import pytest from .._connection import _body_framing, _keep_alive, Connection, NEED_DATA, PAUSED from .._events import * from .._state import * from .._util import LocalProtocolError, RemoteProtocolError from .helpers import ConnectionPair, get_all_events, receive_and_get def test__keep_alive(): assert _keep_alive( Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "Example.com")]) ) assert not _keep_alive( Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "Example.com"), ("Connection", "close")], ) ) assert not _keep_alive( Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "Example.com"), ("Connection", "a, b, cLOse, foo")], ) ) assert not _keep_alive( Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[], http_version="1.0") ) assert _keep_alive(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) assert not _keep_alive(Response(status_code=200, headers=[("Connection", "close")])) assert not _keep_alive( Response(status_code=200, headers=[("Connection", "a, b, cLOse, foo")]) ) assert not _keep_alive(Response(status_code=200, headers=[], http_version="1.0")) def test__body_framing(): def headers(cl, te): headers = [] if cl is not None: headers.append(("Content-Length", str(cl))) if te: headers.append(("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")) return headers def resp(status_code=200, cl=None, te=False): return Response(status_code=status_code, headers=headers(cl, te)) def req(cl=None, te=False): h = headers(cl, te) h += [("Host", "example.com")] return Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=h) # Special cases where the headers are ignored: for kwargs in [{}, {"cl": 100}, {"te": True}, {"cl": 100, "te": True}]: for meth, r in [ (b"HEAD", resp(**kwargs)), (b"GET", resp(status_code=204, **kwargs)), (b"GET", resp(status_code=304, **kwargs)), ]: assert _body_framing(meth, r) == ("content-length", (0,)) # Transfer-encoding for kwargs in [{"te": True}, {"cl": 100, "te": True}]: for meth, r in [(None, req(**kwargs)), (b"GET", resp(**kwargs))]: assert _body_framing(meth, r) == ("chunked", ()) # Content-Length for meth, r in [(None, req(cl=100)), (b"GET", resp(cl=100))]: assert _body_framing(meth, r) == ("content-length", (100,)) # No headers assert _body_framing(None, req()) == ("content-length", (0,)) assert _body_framing(b"GET", resp()) == ("http/1.0", ()) def test_Connection_basics_and_content_length(): with pytest.raises(ValueError): Connection("CLIENT") p = ConnectionPair() assert p.conn[CLIENT].our_role is CLIENT assert p.conn[CLIENT].their_role is SERVER assert p.conn[SERVER].our_role is SERVER assert p.conn[SERVER].their_role is CLIENT data = p.send( CLIENT, Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com"), ("Content-Length", "10")], ), ) assert data == ( b"GET / HTTP/1.1\r\n" b"Host: example.com\r\n" b"Content-Length: 10\r\n\r\n" ) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: SEND_BODY, SERVER: SEND_RESPONSE} assert p.conn[CLIENT].our_state is SEND_BODY assert p.conn[CLIENT].their_state is SEND_RESPONSE assert p.conn[SERVER].our_state is SEND_RESPONSE assert p.conn[SERVER].their_state is SEND_BODY assert p.conn[CLIENT].their_http_version is None assert p.conn[SERVER].their_http_version == b"1.1" data = p.send(SERVER, InformationalResponse(status_code=100, headers=[])) assert data == b"HTTP/1.1 100 \r\n\r\n" data = p.send(SERVER, Response(status_code=200, headers=[("Content-Length", "11")])) assert data == b"HTTP/1.1 200 \r\nContent-Length: 11\r\n\r\n" for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: SEND_BODY, SERVER: SEND_BODY} assert p.conn[CLIENT].their_http_version == b"1.1" assert p.conn[SERVER].their_http_version == b"1.1" data = p.send(CLIENT, Data(data=b"12345")) assert data == b"12345" data = p.send( CLIENT, Data(data=b"67890"), expect=[Data(data=b"67890"), EndOfMessage()] ) assert data == b"67890" data = p.send(CLIENT, EndOfMessage(), expect=[]) assert data == b"" for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: DONE, SERVER: SEND_BODY} data = p.send(SERVER, Data(data=b"1234567890")) assert data == b"1234567890" data = p.send(SERVER, Data(data=b"1"), expect=[Data(data=b"1"), EndOfMessage()]) assert data == b"1" data = p.send(SERVER, EndOfMessage(), expect=[]) assert data == b"" for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: DONE, SERVER: DONE} def test_chunked(): p = ConnectionPair() p.send( CLIENT, Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com"), ("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")], ), ) data = p.send(CLIENT, Data(data=b"1234567890", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=True)) assert data == b"a\r\n1234567890\r\n" data = p.send(CLIENT, Data(data=b"abcde", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=True)) assert data == b"5\r\nabcde\r\n" data = p.send(CLIENT, Data(data=b""), expect=[]) assert data == b"" data = p.send(CLIENT, EndOfMessage(headers=[("hello", "there")])) assert data == b"0\r\nhello: there\r\n\r\n" p.send( SERVER, Response(status_code=200, headers=[("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")]) ) p.send(SERVER, Data(data=b"54321", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=True)) p.send(SERVER, Data(data=b"12345", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=True)) p.send(SERVER, EndOfMessage()) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: DONE, SERVER: DONE} def test_chunk_boundaries(): conn = Connection(our_role=SERVER) request = ( b"POST / HTTP/1.1\r\n" b"Host: example.com\r\n" b"Transfer-Encoding: chunked\r\n" b"\r\n" ) conn.receive_data(request) assert conn.next_event() == Request( method="POST", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com"), ("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")], ) assert conn.next_event() is NEED_DATA conn.receive_data(b"5\r\nhello\r\n") assert conn.next_event() == Data(data=b"hello", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=True) conn.receive_data(b"5\r\nhel") assert conn.next_event() == Data(data=b"hel", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=False) conn.receive_data(b"l") assert conn.next_event() == Data(data=b"l", chunk_start=False, chunk_end=False) conn.receive_data(b"o\r\n") assert conn.next_event() == Data(data=b"o", chunk_start=False, chunk_end=True) conn.receive_data(b"5\r\nhello") assert conn.next_event() == Data(data=b"hello", chunk_start=True, chunk_end=True) conn.receive_data(b"\r\n") assert conn.next_event() == NEED_DATA conn.receive_data(b"0\r\n\r\n") assert conn.next_event() == EndOfMessage() def test_client_talking_to_http10_server(): c = Connection(CLIENT) c.send(Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com")])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) assert c.our_state is DONE # No content-length, so Http10 framing for body assert receive_and_get(c, b"HTTP/1.0 200 OK\r\n\r\n") == [ Response(status_code=200, headers=[], http_version="1.0", reason=b"OK") ] assert c.our_state is MUST_CLOSE assert receive_and_get(c, b"12345") == [Data(data=b"12345")] assert receive_and_get(c, b"67890") == [Data(data=b"67890")] assert receive_and_get(c, b"") == [EndOfMessage(), ConnectionClosed()] assert c.their_state is CLOSED def test_server_talking_to_http10_client(): c = Connection(SERVER) # No content-length, so no body # NB: no host header assert receive_and_get(c, b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n") == [ Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[], http_version="1.0"), EndOfMessage(), ] assert c.their_state is MUST_CLOSE # We automatically Connection: close back at them assert ( c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) == b"HTTP/1.1 200 \r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n" ) assert c.send(Data(data=b"12345")) == b"12345" assert c.send(EndOfMessage()) == b"" assert c.our_state is MUST_CLOSE # Check that it works if they do send Content-Length c = Connection(SERVER) # NB: no host header assert receive_and_get(c, b"POST / HTTP/1.0\r\nContent-Length: 10\r\n\r\n1") == [ Request( method="POST", target="/", headers=[("Content-Length", "10")], http_version="1.0", ), Data(data=b"1"), ] assert receive_and_get(c, b"234567890") == [Data(data=b"234567890"), EndOfMessage()] assert c.their_state is MUST_CLOSE assert receive_and_get(c, b"") == [ConnectionClosed()] def test_automatic_transfer_encoding_in_response(): # Check that in responses, the user can specify either Transfer-Encoding: # chunked or no framing at all, and in both cases we automatically select # the right option depending on whether the peer speaks HTTP/1.0 or # HTTP/1.1 for user_headers in [ [("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")], [], # In fact, this even works if Content-Length is set, # because if both are set then Transfer-Encoding wins [("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked"), ("Content-Length", "100")], ]: p = ConnectionPair() p.send( CLIENT, [ Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com")]), EndOfMessage(), ], ) # When