some bad state,
|
||
|
# we can't be sure we can synchronize and properly parse the next
|
||
|
# request.
|
||
|
raise
|
||
|
except socket.error:
|
||
|
# Don't let socket exceptions during discarding
|
||
|
# input override any exception that may have been
|
||
|
# raised by the application, such as our own _InvalidClientInput.
|
||
|
# In the general case, these aren't even worth logging (see the comment
|
||
|
# just below)
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
except _InvalidClientInput as ex:
|
||
|
# DO log this one because:
|
||
|
# - Some of the data may have been read and acted on by the
|
||
|
# application;
|
||
|
# - The response may or may not have been sent;
|
||
|
# - It's likely that the client is bad, or malicious, and
|
||
|
# users might wish to take steps to block the client.
|
||
|
self._handle_client_error(ex)
|
||
|
self.close_connection = True
|
||
|
self._send_error_response_if_possible(400)
|
||
|
except socket.error as ex:
|
||
|
if ex.args[0] in self.ignored_socket_errors:
|
||
|
# See description of self.ignored_socket_errors.
|
||
|
self.close_connection = True
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self.handle_error(*sys.exc_info())
|
||
|
except: # pylint:disable=bare-except
|
||
|
self.handle_error(*sys.exc_info())
|
||
|
finally:
|
||
|
self.time_finish = time.time()
|
||
|
self.log_request()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _send_error_response_if_possible(self, error_code):
|
||
|
if self.response_length:
|
||
|
self.close_connection = True
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
status, headers, body = _ERRORS[error_code]
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
self.start_response(status, headers[:])
|
||
|
self.write(body)
|
||
|
except socket.error:
|
||
|
self.close_connection = True
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _log_error(self, t, v, tb):
|
||
|
# TODO: Shouldn't we dump this to wsgi.errors? If we did that now, it would
|
||
|
# wind up getting logged twice
|
||
|
if not issubclass(t, GreenletExit):
|
||
|
context = self.environ
|
||
|
if not isinstance(context, self.server.secure_environ_class):
|
||
|
context = self.server.secure_environ_class(context)
|
||
|
self.server.loop.handle_error(context, t, v, tb)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def handle_error(self, t, v, tb):
|
||
|
# Called for internal, unexpected errors, NOT invalid client input
|
||
|
self._log_error(t, v, tb)
|
||
|
t = v = tb = None
|
||
|
self._send_error_response_if_possible(500)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _handle_client_error(self, ex):
|
||
|
# Called for invalid client input
|
||
|
# Returns the appropriate error response.
|
||
|
if not isinstance(ex, (ValueError, _InvalidClientInput)):
|
||
|
# XXX: Why not self._log_error to send it through the loop's
|
||
|
# handle_error method?
|
||
|
# _InvalidClientRequest is a ValueError; _InvalidClientInput is an IOError.
|
||
|
traceback.print_exc()
|
||
|
if isinstance(ex, _InvalidClientRequest):
