go/src/net/http/request.go
David Url 7662e6588c net/http: use RFC 723x as normative reference in docs
Replace references to the obsoleted RFC 2616 with references to RFC
7230 through 7235, to avoid unnecessary confusion.
Obvious inconsistencies are marked with todo comments.

Updates #21974

Change-Id: I8fb4fcdd1333fc5193b93a2f09598f18c45e7a00
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/94095
Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2018-02-20 01:41:06 +00:00

1344 lines
40 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// HTTP Request reading and parsing.
package http
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"context"
"crypto/tls"
"encoding/base64"
"errors"
"fmt"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"mime"
"mime/multipart"
"net"
"net/http/httptrace"
"net/textproto"
"net/url"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"golang_org/x/net/idna"
)
const (
defaultMaxMemory = 32 << 20 // 32 MB
)
// ErrMissingFile is returned by FormFile when the provided file field name
// is either not present in the request or not a file field.
var ErrMissingFile = errors.New("http: no such file")
// ProtocolError represents an HTTP protocol error.
//
// Deprecated: Not all errors in the http package related to protocol errors
// are of type ProtocolError.
type ProtocolError struct {
ErrorString string
}
func (pe *ProtocolError) Error() string { return pe.ErrorString }
var (
// ErrNotSupported is returned by the Push method of Pusher
// implementations to indicate that HTTP/2 Push support is not
// available.
ErrNotSupported = &ProtocolError{"feature not supported"}
// ErrUnexpectedTrailer is returned by the Transport when a server
// replies with a Trailer header, but without a chunked reply.
ErrUnexpectedTrailer = &ProtocolError{"trailer header without chunked transfer encoding"}
// ErrMissingBoundary is returned by Request.MultipartReader when the
// request's Content-Type does not include a "boundary" parameter.
ErrMissingBoundary = &ProtocolError{"no multipart boundary param in Content-Type"}
// ErrNotMultipart is returned by Request.MultipartReader when the
// request's Content-Type is not multipart/form-data.
ErrNotMultipart = &ProtocolError{"request Content-Type isn't multipart/form-data"}
// Deprecated: ErrHeaderTooLong is not used.
ErrHeaderTooLong = &ProtocolError{"header too long"}
// Deprecated: ErrShortBody is not used.
ErrShortBody = &ProtocolError{"entity body too short"}
// Deprecated: ErrMissingContentLength is not used.
ErrMissingContentLength = &ProtocolError{"missing ContentLength in HEAD response"}
)
type badStringError struct {
what string
str string
}
func (e *badStringError) Error() string { return fmt.Sprintf("%s %q", e.what, e.str) }
// Headers that Request.Write handles itself and should be skipped.
var reqWriteExcludeHeader = map[string]bool{
"Host": true, // not in Header map anyway
"User-Agent": true,
"Content-Length": true,
"Transfer-Encoding": true,
"Trailer": true,
}
// A Request represents an HTTP request received by a server
// or to be sent by a client.
//
// The field semantics differ slightly between client and server
// usage. In addition to the notes on the fields below, see the
// documentation for Request.Write and RoundTripper.
type Request struct {
// Method specifies the HTTP method (GET, POST, PUT, etc.).
// For client requests an empty string means GET.
//
// Go's HTTP client does not support sending a request with
// the CONNECT method. See the documentation on Transport for
// details.
Method string
// URL specifies either the URI being requested (for server
// requests) or the URL to access (for client requests).
//
// For server requests the URL is parsed from the URI
// supplied on the Request-Line as stored in RequestURI. For
// most requests, fields other than Path and RawQuery will be
// empty. (See RFC 7230, Section 5.3)
//
// For client requests, the URL's Host specifies the server to
// connect to, while the Request's Host field optionally
// specifies the Host header value to send in the HTTP
// request.
URL *url.URL
// The protocol version for incoming server requests.
//
// For client requests these fields are ignored. The HTTP
// client code always uses either HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/2.
// See the docs on Transport for details.
Proto string // "HTTP/1.0"
ProtoMajor int // 1
ProtoMinor int // 0
// Header contains the request header fields either received
// by the server or to be sent by the client.
//
// If a server received a request with header lines,
//
// Host: example.com
// accept-encoding: gzip, deflate
// Accept-Language: en-us
// fOO: Bar
// foo: two
//
// then
//
// Header = map[string][]string{
// "Accept-Encoding": {"gzip, deflate"},
// "Accept-Language": {"en-us"},
// "Foo": {"Bar", "two"},
// }
//
// For incoming requests, the Host header is promoted to the
// Request.Host field and removed from the Header map.
//
// HTTP defines that header names are case-insensitive. The
// request parser implements this by using CanonicalHeaderKey,
// making the first character and any characters following a
// hyphen uppercase and the rest lowercase.
//
// For client requests, certain headers such as Content-Length
// and Connection are automatically written when needed and
// values in Header may be ignored. See the documentation
// for the Request.Write method.
Header Header
// Body is the request's body.
