cut out cherrypy, general fixes

master
idziubenko 3 years ago
parent 644056b588
commit 05a1c04895

@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
__metaclass__ = type
import OpenSSL
import socket
try:
@ -36,36 +36,18 @@ class BufferedWriter(io.BufferedWriter):
self._flush_unlocked()
return len(b)
#per https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65269123/both-builtin-and-pyopensssl-doesnt-work-with-cherrypy
# def _flush_unlocked(self):
# self._checkClosed('flush of closed file')
# while self._write_buf:
# try:
# # ssl sockets only except 'bytes', not bytearrays
# # so perhaps we should conditionally wrap this for perf?
# n = self.raw.write(bytes(self._write_buf))
# except io.BlockingIOError as e:
# n = e.characters_written
# del self._write_buf[:n]
def _flush_unlocked(self):
self._checkClosed('flush of closed file')
while self._write_buf:
try:
# ssl sockets only except 'bytes', not bytearrays
# so perhaps we should conditionally wrap this for perf?
n = self.raw.write(self._write_buf)
n = self.raw.write(bytes(self._write_buf))
except io.BlockingIOError as e:
n = e.characters_written
except (OpenSSL.SSL.WantReadError,OpenSSL.SSL.WantWriteError, OpenSSL.SSL.WantX509LookupError) as e:
n = 0
del self._write_buf[:n]
class MakeFile_PY2(getattr(socket, '_fileobject', object)):
"""Faux file object attached to a socket object."""
@ -435,9 +417,6 @@ if not six.PY2:
def read(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Capture bytes read."""
#AS PER https://github.com/cherrypy/cheroot/issues/245
# val = self._safe_call(True, super().read, *args, **kwargs)
val = super().read(*args, **kwargs)
self.bytes_read += len(val)
return val

@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
Copyright (c) 2004-2015, CherryPy Team (team@cherrypy.org)
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification,
are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither the name of the CherryPy Team nor the names of its contributors
may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "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 COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS 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.

@ -1,652 +0,0 @@
"""CherryPy is a pythonic, object-oriented HTTP framework.
CherryPy consists of not one, but four separate API layers.
The APPLICATION LAYER is the simplest. CherryPy applications are written as
a tree of classes and methods, where each branch in the tree corresponds to
a branch in the URL path. Each method is a 'page handler', which receives
GET and POST params as keyword arguments, and returns or yields the (HTML)
body of the response. The special method name 'index' is used for paths
that end in a slash, and the special method name 'default' is used to
handle multiple paths via a single handler. This layer also includes:
* the 'exposed' attribute (and cherrypy.expose)
* cherrypy.quickstart()
* _cp_config attributes
* cherrypy.tools (including cherrypy.session)
* cherrypy.url()
The ENVIRONMENT LAYER is used by developers at all levels. It provides
information about the current request and response, plus the application
and server environment, via a (default) set of top-level objects:
* cherrypy.request
* cherrypy.response
* cherrypy.engine
* cherrypy.server
* cherrypy.tree
* cherrypy.config
* cherrypy.thread_data
* cherrypy.log
* cherrypy.HTTPError, NotFound, and HTTPRedirect
* cherrypy.lib
The EXTENSION LAYER allows advanced users to construct and share their own
plugins. It consists of:
* Hook API
* Tool API
* Toolbox API
* Dispatch API
* Config Namespace API
Finally, there is the CORE LAYER, which uses the core API's to construct
the default components which are available at higher layers. You can think
of the default components as the 'reference implementation' for CherryPy.
Megaframeworks (and advanced users) may replace the default components
with customized or extended components. The core API's are:
* Application API
* Engine API
* Request API
* Server API
* WSGI API
These API's are described in the `CherryPy specification <https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/wiki/CherryPySpec>`_.