|
||
|
# No formatting needed, that's already been handled. In fact, because the
|
||
|
# formatted message contains user input, it might have a % in it, and attempting
|
||
|
# to format that with no arguments would be an error.
|
||
|
# However, the error messages do not include the requesting IP
|
||
|
# necessarily, so we do add that.
|
||
|
self.log_error('(from %s) %s', self.client_address, ex.formatted_message)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self.log_error('Invalid request (from %s): %s',
|
||
|
self.client_address,
|
||
|
str(ex) or ex.__class__.__name__)
|
||
|
return ('400', _BAD_REQUEST_RESPONSE)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _headers(self):
|
||
|
key = None
|
||
|
value = None
|
||
|
IGNORED_KEYS = (None, 'CONTENT_TYPE', 'CONTENT_LENGTH')
|
||
|
for header in self.headers.headers:
|
||
|
if key is not None and header[:1] in " \t":
|
||
|
value += header
|
||
|
continue
|
||
|
|
||
|
if key not in IGNORED_KEYS:
|
||
|
yield 'HTTP_' + key, value.strip()
|
||
|
|
||
|
key, value = header.split(':', 1)
|
||
|
if '_' in key:
|
||
|
# strip incoming bad veaders
|
||
|
key = None
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
key = key.replace('-', '_').upper()
|
||
|
|
||
|
if key not in IGNORED_KEYS:
|
||
|
yield 'HTTP_' + key, value.strip()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def get_environ(self):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Construct and return a new WSGI environment dictionary for a specific request.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This should begin with asking the server for the base environment
|
||
|
using :meth:`WSGIServer.get_environ`, and then proceed to add the
|
||
|
request specific values.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By the time this method is invoked the request line and request shall have
|
||
|
been parsed and ``self.headers`` shall be populated.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
env = self.server.get_environ()
|
||
|
env['REQUEST_METHOD'] = self.command
|
||
|
# SCRIPT_NAME is explicitly implementation defined. Using an
|
||
|
# empty value for SCRIPT_NAME is both explicitly allowed by
|
||
|
# both the CGI standard and WSGI PEPs, and also the thing that
|
||
|
# makes the most sense from a generic server perspective (we
|
||
|
# have no hierarchy or understanding of URLs or files, just a
|
||
|
# single application to call. The empty string represents the
|
||
|
# application root, which is what we have). Different WSGI
|
||
|
# implementations handle this very differently, so portable
|
||
|
# applications that rely on SCRIPT_NAME will have to use a
|
||
|
# WSGI middleware to set it to a defined value, or otherwise
|
||
|
# rely on server-specific mechanisms (e.g, on waitress, use
|
||
|
# ``--url-prefix``, in gunicorn set the ``SCRIPT_NAME`` header
|
||
|
# or process environment variable, in gevent subclass
|
||
|
# WSGIHandler.)
|
||
|
#
|
||
|
# See https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/1667 for discussion.
|
||
|
env['SCRIPT_NAME'] = ''
|
||
|
|
||
|
path, query = self.path.split('?', 1) if '?' in self.path else (self.path, '')
|
||
|
# Note that self.path contains the original str object; if it contains
|
||
|
# encoded escapes, it will NOT match PATH_INFO.
|
||
|
env['PATH_INFO'] = unquote_latin1(path)
|
||
|
env['QUERY_STRING'] = query
|
||
|
|
||
|
if self.headers.typeheader is not None:
|
||
|
env['CONTENT_TYPE'] = self.headers.typeheader
|
||
|
|
||
|
length = self.headers.getheader('content-length')
|
||
|
if length:
|
||
|
env['CONTENT_LENGTH'] = length
|
||
|
env['SERVER_PROTOCOL'] = self.request_version
|
||
|
|
||
|
client_address = self.client_address
|
||
|
if isinstance(client_address, tuple):
|
||
|
env['REMOTE_ADDR'] = str(client_address[0])
|
||
|
env['REMOTE_PORT'] = str(client_address[1])
|
||
|
|
||
|
for key, value in self._headers():
|
||
|
if key in env:
|
||
|
if 'COOKIE' in key:
|
||
|
env[key] += '; ' + value
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
env[key] += ',' + value
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
env[key] = value
|
||
|
|
||
|
sock = self.socket if env.get('HTTP_EXPECT') == '100-continue' else None
|
||
|
|
||
|
chunked = env.get('HTTP_TRANSFER_ENCODING', '').lower() == 'chunked'
|
||
|
# Input refuses to read if the data isn't chunked, and there is no content_length
|
||
|
# provided. For 'Upgrade: Websocket' requests, neither of those things is true.
|
||
|
handling_reads = not self._connection_upgrade_requested()
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.wsgi_input = Input(self.rfile, self.content_length, socket=sock, chunked_input=chunked)
