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Diffstat (limited to 'src/net/http/httputil/dump.go')
-rw-r--r--src/net/http/httputil/dump.go284
1 files changed, 284 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/net/http/httputil/dump.go b/src/net/http/httputil/dump.go
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..ac8f103f9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/src/net/http/httputil/dump.go
@@ -0,0 +1,284 @@
+// 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.
+
+package httputil
+
+import (
+ "bufio"
+ "bytes"
+ "errors"
+ "fmt"
+ "io"
+ "io/ioutil"
+ "net"
+ "net/http"
+ "net/url"
+ "strings"
+ "time"
+)
+
+// One of the copies, say from b to r2, could be avoided by using a more
+// elaborate trick where the other copy is made during Request/Response.Write.
+// This would complicate things too much, given that these functions are for
+// debugging only.
+func drainBody(b io.ReadCloser) (r1, r2 io.ReadCloser, err error) {
+ var buf bytes.Buffer
+ if _, err = buf.ReadFrom(b); err != nil {
+ return nil, nil, err
+ }
+ if err = b.Close(); err != nil {
+ return nil, nil, err
+ }
+ return ioutil.NopCloser(&buf), ioutil.NopCloser(bytes.NewReader(buf.Bytes())), nil
+}
+
+// dumpConn is a net.Conn which writes to Writer and reads from Reader
+type dumpConn struct {
+ io.Writer
+ io.Reader
+}
+
+func (c *dumpConn) Close() error { return nil }
+func (c *dumpConn) LocalAddr() net.Addr { return nil }
+func (c *dumpConn) RemoteAddr() net.Addr { return nil }
+func (c *dumpConn) SetDeadline(t time.Time) error { return nil }
+func (c *dumpConn) SetReadDeadline(t time.Time) error { return nil }
+func (c *dumpConn) SetWriteDeadline(t time.Time) error { return nil }
+
+type neverEnding byte
+
+func (b neverEnding) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
+ for i := range p {
+ p[i] = byte(b)
+ }
+ return len(p), nil
+}
+
+// DumpRequestOut is like DumpRequest but includes
+// headers that the standard http.Transport adds,
+// such as User-Agent.
+func DumpRequestOut(req *http.Request, body bool) ([]byte, error) {
+ save := req.Body
+ dummyBody := false
+ if !body || req.Body == nil {
+ req.Body = nil
+ if req.ContentLength != 0 {
+ req.Body = ioutil.NopCloser(io.LimitReader(neverEnding('x'), req.ContentLength))
+ dummyBody = true
+ }
+ } else {
+ var err error
+ save, req.Body, err = drainBody(req.Body)
+ if err != nil {
+ return nil, err
+ }
+ }
+
+ // Since we're using the actual Transport code to write the request,
+ // switch to http so the Transport doesn't try to do an SSL
+ // negotiation with our dumpConn and its bytes.Buffer & pipe.
+ // The wire format for https and http are the same, anyway.
+ reqSend := req
+ if req.URL.Scheme == "https" {
+ reqSend = new(http.Request)
+ *reqSend = *req
+ reqSend.URL = new(url.URL)
+ *reqSend.URL = *req.URL
+ reqSend.URL.Scheme = "http"
+ }
+
+ // Use the actual Transport code to record what we would send
+ // on the wire, but not using TCP. Use a Transport with a
+ // custom dialer that returns a fake net.Conn that waits
+ // for the full input (and recording it), and then responds
+ // with a dummy response.
+ var buf bytes.Buffer // records the output
+ pr, pw := io.Pipe()
+ defer pr.Close()
+ defer pw.Close()
+ dr := &delegateReader{c: make(chan io.Reader)}
+ // Wait for the request before replying with a dummy response:
+ go func() {
+ req, err := http.ReadRequest(bufio.NewReader(pr))
+ if err == nil {
+ // Ensure all the body is read; otherwise
+ // we'll get a partial dump.
+ io.Copy(ioutil.Discard, req.Body)
+ req.Body.Close()
+ }
+ dr.c <- strings.NewReader("HTTP/1.1 204 No Content\r\n\r\n")
+ }()
+
+ t := &http.Transport{
+ DisableKeepAlives: true,
+ Dial: func(net, addr string) (net.Conn, error) {
+ return &dumpConn{io.MultiWriter(&buf, pw), dr}, nil
+ },
+ }
+
+ _, err := t.RoundTrip(reqSend)
+
+ req.Body = save
+ if err != nil {
+ return nil, err
+ }
+ dump := buf.Bytes()
+
+ // If we used a dummy body above, remove it now.
+ // TODO: if the req.ContentLength is large, we allocate memory
+ // unnecessarily just to slice it off here. But this is just
+ // a debug function, so this is acceptable for now. We could
+ // discard the body earlier if this matters.
