/usr/share/perl5/Perlbal/HTTPHeaders.pm is in libperlbal-perl 1.80-3.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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# HTTP header class (both request and response)
#
# Copyright 2004, Danga Interactive, Inc.
# Copyright 2005-2007, Six Apart, Ltd.
#
package Perlbal::HTTPHeaders;
use strict;
use warnings;
no warnings qw(deprecated);
use Perlbal;
use fields (
'headers', # href; lowercase header -> comma-sep list of values
'origcase', # href; lowercase header -> provided case
'hdorder', # aref; order headers were received (canonical order)
'method', # scalar; request method (if GET request)
'uri', # scalar; request URI (if GET request)
'type', # 'res' or 'req'
'code', # HTTP response status code
'codetext', # status text that for response code
'ver', # version (string) "1.1"
'vernum', # version (number: major*1000+minor): "1.1" => 1001
'responseLine', # first line of HTTP response (if response)
'requestLine', # first line of HTTP request (if request)
);
our $HTTPCode = {
200 => 'OK',
204 => 'No Content',
206 => 'Partial Content',
301 => 'Permanent Redirect',
302 => 'Found',
304 => 'Not Modified',
400 => 'Bad request',
403 => 'Forbidden',
404 => 'Not Found',
416 => 'Request range not satisfiable',
500 => 'Internal Server Error',
501 => 'Not Implemented',
503 => 'Service Unavailable',
};
sub fail {
return undef unless Perlbal::DEBUG >= 1;
my $reason = shift;
print "HTTP parse failure: $reason\n" if Perlbal::DEBUG >= 1;
return undef;
}
sub http_code_english {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
if (@_) {
return $HTTPCode->{shift()} || "";
} else {
return "" unless $self->response_code;
return $HTTPCode->{$self->response_code} || "";
}
}
sub new_response {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
$self = fields::new($self) unless ref $self;
my $code = shift;
$self->{headers} = {};
$self->{origcase} = {};
$self->{hdorder} = [];
$self->{method} = undef;
$self->{uri} = undef;
$self->{responseLine} = "HTTP/1.0 $code " . $self->http_code_english($code);
$self->{code} = $code;
$self->{type} = "httpres";
Perlbal::objctor($self, $self->{type});
return $self;
}
*new_response_PERL = \&new_response;
sub new {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
$self = fields::new($self) unless ref $self;
my ($hstr_ref, $is_response) = @_;
# hstr: headers as a string ref
# is_response: bool; is HTTP response (as opposed to request). defaults to request.
my $absoluteURIHost = undef;
my @lines = split(/\r?\n/, $$hstr_ref);
$self->{headers} = {};
$self->{origcase} = {};
$self->{hdorder} = [];
$self->{method} = undef;
$self->{uri} = undef;
$self->{type} = ($is_response ? "res" : "req");
Perlbal::objctor($self, $self->{type});
# check request line
if ($is_response) {
$self->{responseLine} = (shift @lines) || "";
# check for valid response line
return fail("Bogus response line") unless
$self->{responseLine} =~ m!^HTTP\/(\d+)\.(\d+)\s+(\d+)(?:\s+(.*))$!;
my ($ver_ma, $ver_mi, $code) = ($1, $2, $3);
$self->code($code, $4);
# version work so we know what version the backend spoke
unless (defined $ver_ma) {
($ver_ma, $ver_mi) = (0, 9);
}
$self->{ver} = "$ver_ma.$ver_mi";
$self->{vernum} = $ver_ma*1000 + $ver_mi;
} else {
$self->{requestLine} = (shift @lines) || "";
# check for valid request line
return fail("Bogus request line") unless
$self->{requestLine} =~ m!^(\w+) ((?:\*|(?:\S*?)))(?: HTTP/(\d+)\.(\d+))$!;
$self->{method} = $1;
$self->{uri} = $2;
my ($ver_ma, $ver_mi) = ($3, $4);
# now check uri for not being a uri
if ($self->{uri} =~ m!^http://([^/:]+?)(?::\d+)?(/.*)?$!) {
$absoluteURIHost = lc($1);
$self->{uri} = $2 || "/"; # "http://www.foo.com" yields no path, so default to "/"
}
# default to HTTP/0.9
unless (defined $ver_ma) {
($ver_ma, $ver_mi) = (0, 9);
}
$self->{ver} = "$ver_ma.$ver_mi";
$self->{vernum} = $ver_ma*1000 + $ver_mi;
}
my $last_header = undef;
foreach my $line (@lines) {
if ($line =~ /^\s/) {
next unless defined $last_header;
$self->{headers}{$last_header} .= $line;
} elsif ($line =~ /^([^\x00-\x20\x7f()<>@,;:\\\"\/\[\]?={}]+):\s*(.*)$/) {
