ansible/lib/ansible/module_utils/urls.py

1120 lines
44 KiB
Python

# This code is part of Ansible, but is an independent component.
# This particular file snippet, and this file snippet only, is BSD licensed.
# Modules you write using this snippet, which is embedded dynamically by Ansible
# still belong to the author of the module, and may assign their own license
# to the complete work.
#
# Copyright (c), Michael DeHaan <michael.dehaan@gmail.com>, 2012-2013
# Copyright (c), Toshio Kuratomi <tkuratomi@ansible.com>, 2015
#
# Simplified BSD License (see licenses/simplified_bsd.txt or https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause)
#
# The match_hostname function and supporting code is under the terms and
# conditions of the Python Software Foundation License. They were taken from
# the Python3 standard library and adapted for use in Python2. See comments in the
# source for which code precisely is under this License.
#
# PSF License (see licenses/PSF-license.txt or https://opensource.org/licenses/Python-2.0)
'''
The **urls** utils module offers a replacement for the urllib2 python library.
urllib2 is the python stdlib way to retrieve files from the Internet but it
lacks some security features (around verifying SSL certificates) that users
should care about in most situations. Using the functions in this module corrects
deficiencies in the urllib2 module wherever possible.
There are also third-party libraries (for instance, requests) which can be used
to replace urllib2 with a more secure library. However, all third party libraries
require that the library be installed on the managed machine. That is an extra step
for users making use of a module. If possible, avoid third party libraries by using
this code instead.
'''
import base64
import netrc
import os
import platform
import re
import socket
import sys
import tempfile
import traceback
try:
import httplib
except ImportError:
# Python 3
import http.client as httplib
import ansible.module_utils.six.moves.http_cookiejar as cookiejar
import ansible.module_utils.six.moves.urllib.request as urllib_request
import ansible.module_utils.six.moves.urllib.error as urllib_error
from ansible.module_utils.six import PY3
from ansible.module_utils.basic import get_distribution
from ansible.module_utils._text import to_bytes, to_native, to_text
try:
# python3
import urllib.request as urllib_request
from urllib.request import AbstractHTTPHandler
except ImportError:
# python2
import urllib2 as urllib_request
from urllib2 import AbstractHTTPHandler
urllib_request.HTTPRedirectHandler.http_error_308 = urllib_request.HTTPRedirectHandler.http_error_307
try:
from ansible.module_utils.six.moves.urllib.parse import urlparse, urlunparse
HAS_URLPARSE = True
except:
HAS_URLPARSE = False
try:
import ssl
HAS_SSL = True
except:
HAS_SSL = False
try:
# SNI Handling needs python2.7.9's SSLContext
from ssl import create_default_context, SSLContext
HAS_SSLCONTEXT = True
except ImportError:
HAS_SSLCONTEXT = False
# SNI Handling for python < 2.7.9 with urllib3 support
try:
# urllib3>=1.15
HAS_URLLIB3_SSL_WRAP_SOCKET = False
try:
from urllib3.contrib.pyopenssl import PyOpenSSLContext
except ImportError:
from requests.packages.urllib3.contrib.pyopenssl import PyOpenSSLContext
HAS_URLLIB3_PYOPENSSLCONTEXT = True
except ImportError:
# urllib3<1.15,>=1.6
HAS_URLLIB3_PYOPENSSLCONTEXT = False
try:
try:
from urllib3.contrib.pyopenssl import ssl_wrap_socket
except ImportError:
from requests.packages.urllib3.contrib.pyopenssl import ssl_wrap_socket
HAS_URLLIB3_SSL_WRAP_SOCKET = True
except ImportError:
pass
# Select a protocol that includes all secure tls protocols
# Exclude insecure ssl protocols if possible
if HAS_SSL:
# If we can't find extra tls methods, ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1 is sufficient
PROTOCOL = ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1
if not HAS_SSLCONTEXT and HAS_SSL:
try:
import ctypes
import ctypes.util
except ImportError:
# python 2.4 (likely rhel5 which doesn't have tls1.1 support in its openssl)
pass
else:
libssl_name = ctypes.util.find_library('ssl')
libssl = ctypes.CDLL(libssl_name)
for method in ('TLSv1_1_method', 'TLSv1_2_method'):
try:
libssl[method]
# Found something - we'll let openssl autonegotiate and hope
# the server has disabled sslv2 and 3. best we can do.
PROTOCOL = ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23
break
except AttributeError:
pass
del libssl
LOADED_VERIFY_LOCATIONS = set()
HAS_MATCH_HOSTNAME = True
try:
from ssl import match_hostname, CertificateError
except ImportError:
try:
from backports.ssl_match_hostname import match_hostname, CertificateError
except ImportError:
HAS_MATCH_HOSTNAME = False
if not HAS_MATCH_HOSTNAME:
# The following block of code is under the terms and conditions of the
# Python Software Foundation License
"""The match_hostname() function from Python 3.4, essential when using SSL."""