speaking to HTTP/1.1 client, all of the above cases get # normalized to Transfer-Encoding: chunked p.send( SERVER, Response(status_code=200, headers=user_headers), expect=Response( status_code=200, headers=[("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")] ), ) # When speaking to HTTP/1.0 client, all of the above cases get # normalized to no-framing-headers c = Connection(SERVER) receive_and_get(c, b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n") assert ( c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=user_headers)) == b"HTTP/1.1 200 \r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n" ) assert c.send(Data(data=b"12345")) == b"12345" def test_automagic_connection_close_handling(): p = ConnectionPair() # If the user explicitly sets Connection: close, then we notice and # respect it p.send( CLIENT, [ Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com"), ("Connection", "close")], ), EndOfMessage(), ], ) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states[CLIENT] is MUST_CLOSE # And if the client sets it, the server automatically echoes it back p.send( SERVER, # no header here... [Response(status_code=204, headers=[]), EndOfMessage()], # ...but oh look, it arrived anyway expect=[ Response(status_code=204, headers=[("connection", "close")]), EndOfMessage(), ], ) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: MUST_CLOSE, SERVER: MUST_CLOSE} def test_100_continue(): def setup(): p = ConnectionPair() p.send( CLIENT, Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[ ("Host", "example.com"), ("Content-Length", "100"), ("Expect", "100-continue"), ], ), ) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.client_is_waiting_for_100_continue assert not p.conn[CLIENT].they_are_waiting_for_100_continue assert p.conn[SERVER].they_are_waiting_for_100_continue return p # Disabled by 100 Continue p = setup() p.send(SERVER, InformationalResponse(status_code=100, headers=[])) for conn in p.conns: assert not conn.client_is_waiting_for_100_continue assert not conn.they_are_waiting_for_100_continue # Disabled by a real response p = setup() p.send( SERVER, Response(status_code=200, headers=[("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")]) ) for conn in p.conns: assert not conn.client_is_waiting_for_100_continue assert not conn.they_are_waiting_for_100_continue # Disabled by the client going ahead and sending stuff anyway p = setup() p.send(CLIENT, Data(data=b"12345")) for conn in p.conns: assert not conn.client_is_waiting_for_100_continue assert not conn.they_are_waiting_for_100_continue def test_max_incomplete_event_size_countermeasure(): # Infinitely long headers are definitely not okay c = Connection(SERVER) c.receive_data(b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nEndless: ") assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): while True: c.receive_data(b"a" * 1024) c.next_event() # Checking that the same header is accepted / rejected depending on the # max_incomplete_event_size setting: c = Connection(SERVER, max_incomplete_event_size=5000) c.receive_data(b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nBig: ") c.receive_data(b"a" * 4000) c.receive_data(b"\r\n\r\n") assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request( method="GET", target="/", http_version="1.0", headers=[("big", "a" * 4000)] ), EndOfMessage(), ] c = Connection(SERVER, max_incomplete_event_size=4000) c.receive_data(b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nBig: ") c.receive_data(b"a" * 4000) with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() # Temporarily exceeding the size limit is fine, as long as its done with # complete events: c = Connection(SERVER, max_incomplete_event_size=5000) c.receive_data(b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nContent-Length: 10000") c.receive_data(b"\r\n\r\n" + b"a" * 10000) assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request( method="GET", target="/", http_version="1.0", headers=[("Content-Length", "10000")], ), Data(data=b"a" * 10000), EndOfMessage(), ] c = Connection(SERVER, max_incomplete_event_size=100) # Two pipelined requests to create a way-too-big receive buffer... but # it's fine because we're not checking c.receive_data( b"GET /1 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: a\r\n\r\n" b"GET /2 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: b\r\n\r\n" + b"X" * 1000 ) assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request(method="GET", target="/1", headers=[("host", "a")]), EndOfMessage(), ] # Even more data comes in, still no problem c.receive_data(b"X" * 1000) # We can respond and reuse to get the second pipelined request c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) c.start_next_cycle() assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request(method="GET", target="/2", headers=[("host", "b")]), EndOfMessage(), ] # But once we unpause and try to read the next message, and find that it's # incomplete and the buffer is *still* way too large, then *that's* a # problem: c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) c.start_next_cycle() with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() def test_reuse_simple(): p = ConnectionPair() p.send( CLIENT, [Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "a")]), EndOfMessage()], ) p.send(SERVER, [Response(status_code=200, headers=[]), EndOfMessage()]) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: DONE, SERVER: DONE} conn.start_next_cycle() p.send( CLIENT, [ Request(method="DELETE", target="/foo", headers=[("Host", "a")]), EndOfMessage(), ], ) p.send(SERVER, [Response(status_code=404, headers=[]), EndOfMessage()]) def test_pipelining(): # Client doesn't support pipelining, so we have to do this by hand c = Connection(SERVER) assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA # 3 requests all bunched up c.receive_data( b"GET /1 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: a.com\r\nContent-Length: 5\r\n\r\n" b"12345" b"GET /2 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: a.com\r\nContent-Length: 5\r\n\r\n" b"67890" b"GET /3 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: a.com\r\n\r\n" ) assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request( method="GET", target="/1", headers=[("Host", "a.com"), ("Content-Length", "5")], ), Data(data=b"12345"), EndOfMessage(), ] assert c.their_state is DONE assert c.our_state is SEND_RESPONSE assert c.next_event() is PAUSED c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) assert c.their_state is DONE assert c.our_state is DONE c.start_next_cycle() assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request( method="GET", target="/2", headers=[("Host", "a.com"), ("Content-Length", "5")], ), Data(data=b"67890"), EndOfMessage(), ] assert c.next_event() is PAUSED c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) c.start_next_cycle() assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request(method="GET", target="/3", headers=[("Host", "a.com")]), EndOfMessage(), ] # Doesn't pause this time, no trailing data assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) # Arrival of more data triggers pause assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA c.receive_data(b"SADF") assert c.next_event() is PAUSED assert c.trailing_data == (b"SADF", False) # If EOF arrives while paused, we don't see that either: c.receive_data(b"") assert c.trailing_data == (b"SADF", True) assert c.next_event() is PAUSED c.receive_data(b"") assert c.next_event() is PAUSED # Can't call receive_data with non-empty buf after closing it with pytest.raises(RuntimeError): c.receive_data(b"FDSA") def test_protocol_switch(): for (req, deny, accept) in [ ( Request( method="CONNECT", target="example.com:443", headers=[("Host", "foo"), ("Content-Length", "1")], ), Response(status_code=404, headers=[]), Response(status_code=200, headers=[]), ), ( Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "foo"), ("Content-Length", "1"), ("Upgrade", "a, b")], ), Response(status_code=200, headers=[]), InformationalResponse(status_code=101, headers=[("Upgrade", "a")]), ), ( Request( method="CONNECT", target="example.com:443", headers=[("Host", "foo"), ("Content-Length", "1"), ("Upgrade", "a, b")], ), Response(status_code=404, headers=[]), # Accept CONNECT, not upgrade Response(status_code=200, headers=[]), ), ( Request( method="CONNECT", target="example.com:443", headers=[("Host", "foo"), ("Content-Length", "1"), ("Upgrade", "a, b")], ), Response(status_code=404, headers=[]), # Accept Upgrade, not CONNECT InformationalResponse(status_code=101, headers=[("Upgrade", "b")]), ), ]: def setup(): p = ConnectionPair() p.send(CLIENT, req) # No switch-related state change stuff yet; the client has to # finish the request before that kicks in for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states[CLIENT] is SEND_BODY