# RFC 2616:
# sec 4.2:
# message-header = field-name ":" [ field-value ]
# field-name = token
# sec 2.2:
# token = 1*<any CHAR except CTLs or separators>
$last_header = lc($1);
if (defined $self->{headers}{$last_header}) {
if ($last_header eq "set-cookie") {
# cookie spec doesn't allow merged headers for set-cookie,
# so instead we do this hack so to_string below does the right
# thing without needing to be arrayref-aware or such. also
# this lets client code still modify/delete this data
# (but retrieving the value of "set-cookie" will be broken)
$self->{headers}{$last_header} .= "\r\nSet-Cookie: $2";
} else {
# normal merged header case (according to spec)
$self->{headers}{$last_header} .= ", $2";
}
} else {
$self->{headers}{$last_header} = $2;
$self->{origcase}{$last_header} = $1;
push @{$self->{hdorder}}, $last_header;
}
} else {
return fail("unknown header line");
}
}
# override the host header if an absolute URI was provided
$self->header('Host', $absoluteURIHost)
if defined $absoluteURIHost;
# now error if no host
return fail("HTTP 1.1 requires host header")
if !$is_response && $self->{vernum} >= 1001 && !$self->header('Host');
return $self;
}
*new_PERL = \&new;
sub _codetext {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
return $self->{codetext} if $self->{codetext};
return $self->http_code_english;
}
sub code {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
my ($code, $text) = @_;
$self->{codetext} = $text;
if (! defined $self->{code} || $code != $self->{code}) {
$self->{code} = $code+0;
if ($self->{responseLine}) {
$self->{responseLine} = "HTTP/1.0 $code " . $self->http_code_english;
}
}
}
sub response_code {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = $_[0];
return $self->{code};
}
sub request_method {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
return $self->{method};
}
sub request_uri {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
return $self->{uri};
}
sub set_request_uri {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
return unless $self->{requestLine};
my $uri = shift;
return unless defined $uri and length $uri;
my $ver = $self->{ver};
if ($ver == 0.9) {
$self->{requestLine} = sprintf("%s %s", $self->{method}, $uri);
} else {
$self->{requestLine} = sprintf("%s %s HTTP/%s", $self->{method}, $uri, $ver);
}
return $self->{uri} = $uri;
}
sub version_number {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = $_[0];
return $self->{vernum} unless $_[1];
return $self->{vernum} = $_[1];
}
sub header {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
my $key = shift;
return $self->{headers}{lc($key)} unless @_;
# adding a new header
my $origcase = $key;
$key = lc($key);
unless (exists $self->{headers}{$key}) {
push @{$self->{hdorder}}, $key;
$self->{origcase}{$key} = $origcase;
}
return $self->{headers}{$key} = shift;
}
sub headers_list {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
return [] unless $self->{headers};
return [ map { $self->{origcase}{$_} } keys %{$self->{headers}} ];
}
sub to_string_ref {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
my $st = join("\r\n",
$self->{requestLine} || $self->{responseLine},
(map { "$self->{origcase}{$_}: $self->{headers}{$_}" }
grep { defined $self->{headers}{$_} }
@{$self->{hdorder}}),
'', ''); # final \r\n\r\n
return \$st;
}
sub clone {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
my $new = fields::new($self);
foreach (qw(method uri type code codetext ver vernum responseLine requestLine)) {
$new->{$_} = $self->{$_};
}
# mark this object as constructed
Perlbal::objctor($new, $new->{type});
$new->{headers} = { %{$self->{headers}} };
$new->{origcase} = { %{$self->{origcase}} };
$new->{hdorder} = [ @{$self->{hdorder}} ];
return $new;
}
sub set_version {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
my $ver = shift;
die "Bogus version" unless $ver =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d+)$/;
my ($ver_ma, $ver_mi) = ($1, $2);
# check for req, as the other can be res or httpres
if ($self->{type} eq 'req') {
$self->{requestLine} = "$self->{method} $self->{uri} HTTP/$ver";
} else {
$self->{responseLine} = "HTTP/$ver $self->{code} " . $self->_codetext;
}
$self->{ver} = "$ver_ma.$ver_mi";
$self->{vernum} = $ver_ma*1000 + $ver_mi;
return $self;