class CertificateError(ValueError):
pass
def _dnsname_match(dn, hostname, max_wildcards=1):
"""Matching according to RFC 6125, section 6.4.3
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6125#section-6.4.3
"""
pats = []
if not dn:
return False
# Ported from python3-syntax:
# leftmost, *remainder = dn.split(r'.')
parts = dn.split(r'.')
leftmost = parts[0]
remainder = parts[1:]
wildcards = leftmost.count('*')
if wildcards > max_wildcards:
# Issue #17980: avoid denials of service by refusing more
# than one wildcard per fragment. A survey of established
# policy among SSL implementations showed it to be a
# reasonable choice.
raise CertificateError(
"too many wildcards in certificate DNS name: " + repr(dn))
# speed up common case w/o wildcards
if not wildcards:
return dn.lower() == hostname.lower()
# RFC 6125, section 6.4.3, subitem 1.
# The client SHOULD NOT attempt to match a presented identifier in which
# the wildcard character comprises a label other than the left-most label.
if leftmost == '*':
# When '*' is a fragment by itself, it matches a non-empty dotless
# fragment.
pats.append('[^.]+')
elif leftmost.startswith('xn--') or hostname.startswith('xn--'):
# RFC 6125, section 6.4.3, subitem 3.
# The client SHOULD NOT attempt to match a presented identifier
# where the wildcard character is embedded within an A-label or
# U-label of an internationalized domain name.
pats.append(re.escape(leftmost))
else:
# Otherwise, '*' matches any dotless string, e.g. www*
pats.append(re.escape(leftmost).replace(r'\*', '[^.]*'))
# add the remaining fragments, ignore any wildcards
for frag in remainder:
pats.append(re.escape(frag))
pat = re.compile(r'\A' + r'\.'.join(pats) + r'\Z', re.IGNORECASE)
return pat.match(hostname)
def match_hostname(cert, hostname):
"""Verify that *cert* (in decoded format as returned by
SSLSocket.getpeercert()) matches the *hostname*. RFC 2818 and RFC 6125
rules are followed, but IP addresses are not accepted for *hostname*.
CertificateError is raised on failure. On success, the function
returns nothing.
"""
if not cert:
raise ValueError("empty or no certificate")
dnsnames = []
san = cert.get('subjectAltName', ())
for key, value in san:
if key == 'DNS':
if _dnsname_match(value, hostname):
return
dnsnames.append(value)
if not dnsnames:
# The subject is only checked when there is no dNSName entry
# in subjectAltName
for sub in cert.get('subject', ()):
for key, value in sub:
# XXX according to RFC 2818, the most specific Common Name
# must be used.
if key == 'commonName':
if _dnsname_match(value, hostname):
return
dnsnames.append(value)
if len(dnsnames) > 1:
raise CertificateError("hostname %r " "doesn't match either of %s" % (hostname, ', '.join(map(repr, dnsnames))))
elif len(dnsnames) == 1:
raise CertificateError("hostname %r doesn't match %r" % (hostname, dnsnames[0]))
else:
raise CertificateError("no appropriate commonName or subjectAltName fields were found")
# End of Python Software Foundation Licensed code
HAS_MATCH_HOSTNAME = True
# This is a dummy cacert provided for Mac OS since you need at least 1
# ca cert, regardless of validity, for Python on Mac OS to use the
# keychain functionality in OpenSSL for validating SSL certificates.
# See: http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/CACertificates#Mac_OS_X_10.6_and_higher
b_DUMMY_CA_CERT = b"""-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----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-----END CERTIFICATE-----
"""
#
# Exceptions
#
class ConnectionError(Exception):
"""Failed to connect to the server"""
pass
class ProxyError(ConnectionError):
"""Failure to connect because of a proxy"""
pass
class SSLValidationError(ConnectionError):
"""Failure to connect due to SSL validation failing"""
pass
class NoSSLError(SSLValidationError):
"""Needed to connect to an HTTPS url but no ssl library available to verify the certificate"""
pass
# Some environments (Google Compute Engine's CoreOS deploys) do not compile
# against openssl and thus do not have any HTTPS support.
CustomHTTPSConnection = CustomHTTPSHandler = None
if hasattr(httplib, 'HTTPSConnection') and hasattr(urllib_request, 'HTTPSHandler'):
class CustomHTTPSConnection(httplib.HTTPSConnection):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
httplib.HTTPSConnection.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
self.context = None
if HAS_SSLCONTEXT:
self.context = create_default_context()
elif HAS_URLLIB3_PYOPENSSLCONTEXT:
self.context = PyOpenSSLContext(PROTOCOL)
if self.context and self.cert_file:
self.context.load_cert_chain(self.cert_file, self.key_file)
def connect(self):
"Connect to a host on a given (SSL) port."