"""
__version__ = "3.8.0"
from cherrypy._cpcompat import urljoin as _urljoin, urlencode as _urlencode
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, unicodestr, set
from cherrypy._cperror import HTTPError, HTTPRedirect, InternalRedirect
from cherrypy._cperror import NotFound, CherryPyException, TimeoutError
from cherrypy import _cpdispatch as dispatch
from cherrypy import _cptools
tools = _cptools.default_toolbox
Tool = _cptools.Tool
from cherrypy import _cprequest
from cherrypy.lib import httputil as _httputil
from cherrypy import _cptree
tree = _cptree.Tree()
from cherrypy._cptree import Application
from cherrypy import _cpwsgi as wsgi
from cherrypy import process
try:
from cherrypy.process import win32
engine = win32.Win32Bus()
engine.console_control_handler = win32.ConsoleCtrlHandler(engine)
del win32
except ImportError:
engine = process.bus
# Timeout monitor. We add two channels to the engine
# to which cherrypy.Application will publish.
engine.listeners['before_request'] = set()
engine.listeners['after_request'] = set()
class _TimeoutMonitor(process.plugins.Monitor):
def __init__(self, bus):
self.servings = []
process.plugins.Monitor.__init__(self, bus, self.run)
def before_request(self):
self.servings.append((serving.request, serving.response))
def after_request(self):
try:
self.servings.remove((serving.request, serving.response))
except ValueError:
pass
def run(self):
"""Check timeout on all responses. (Internal)"""
for req, resp in self.servings:
resp.check_timeout()
engine.timeout_monitor = _TimeoutMonitor(engine)
engine.timeout_monitor.subscribe()
engine.autoreload = process.plugins.Autoreloader(engine)
engine.autoreload.subscribe()
engine.thread_manager = process.plugins.ThreadManager(engine)
engine.thread_manager.subscribe()
engine.signal_handler = process.plugins.SignalHandler(engine)
class _HandleSignalsPlugin(object):
"""Handle signals from other processes based on the configured
platform handlers above."""
def __init__(self, bus):
self.bus = bus
def subscribe(self):
"""Add the handlers based on the platform"""
if hasattr(self.bus, "signal_handler"):
self.bus.signal_handler.subscribe()
if hasattr(self.bus, "console_control_handler"):
self.bus.console_control_handler.subscribe()
engine.signals = _HandleSignalsPlugin(engine)
from cherrypy import _cpserver
server = _cpserver.Server()
server.subscribe()
def quickstart(root=None, script_name="", config=None):
"""Mount the given root, start the builtin server (and engine), then block.
root: an instance of a "controller class" (a collection of page handler
methods) which represents the root of the application.
script_name: a string containing the "mount point" of the application.
This should start with a slash, and be the path portion of the URL
at which to mount the given root. For example, if root.index() will
handle requests to "http://www.example.com:8080/dept/app1/", then
the script_name argument would be "/dept/app1".
It MUST NOT end in a slash. If the script_name refers to the root
of the URI, it MUST be an empty string (not "/").
config: a file or dict containing application config. If this contains
a [global] section, those entries will be used in the global
(site-wide) config.
"""
if config:
_global_conf_alias.update(config)
tree.mount(root, script_name, config)
engine.signals.subscribe()
engine.start()
engine.block()
from cherrypy._cpcompat import threadlocal as _local
class _Serving(_local):
"""An interface for registering request and response objects.
Rather than have a separate "thread local" object for the request and
the response, this class works as a single threadlocal container for
both objects (and any others which developers wish to define). In this
way, we can easily dump those objects when we stop/start a new HTTP
conversation, yet still refer to them as module-level globals in a
thread-safe way.
"""
request = _cprequest.Request(_httputil.Host("127.0.0.1", 80),
_httputil.Host("127.0.0.1", 1111))
"""
The request object for the current thread. In the main thread,
and any threads which are not receiving HTTP requests, this is None."""
response = _cprequest.Response()
"""
The response object for the current thread. In the main thread,
and any threads which are not receiving HTTP requests, this is None."""
def load(self, request, response):
self.request = request
self.response = response
def clear(self):
"""Remove all attributes of self."""