//
// For client requests a nil body means the request has no
// body, such as a GET request. The HTTP Client's Transport
// is responsible for calling the Close method.
//
// For server requests the Request Body is always non-nil
// but will return EOF immediately when no body is present.
// The Server will close the request body. The ServeHTTP
// Handler does not need to.
Body io.ReadCloser
// GetBody defines an optional func to return a new copy of
// Body. It is used for client requests when a redirect requires
// reading the body more than once. Use of GetBody still
// requires setting Body.
//
// For server requests it is unused.
GetBody func() (io.ReadCloser, error)
// ContentLength records the length of the associated content.
// The value -1 indicates that the length is unknown.
// Values >= 0 indicate that the given number of bytes may
// be read from Body.
// For client requests, a value of 0 with a non-nil Body is
// also treated as unknown.
ContentLength int64
// TransferEncoding lists the transfer encodings from outermost to
// innermost. An empty list denotes the "identity" encoding.
// TransferEncoding can usually be ignored; chunked encoding is
// automatically added and removed as necessary when sending and
// receiving requests.
TransferEncoding []string
// Close indicates whether to close the connection after
// replying to this request (for servers) or after sending this
// request and reading its response (for clients).
//
// For server requests, the HTTP server handles this automatically
// and this field is not needed by Handlers.
//
// For client requests, setting this field prevents re-use of
// TCP connections between requests to the same hosts, as if
// Transport.DisableKeepAlives were set.
Close bool
// For server requests Host specifies the host on which the URL
// is sought. Per RFC 7230, section 5.4, this is either the value
// of the "Host" header or the host name given in the URL itself.
// It may be of the form "host:port". For international domain
// names, Host may be in Punycode or Unicode form. Use
// golang.org/x/net/idna to convert it to either format if
// needed.
//
// For client requests Host optionally overrides the Host
// header to send. If empty, the Request.Write method uses
// the value of URL.Host. Host may contain an international
// domain name.
Host string
// Form contains the parsed form data, including both the URL
// field's query parameters and the POST or PUT form data.
// This field is only available after ParseForm is called.
// The HTTP client ignores Form and uses Body instead.
Form url.Values
// PostForm contains the parsed form data from POST, PATCH,
// or PUT body parameters.
//
// This field is only available after ParseForm is called.
// The HTTP client ignores PostForm and uses Body instead.
PostForm url.Values
// MultipartForm is the parsed multipart form, including file uploads.
// This field is only available after ParseMultipartForm is called.
// The HTTP client ignores MultipartForm and uses Body instead.
MultipartForm *multipart.Form
// Trailer specifies additional headers that are sent after the request
// body.
//
// For server requests the Trailer map initially contains only the
// trailer keys, with nil values. (The client declares which trailers it
// will later send.) While the handler is reading from Body, it must
// not reference Trailer. After reading from Body returns EOF, Trailer
// can be read again and will contain non-nil values, if they were sent
// by the client.
//
// For client requests Trailer must be initialized to a map containing
// the trailer keys to later send. The values may be nil or their final
// values. The ContentLength must be 0 or -1, to send a chunked request.
// After the HTTP request is sent the map values can be updated while
// the request body is read. Once the body returns EOF, the caller must
// not mutate Trailer.
//
// Few HTTP clients, servers, or proxies support HTTP trailers.
Trailer Header
// RemoteAddr allows HTTP servers and other software to record
// the network address that sent the request, usually for
// logging. This field is not filled in by ReadRequest and
// has no defined format. The HTTP server in this package
// sets RemoteAddr to an "IP:port" address before invoking a
// handler.
// This field is ignored by the HTTP client.
RemoteAddr string
// RequestURI is the unmodified request-target of the
// Request-Line (RFC 7230, Section 3.1.1) as sent by the client
// to a server. Usually the URL field should be used instead.
// It is an error to set this field in an HTTP client request.
RequestURI string
// TLS allows HTTP servers and other software to record
// information about the TLS connection on which the request
// was received. This field is not filled in by ReadRequest.
// The HTTP server in this package sets the field for
// TLS-enabled connections before invoking a handler;
// otherwise it leaves the field nil.
// This field is ignored by the HTTP client.
TLS *tls.ConnectionState
// Cancel is an optional channel whose closure indicates that the client
// request should be regarded as canceled. Not all implementations of
// RoundTripper may support Cancel.
//
// For server requests, this field is not applicable.
//
// Deprecated: Use the Context and WithContext methods
// instead. If a Request's Cancel field and context are both
// set, it is undefined whether Cancel is respected.
Cancel <-chan struct{}
// Response is the redirect response which caused this request
// to be created. This field is only populated during client
// redirects.
Response *Response
// ctx is either the client or server context. It should only
// be modified via copying the whole Request using WithContext.
// It is unexported to prevent people from using Context wrong
// and mutating the contexts held by callers of the same request.
ctx context.Context
}
// Context returns the request's context. To change the context, use
// WithContext.
//
// The returned context is always non-nil; it defaults to the
// background context.
//
// For outgoing client requests, the context controls cancelation.