if hasattr(self, 'source_address'):
sock = socket.create_connection((self.host, self.port), self.timeout, self.source_address)
else:
sock = socket.create_connection((self.host, self.port), self.timeout)
server_hostname = self.host
# Note: self._tunnel_host is not available on py < 2.6 but this code
# isn't used on py < 2.6 (lack of create_connection)
if self._tunnel_host:
self.sock = sock
self._tunnel()
server_hostname = self._tunnel_host
if HAS_SSLCONTEXT or HAS_URLLIB3_PYOPENSSLCONTEXT:
self.sock = self.context.wrap_socket(sock, server_hostname=server_hostname)
elif HAS_URLLIB3_SSL_WRAP_SOCKET:
self.sock = ssl_wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=self.key_file, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_NONE, certfile=self.cert_file, ssl_version=PROTOCOL,
server_hostname=server_hostname)
else:
self.sock = ssl.wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=self.key_file, certfile=self.cert_file, ssl_version=PROTOCOL)
class CustomHTTPSHandler(urllib_request.HTTPSHandler):
def https_open(self, req):
return self.do_open(CustomHTTPSConnection, req)
https_request = AbstractHTTPHandler.do_request_
class HTTPSClientAuthHandler(urllib_request.HTTPSHandler):
'''Handles client authentication via cert/key
This is a fairly lightweight extension on HTTPSHandler, and can be used
in place of HTTPSHandler
'''
def __init__(self, client_cert=None, client_key=None, **kwargs):
urllib_request.HTTPSHandler.__init__(self, **kwargs)
self.client_cert = client_cert
self.client_key = client_key
def https_open(self, req):
return self.do_open(self._build_https_connection, req)
def _build_https_connection(self, host, **kwargs):
kwargs.update({
'cert_file': self.client_cert,
'key_file': self.client_key,
})
try:
kwargs['context'] = self._context
except AttributeError:
pass
return httplib.HTTPSConnection(host, **kwargs)
class ParseResultDottedDict(dict):
'''
A dict that acts similarly to the ParseResult named tuple from urllib
'''
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(ParseResultDottedDict, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.__dict__ = self
def as_list(self):
'''
Generate a list from this dict, that looks like the ParseResult named tuple
'''
return [self.get(k, None) for k in ('scheme', 'netloc', 'path', 'params', 'query', 'fragment')]
def generic_urlparse(parts):
'''
Returns a dictionary of url parts as parsed by urlparse,
but accounts for the fact that older versions of that
library do not support named attributes (ie. .netloc)
'''
generic_parts = ParseResultDottedDict()
if hasattr(parts, 'netloc'):
# urlparse is newer, just read the fields straight
# from the parts object
generic_parts['scheme'] = parts.scheme
generic_parts['netloc'] = parts.netloc
generic_parts['path'] = parts.path
generic_parts['params'] = parts.params
generic_parts['query'] = parts.query
generic_parts['fragment'] = parts.fragment
generic_parts['username'] = parts.username
generic_parts['password'] = parts.password
generic_parts['hostname'] = parts.hostname
generic_parts['port'] = parts.port
else:
# we have to use indexes, and then parse out
# the other parts not supported by indexing
generic_parts['scheme'] = parts[0]
generic_parts['netloc'] = parts[1]
generic_parts['path'] = parts[2]
generic_parts['params'] = parts[3]
generic_parts['query'] = parts[4]
generic_parts['fragment'] = parts[5]