|
||
|
|
||
|
env['wsgi.input'] = self.wsgi_input if handling_reads else self.rfile
|
||
|
# This is a non-standard flag indicating that our input stream is
|
||
|
# self-terminated (returns EOF when consumed).
|
||
|
# See https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/1308
|
||
|
env['wsgi.input_terminated'] = handling_reads
|
||
|
return env
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class _NoopLog(object):
|
||
|
# Does nothing; implements just enough file-like methods
|
||
|
# to pass the WSGI validator
|
||
|
|
||
|
def write(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=unused-argument
|
||
|
return
|
||
|
|
||
|
def flush(self):
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
|
||
|
def writelines(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class LoggingLogAdapter(object):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
An adapter for :class:`logging.Logger` instances
|
||
|
to let them be used with :class:`WSGIServer`.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. warning:: Unless the entire process is monkey-patched at a very
|
||
|
early part of the lifecycle (before logging is configured),
|
||
|
loggers are likely to not be gevent-cooperative. For example,
|
||
|
the socket and syslog handlers use the socket module in a way
|
||
|
that can block, and most handlers acquire threading locks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. warning:: It *may* be possible for the logging functions to be
|
||
|
called in the :class:`gevent.Hub` greenlet. Code running in the
|
||
|
hub greenlet cannot use any gevent blocking functions without triggering
|
||
|
a ``LoopExit``.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionadded:: 1.1a3
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1b6
|
||
|
Attributes not present on this object are proxied to the underlying
|
||
|
logger instance. This permits using custom :class:`~logging.Logger`
|
||
|
subclasses (or indeed, even duck-typed objects).
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
|
||
|
Strip trailing newline characters on the message passed to :meth:`write`
|
||
|
because log handlers will usually add one themselves.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
# gevent avoids importing and using logging because importing it and
|
||
|
# creating loggers creates native locks unless monkey-patched.
|
||
|
|
||
|
__slots__ = ('_logger', '_level')
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, logger, level=20):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Write information to the *logger* at the given *level* (default to INFO).
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
self._logger = logger
|
||
|
self._level = level
|
||
|
|
||
|
def write(self, msg):
|
||
|
if msg and msg.endswith('\n'):
|
||
|
msg = msg[:-1]
|
||
|
self._logger.log(self._level, msg)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def flush(self):
|
||
|
"No-op; required to be a file-like object"
|
||
|
|
||
|
def writelines(self, lines):
|
||
|
for line in lines:
|
||
|
self.write(line)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __getattr__(self, name):
|
||
|
return getattr(self._logger, name)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
|
||
|
if name not in LoggingLogAdapter.__slots__:
|
||
|
setattr(self._logger, name, value)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __delattr__(self, name):
|
||
|
delattr(self._logger, name)