//
// For incoming server requests, the context is canceled when the
// client's connection closes, the request is canceled (with HTTP/2),
// or when the ServeHTTP method returns.
func (r *Request) Context() context.Context {
if r.ctx != nil {
return r.ctx
}
return context.Background()
}
// WithContext returns a shallow copy of r with its context changed
// to ctx. The provided ctx must be non-nil.
func (r *Request) WithContext(ctx context.Context) *Request {
if ctx == nil {
panic("nil context")
}
r2 := new(Request)
*r2 = *r
r2.ctx = ctx
// Deep copy the URL because it isn't
// a map and the URL is mutable by users
// of WithContext.
if r.URL != nil {
r2URL := new(url.URL)
*r2URL = *r.URL
r2.URL = r2URL
}
return r2
}
// ProtoAtLeast reports whether the HTTP protocol used
// in the request is at least major.minor.
func (r *Request) ProtoAtLeast(major, minor int) bool {
return r.ProtoMajor > major ||
r.ProtoMajor == major && r.ProtoMinor >= minor
}
// UserAgent returns the client's User-Agent, if sent in the request.
func (r *Request) UserAgent() string {
return r.Header.Get("User-Agent")
}
// Cookies parses and returns the HTTP cookies sent with the request.
func (r *Request) Cookies() []*Cookie {
return readCookies(r.Header, "")
}
// ErrNoCookie is returned by Request's Cookie method when a cookie is not found.
var ErrNoCookie = errors.New("http: named cookie not present")
// Cookie returns the named cookie provided in the request or
// ErrNoCookie if not found.
// If multiple cookies match the given name, only one cookie will
// be returned.
func (r *Request) Cookie(name string) (*Cookie, error) {
for _, c := range readCookies(r.Header, name) {
return c, nil
}
return nil, ErrNoCookie
}
// AddCookie adds a cookie to the request. Per RFC 6265 section 5.4,
// AddCookie does not attach more than one Cookie header field. That
// means all cookies, if any, are written into the same line,
// separated by semicolon.
func (r *Request) AddCookie(c *Cookie) {
s := fmt.Sprintf("%s=%s", sanitizeCookieName(c.Name), sanitizeCookieValue(c.Value))
if c := r.Header.Get("Cookie"); c != "" {
r.Header.Set("Cookie", c+"; "+s)
} else {
r.Header.Set("Cookie", s)
}
}
// Referer returns the referring URL, if sent in the request.
//
// Referer is misspelled as in the request itself, a mistake from the
// earliest days of HTTP. This value can also be fetched from the
// Header map as Header["Referer"]; the benefit of making it available
// as a method is that the compiler can diagnose programs that use the
// alternate (correct English) spelling req.Referrer() but cannot
// diagnose programs that use Header["Referrer"].
func (r *Request) Referer() string {
return r.Header.Get("Referer")
}
// multipartByReader is a sentinel value.
// Its presence in Request.MultipartForm indicates that parsing of the request
// body has been handed off to a MultipartReader instead of ParseMultipartFrom.
var multipartByReader = &multipart.Form{
Value: make(map[string][]string),
File: make(map[string][]*multipart.FileHeader),
}
// MultipartReader returns a MIME multipart reader if this is a
// multipart/form-data POST request, else returns nil and an error.
// Use this function instead of ParseMultipartForm to
// process the request body as a stream.
func (r *Request) MultipartReader() (*multipart.Reader, error) {
if r.MultipartForm == multipartByReader {
return nil, errors.New("http: MultipartReader called twice")
}
if r.MultipartForm != nil {
return nil, errors.New("http: multipart handled by ParseMultipartForm")
}
r.MultipartForm = multipartByReader
return r.multipartReader()
}
func (r *Request) multipartReader() (*multipart.Reader, error) {
v := r.Header.Get("Content-Type")
if v == "" {
return nil, ErrNotMultipart
}
d, params, err := mime.ParseMediaType(v)
if err != nil || d != "multipart/form-data" {
return nil, ErrNotMultipart
}
boundary, ok := params["boundary"]
if !ok {
return nil, ErrMissingBoundary
}
return multipart.NewReader(r.Body, boundary), nil
}
// isH2Upgrade reports whether r represents the http2 "client preface"
// magic string.
func (r *Request) isH2Upgrade() bool {
return r.Method == "PRI" && len(r.Header) == 0 && r.URL.Path == "*" && r.Proto == "HTTP/2.0"
}
// Return value if nonempty, def otherwise.
func valueOrDefault(value, def string) string {
if value != "" {
return value
}
return def
}
// NOTE: This is not intended to reflect the actual Go version being used.
// It was changed at the time of Go 1.1 release because the former User-Agent
// had ended up on a blacklist for some intrusion detection systems.
// See https://codereview.appspot.com/7532043.
const defaultUserAgent = "Go-http-client/1.1"
// Write writes an HTTP/1.1 request, which is the header and body, in wire format.