# get the username, password, etc.
try:
netloc_re = re.compile(r'^((?:\w)+(?::(?:\w)+)?@)?([A-Za-z0-9.-]+)(:\d+)?$')
match = netloc_re.match(parts[1])
auth = match.group(1)
hostname = match.group(2)
port = match.group(3)
if port:
# the capture group for the port will include the ':',
# so remove it and convert the port to an integer
port = int(port[1:])
if auth:
# the capture group above includes the @, so remove it
# and then split it up based on the first ':' found
auth = auth[:-1]
username, password = auth.split(':', 1)
else:
username = password = None
generic_parts['username'] = username
generic_parts['password'] = password
generic_parts['hostname'] = hostname
generic_parts['port'] = port
except:
generic_parts['username'] = None
generic_parts['password'] = None
generic_parts['hostname'] = parts[1]
generic_parts['port'] = None
return generic_parts
class RequestWithMethod(urllib_request.Request):
'''
Workaround for using DELETE/PUT/etc with urllib2
Originally contained in library/net_infrastructure/dnsmadeeasy
'''
def __init__(self, url, method, data=None, headers=None, origin_req_host=None, unverifiable=True):
if headers is None:
headers = {}
self._method = method.upper()
urllib_request.Request.__init__(self, url, data, headers, origin_req_host, unverifiable)
def get_method(self):
if self._method:
return self._method
else:
return urllib_request.Request.get_method(self)
def RedirectHandlerFactory(follow_redirects=None, validate_certs=True):
"""This is a class factory that closes over the value of
``follow_redirects`` so that the RedirectHandler class has access to
that value without having to use globals, and potentially cause problems
where ``open_url`` or ``fetch_url`` are used multiple times in a module.
"""
class RedirectHandler(urllib_request.HTTPRedirectHandler):
"""This is an implementation of a RedirectHandler to match the
functionality provided by httplib2. It will utilize the value of
``follow_redirects`` that is passed into ``RedirectHandlerFactory``
to determine how redirects should be handled in urllib2.
"""
def redirect_request(self, req, fp, code, msg, hdrs, newurl):
handler = maybe_add_ssl_handler(newurl, validate_certs)
if handler:
urllib_request._opener.add_handler(handler)
# Preserve urllib2 compatibility
if follow_redirects == 'urllib2':
return urllib_request.HTTPRedirectHandler.redirect_request(self, req, fp, code, msg, hdrs, newurl)
# Handle disabled redirects
elif follow_redirects in ['no', 'none', False]:
raise urllib_error.HTTPError(newurl, code, msg, hdrs, fp)
method = req.get_method()
# Handle non-redirect HTTP status or invalid follow_redirects
if follow_redirects in ['all', 'yes', True]:
if code < 300 or code >= 400:
raise urllib_error.HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code, msg, hdrs, fp)
elif follow_redirects == 'safe':
if code < 300 or code >= 400 or method not in ('GET', 'HEAD'):
raise urllib_error.HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code, msg, hdrs, fp)
else:
raise urllib_error.HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code, msg, hdrs, fp)
try:
# Python 2-3.3
data = req.get_data()
origin_req_host = req.get_origin_req_host()
except AttributeError:
# Python 3.4+
data = req.data
origin_req_host = req.origin_req_host
# Be conciliant with URIs containing a space
newurl = newurl.replace(' ', '%20')
# Suport redirect with payload and original headers
if code in (307, 308):
# Preserve payload and headers
headers = req.headers
else:
# Do not preserve payload and filter headers
data = None
headers = dict((k, v) for k, v in req.headers.items()
if k.lower() not in ("content-length", "content-type", "transfer-encoding"))
# http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-6.4.4
if code == 303 and method != 'HEAD':
method = 'GET'
# Do what the browsers do, despite standards...
# First, turn 302s into GETs.
if code == 302 and method != 'HEAD':
method = 'GET'
# Second, if a POST is responded to with a 301, turn it into a GET.
if code == 301 and method == 'POST':
method = 'GET'
return RequestWithMethod(newurl,
method=method,
headers=headers,
data=data,
origin_req_host=origin_req_host,
unverifiable=True,
)
return RedirectHandler
def build_ssl_validation_error(hostname, port, paths, exc=None):
'''Inteligently build out the SSLValidationError based on what support
you have installed
'''
msg = [
('Failed to validate the SSL certificate for %s:%s.'
' Make sure your managed systems have a valid CA'
' certificate installed.')
]
if not HAS_SSLCONTEXT:
msg.append('If the website serving the url uses SNI you need'
' python >= 2.7.9 on your managed machine')
msg.append(' (the python executable used (%s) is version: %s)' %
(sys.executable, ''.join(sys.version.splitlines())))
if not HAS_URLLIB3_PYOPENSSLCONTEXT or not HAS_URLLIB3_SSL_WRAP_SOCKET:
msg.append('or you can install the `urllib3`, `pyOpenSSL`,'
' `ndg-httpsclient`, and `pyasn1` python modules')
msg.append('to perform SNI verification in python >= 2.6.')
msg.append('You can use validate_certs=False if you do'
' not need to confirm the servers identity but this is'
' unsafe and not recommended.'
' Paths checked for this platform: %s.')
if exc:
msg.append('The exception msg was: %s.' % to_native(exc))
raise SSLValidationError(' '.join(msg) % (hostname, port, ", ".join(paths)))
class SSLValidationHandler(urllib_request.BaseHandler):
'''
A custom handler class for SSL validation.