p.send(CLIENT, [Data(data=b"1"), EndOfMessage()]) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states[CLIENT] is MIGHT_SWITCH_PROTOCOL assert p.conn[SERVER].next_event() is PAUSED return p # Test deny case p = setup() p.send(SERVER, deny) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: DONE, SERVER: SEND_BODY} p.send(SERVER, EndOfMessage()) # Check that re-use is still allowed after a denial for conn in p.conns: conn.start_next_cycle() # Test accept case p = setup() p.send(SERVER, accept) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: SWITCHED_PROTOCOL, SERVER: SWITCHED_PROTOCOL} conn.receive_data(b"123") assert conn.next_event() is PAUSED conn.receive_data(b"456") assert conn.next_event() is PAUSED assert conn.trailing_data == (b"123456", False) # Pausing in might-switch, then recovery # (weird artificial case where the trailing data actually is valid # HTTP for some reason, because this makes it easier to test the state # logic) p = setup() sc = p.conn[SERVER] sc.receive_data(b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n") assert sc.next_event() is PAUSED assert sc.trailing_data == (b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n", False) sc.send(deny) assert sc.next_event() is PAUSED sc.send(EndOfMessage()) sc.start_next_cycle() assert get_all_events(sc) == [ Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[], http_version="1.0"), EndOfMessage(), ] # When we're DONE, have no trailing data, and the connection gets # closed, we report ConnectionClosed(). When we're in might-switch or # switched, we don't. p = setup() sc = p.conn[SERVER] sc.receive_data(b"") assert sc.next_event() is PAUSED assert sc.trailing_data == (b"", True) p.send(SERVER, accept) assert sc.next_event() is PAUSED p = setup() sc = p.conn[SERVER] sc.receive_data(b"") == [] assert sc.next_event() is PAUSED sc.send(deny) assert sc.next_event() == ConnectionClosed() # You can't send after switching protocols, or while waiting for a # protocol switch p = setup() with pytest.raises(LocalProtocolError): p.conn[CLIENT].send( Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "a")]) ) p = setup() p.send(SERVER, accept) with pytest.raises(LocalProtocolError): p.conn[SERVER].send(Data(data=b"123")) def test_close_simple(): # Just immediately closing a new connection without anything having # happened yet. for (who_shot_first, who_shot_second) in [(CLIENT, SERVER), (SERVER, CLIENT)]: def setup(): p = ConnectionPair() p.send(who_shot_first, ConnectionClosed()) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == { who_shot_first: CLOSED, who_shot_second: MUST_CLOSE, } return p # You can keep putting b"" into a closed connection, and you keep # getting ConnectionClosed() out: p = setup() assert p.conn[who_shot_second].next_event() == ConnectionClosed() assert p.conn[who_shot_second].next_event() == ConnectionClosed() p.conn[who_shot_second].receive_data(b"") assert p.conn[who_shot_second].next_event() == ConnectionClosed() # Second party can close... p = setup() p.send(who_shot_second, ConnectionClosed()) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.our_state is CLOSED assert conn.their_state is CLOSED # But trying to receive new data on a closed connection is a # RuntimeError (not ProtocolError, because the problem here isn't # violation of HTTP, it's violation of physics) p = setup() with pytest.raises(RuntimeError): p.conn[who_shot_second].receive_data(b"123") # And receiving new data on a MUST_CLOSE connection is a ProtocolError p = setup() p.conn[who_shot_first].receive_data(b"GET") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): p.conn[who_shot_first].next_event() def test_close_different_states(): req = [ Request(method="GET", target="/foo", headers=[("Host", "a")]), EndOfMessage(), ] resp = [Response(status_code=200, headers=[]), EndOfMessage()] # Client before request p = ConnectionPair() p.send(CLIENT, ConnectionClosed()) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: CLOSED, SERVER: MUST_CLOSE} # Client after request p = ConnectionPair() p.send(CLIENT, req) p.send(CLIENT, ConnectionClosed()) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: CLOSED, SERVER: SEND_RESPONSE} # Server after request -> not allowed p = ConnectionPair() p.send(CLIENT, req) with pytest.raises(LocalProtocolError): p.conn[SERVER].send(ConnectionClosed()) p.conn[CLIENT].receive_data(b"") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): p.conn[CLIENT].next_event() # Server after