// This method consults the following fields of the request:
// Host
// URL
// Method (defaults to "GET")
// Header
// ContentLength
// TransferEncoding
// Body
//
// If Body is present, Content-Length is <= 0 and TransferEncoding
// hasn't been set to "identity", Write adds "Transfer-Encoding:
// chunked" to the header. Body is closed after it is sent.
func (r *Request) Write(w io.Writer) error {
return r.write(w, false, nil, nil)
}
// WriteProxy is like Write but writes the request in the form
// expected by an HTTP proxy. In particular, WriteProxy writes the
// initial Request-URI line of the request with an absolute URI, per
// section 5.3 of RFC 7230, including the scheme and host.
// In either case, WriteProxy also writes a Host header, using
// either r.Host or r.URL.Host.
func (r *Request) WriteProxy(w io.Writer) error {
return r.write(w, true, nil, nil)
}
// errMissingHost is returned by Write when there is no Host or URL present in
// the Request.
var errMissingHost = errors.New("http: Request.Write on Request with no Host or URL set")
// extraHeaders may be nil
// waitForContinue may be nil
func (r *Request) write(w io.Writer, usingProxy bool, extraHeaders Header, waitForContinue func() bool) (err error) {
trace := httptrace.ContextClientTrace(r.Context())
if trace != nil && trace.WroteRequest != nil {
defer func() {
trace.WroteRequest(httptrace.WroteRequestInfo{
Err: err,
})
}()
}
// Find the target host. Prefer the Host: header, but if that
// is not given, use the host from the request URL.
//
// Clean the host, in case it arrives with unexpected stuff in it.
host := cleanHost(r.Host)
if host == "" {
if r.URL == nil {
return errMissingHost
}
host = cleanHost(r.URL.Host)
}
// According to RFC 6874, an HTTP client, proxy, or other
// intermediary must remove any IPv6 zone identifier attached
// to an outgoing URI.
host = removeZone(host)
ruri := r.URL.RequestURI()
if usingProxy && r.URL.Scheme != "" && r.URL.Opaque == "" {
ruri = r.URL.Scheme + "://" + host + ruri
} else if r.Method == "CONNECT" && r.URL.Path == "" {
// CONNECT requests normally give just the host and port, not a full URL.
ruri = host
}
// TODO(bradfitz): escape at least newlines in ruri?
// Wrap the writer in a bufio Writer if it's not already buffered.
// Don't always call NewWriter, as that forces a bytes.Buffer
// and other small bufio Writers to have a minimum 4k buffer
// size.
var bw *bufio.Writer
if _, ok := w.(io.ByteWriter); !ok {
bw = bufio.NewWriter(w)
w = bw
}
_, err = fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s %s HTTP/1.1\r\n", valueOrDefault(r.Method, "GET"), ruri)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Header lines
_, err = fmt.Fprintf(w, "Host: %s\r\n", host)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Use the defaultUserAgent unless the Header contains one, which
// may be blank to not send the header.
userAgent := defaultUserAgent
if _, ok := r.Header["User-Agent"]; ok {
userAgent = r.Header.Get("User-Agent")
}
if userAgent != "" {
_, err = fmt.Fprintf(w, "User-Agent: %s\r\n", userAgent)
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
// Process Body,ContentLength,Close,Trailer
tw, err := newTransferWriter(r)
if err != nil {
return err
}
err = tw.WriteHeader(w)
if err != nil {
return err
}
err = r.Header.WriteSubset(w, reqWriteExcludeHeader)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if extraHeaders != nil {
err = extraHeaders.Write(w)
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
_, err = io.WriteString(w, "\r\n")
if err != nil {
return err
}
if trace != nil && trace.WroteHeaders != nil {
trace.WroteHeaders()
}
// Flush and wait for 100-continue if expected.
if waitForContinue != nil {
if bw, ok := w.(*bufio.Writer); ok {
err = bw.Flush()
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
if trace != nil && trace.Wait100Continue != nil {
trace.Wait100Continue()
}
if !waitForContinue() {
r.closeBody()
return nil
}
}
if bw, ok := w.(*bufio.Writer); ok && tw.FlushHeaders {
if err := bw.Flush(); err != nil {
return err
}
}
// Write body and trailer
err = tw.WriteBody(w)
if err != nil {
if tw.bodyReadError == err {
err = requestBodyReadError{err}
}
return err
}
if bw != nil {
return bw.Flush()
}
return nil
}
// requestBodyReadError wraps an error from (*Request).write to indicate
// that the error came from a Read call on the Request.Body.
// This error type should not escape the net/http package to users.
type requestBodyReadError struct{ error }
func idnaASCII(v string) (string, error) {
// TODO: Consider removing this check after verifying performance is okay.
// Right now punycode verification, length checks, context checks, and the
// permissible character tests are all omitted. It also prevents the ToASCII
// call from salvaging an invalid IDN, when possible. As a result it may be
// possible to have two IDNs that appear identical to the user where the
// ASCII-only version causes an error downstream whereas the non-ASCII
// version does not.
// Note that for correct ASCII IDNs ToASCII will only do considerably more
// work, but it will not cause an allocation.
if isASCII(v) {
return v, nil
}
return idna.Lookup.ToASCII(v)
}
// cleanHost cleans up the host sent in request's Host header.