Based on:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1087227/validate-ssl-certificates-with-python
http://techknack.net/python-urllib2-handlers/
'''
CONNECT_COMMAND = "CONNECT %s:%s HTTP/1.0\r\nConnection: close\r\n"
def __init__(self, hostname, port):
self.hostname = hostname
self.port = port
def get_ca_certs(self):
# tries to find a valid CA cert in one of the
# standard locations for the current distribution
ca_certs = []
paths_checked = []
system = to_text(platform.system(), errors='surrogate_or_strict')
# build a list of paths to check for .crt/.pem files
# based on the platform type
paths_checked.append('/etc/ssl/certs')
if system == u'Linux':
paths_checked.append('/etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/pem')
paths_checked.append('/etc/pki/tls/certs')
paths_checked.append('/usr/share/ca-certificates/cacert.org')
elif system == u'FreeBSD':
paths_checked.append('/usr/local/share/certs')
elif system == u'OpenBSD':
paths_checked.append('/etc/ssl')
elif system == u'NetBSD':
ca_certs.append('/etc/openssl/certs')
elif system == u'SunOS':
paths_checked.append('/opt/local/etc/openssl/certs')
# fall back to a user-deployed cert in a standard
# location if the OS platform one is not available
paths_checked.append('/etc/ansible')
tmp_fd, tmp_path = tempfile.mkstemp()
to_add_fd, to_add_path = tempfile.mkstemp()
to_add = False
# Write the dummy ca cert if we are running on Mac OS X
if system == u'Darwin':
os.write(tmp_fd, b_DUMMY_CA_CERT)
# Default Homebrew path for OpenSSL certs
paths_checked.append('/usr/local/etc/openssl')
# for all of the paths, find any .crt or .pem files
# and compile them into single temp file for use
# in the ssl check to speed up the test
for path in paths_checked:
if os.path.exists(path) and os.path.isdir(path):
dir_contents = os.listdir(path)
for f in dir_contents:
full_path = os.path.join(path, f)
if os.path.isfile(full_path) and os.path.splitext(f)[1] in ('.crt', '.pem'):
try:
cert_file = open(full_path, 'rb')
cert = cert_file.read()
cert_file.close()
os.write(tmp_fd, cert)
os.write(tmp_fd, b'\n')
if full_path not in LOADED_VERIFY_LOCATIONS:
to_add = True
os.write(to_add_fd, cert)
os.write(to_add_fd, b'\n')
LOADED_VERIFY_LOCATIONS.add(full_path)
except (OSError, IOError):
pass
if not to_add:
try:
os.remove(to_add_path)
except OSError:
pass
to_add_path = None
return (tmp_path, to_add_path, paths_checked)
def validate_proxy_response(self, response, valid_codes=None):
'''
make sure we get back a valid code from the proxy
'''
valid_codes = [200] if valid_codes is None else valid_codes
try:
(http_version, resp_code, msg) = re.match(br'(HTTP/\d\.\d) (\d\d\d) (.*)', response).groups()
if int(resp_code) not in valid_codes:
raise Exception
except:
raise ProxyError('Connection to proxy failed')
def detect_no_proxy(self, url):
'''
Detect if the 'no_proxy' environment variable is set and honor those locations.
'''
env_no_proxy = os.environ.get('no_proxy')
if env_no_proxy:
env_no_proxy = env_no_proxy.split(',')
netloc = urlparse(url).netloc
for host in env_no_proxy:
if netloc.endswith(host) or netloc.split(':')[0].endswith(host):
# Our requested URL matches something in no_proxy, so don't
# use the proxy for this
return False
return True
def _make_context(self, to_add_ca_cert_path):
if HAS_SSLCONTEXT:
context = create_default_context()
elif HAS_URLLIB3_PYOPENSSLCONTEXT:
context = PyOpenSSLContext(PROTOCOL)
else:
raise NotImplementedError('Host libraries are too old to support creating an sslcontext')
if to_add_ca_cert_path:
context.load_verify_locations(to_add_ca_cert_path)
return context
def http_request(self, req):
tmp_ca_cert_path, to_add_ca_cert_path, paths_checked = self.get_ca_certs()
https_proxy = os.environ.get('https_proxy')
context = None
try:
context = self._make_context(to_add_ca_cert_path)
except Exception:
# We'll make do with no context below
pass
# Detect if 'no_proxy' environment variable is set and if our URL is included
use_proxy = self.detect_no_proxy(req.get_full_url())
if not use_proxy:
# ignore proxy settings for this host request
if tmp_ca_cert_path:
try:
os.remove(tmp_ca_cert_path)
except OSError:
pass
if to_add_ca_cert_path:
try:
os.remove(to_add_ca_cert_path)
except OSError:
pass
return req
try:
if https_proxy:
proxy_parts = generic_urlparse(urlparse(https_proxy))
port = proxy_parts.get('port') or 443
s = socket.create_connection((proxy_parts.get('hostname'), port))
if proxy_parts.get('scheme') == 'http':
s.sendall(to_bytes(self.CONNECT_COMMAND % (self.hostname, self.port), errors='surrogate_or_strict'))
if proxy_parts.get('username'):
credentials = "%s:%s" % (proxy_parts.get('username', ''), proxy_parts.get('password', ''))
s.sendall(b'Proxy-Authorization: Basic %s\r\n' % base64.b64encode(to_bytes(credentials, errors='surrogate_or_strict')).strip())
s.sendall(b'\r\n')
connect_result = b""
while connect_result.find(b"\r\n\r\n") <= 0:
connect_result += s.recv(4096)
