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construct/include/ircd/http.h

390 lines
11 KiB
C++

/*
* charybdis: 21st Century IRC++d
*
* Copyright (C) 2016 Charybdis Development Team
* Copyright (C) 2016 Jason Volk <jason@zemos.net>
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
* purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
* copyright notice and this permission notice is present in all copies.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
* WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
* DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,
* INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
* (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
* SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
* STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
* IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
*/
#pragma once
#define HAVE_IRCD_HTTP_H
/// HyperText TransPort: formal grammars & tools
namespace ircd::http
{
enum code :int;
struct error;
struct line;
struct query;
struct headers;
struct content;
struct request;
struct response;
string_view status(const enum code &);
enum code status(const string_view &);
}
//
// Add more as you go...
//
enum ircd::http::code
:int
{
CONTINUE = 100,
SWITCHING_PROTOCOLS = 101,
OK = 200,
CREATED = 201,
ACCEPTED = 202,
NON_AUTHORITATIVE_INFORMATION = 203,
NO_CONTENT = 204,
PARTIAL_CONTENT = 206,
MULTIPLE_CHOICES = 300,
MOVED_PERMANENTLY = 301,
FOUND = 302,
SEE_OTHER = 303,
NOT_MODIFIED = 304,
TEMPORARY_REDIRECT = 305,
PERMANENT_REDIRECT = 306,
BAD_REQUEST = 400,
UNAUTHORIZED = 401,
FORBIDDEN = 403,
NOT_FOUND = 404,
METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED = 405,
REQUEST_TIMEOUT = 408,
CONFLICT = 409,
REQUEST_URI_TOO_LONG = 414,
EXPECTATION_FAILED = 417,
IM_A_TEAPOT = 418,
UNPROCESSABLE_ENTITY = 422,
TOO_MANY_REQUESTS = 429,
REQUEST_HEADER_FIELDS_TOO_LARGE = 431,
INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR = 500,
NOT_IMPLEMENTED = 501,
SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE = 503,
HTTP_VERSION_NOT_SUPPORTED = 505,
INSUFFICIENT_STORAGE = 507,
};
/// Root exception for HTTP.
struct ircd::http::error
:ircd::error
{
enum code code;
std::string content;
error(const enum code &, std::string content = {});
};
/// Represents a single \r\n delimited line used in HTTP.
///
/// This object is just a string_view of that line. The actual data backing
/// that view is the responsibility of the user. This object is constructed
/// with an ircd::parse::capstan argument which is used by the formal grammar
/// in the constructor.
///
struct ircd::http::line
:string_view
{
struct request;
struct response;
struct header;
using string_view::string_view;
line(parse::capstan &);
};
namespace ircd::http
{
using header = line::header;
}
/// Represents a 'request line' or the first line a client sends to a server.
///
/// This is a dual-use class. For HTTP clients, one may simply connect the
/// members to the proper strings and then pass this structure to a function
/// making a client request. For HTTP servers, pass an http::line to the ctor
/// and the formal grammar will set the members appropriately. The actual data
/// behind these members is the responsibility of the user.
///
struct ircd::http::line::request
{
string_view method;
string_view path;
string_view query;
string_view fragment;
string_view version;
request(const line &);
request() = default;
};
/// Represents a 'response line' or the first line a server sends to a client.
///
/// This is a dual-use class and symmetric to the http::line::request class.
/// Servers may set the members and then use this object to respond to a client
/// while clients should provide an http::line to the constructor which will
/// fill in the members.
///
struct ircd::http::line::response
{
string_view version;
string_view status;
string_view reason;
response(const line &);
response() = default;
};
/// Represents a single key/value pair in a query string.
///
/// This is used by the ircd::http::query::string object when parsing query
/// strings.
///
struct ircd::http::query
:std::pair<string_view, string_view>
{
struct string;
bool operator<(const string_view &s) const { return iless(first, s); }
bool operator==(const string_view &s) const { return iequals(first, s); }
using std::pair<string_view, string_view>::pair;
query() = default;
};
/// Tool for parsing an HTTP query string.
///
/// Query string is read as a complete string off the tape (into request.query)
/// and not parsed further. To make queries into that string use this class to
/// view it. Once this object is constructed by viewing the whole query string,
/// the member functions invoke the formal grammar to get individual key/value
/// pairs.
///
struct ircd::http::query::string
:string_view
{
void for_each(const std::function<void (const query &)> &) const;
bool until(const std::function<bool (const query &)> &) const;
string_view at(const string_view &key) const;
string_view operator[](const string_view &key) const;
using string_view::string_view;
};
/// Represents an HTTP header key/value pair.