//
// It both strips anything after '/' or ' ', and puts the value
// into Punycode form, if necessary.
//
// Ideally we'd clean the Host header according to the spec:
// https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230#section-5.4 (Host = uri-host [ ":" port ]")
// https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230#section-2.7 (uri-host -> rfc3986's host)
// https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3.2.2 (definition of host)
// But practically, what we are trying to avoid is the situation in
// issue 11206, where a malformed Host header used in the proxy context
// would create a bad request. So it is enough to just truncate at the
// first offending character.
func cleanHost(in string) string {
if i := strings.IndexAny(in, " /"); i != -1 {
in = in[:i]
}
host, port, err := net.SplitHostPort(in)
if err != nil { // input was just a host
a, err := idnaASCII(in)
if err != nil {
return in // garbage in, garbage out
}
return a
}
a, err := idnaASCII(host)
if err != nil {
return in // garbage in, garbage out
}
return net.JoinHostPort(a, port)
}
// removeZone removes IPv6 zone identifier from host.
// E.g., "[fe80::1%en0]:8080" to "[fe80::1]:8080"
func removeZone(host string) string {
if !strings.HasPrefix(host, "[") {
return host
}
i := strings.LastIndex(host, "]")
if i < 0 {
return host
}
j := strings.LastIndex(host[:i], "%")
if j < 0 {
return host
}
return host[:j] + host[i:]
}
// ParseHTTPVersion parses a HTTP version string.
// "HTTP/1.0" returns (1, 0, true).
func ParseHTTPVersion(vers string) (major, minor int, ok bool) {
const Big = 1000000 // arbitrary upper bound
switch vers {
case "HTTP/1.1":
return 1, 1, true
case "HTTP/1.0":
return 1, 0, true
}
if !strings.HasPrefix(vers, "HTTP/") {
return 0, 0, false
}
dot := strings.Index(vers, ".")
if dot < 0 {
return 0, 0, false
}
major, err := strconv.Atoi(vers[5:dot])
if err != nil || major < 0 || major > Big {
return 0, 0, false
}
minor, err = strconv.Atoi(vers[dot+1:])
if err != nil || minor < 0 || minor > Big {
return 0, 0, false
}
return major, minor, true
}
func validMethod(method string) bool {
/*
Method = "OPTIONS" ; Section 9.2
| "GET" ; Section 9.3
| "HEAD" ; Section 9.4
| "POST" ; Section 9.5
| "PUT" ; Section 9.6
| "DELETE" ; Section 9.7
| "TRACE" ; Section 9.8
| "CONNECT" ; Section 9.9
| extension-method
extension-method = token
token = 1*<any CHAR except CTLs or separators>
*/
return len(method) > 0 && strings.IndexFunc(method, isNotToken) == -1
}
// NewRequest returns a new Request given a method, URL, and optional body.
//
// If the provided body is also an io.Closer, the returned
// Request.Body is set to body and will be closed by the Client
// methods Do, Post, and PostForm, and Transport.RoundTrip.
//
// NewRequest returns a Request suitable for use with Client.Do or
// Transport.RoundTrip. To create a request for use with testing a
// Server Handler, either use the NewRequest function in the
// net/http/httptest package, use ReadRequest, or manually update the
// Request fields. See the Request type's documentation for the
// difference between inbound and outbound request fields.
//
// If body is of type *bytes.Buffer, *bytes.Reader, or
// *strings.Reader, the returned request's ContentLength is set to its
// exact value (instead of -1), GetBody is populated (so 307 and 308
// redirects can replay the body), and Body is set to NoBody if the
// ContentLength is 0.
func NewRequest(method, url string, body io.Reader) (*Request, error) {
if method == "" {
// We document that "" means "GET" for Request.Method, and people have
// relied on that from NewRequest, so keep that working.
// We still enforce validMethod for non-empty methods.
method = "GET"
}
if !validMethod(method) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("net/http: invalid method %q", method)
}
u, err := parseURL(url) // Just url.Parse (url is shadowed for godoc).
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
rc, ok := body.(io.ReadCloser)
if !ok && body != nil {
rc = ioutil.NopCloser(body)
}
// The host's colon:port should be normalized. See Issue 14836.
u.Host = removeEmptyPort(u.Host)
req := &Request{
Method: method,
URL: u,
Proto: "HTTP/1.1",
ProtoMajor: 1,
ProtoMinor: 1,
Header: make(Header),
Body: rc,
Host: u.Host,
}
if body != nil {
switch v := body.(type) {
case *bytes.Buffer:
req.ContentLength = int64(v.Len())
buf := v.Bytes()
req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) {
r := bytes.NewReader(buf)
return ioutil.NopCloser(r), nil
}
case *bytes.Reader:
req.ContentLength = int64(v.Len())
snapshot := *v
req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) {
r := snapshot
return ioutil.NopCloser(&r), nil
}
case *strings.Reader:
req.ContentLength = int64(v.Len())
snapshot := *v
req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) {
r := snapshot
return ioutil.NopCloser(&r), nil
}
default:
// This is where we'd set it to -1 (at least
// if body != NoBody) to mean unknown, but
// that broke people during the Go 1.8 testing
// period. People depend on it being 0 I
// guess. Maybe retry later. See Issue 18117.