# 128 kilobytes of headers should be enough for everyone.
if len(connect_result) > 131072:
raise ProxyError('Proxy sent too verbose headers. Only 128KiB allowed.')
self.validate_proxy_response(connect_result)
if context:
ssl_s = context.wrap_socket(s, server_hostname=self.hostname)
elif HAS_URLLIB3_SSL_WRAP_SOCKET:
ssl_s = ssl_wrap_socket(s, ca_certs=tmp_ca_cert_path, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ssl_version=PROTOCOL, server_hostname=self.hostname)
else:
ssl_s = ssl.wrap_socket(s, ca_certs=tmp_ca_cert_path, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ssl_version=PROTOCOL)
match_hostname(ssl_s.getpeercert(), self.hostname)
else:
raise ProxyError('Unsupported proxy scheme: %s. Currently ansible only supports HTTP proxies.' % proxy_parts.get('scheme'))
else:
s = socket.create_connection((self.hostname, self.port))
if context:
ssl_s = context.wrap_socket(s, server_hostname=self.hostname)
elif HAS_URLLIB3_SSL_WRAP_SOCKET:
ssl_s = ssl_wrap_socket(s, ca_certs=tmp_ca_cert_path, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ssl_version=PROTOCOL, server_hostname=self.hostname)
else:
ssl_s = ssl.wrap_socket(s, ca_certs=tmp_ca_cert_path, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ssl_version=PROTOCOL)
match_hostname(ssl_s.getpeercert(), self.hostname)
# close the ssl connection
# ssl_s.unwrap()
s.close()
except (ssl.SSLError, CertificateError) as e:
build_ssl_validation_error(self.hostname, self.port, paths_checked, e)
except socket.error as e:
raise ConnectionError('Failed to connect to %s at port %s: %s' % (self.hostname, self.port, to_native(e)))
try:
# cleanup the temp file created, don't worry
# if it fails for some reason
os.remove(tmp_ca_cert_path)
except:
pass
try:
# cleanup the temp file created, don't worry
# if it fails for some reason
if to_add_ca_cert_path:
os.remove(to_add_ca_cert_path)
except:
pass
return req
https_request = http_request
def maybe_add_ssl_handler(url, validate_certs):
parsed = generic_urlparse(urlparse(url))
if parsed.scheme == 'https' and validate_certs:
if not HAS_SSL:
raise NoSSLError('SSL validation is not available in your version of python. You can use validate_certs=False,'
' however this is unsafe and not recommended')
# do the cert validation
netloc = parsed.netloc
if '@' in netloc:
netloc = netloc.split('@', 1)[1]
if ':' in netloc:
hostname, port = netloc.split(':', 1)
port = int(port)
else:
hostname = netloc
port = 443
# create the SSL validation handler and
# add it to the list of handlers
return SSLValidationHandler(hostname, port)
def open_url(url, data=None, headers=None, method=None, use_proxy=True,
force=False, last_mod_time=None, timeout=10, validate_certs=True,
url_username=None, url_password=None, http_agent=None,
force_basic_auth=False, follow_redirects='urllib2',
client_cert=None, client_key=None, cookies=None):
'''
Sends a request via HTTP(S) or FTP using urllib2 (Python2) or urllib (Python3)
Does not require the module environment
'''
handlers = []
ssl_handler = maybe_add_ssl_handler(url, validate_certs)
if ssl_handler:
handlers.append(ssl_handler)
parsed = generic_urlparse(urlparse(url))
if parsed.scheme != 'ftp':
username = url_username
if headers is None:
headers = {}
if username:
password = url_password
netloc = parsed.netloc
elif '@' in parsed.netloc:
credentials, netloc = parsed.netloc.split('@', 1)
if ':' in credentials:
username, password = credentials.split(':', 1)
else:
username = credentials
password = ''
parsed_list = parsed.as_list()
parsed_list[1] = netloc
# reconstruct url without credentials
url = urlunparse(parsed_list)
if username and not force_basic_auth:
passman = urllib_request.HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm()
# this creates a password manager
passman.add_password(None, netloc, username, password)
# because we have put None at the start it will always
# use this username/password combination for urls
# for which `theurl` is a super-url
authhandler = urllib_request.HTTPBasicAuthHandler(passman)
digest_authhandler = urllib_request.HTTPDigestAuthHandler(passman)
# create the AuthHandler
handlers.append(authhandler)