///
/// This is a dual-use class. Those sending headers will simply fill in the
/// components of the std::pair. Those receiving headers can pass the ctor an
/// ircd::http::line which will construct the pair using the formal grammars.
///
struct ircd::http::line::header
:std::pair<string_view, string_view>
{
bool operator<(const string_view &s) const { return iless(first, s); }
bool operator==(const string_view &s) const { return iequals(first, s); }
using std::pair<string_view, string_view>::pair;
header(const line &);
header() = default;
};
/// This device allows parsing HTTP headers directly off the wire without state
///
/// The constructor of this object contains the grammar to read HTTP headers
/// from the capstan and then proffer them one by one to the provided closure,
/// that's all it does.
///
struct ircd::http::headers
:string_view
{
using header = line::header;
using closure = std::function<void (const header &)>;
headers(parse::capstan &, const closure & = {});
};
/// Represents the content of an HTTP request after the head.
///
/// Use the request::content / response::content wrappers. They ensure the
/// proper amount of content is read and the tape is in the right position
/// for the next request with exception safety. In other words, this object
/// ensures the capstan is in the proper place for the next request no matter
/// what happens; whether an exception happened, or whether the user simply
/// didn't care to read the content. The capstan MUST advance Content-Length
/// bytes in any case.
///
struct ircd::http::content
:string_view
{
IRCD_OVERLOAD(discard)
IRCD_OVERLOAD(chunked)
content(parse::capstan &, const size_t &length, discard_t);
content(parse::capstan &, const size_t &length);
content(parse::capstan &, chunked_t);
content() = default;
};
/// HTTP request suite. Functionality to send and receive requests.
///
struct ircd::http::request
{
struct head;
struct content;
using proffer = std::function<void (const head &)>;
using header = line::header;
// send
request(stream_buffer &,
const string_view &host,
const string_view &method = "GET",
const string_view &path = "/",
const string_view &query = {},
const size_t &content_length = 0,
const string_view &content_type = {},
const vector_view<const header> & = {},
const bool &termination = true);
// recv
request(parse::capstan &,
content *const &,
const proffer & = nullptr,
const headers::closure & = {});
};
/// Represents an HTTP request head. This is only for receiving requests.
///
struct ircd::http::request::head
:line::request
{
string_view host;
string_view expect;
string_view te;
string_view authorization;
string_view connection;
size_t content_length {0};
string_view headers;
head(parse::capstan &pc, const headers::closure &c = {});
};
/// Represents an HTTP request content. This is only for receiving content.
///
struct ircd::http::request::content
:http::content
{
content(parse::capstan &pc, const head &h, discard_t)
:http::content{pc, h.content_length, discard}
{}
content(parse::capstan &pc, const head &h)
:http::content{pc, h.content_length}
{}
};
/// HTTP response suite. Functionality to send and receive responses.
///
struct ircd::http::response
{
struct head;
struct content;
struct chunked;
using write_closure = std::function<void (const ilist<const_buffer> &)>;
using proffer = std::function<void (const head &)>;
using header = line::header;
// send
response(stream_buffer &,
const code & = code::OK,
const size_t &content_length = 0,
const string_view &content_type = {},
const string_view &cache_control = {},
const vector_view<const header> & = {},
const bool &termination = true);
// recv
response(parse::capstan &,
content *const &,
const proffer & = nullptr,
const headers::closure & = {});
response() = default;
};
struct ircd::http::response::chunked
:response
{
struct chunk;
write_closure closure;
chunked(const code &,
const write_closure &,
const vector_view<const header> &headers);
chunked(const chunked &) = delete;
~chunked() noexcept;
};
struct ircd::http::response::chunked::chunk
{
chunk(chunked &, const const_buffer &);
};
/// Represents an HTTP response head. This is for receiving responses only.
///
struct ircd::http::response::head
:line::response
{
size_t content_length {0};
string_view transfer_encoding;
string_view headers;
head(parse::capstan &pc, const headers::closure &c = {});
};
/// Represents an HTTP response content. This is for receiving only.
///
struct ircd::http::response::content
:http::content
{
content(parse::capstan &pc, const head &h, discard_t)
:http::content{pc, h.content_length, discard}
{}
content(parse::capstan &pc, const head &h, chunked_t)
:http::content{pc, chunked}
{}
content(parse::capstan &pc, const head &h)
:http::content{pc, h.content_length}
{}
content() = default;
};