}
# using all available information, attempt to determine the content length of
# the message body being sent to us.
sub content_length {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
# shortcuts depending on our method/code, depending on what we are
if ($self->{type} eq 'req') {
# no content length for head requests
return 0 if $self->{method} eq 'HEAD';
} elsif ($self->{type} eq 'res' || $self->{type} eq 'httpres') {
# no content length in any of these
if ($self->{code} == 304 || $self->{code} == 204 ||
($self->{code} >= 100 && $self->{code} <= 199)) {
return 0;
}
}
# the normal case for a GET/POST, etc. real data coming back
# also, an OPTIONS requests generally has a defined but 0 content-length
if (defined(my $clen = $self->header("Content-Length"))) {
return $clen;
}
# if we get here, nothing matched, so we don't definitively know what the
# content length is. this is usually an error, but we try to work around it.
return undef;
}
# answers the question: "should a response to this person specify keep-alive,
# given the request (self) and the backend response?" this is used in proxy
# mode to determine based on the client's request and the backend's response
# whether or not the response from the proxy (us) should do keep-alive.
#
# FIXME: this is called too often (especially with service selector),
# and should be redesigned to be simpler, and/or cached on the
# connection. there's too much duplication with res_keep_alive.
sub req_keep_alive {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = $_[0];
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $res = $_[1] or Carp::confess("ASSERT: No response headers given");
# get the connection header now (saves warnings later)
my $conn = lc ($self->header('Connection') || '');
# check the client
if ($self->version_number < 1001) {
# they must specify a keep-alive header
return 0 unless $conn =~ /\bkeep-alive\b/i;
}
# so it must be 1.1 which means keep-alive is on, unless they say not to
return 0 if $conn =~ /\bclose\b/i;
# if we get here, the user wants keep-alive and seems to support it,
# so we make sure that the response is in a form that we can understand
# well enough to do keep-alive. FIXME: support chunked encoding in the
# future, which means this check changes.
return 1 if defined $res->header('Content-length') ||
$res->response_code == 304 || # not modified
$res->response_code == 204 || # no content
$self->request_method eq 'HEAD';
# fail-safe, no keep-alive
return 0;
}
# if an options response from a backend looks like it can do keep-alive.
sub res_keep_alive_options {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = $_[0];
return $self->res_keep_alive(undef, 1);
}
# answers the question: "is the backend expected to stay open?" this
# is a combination of the request we sent to it and the response they
# sent...
# FIXME: this is called too often (especially with service selector),
# and should be redesigned to be simpler, and/or cached on the
# connection. there's too much duplication with req_keep_alive.
sub res_keep_alive {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = $_[0];
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $req = $_[1];
my $is_options = $_[2];
Carp::confess("ASSERT: No request headers given") unless $req || $is_options;
# get the connection header now (saves warnings later)
my $conn = lc ($self->header('Connection') || '');
# if they said Connection: close, it's always not keep-alive
return 0 if $conn =~ /\bclose\b/i;
# handle the http 1.0/0.9 case which requires keep-alive specified
if ($self->version_number < 1001) {
# must specify keep-alive, and must have a content length OR
# the request must be a head request
return 1 if
$conn =~ /\bkeep-alive\b/i &&
($is_options ||
defined $self->header('Content-length') ||
$req->request_method eq 'HEAD' ||
$self->response_code == 304 || # not modified
$self->response_code == 204
); # no content
return 0;
}
# HTTP/1.1 case. defaults to keep-alive, per spec, unless
# asked for otherwise (checked above)
# FIXME: make sure we handle a HTTP/1.1 response from backend
# with connection: close, no content-length, going to a
# HTTP/1.1 persistent client. we'll have to add chunk markers.
# (not here, obviously)
return 1;
}
# returns (status, range_start, range_end) when given a size
# status = 200 - invalid or non-existent range header. serve normally.
# status = 206 - parseable range is good. serve partial content.
# status = 416 - Range is unsatisfiable
sub range {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = $_[0];
my $size = $_[1];
my $not_satisfiable;
my $range = $self->header("Range");
return 200 unless
$range &&
defined $size &&
$range =~ /^bytes=(\d*)-(\d*)$/;
my ($range_start, $range_end) = ($1, $2);
undef $range_start if $range_start eq '';
undef $range_end if $range_end eq '';
return 200 unless defined($range_start) or defined($range_end);
if (defined($range_start) and defined($range_end) and $range_start > $range_end) {
return 416;
} elsif (not defined($range_start) and defined($range_end) and $range_end == 0) {
return 416;
} elsif (defined($range_start) and $size <= $range_start) {
return 416;
}
$range_start = 0 unless defined($range_start);
$range_end = $size - 1 unless defined($range_end) and $range_end < $size;
return (206, $range_start, $range_end);
}
sub DESTROY {
my Perlbal::HTTPHeaders $self = shift;
Perlbal::objdtor($self, $self->{type});
}
1;
# Local Variables:
# mode: perl
# c-basic-indent: 4
# indent-tabs-mode: nil
# End:
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