handlers.append(digest_authhandler)
elif username and force_basic_auth:
headers["Authorization"] = basic_auth_header(username, password)
else:
try:
rc = netrc.netrc(os.environ.get('NETRC'))
login = rc.authenticators(parsed.hostname)
except IOError:
login = None
if login:
username, _, password = login
if username and password:
headers["Authorization"] = basic_auth_header(username, password)
if not use_proxy:
proxyhandler = urllib_request.ProxyHandler({})
handlers.append(proxyhandler)
if HAS_SSLCONTEXT and not validate_certs:
# In 2.7.9, the default context validates certificates
context = SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
context.options |= ssl.OP_NO_SSLv2
context.options |= ssl.OP_NO_SSLv3
context.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_NONE
context.check_hostname = False
handlers.append(HTTPSClientAuthHandler(client_cert=client_cert,
client_key=client_key,
context=context))
elif client_cert:
handlers.append(HTTPSClientAuthHandler(client_cert=client_cert,
client_key=client_key))
# pre-2.6 versions of python cannot use the custom https
# handler, since the socket class is lacking create_connection.
# Some python builds lack HTTPS support.
if hasattr(socket, 'create_connection') and CustomHTTPSHandler:
handlers.append(CustomHTTPSHandler)
handlers.append(RedirectHandlerFactory(follow_redirects, validate_certs))
# add some nicer cookie handling
if cookies is not None:
handlers.append(urllib_request.HTTPCookieProcessor(cookies))
opener = urllib_request.build_opener(*handlers)
urllib_request.install_opener(opener)
data = to_bytes(data, nonstring='passthru')
if method:
if method.upper() not in ('OPTIONS', 'GET', 'HEAD', 'POST', 'PUT', 'DELETE', 'TRACE', 'CONNECT', 'PATCH'):
raise ConnectionError('invalid HTTP request method; %s' % method.upper())
request = RequestWithMethod(url, method.upper(), data)
else:
request = urllib_request.Request(url, data)
# add the custom agent header, to help prevent issues
# with sites that block the default urllib agent string
if http_agent:
request.add_header('User-agent', http_agent)
# Cache control
# Either we directly force a cache refresh
if force:
request.add_header('cache-control', 'no-cache')
# or we do it if the original is more recent than our copy
elif last_mod_time:
tstamp = last_mod_time.strftime('%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S +0000')
request.add_header('If-Modified-Since', tstamp)
# user defined headers now, which may override things we've set above
if headers:
if not isinstance(headers, dict):
raise ValueError("headers provided to open_url() must be a dict")
for header in headers:
request.add_header(header, headers[header])
urlopen_args = [request, None]
if sys.version_info >= (2, 6, 0):
# urlopen in python prior to 2.6.0 did not
# have a timeout parameter
urlopen_args.append(timeout)
r = urllib_request.urlopen(*urlopen_args)
return r
#
# Module-related functions
#
def basic_auth_header(username, password):
"""Takes a username and password and returns a byte string suitable for
using as value of an Authorization header to do basic auth.
"""
return b"Basic %s" % base64.b64encode(to_bytes("%s:%s" % (username, password), errors='surrogate_or_strict'))
def url_argument_spec():
'''
Creates an argument spec that can be used with any module
that will be requesting content via urllib/urllib2
'''
return dict(
url=dict(),
force=dict(default='no', aliases=['thirsty'], type='bool'),
http_agent=dict(default='ansible-httpget'),
use_proxy=dict(default='yes', type='bool'),
validate_certs=dict(default='yes', type='bool'),
url_username=dict(required=False),
url_password=dict(required=False, no_log=True),
force_basic_auth=dict(required=False, type='bool', default='no'),
client_cert=dict(required=False, type='path', default=None),
client_key=dict(required=False, type='path', default=None),
)
def fetch_url(module, url, data=None, headers=None, method=None,
use_proxy=True, force=False, last_mod_time=None, timeout=10):
"""Sends a request via HTTP(S) or FTP (needs the module as parameter)
:arg module: The AnsibleModule (used to get username, password etc. (s.b.).