self.__dict__.clear()
serving = _Serving()
class _ThreadLocalProxy(object):
__slots__ = ['__attrname__', '__dict__']
def __init__(self, attrname):
self.__attrname__ = attrname
def __getattr__(self, name):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
return getattr(child, name)
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
if name in ("__attrname__", ):
object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
else:
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
setattr(child, name, value)
def __delattr__(self, name):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
delattr(child, name)
def _get_dict(self):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
d = child.__class__.__dict__.copy()
d.update(child.__dict__)
return d
__dict__ = property(_get_dict)
def __getitem__(self, key):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
return child[key]
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
child[key] = value
def __delitem__(self, key):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
del child[key]
def __contains__(self, key):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
return key in child
def __len__(self):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
return len(child)
def __nonzero__(self):
child = getattr(serving, self.__attrname__)
return bool(child)
# Python 3
__bool__ = __nonzero__
# Create request and response object (the same objects will be used
# throughout the entire life of the webserver, but will redirect
# to the "serving" object)
request = _ThreadLocalProxy('request')
response = _ThreadLocalProxy('response')
# Create thread_data object as a thread-specific all-purpose storage
class _ThreadData(_local):
"""A container for thread-specific data."""
thread_data = _ThreadData()
# Monkeypatch pydoc to allow help() to go through the threadlocal proxy.
# Jan 2007: no Googleable examples of anyone else replacing pydoc.resolve.
# The only other way would be to change what is returned from type(request)
# and that's not possible in pure Python (you'd have to fake ob_type).
def _cherrypy_pydoc_resolve(thing, forceload=0):
"""Given an object or a path to an object, get the object and its name."""
if isinstance(thing, _ThreadLocalProxy):
thing = getattr(serving, thing.__attrname__)
return _pydoc._builtin_resolve(thing, forceload)
try:
import pydoc as _pydoc
_pydoc._builtin_resolve = _pydoc.resolve
_pydoc.resolve = _cherrypy_pydoc_resolve
except ImportError:
pass
from cherrypy import _cplogging
class _GlobalLogManager(_cplogging.LogManager):
"""A site-wide LogManager; routes to app.log or global log as appropriate.
This :class:`LogManager<cherrypy._cplogging.LogManager>` implements
cherrypy.log() and cherrypy.log.access(). If either
function is called during a request, the message will be sent to the
logger for the current Application. If they are called outside of a
request, the message will be sent to the site-wide logger.
"""
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Log the given message to the app.log or global log as appropriate.
"""
# Do NOT use try/except here. See
# https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/945
if hasattr(request, 'app') and hasattr(request.app, 'log'):
log = request.app.log
else:
log = self
return log.error(*args, **kwargs)
def access(self):
"""Log an access message to the app.log or global log as appropriate.
"""
try:
return request.app.log.access()
except AttributeError:
return _cplogging.LogManager.access(self)
log = _GlobalLogManager()
# Set a default screen handler on the global log.
log.screen = True
log.error_file = ''
# Using an access file makes CP about 10% slower. Leave off by default.
log.access_file = ''
def _buslog(msg, level):
log.error(msg, 'ENGINE', severity=level)
engine.subscribe('log', _buslog)
# Helper functions for CP apps #
def expose(func=None, alias=None):
"""Expose the function, optionally providing an alias or set of aliases."""
def expose_(func):
func.exposed = True
if alias is not None:
if isinstance(alias, basestring):
parents[alias.replace(".", "_")] = func
else:
for a in alias:
parents[a.replace(".", "_")] = func
return func
import sys
import types
if isinstance(func, (types.FunctionType, types.MethodType)):
if alias is None:
# @expose
func.exposed = True
return func
else:
# func = expose(func, alias)
parents = sys._getframe(1).f_locals
return expose_(func)
elif func is None:
if alias is None:
# @expose()
parents = sys._getframe(1).f_locals
return expose_
else:
# @expose(alias="alias") or
# @expose(alias=["alias1", "alias2"])
parents = sys._getframe(1).f_locals
return expose_
else:
# @expose("alias") or
# @expose(["alias1", "alias2"])
parents = sys._getframe(1).f_locals
alias = func
return expose_
def popargs(*args, **kwargs):
"""A decorator for _cp_dispatch
(cherrypy.dispatch.Dispatcher.dispatch_method_name).
Optional keyword argument: handler=(Object or Function)
Provides a _cp_dispatch function that pops off path segments into
cherrypy.request.params under the names specified. The dispatch
is then forwarded on to the next vpath element.