}
// For client requests, Request.ContentLength of 0
// means either actually 0, or unknown. The only way
// to explicitly say that the ContentLength is zero is
// to set the Body to nil. But turns out too much code
// depends on NewRequest returning a non-nil Body,
// so we use a well-known ReadCloser variable instead
// and have the http package also treat that sentinel
// variable to mean explicitly zero.
if req.GetBody != nil && req.ContentLength == 0 {
req.Body = NoBody
req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) { return NoBody, nil }
}
}
return req, nil
}
// BasicAuth returns the username and password provided in the request's
// Authorization header, if the request uses HTTP Basic Authentication.
// See RFC 2617, Section 2.
func (r *Request) BasicAuth() (username, password string, ok bool) {
auth := r.Header.Get("Authorization")
if auth == "" {
return
}
return parseBasicAuth(auth)
}
// parseBasicAuth parses an HTTP Basic Authentication string.
// "Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ==" returns ("Aladdin", "open sesame", true).
func parseBasicAuth(auth string) (username, password string, ok bool) {
const prefix = "Basic "
if !strings.HasPrefix(auth, prefix) {
return
}
c, err := base64.StdEncoding.DecodeString(auth[len(prefix):])
if err != nil {
return
}
cs := string(c)
s := strings.IndexByte(cs, ':')
if s < 0 {
return
}
return cs[:s], cs[s+1:], true
}
// SetBasicAuth sets the request's Authorization header to use HTTP
// Basic Authentication with the provided username and password.
//
// With HTTP Basic Authentication the provided username and password
// are not encrypted.
func (r *Request) SetBasicAuth(username, password string) {
r.Header.Set("Authorization", "Basic "+basicAuth(username, password))
}
// parseRequestLine parses "GET /foo HTTP/1.1" into its three parts.
func parseRequestLine(line string) (method, requestURI, proto string, ok bool) {
s1 := strings.Index(line, " ")
s2 := strings.Index(line[s1+1:], " ")
if s1 < 0 || s2 < 0 {
return
}
s2 += s1 + 1
return line[:s1], line[s1+1 : s2], line[s2+1:], true
}
var textprotoReaderPool sync.Pool
func newTextprotoReader(br *bufio.Reader) *textproto.Reader {
if v := textprotoReaderPool.Get(); v != nil {
tr := v.(*textproto.Reader)
tr.R = br
return tr
}
return textproto.NewReader(br)
}
func putTextprotoReader(r *textproto.Reader) {
r.R = nil
textprotoReaderPool.Put(r)
}
// ReadRequest reads and parses an incoming request from b.
func ReadRequest(b *bufio.Reader) (*Request, error) {
return readRequest(b, deleteHostHeader)
}
// Constants for readRequest's deleteHostHeader parameter.
const (
deleteHostHeader = true
keepHostHeader = false
)
func readRequest(b *bufio.Reader, deleteHostHeader bool) (req *Request, err error) {
tp := newTextprotoReader(b)
req = new(Request)
// First line: GET /index.html HTTP/1.0
var s string
if s, err = tp.ReadLine(); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer func() {
putTextprotoReader(tp)
if err == io.EOF {
err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF
}
}()
var ok bool
req.Method, req.RequestURI, req.Proto, ok = parseRequestLine(s)
if !ok {
return nil, &badStringError{"malformed HTTP request", s}
}
if !validMethod(req.Method) {
return nil, &badStringError{"invalid method", req.Method}
}
rawurl := req.RequestURI
if req.ProtoMajor, req.ProtoMinor, ok = ParseHTTPVersion(req.Proto); !ok {
return nil, &badStringError{"malformed HTTP version", req.Proto}
}
// CONNECT requests are used two different ways, and neither uses a full URL:
// The standard use is to tunnel HTTPS through an HTTP proxy.
// It looks like "CONNECT www.google.com:443 HTTP/1.1", and the parameter is
// just the authority section of a URL. This information should go in req.URL.Host.
//
// The net/rpc package also uses CONNECT, but there the parameter is a path
// that starts with a slash. It can be parsed with the regular URL parser,
// and the path will end up in req.URL.Path, where it needs to be in order for
// RPC to work.
justAuthority := req.Method == "CONNECT" && !strings.HasPrefix(rawurl, "/")
if justAuthority {
rawurl = "http://" + rawurl
}
if req.URL, err = url.ParseRequestURI(rawurl); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if justAuthority {
// Strip the bogus "http://" back off.
req.URL.Scheme = ""
}
// Subsequent lines: Key: value.
mimeHeader, err := tp.ReadMIMEHeader()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
req.Header = Header(mimeHeader)
// RFC 7230, section 5.3: Must treat
// GET /index.html HTTP/1.1
// Host: www.google.com
// and
// GET http://www.google.com/index.html HTTP/1.1
// Host: doesntmatter
// the same. In the second case, any Host line is ignored.