:arg url: The url to use.
:kwarg data: The data to be sent (in case of POST/PUT).
:kwarg headers: A dict with the request headers.
:kwarg method: "POST", "PUT", etc.
:kwarg boolean use_proxy: Default: True
:kwarg boolean force: If True: Do not get a cached copy (Default: False)
:kwarg last_mod_time: Default: None
:kwarg int timeout: Default: 10
:returns: A tuple of (**response**, **info**). Use ``response.read()`` to read the data.
The **info** contains the 'status' and other meta data. When a HttpError (status > 400)
occurred then ``info['body']`` contains the error response data::
Example::
data={...}
resp, info = fetch_url(module,
"http://example.com",
data=module.jsonify(data),
headers={'Content-type': 'application/json'},
method="POST")
status_code = info["status"]
body = resp.read()
if status_code >= 400 :
body = info['body']
"""
if not HAS_URLPARSE:
module.fail_json(msg='urlparse is not installed')
# ensure we use proper tempdir
old_tempdir = tempfile.tempdir
tempfile.tempdir = module.tmpdir
# Get validate_certs from the module params
validate_certs = module.params.get('validate_certs', True)
username = module.params.get('url_username', '')
password = module.params.get('url_password', '')
http_agent = module.params.get('http_agent', 'ansible-httpget')
force_basic_auth = module.params.get('force_basic_auth', '')
follow_redirects = module.params.get('follow_redirects', 'urllib2')
client_cert = module.params.get('client_cert')
client_key = module.params.get('client_key')
cookies = cookiejar.LWPCookieJar()
r = None
info = dict(url=url)
try:
r = open_url(url, data=data, headers=headers, method=method,
use_proxy=use_proxy, force=force, last_mod_time=last_mod_time, timeout=timeout,
validate_certs=validate_certs, url_username=username,
url_password=password, http_agent=http_agent, force_basic_auth=force_basic_auth,
follow_redirects=follow_redirects, client_cert=client_cert,
client_key=client_key, cookies=cookies)
# Lowercase keys, to conform to py2 behavior, so that py3 and py2 are predictable
info.update(dict((k.lower(), v) for k, v in r.info().items()))
# Don't be lossy, append header values for duplicate headers
# In Py2 there is nothing that needs done, py2 does this for us
if PY3:
temp_headers = {}
for name, value in r.headers.items():
# The same as above, lower case keys to match py2 behavior, and create more consistent results
name = name.lower()
if name in temp_headers:
temp_headers[name] = ', '.join((temp_headers[name], value))
else:
temp_headers[name] = value
info.update(temp_headers)
# parse the cookies into a nice dictionary
cookie_list = []
cookie_dict = dict()
# Python sorts cookies in order of most specific (ie. longest) path first. See ``CookieJar._cookie_attrs``
# Cookies with the same path are reversed from response order.
# This code makes no assumptions about that, and accepts the order given by python
for cookie in cookies:
cookie_dict[cookie.name] = cookie.value
cookie_list.append((cookie.name, cookie.value))
info['cookies_string'] = '; '.join('%s=%s' % c for c in cookie_list)
info['cookies'] = cookie_dict
# finally update the result with a message about the fetch
info.update(dict(msg="OK (%s bytes)" % r.headers.get('Content-Length', 'unknown'), url=r.geturl(), status=r.code))
except NoSSLError as e:
distribution = get_distribution()
if distribution is not None and distribution.lower() == 'redhat':
module.fail_json(msg='%s. You can also install python-ssl from EPEL' % to_native(e))
else:
module.fail_json(msg='%s' % to_native(e))
except (ConnectionError, ValueError) as e:
module.fail_json(msg=to_native(e))
except urllib_error.HTTPError as e:
try:
body = e.read()
except AttributeError:
body = ''
# Try to add exception info to the output but don't fail if we can't
try:
info.update(dict(**e.info()))
except:
pass
info.update({'msg': to_native(e), 'body': body, 'status': e.code})
except urllib_error.URLError as e:
code = int(getattr(e, 'code', -1))
info.update(dict(msg="Request failed: %s" % to_native(e), status=code))
except socket.error as e:
info.update(dict(msg="Connection failure: %s" % to_native(e), status=-1))
except httplib.BadStatusLine as e:
info.update(dict(msg="Connection failure: connection was closed before a valid response was received: %s" % to_native(e.line), status=-1))
except Exception as e:
info.update(dict(msg="An unknown error occurred: %s" % to_native(e), status=-1),
exception=traceback.format_exc())
finally:
tempfile.tempdir = old_tempdir
return r, info