Note that any existing (and exposed) member function of the class that
popargs is applied to will override that value of the argument. For
instance, if you have a method named "list" on the class decorated with
popargs, then accessing "/list" will call that function instead of popping
it off as the requested parameter. This restriction applies to all
_cp_dispatch functions. The only way around this restriction is to create
a "blank class" whose only function is to provide _cp_dispatch.
If there are path elements after the arguments, or more arguments
are requested than are available in the vpath, then the 'handler'
keyword argument specifies the next object to handle the parameterized
request. If handler is not specified or is None, then self is used.
If handler is a function rather than an instance, then that function
will be called with the args specified and the return value from that
function used as the next object INSTEAD of adding the parameters to
cherrypy.request.args.
This decorator may be used in one of two ways:
As a class decorator:
@cherrypy.popargs('year', 'month', 'day')
class Blog:
def index(self, year=None, month=None, day=None):
#Process the parameters here; any url like
#/, /2009, /2009/12, or /2009/12/31
#will fill in the appropriate parameters.
def create(self):
#This link will still be available at /create. Defined functions
#take precedence over arguments.
Or as a member of a class:
class Blog:
_cp_dispatch = cherrypy.popargs('year', 'month', 'day')
#...
The handler argument may be used to mix arguments with built in functions.
For instance, the following setup allows different activities at the
day, month, and year level:
class DayHandler:
def index(self, year, month, day):
#Do something with this day; probably list entries
def delete(self, year, month, day):
#Delete all entries for this day
@cherrypy.popargs('day', handler=DayHandler())
class MonthHandler:
def index(self, year, month):
#Do something with this month; probably list entries
def delete(self, year, month):
#Delete all entries for this month
@cherrypy.popargs('month', handler=MonthHandler())
class YearHandler:
def index(self, year):
#Do something with this year
#...
@cherrypy.popargs('year', handler=YearHandler())
class Root:
def index(self):
#...
"""
# Since keyword arg comes after *args, we have to process it ourselves
# for lower versions of python.
handler = None
handler_call = False
for k, v in kwargs.items():
if k == 'handler':
handler = v
else:
raise TypeError(
"cherrypy.popargs() got an unexpected keyword argument '{0}'"
.format(k)
)
import inspect
if handler is not None \
and (hasattr(handler, '__call__') or inspect.isclass(handler)):
handler_call = True
def decorated(cls_or_self=None, vpath=None):
if inspect.isclass(cls_or_self):
# cherrypy.popargs is a class decorator
cls = cls_or_self
setattr(cls, dispatch.Dispatcher.dispatch_method_name, decorated)
return cls
# We're in the actual function
self = cls_or_self
parms = {}
for arg in args:
if not vpath:
break
parms[arg] = vpath.pop(0)
if handler is not None:
if handler_call:
return handler(**parms)
else:
request.params.update(parms)
return handler
request.params.update(parms)
# If we are the ultimate handler, then to prevent our _cp_dispatch
# from being called again, we will resolve remaining elements through
# getattr() directly.
if vpath:
return getattr(self, vpath.pop(0), None)
else:
return self
return decorated
def url(path="", qs="", script_name=None, base=None, relative=None):
"""Create an absolute URL for the given path.
If 'path' starts with a slash ('/'), this will return
(base + script_name + path + qs).
If it does not start with a slash, this returns
(base + script_name [+ request.path_info] + path + qs).
If script_name is None, cherrypy.request will be used
to find a script_name, if available.
If base is None, cherrypy.request.base will be used (if available).
Note that you can use cherrypy.tools.proxy to change this.
Finally, note that this function can be used to obtain an absolute URL
for the current request path (minus the querystring) by passing no args.
If you call url(qs=cherrypy.request.query_string), you should get the
original browser URL (assuming no internal redirections).
If relative is None or not provided, request.app.relative_urls will
be used (if available, else False). If False, the output will be an
absolute URL (including the scheme, host, vhost, and script_name).
If True, the output will instead be a URL that is relative to the
current request path, perhaps including '..' atoms. If relative is
the string 'server', the output will instead be a URL that is
relative to the server root; i.e., it will start with a slash.