|
||
|
|
||
|
####
|
||
|
## Environ classes.
|
||
|
# These subclass dict. They could subclass collections.UserDict on
|
||
|
# 3.3+ and proxy to the underlying real dict to avoid a copy if we
|
||
|
# have to print them (on 2.7 it's slightly more complicated to be an
|
||
|
# instance of collections.MutableMapping; UserDict.UserDict isn't.)
|
||
|
# Then we could have either the WSGIHandler.get_environ or the
|
||
|
# WSGIServer.get_environ return one of these proxies, and
|
||
|
# WSGIHandler.run_application would know to access the `environ.data`
|
||
|
# attribute to be able to pass the *real* dict to the application
|
||
|
# (because PEP3333 requires no subclasses, only actual dict objects;
|
||
|
# wsgiref.validator and webob.Request both enforce this). This has the
|
||
|
# advantage of not being fragile if anybody else tries to print/log
|
||
|
# self.environ (and not requiring a copy). However, if there are any
|
||
|
# subclasses of Handler or Server, this could break if they don't know
|
||
|
# to return this type.
|
||
|
####
|
||
|
|
||
|
class Environ(dict):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
A base class that can be used for WSGI environment objects.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Provisional API.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionadded:: 1.2a1
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
__slots__ = () # add no ivars or weakref ability
|
||
|
|
||
|
def copy(self):
|
||
|
return self.__class__(self)
|
||
|
|
||
|
if not hasattr(dict, 'iteritems'):
|
||
|
# Python 3
|
||
|
def iteritems(self):
|
||
|
return self.items()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __reduce_ex__(self, proto):
|
||
|
return (dict, (), None, None, iter(self.iteritems()))
|
||
|
|
||
|
class SecureEnviron(Environ):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
An environment that does not print its keys and values
|
||
|
by default.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Provisional API.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is intended to keep potentially sensitive information like
|
||
|
HTTP authorization and cookies from being inadvertently printed
|
||
|
or logged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For debugging, each instance can have its *secure_repr* attribute
|
||
|
set to ``False``, which will cause it to print like a normal dict.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When *secure_repr* is ``True`` (the default), then the value of
|
||
|
the *whitelist_keys* attribute is consulted; if this value is
|
||
|
true-ish, it should be a container (something that responds to
|
||
|
``in``) of key names (typically a list or set). Keys and values in
|
||
|
this dictionary that are in *whitelist_keys* will then be printed,
|
||
|
while all other values will be masked. These values may be
|
||
|
customized on the class by setting the *default_secure_repr* and
|
||
|
*default_whitelist_keys*, respectively::
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> environ = SecureEnviron(key='value')
|
||
|
>>> environ # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
|
||
|
<pywsgi.SecureEnviron dict (keys: 1) at ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
If we whitelist the key, it gets printed::
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> environ.whitelist_keys = {'key'}
|
||
|
>>> environ
|
||
|
{'key': 'value'}
|
||
|
|
||
|
A non-whitelisted key (*only*, to avoid doctest issues) is masked::
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> environ['secure'] = 'secret'; del environ['key']
|
||
|
>>> environ
|
||
|
{'secure': '<MASKED>'}
|
||
|
|
||
|
We can turn it off entirely for the instance::
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> environ.secure_repr = False
|
||
|
>>> environ
|
||
|
{'secure': 'secret'}
|
||
|
|
||
|
We can also customize it at the class level (here we use a new
|
||
|
class to be explicit and to avoid polluting the true default
|
||
|
values; we would set this class to be the ``environ_class`` of the
|
||
|
server)::
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> class MyEnviron(SecureEnviron):
|
||
|
... default_whitelist_keys = ('key',)
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
>>> environ = MyEnviron({'key': 'value'})
|
||
|
>>> environ
|
||
|
{'key': 'value'}
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionadded:: 1.2a1
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
default_secure_repr = True
|
||
|
default_whitelist_keys = ()
|
||
|
default_print_masked_keys = True
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Allow instances to override the class values,
|
||
|
# but inherit from the class if not present. Keeps instances
|
||
|
# small since we can't combine __slots__ with class attributes
|
||
|
# of the same name.
|
||
|
__slots__ = ('secure_repr', 'whitelist_keys', 'print_masked_keys')
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __getattr__(self, name):
|
||
|
if name in SecureEnviron.__slots__:
|
||
|
return getattr(type(self), 'default_' + name)
|
||
|
raise AttributeError(name)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __repr__(self):
|
||
|
if self.secure_repr:
|
||
|
whitelist = self.whitelist_keys
|
||
|
print_masked = self.print_masked_keys
|
||
|
if whitelist:
|
||
|
safe = {k: self[k] if k in whitelist else "<MASKED>"
|
||
|
for k in self
|
||
|
if k in whitelist or print_masked}
|
||
|
safe_repr = repr(safe)
|
||
|
if not print_masked and len(safe) != len(self):
|
||
|
safe_repr = safe_repr[:-1] + ", (hidden keys: %d)}" % (len(self) - len(safe))
|
||
|
return safe_repr
|
||
|
return "<pywsgi.SecureEnviron dict (keys: %d) at %s>" % (len(self), id(self))
|
||
|
return Environ.__repr__(self)
|
||
|
__str__ = __repr__
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class WSGISecureEnviron(SecureEnviron):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Specializes the default list of whitelisted keys to a few
|
||
|
common WSGI variables.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Example::
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> environ = WSGISecureEnviron(REMOTE_ADDR='::1', HTTP_AUTHORIZATION='secret')
|
||
|
>>> environ
|
||
|
{'REMOTE_ADDR': '::1', (hidden keys: 1)}
|
||
|
>>> import pprint
|
||
|
>>> pprint.pprint(environ)
|
||
|
{'REMOTE_ADDR': '::1', (hidden keys: 1)}
|
||
|
>>> print(pprint.pformat(environ))
|
||
|
{'REMOTE_ADDR': '::1', (hidden keys: 1)}
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
default_whitelist_keys = ('REMOTE_ADDR', 'REMOTE_PORT', 'HTTP_HOST')
|
||
|
default_print_masked_keys = False
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class WSGIServer(StreamServer):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
A WSGI server based on :class:`StreamServer` that supports HTTPS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
:keyword log: If given, an object with a ``write`` method to which
|
||
|
request (access) logs will be written. If not given, defaults
|
||
|
to :obj:`sys.stderr`. You may pass ``None`` to disable request
|
||
|
logging. You may use a wrapper, around e.g., :mod:`logging`,
|
||
|
to support objects that don't implement a ``write`` method.