req.Host = req.URL.Host
if req.Host == "" {
req.Host = req.Header.get("Host")
}
if deleteHostHeader {
delete(req.Header, "Host")
}
fixPragmaCacheControl(req.Header)
req.Close = shouldClose(req.ProtoMajor, req.ProtoMinor, req.Header, false)
err = readTransfer(req, b)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if req.isH2Upgrade() {
// Because it's neither chunked, nor declared:
req.ContentLength = -1
// We want to give handlers a chance to hijack the
// connection, but we need to prevent the Server from
// dealing with the connection further if it's not
// hijacked. Set Close to ensure that:
req.Close = true
}
return req, nil
}
// MaxBytesReader is similar to io.LimitReader but is intended for
// limiting the size of incoming request bodies. In contrast to
// io.LimitReader, MaxBytesReader's result is a ReadCloser, returns a
// non-EOF error for a Read beyond the limit, and closes the
// underlying reader when its Close method is called.
//
// MaxBytesReader prevents clients from accidentally or maliciously
// sending a large request and wasting server resources.
func MaxBytesReader(w ResponseWriter, r io.ReadCloser, n int64) io.ReadCloser {
return &maxBytesReader{w: w, r: r, n: n}
}
type maxBytesReader struct {
w ResponseWriter
r io.ReadCloser // underlying reader
n int64 // max bytes remaining
err error // sticky error
}
func (l *maxBytesReader) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if l.err != nil {
return 0, l.err
}
if len(p) == 0 {
return 0, nil
}
// If they asked for a 32KB byte read but only 5 bytes are
// remaining, no need to read 32KB. 6 bytes will answer the
// question of the whether we hit the limit or go past it.
if int64(len(p)) > l.n+1 {
p = p[:l.n+1]
}
n, err = l.r.Read(p)
if int64(n) <= l.n {
l.n -= int64(n)
l.err = err
return n, err
}
n = int(l.n)
l.n = 0
// The server code and client code both use
// maxBytesReader. This "requestTooLarge" check is
// only used by the server code. To prevent binaries
// which only using the HTTP Client code (such as
// cmd/go) from also linking in the HTTP server, don't
// use a static type assertion to the server
// "*response" type. Check this interface instead:
type requestTooLarger interface {
requestTooLarge()
}
if res, ok := l.w.(requestTooLarger); ok {
res.requestTooLarge()
}
l.err = errors.New("http: request body too large")
return n, l.err
}
func (l *maxBytesReader) Close() error {
return l.r.Close()
}
func copyValues(dst, src url.Values) {
for k, vs := range src {
for _, value := range vs {
dst.Add(k, value)
}
}
}
func parsePostForm(r *Request) (vs url.Values, err error) {
if r.Body == nil {
err = errors.New("missing form body")
return
}
ct := r.Header.Get("Content-Type")
// RFC 7231, section 3.1.1.5 - empty type
// MAY be treated as application/octet-stream
if ct == "" {
ct = "application/octet-stream"
}
ct, _, err = mime.ParseMediaType(ct)
switch {
case ct == "application/x-www-form-urlencoded":
var reader io.Reader = r.Body
maxFormSize := int64(1<<63 - 1)
if _, ok := r.Body.(*maxBytesReader); !ok {
maxFormSize = int64(10 << 20) // 10 MB is a lot of text.
reader = io.LimitReader(r.Body, maxFormSize+1)
}
b, e := ioutil.ReadAll(reader)
if e != nil {
if err == nil {
err = e
}
break
}
if int64(len(b)) > maxFormSize {
err = errors.New("http: POST too large")
return
}
vs, e = url.ParseQuery(string(b))
if err == nil {
err = e
}
case ct == "multipart/form-data":
// handled by ParseMultipartForm (which is calling us, or should be)
// TODO(bradfitz): there are too many possible
// orders to call too many functions here.
// Clean this up and write more tests.
// request_test.go contains the start of this,
// in TestParseMultipartFormOrder and others.
}
return
}
// ParseForm populates r.Form and r.PostForm.
//
// For all requests, ParseForm parses the raw query from the URL and updates
// r.Form.
//
// For POST, PUT, and PATCH requests, it also parses the request body as a form
// and puts the results into both r.PostForm and r.Form. Request body parameters
// take precedence over URL query string values in r.Form.
//
// For other HTTP methods, or when the Content-Type is not
// application/x-www-form-urlencoded, the request Body is not read, and
// r.PostForm is initialized to a non-nil, empty value.
//
// If the request Body's size has not already been limited by MaxBytesReader,
// the size is capped at 10MB.
//
// ParseMultipartForm calls ParseForm automatically.