+ if dummyBody {
+ if i := bytes.Index(dump, []byte("\r\n\r\n")); i >= 0 {
+ dump = dump[:i+4]
+ }
+ }
+ return dump, nil
+}
+
+// delegateReader is a reader that delegates to another reader,
+// once it arrives on a channel.
+type delegateReader struct {
+ c chan io.Reader
+ r io.Reader // nil until received from c
+}
+
+func (r *delegateReader) Read(p []byte) (int, error) {
+ if r.r == nil {
+ r.r = <-r.c
+ }
+ return r.r.Read(p)
+}
+
+// Return value if nonempty, def otherwise.
+func valueOrDefault(value, def string) string {
+ if value != "" {
+ return value
+ }
+ return def
+}
+
+var reqWriteExcludeHeaderDump = map[string]bool{
+ "Host": true, // not in Header map anyway
+ "Content-Length": true,
+ "Transfer-Encoding": true,
+ "Trailer": true,
+}
+
+// dumpAsReceived writes req to w in the form as it was received, or
+// at least as accurately as possible from the information retained in
+// the request.
+func dumpAsReceived(req *http.Request, w io.Writer) error {
+ return nil
+}
+
+// DumpRequest returns the as-received wire representation of req,
+// optionally including the request body, for debugging.
+// DumpRequest is semantically a no-op, but in order to
+// dump the body, it reads the body data into memory and
+// changes req.Body to refer to the in-memory copy.
+// The documentation for http.Request.Write details which fields
+// of req are used.
+func DumpRequest(req *http.Request, body bool) (dump []byte, err error) {
+ save := req.Body
+ if !body || req.Body == nil {
+ req.Body = nil
+ } else {
+ save, req.Body, err = drainBody(req.Body)
+ if err != nil {
+ return
+ }
+ }
+
+ var b bytes.Buffer
+
+ fmt.Fprintf(&b, "%s %s HTTP/%d.%d\r\n", valueOrDefault(req.Method, "GET"),
+ req.URL.RequestURI(), req.ProtoMajor, req.ProtoMinor)
+
+ host := req.Host
+ if host == "" && req.URL != nil {
+ host = req.URL.Host
+ }
+ if host != "" {
+ fmt.Fprintf(&b, "Host: %s\r\n", host)
+ }
+
+ chunked := len(req.TransferEncoding) > 0 && req.TransferEncoding[0] == "chunked"
+ if len(req.TransferEncoding) > 0 {
+ fmt.Fprintf(&b, "Transfer-Encoding: %s\r\n", strings.Join(req.TransferEncoding, ","))
+ }
+ if req.Close {
+ fmt.Fprintf(&b, "Connection: close\r\n")
+ }
+
+ err = req.Header.WriteSubset(&b, reqWriteExcludeHeaderDump)
+ if err != nil {
+ return
+ }
+
+ io.WriteString(&b, "\r\n")
+
+ if req.Body != nil {
+ var dest io.Writer = &b
+ if chunked {
+ dest = NewChunkedWriter(dest)
+ }
+ _, err = io.Copy(dest, req.Body)
+ if chunked {
+ dest.(io.Closer).Close()
+ io.WriteString(&b, "\r\n")
+ }
+ }
+
+ req.Body = save
+ if err != nil {
+ return
+ }
+ dump = b.Bytes()
+ return
+}
+
+// errNoBody is a sentinel error value used by failureToReadBody so we can detect
+// that the lack of body was intentional.
+var errNoBody = errors.New("sentinel error value")
+
+// failureToReadBody is a io.ReadCloser that just returns errNoBody on
+// Read. It's swapped in when we don't actually want to consume the
+// body, but need a non-nil one, and want to distinguish the error
+// from reading the dummy body.
+type failureToReadBody struct{}
+
+func (failureToReadBody) Read([]byte) (int, error) { return 0, errNoBody }
+func (failureToReadBody) Close() error { return nil }
+
+var emptyBody = ioutil.NopCloser(strings.NewReader(""))
+
+// DumpResponse is like DumpRequest but dumps a response.
+func DumpResponse(resp *http.Response, body bool) (dump []byte, err error) {
+ var b bytes.Buffer
+ save := resp.Body
+ savecl := resp.ContentLength
+
+ if !body {
+ resp.Body = failureToReadBody{}
+ } else if resp.Body == nil {
+ resp.Body = emptyBody
+ } else {
+ save, resp.Body, err = drainBody(resp.Body)
+ if err != nil {
+ return
+ }
+ }
+ err = resp.Write(&b)
+ if err == errNoBody {
+ err = nil
+ }
+ resp.Body = save
+ resp.ContentLength = savecl
+ if err != nil {
+ return nil, err
+ }
+ return b.Bytes(), nil
+}