|
||
|
(If you pass a :class:`~logging.Logger` instance, or in
|
||
|
general something that provides a ``log`` method but not a
|
||
|
``write`` method, such a wrapper will automatically be created
|
||
|
and it will be logged to at the :data:`~logging.INFO` level.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
:keyword error_log: If given, a file-like object with ``write``,
|
||
|
``writelines`` and ``flush`` methods to which error logs will
|
||
|
be written. If not given, defaults to :obj:`sys.stderr`. You
|
||
|
may pass ``None`` to disable error logging (not recommended).
|
||
|
You may use a wrapper, around e.g., :mod:`logging`, to support
|
||
|
objects that don't implement the proper methods. This
|
||
|
parameter will become the value for ``wsgi.errors`` in the
|
||
|
WSGI environment (if not already set). (As with *log*,
|
||
|
wrappers for :class:`~logging.Logger` instances and the like
|
||
|
will be created automatically and logged to at the :data:`~logging.ERROR`
|
||
|
level.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. seealso::
|
||
|
|
||
|
:class:`LoggingLogAdapter`
|
||
|
See important warnings before attempting to use :mod:`logging`.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1a3
|
||
|
Added the ``error_log`` parameter, and set ``wsgi.errors`` in the WSGI
|
||
|
environment to this value.
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 1.1a3
|
||
|
Add support for passing :class:`logging.Logger` objects to the ``log`` and
|
||
|
``error_log`` arguments.
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 20.6.0
|
||
|
Passing a ``handle`` kwarg to the constructor is now officially deprecated.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: A callable taking three arguments: (socket, address, server) and returning
|
||
|
#: an object with a ``handle()`` method. The callable is called once for
|
||
|
#: each incoming socket request, as is its handle method. The handle method should not
|
||
|
#: return until all use of the socket is complete.
|
||
|
#:
|
||
|
#: This class uses the :class:`WSGIHandler` object as the default value. You may
|
||
|
#: subclass this class and set a different default value, or you may pass
|
||
|
#: a value to use in the ``handler_class`` keyword constructor argument.
|
||
|
handler_class = WSGIHandler
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: The object to which request logs will be written.
|
||
|
#: It must never be None. Initialized from the ``log`` constructor
|
||
|
#: parameter.
|
||
|
log = None
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: The object to which error logs will be written.
|
||
|
#: It must never be None. Initialized from the ``error_log`` constructor
|
||
|
#: parameter.
|
||
|
error_log = None
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: The class of environ objects passed to the handlers.
|
||
|
#: Must be a dict subclass. For compliance with :pep:`3333`
|
||
|
#: and libraries like WebOb, this is simply :class:`dict`
|
||
|
#: but this can be customized in a subclass or per-instance
|
||
|
#: (probably to :class:`WSGISecureEnviron`).
|
||
|
#:
|
||
|
#: .. versionadded:: 1.2a1
|
||
|
environ_class = dict
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Undocumented internal detail: the class that WSGIHandler._log_error
|
||
|
# will cast to before passing to the loop.
|
||
|
secure_environ_class = WSGISecureEnviron
|
||
|
|
||
|
base_env = {'GATEWAY_INTERFACE': 'CGI/1.1',
|
||
|
'SERVER_SOFTWARE': 'gevent/%d.%d Python/%d.%d' % (gevent.version_info[:2] + sys.version_info[:2]),
|
||
|
'SCRIPT_NAME': '',
|
||
|
'wsgi.version': (1, 0),
|
||
|
'wsgi.multithread': False, # XXX: Aren't we really, though?
|
||
|
'wsgi.multiprocess': False,
|
||
|
'wsgi.run_once': False}
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, listener, application=None, backlog=None, spawn='default',
|
||
|
log='default', error_log='default',
|
||
|
handler_class=None,
|
||
|
environ=None, **ssl_args):
|
||
|
if 'handle' in ssl_args:
|
||
|
# The ultimate base class (BaseServer) uses 'handle' for
|
||
|
# the thing we call 'application'. We never deliberately
|
||
|
# bass a `handle` argument to the base class, but one
|
||
|
# could sneak in through ``**ssl_args``, even though that
|
||
|
# is not the intent, while application is None. That
|
||
|
# causes our own ``def handle`` method to be replaced,
|
||
|
# probably leading to bad results. Passing a 'handle'
|
||
|
# instead of an 'application' can really confuse things.
|
||
|
import warnings
|
||
|
warnings.warn("Passing 'handle' kwarg to WSGIServer is deprecated. "
|
||
|
"Did you mean application?", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
|
||
|
|
||
|
StreamServer.__init__(self, listener, backlog=backlog, spawn=spawn, **ssl_args)
|
||
|
|
||
|
if application is not None:
|
||
|
self.application = application
|
||
|
if handler_class is not None:
|
||
|
self.handler_class = handler_class
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Note that we can't initialize these as class variables:
|
||
|
# sys.stderr might get monkey patched at runtime.
|
||
|
def _make_log(l, level=20):
|
||
|
if l == 'default':
|
||
|
return sys.stderr
|
||
|
if l is None:
|
||
|
return _NoopLog()
|
||
|
if not hasattr(l, 'write') and hasattr(l, 'log'):
|
||
|
return LoggingLogAdapter(l, level)
|
||
|
return l
|
||
|
self.log = _make_log(log)
|
||
|
self.error_log = _make_log(error_log, 40) # logging.ERROR
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.set_environ(environ)
|
||
|
self.set_max_accept()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def set_environ(self, environ=None):
|
||
|
if environ is not None:
|
||
|
self.environ = environ
|
||
|
environ_update = getattr(self, 'environ', None)
|
||
|
|
||
|
self.environ = self.environ_class(self.base_env)
|
||
|
if self.ssl_enabled:
|
||
|
self.environ['wsgi.url_scheme'] = 'https'
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self.environ['wsgi.url_scheme'] = 'http'
|
||
|
if environ_update is not None:
|
||
|
self.environ.update(environ_update)
|
||
|
if self.environ.get('wsgi.errors') is None:
|
||
|
self.environ['wsgi.errors'] = self.error_log
|
||
|
|
||
|
def set_max_accept(self):
|
||
|
if self.environ.get('wsgi.multiprocess'):
|
||
|
self.max_accept = 1
|
||
|
|
||
|
def get_environ(self):
|
||
|
return self.environ_class(self.environ)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def init_socket(self):
|
||
|
StreamServer.init_socket(self)
|
||
|
self.update_environ()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def update_environ(self):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Called before the first request is handled to fill in WSGI environment values.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This includes getting the correct server name and port.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
address = self.address
|
||
|
if isinstance(address, tuple):
|
||
|
if 'SERVER_NAME' not in self.environ:
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
name = socket.getfqdn(address[0])
|
||
|
except socket.error:
|
||
|
name = str(address[0])
|
||
|
if not isinstance(name, str):
|
||
|
name = name.decode('ascii')
|
||
|
self.environ['SERVER_NAME'] = name
|
||
|
self.environ.setdefault('SERVER_PORT', str(address[1]))
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
self.environ.setdefault('SERVER_NAME', '')
|
||
|
self.environ.setdefault('SERVER_PORT', '')
|
||
|
|
||
|
def handle(self, sock, address):
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
Create an instance of :attr:`handler_class` to handle the request.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This method blocks until the handler returns.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
# pylint:disable=method-hidden
|
||
|
handler = self.handler_class(sock, address, self)
|
||
|
handler.handle()
|
||
|
|
||
|
def _main():
|
||
|
# Provisional main handler, for quick tests, not production
|
||
|
# usage.
|
||
|
from gevent import monkey; monkey.patch_all()
|
||
|
|
||
|
import argparse
|
||
|
import importlib
|
||
|
|
||
|
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
|
||
|
parser.add_argument("app", help="dotted name of WSGI app callable [module:callable]")
|
||
|
parser.add_argument("-b", "--bind",
|
||
|
help="The socket to bind",
|
||
|
default=":8080")
|
||
|
|
||
|
args = parser.parse_args()
|
||
|
|
||
|
module_name, app_name = args.app.split(':')
|
||
|
module = importlib.import_module(module_name)
|
||
|
app = getattr(module, app_name)
|
||
|
bind = args.bind
|
||
|
|
||
|
server = WSGIServer(bind, app)
|
||
|
server.serve_forever()
|
||
|
|
||
|
if __name__ == '__main__':
|
||
|
_main()
|