response p = ConnectionPair() p.send(CLIENT, req) p.send(SERVER, resp) p.send(SERVER, ConnectionClosed()) for conn in p.conns: assert conn.states == {CLIENT: MUST_CLOSE, SERVER: CLOSED} # Both after closing (ConnectionClosed() is idempotent) p = ConnectionPair() p.send(CLIENT, req) p.send(SERVER, resp) p.send(CLIENT, ConnectionClosed()) p.send(SERVER, ConnectionClosed()) p.send(CLIENT, ConnectionClosed()) p.send(SERVER, ConnectionClosed()) # In the middle of sending -> not allowed p = ConnectionPair() p.send( CLIENT, Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "a"), ("Content-Length", "10")] ), ) with pytest.raises(LocalProtocolError): p.conn[CLIENT].send(ConnectionClosed()) p.conn[SERVER].receive_data(b"") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): p.conn[SERVER].next_event() # Receive several requests and then client shuts down their side of the # connection; we can respond to each def test_pipelined_close(): c = Connection(SERVER) # 2 requests then a close c.receive_data( b"GET /1 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: a.com\r\nContent-Length: 5\r\n\r\n" b"12345" b"GET /2 HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: a.com\r\nContent-Length: 5\r\n\r\n" b"67890" ) c.receive_data(b"") assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request( method="GET", target="/1", headers=[("host", "a.com"), ("content-length", "5")], ), Data(data=b"12345"), EndOfMessage(), ] assert c.states[CLIENT] is DONE c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) assert c.states[SERVER] is DONE c.start_next_cycle() assert get_all_events(c) == [ Request( method="GET", target="/2", headers=[("host", "a.com"), ("content-length", "5")], ), Data(data=b"67890"), EndOfMessage(), ConnectionClosed(), ] assert c.states == {CLIENT: CLOSED, SERVER: SEND_RESPONSE} c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) c.send(EndOfMessage()) assert c.states == {CLIENT: CLOSED, SERVER: MUST_CLOSE} c.send(ConnectionClosed()) assert c.states == {CLIENT: CLOSED, SERVER: CLOSED} def test_sendfile(): class SendfilePlaceholder: def __len__(self): return 10 placeholder = SendfilePlaceholder() def setup(header, http_version): c = Connection(SERVER) receive_and_get( c, "GET / HTTP/{}\r\nHost: a\r\n\r\n".format(http_version).encode("ascii") ) headers = [] if header: headers.append(header) c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=headers)) return c, c.send_with_data_passthrough(Data(data=placeholder)) c, data = setup(("Content-Length", "10"), "1.1") assert data == [placeholder] # Raises an error if the connection object doesn't think we've sent # exactly 10 bytes c.send(EndOfMessage()) _, data = setup(("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked"), "1.1") assert placeholder in data data[data.index(placeholder)] = b"x" * 10 assert b"".join(data) == b"a\r\nxxxxxxxxxx\r\n" c, data = setup(None, "1.0") assert data == [placeholder] assert c.our_state is SEND_BODY def test_errors(): # After a receive error, you can't receive for role in [CLIENT, SERVER]: c = Connection(our_role=role) c.receive_data(b"gibberish\r\n\r\n") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() # Now any attempt to receive continues to raise assert c.their_state is ERROR assert c.our_state is not ERROR print(c._cstate.states) with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() # But we can still yell at the client for sending us gibberish if role is SERVER: assert ( c.send(Response(status_code=400, headers=[])) == b"HTTP/1.1 400 \r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n" ) # After an error sending, you can no longer send # (This is especially important for things like content-length errors, # where there's complex internal state being modified) def conn(role): c = Connection(our_role=role) if role is SERVER: # Put it into the state where it *could* send a response... receive_and_get(c, b"GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n") assert c.our_state is SEND_RESPONSE return c for role in [CLIENT, SERVER]: if role is CLIENT: # This HTTP/1.0 request won't be detected as bad until after we go # through the state machine and hit the writing code good = Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com")]) bad = Request( method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "example.com")], http_version="1.0", ) elif role is SERVER: good = Response(status_code=200, headers=[]) bad = Response(status_code=200, headers=[], http_version="1.0") # Make