// ParseForm is idempotent.
func (r *Request) ParseForm() error {
var err error
if r.PostForm == nil {
if r.Method == "POST" || r.Method == "PUT" || r.Method == "PATCH" {
r.PostForm, err = parsePostForm(r)
}
if r.PostForm == nil {
r.PostForm = make(url.Values)
}
}
if r.Form == nil {
if len(r.PostForm) > 0 {
r.Form = make(url.Values)
copyValues(r.Form, r.PostForm)
}
var newValues url.Values
if r.URL != nil {
var e error
newValues, e = url.ParseQuery(r.URL.RawQuery)
if err == nil {
err = e
}
}
if newValues == nil {
newValues = make(url.Values)
}
if r.Form == nil {
r.Form = newValues
} else {
copyValues(r.Form, newValues)
}
}
return err
}
// ParseMultipartForm parses a request body as multipart/form-data.
// The whole request body is parsed and up to a total of maxMemory bytes of
// its file parts are stored in memory, with the remainder stored on
// disk in temporary files.
// ParseMultipartForm calls ParseForm if necessary.
// After one call to ParseMultipartForm, subsequent calls have no effect.
func (r *Request) ParseMultipartForm(maxMemory int64) error {
if r.MultipartForm == multipartByReader {
return errors.New("http: multipart handled by MultipartReader")
}
if r.Form == nil {
err := r.ParseForm()
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
if r.MultipartForm != nil {
return nil
}
mr, err := r.multipartReader()
if err != nil {
return err
}
f, err := mr.ReadForm(maxMemory)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if r.PostForm == nil {
r.PostForm = make(url.Values)
}
for k, v := range f.Value {
r.Form[k] = append(r.Form[k], v...)
// r.PostForm should also be populated. See Issue 9305.
r.PostForm[k] = append(r.PostForm[k], v...)
}
r.MultipartForm = f
return nil
}
// FormValue returns the first value for the named component of the query.
// POST and PUT body parameters take precedence over URL query string values.
// FormValue calls ParseMultipartForm and ParseForm if necessary and ignores
// any errors returned by these functions.
// If key is not present, FormValue returns the empty string.
// To access multiple values of the same key, call ParseForm and
// then inspect Request.Form directly.
func (r *Request) FormValue(key string) string {
if r.Form == nil {
r.ParseMultipartForm(defaultMaxMemory)
}
if vs := r.Form[key]; len(vs) > 0 {
return vs[0]
}
return ""
}
// PostFormValue returns the first value for the named component of the POST
// or PUT request body. URL query parameters are ignored.
// PostFormValue calls ParseMultipartForm and ParseForm if necessary and ignores
// any errors returned by these functions.
// If key is not present, PostFormValue returns the empty string.
func (r *Request) PostFormValue(key string) string {
if r.PostForm == nil {
r.ParseMultipartForm(defaultMaxMemory)
}
if vs := r.PostForm[key]; len(vs) > 0 {
return vs[0]
}
return ""
}
// FormFile returns the first file for the provided form key.
// FormFile calls ParseMultipartForm and ParseForm if necessary.
func (r *Request) FormFile(key string) (multipart.File, *multipart.FileHeader, error) {
if r.MultipartForm == multipartByReader {
return nil, nil, errors.New("http: multipart handled by MultipartReader")
}
if r.MultipartForm == nil {
err := r.ParseMultipartForm(defaultMaxMemory)
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
}
if r.MultipartForm != nil && r.MultipartForm.File != nil {
if fhs := r.MultipartForm.File[key]; len(fhs) > 0 {
f, err := fhs[0].Open()
return f, fhs[0], err
}
}
return nil, nil, ErrMissingFile
}
func (r *Request) expectsContinue() bool {
return hasToken(r.Header.get("Expect"), "100-continue")
}
func (r *Request) wantsHttp10KeepAlive() bool {
if r.ProtoMajor != 1 || r.ProtoMinor != 0 {
return false
}
return hasToken(r.Header.get("Connection"), "keep-alive")
}
func (r *Request) wantsClose() bool {
return hasToken(r.Header.get("Connection"), "close")
}
func (r *Request) closeBody() {
if r.Body != nil {
r.Body.Close()
}
}
func (r *Request) isReplayable() bool {
if r.Body == nil || r.Body == NoBody || r.GetBody != nil {
switch valueOrDefault(r.Method, "GET") {
case "GET", "HEAD", "OPTIONS", "TRACE":
return true
}
}
return false
}
// outgoingLength reports the Content-Length of this outgoing (Client) request.
// It maps 0 into -1 (unknown) when the Body is non-nil.
func (r *Request) outgoingLength() int64 {
if r.Body == nil || r.Body == NoBody {
return 0
}
if r.ContentLength != 0 {
return r.ContentLength
}
return -1
}
// requestMethodUsuallyLacksBody reports whether the given request
// method is one that typically does not involve a request body.
// This is used by the Transport (via
// transferWriter.shouldSendChunkedRequestBody) to determine whether
// we try to test-read a byte from a non-nil Request.Body when
// Request.outgoingLength() returns -1. See the comments in
// shouldSendChunkedRequestBody.
func requestMethodUsuallyLacksBody(method string) bool {
switch method {
case "GET", "HEAD", "DELETE", "OPTIONS", "PROPFIND", "SEARCH":
return true
}
return false
}