sure 'good' actually is good c = conn(role) c.send(good) assert c.our_state is not ERROR # Do that again, but this time sending 'bad' first c = conn(role) with pytest.raises(LocalProtocolError): c.send(bad) assert c.our_state is ERROR assert c.their_state is not ERROR # Now 'good' is not so good with pytest.raises(LocalProtocolError): c.send(good) # And check send_failed() too c = conn(role) c.send_failed() assert c.our_state is ERROR assert c.their_state is not ERROR # This is idempotent c.send_failed() assert c.our_state is ERROR assert c.their_state is not ERROR def test_idle_receive_nothing(): # At one point this incorrectly raised an error for role in [CLIENT, SERVER]: c = Connection(role) assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA def test_connection_drop(): c = Connection(SERVER) c.receive_data(b"GET /") assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA c.receive_data(b"") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() def test_408_request_timeout(): # Should be able to send this spontaneously as a server without seeing # anything from client p = ConnectionPair() p.send(SERVER, Response(status_code=408, headers=[])) # This used to raise IndexError def test_empty_request(): c = Connection(SERVER) c.receive_data(b"\r\n") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() # This used to raise IndexError def test_empty_response(): c = Connection(CLIENT) c.send(Request(method="GET", target="/", headers=[("Host", "a")])) c.receive_data(b"\r\n") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() @pytest.mark.parametrize( "data", [ b"\x00", b"\x20", b"\x16\x03\x01\x00\xa5", # Typical start of a TLS Client Hello ], ) def test_early_detection_of_invalid_request(data): c = Connection(SERVER) # Early detection should occur before even receiving a `\r\n` c.receive_data(data) with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() @pytest.mark.parametrize( "data", [ b"\x00", b"\x20", b"\x16\x03\x03\x00\x31", # Typical start of a TLS Server Hello ], ) def test_early_detection_of_invalid_response(data): c = Connection(CLIENT) # Early detection should occur before even receiving a `\r\n` c.receive_data(data) with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError): c.next_event() # This used to give different headers for HEAD and GET. # The correct way to handle HEAD is to put whatever headers we *would* have # put if it were a GET -- even though we know that for HEAD, those headers # will be ignored. def test_HEAD_framing_headers(): def setup(method, http_version): c = Connection(SERVER) c.receive_data( method + b" / HTTP/" + http_version + b"\r\n" + b"Host: example.com\r\n\r\n" ) assert type(c.next_event()) is Request assert type(c.next_event()) is EndOfMessage return c for method in [b"GET", b"HEAD"]: # No Content-Length, HTTP/1.1 peer, should use chunked c = setup(method, b"1.1") assert ( c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) == b"HTTP/1.1 200 \r\n" b"Transfer-Encoding: chunked\r\n\r\n" ) # No Content-Length, HTTP/1.0 peer, frame with connection: close c = setup(method, b"1.0") assert ( c.send(Response(status_code=200, headers=[])) == b"HTTP/1.1 200 \r\n" b"Connection: close\r\n\r\n" ) # Content-Length + Transfer-Encoding, TE wins c = setup(method, b"1.1") assert ( c.send( Response( status_code=200, headers=[ ("Content-Length", "100"), ("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked"), ], ) ) == b"HTTP/1.1 200 \r\n" b"Transfer-Encoding: chunked\r\n\r\n" ) def test_special_exceptions_for_lost_connection_in_message_body(): c = Connection(SERVER) c.receive_data( b"POST / HTTP/1.1\r\n" b"Host: example.com\r\n" b"Content-Length: 100\r\n\r\n" ) assert type(c.next_event()) is Request assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA c.receive_data(b"12345") assert c.next_event() == Data(data=b"12345") c.receive_data(b"") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError) as excinfo: c.next_event() assert "received 5 bytes" in str(excinfo.value) assert "expected 100" in str(excinfo.value) c = Connection(SERVER) c.receive_data( b"POST / HTTP/1.1\r\n" b"Host: example.com\r\n" b"Transfer-Encoding: chunked\r\n\r\n" ) assert type(c.next_event()) is Request assert c.next_event() is NEED_DATA c.receive_data(b"8\r\n012345") assert c.next_event().data == b"012345" c.receive_data(b"") with pytest.raises(RemoteProtocolError) as excinfo: c.next_event() assert "incomplete chunked read" in str(excinfo.value)