"""
if isinstance(qs, (tuple, list, dict)):
qs = _urlencode(qs)
if qs:
qs = '?' + qs
if request.app:
if not path.startswith("/"):
# Append/remove trailing slash from path_info as needed
# (this is to support mistyped URL's without redirecting;
# if you want to redirect, use tools.trailing_slash).
pi = request.path_info
if request.is_index is True:
if not pi.endswith('/'):
pi = pi + '/'
elif request.is_index is False:
if pi.endswith('/') and pi != '/':
pi = pi[:-1]
if path == "":
path = pi
else:
path = _urljoin(pi, path)
if script_name is None:
script_name = request.script_name
if base is None:
base = request.base
newurl = base + script_name + path + qs
else:
# No request.app (we're being called outside a request).
# We'll have to guess the base from server.* attributes.
# This will produce very different results from the above
# if you're using vhosts or tools.proxy.
if base is None:
base = server.base()
path = (script_name or "") + path
newurl = base + path + qs
if './' in newurl:
# Normalize the URL by removing ./ and ../
atoms = []
for atom in newurl.split('/'):
if atom == '.':
pass
elif atom == '..':
atoms.pop()
else:
atoms.append(atom)
newurl = '/'.join(atoms)
# At this point, we should have a fully-qualified absolute URL.
if relative is None:
relative = getattr(request.app, "relative_urls", False)
# See http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt
if relative == 'server':
# "A relative reference beginning with a single slash character is
# termed an absolute-path reference, as defined by <abs_path>..."
# This is also sometimes called "server-relative".
newurl = '/' + '/'.join(newurl.split('/', 3)[3:])
elif relative:
# "A relative reference that does not begin with a scheme name
# or a slash character is termed a relative-path reference."
old = url(relative=False).split('/')[:-1]
new = newurl.split('/')
while old and new:
a, b = old[0], new[0]
if a != b:
break
old.pop(0)
new.pop(0)
new = (['..'] * len(old)) + new
newurl = '/'.join(new)
return newurl
# import _cpconfig last so it can reference other top-level objects
from cherrypy import _cpconfig
# Use _global_conf_alias so quickstart can use 'config' as an arg
# without shadowing cherrypy.config.
config = _global_conf_alias = _cpconfig.Config()
config.defaults = {
'tools.log_tracebacks.on': True,
'tools.log_headers.on': True,
'tools.trailing_slash.on': True,
'tools.encode.on': True
}
config.namespaces["log"] = lambda k, v: setattr(log, k, v)
config.namespaces["checker"] = lambda k, v: setattr(checker, k, v)
# Must reset to get our defaults applied.
config.reset()
from cherrypy import _cpchecker
checker = _cpchecker.Checker()
engine.subscribe('start', checker)

@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
import cherrypy.daemon
if __name__ == '__main__':
cherrypy.daemon.run()

@ -1,332 +0,0 @@
import os
import warnings
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import iteritems, copykeys, builtins
class Checker(object):
"""A checker for CherryPy sites and their mounted applications.
When this object is called at engine startup, it executes each
of its own methods whose names start with ``check_``. If you wish
to disable selected checks, simply add a line in your global
config which sets the appropriate method to False::
[global]
checker.check_skipped_app_config = False
You may also dynamically add or replace ``check_*`` methods in this way.
"""
on = True
"""If True (the default), run all checks; if False, turn off all checks."""
def __init__(self):
self._populate_known_types()
def __call__(self):
"""Run all check_* methods."""
if self.on:
oldformatwarning = warnings.formatwarning
warnings.formatwarning = self.formatwarning
try:
for name in dir(self):
if name.startswith("check_"):
method = getattr(self, name)
if method and hasattr(method, '__call__'):
method()
finally:
warnings.formatwarning = oldformatwarning
def formatwarning(self, message, category, filename, lineno, line=None):
"""Function to format a warning."""
return "CherryPy Checker:\n%s\n\n" % message
# This value should be set inside _cpconfig.
global_config_contained_paths = False
def check_app_config_entries_dont_start_with_script_name(self):
"""Check for Application config with sections that repeat script_name.
"""
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
if not app.config:
continue
if sn == '':
continue
sn_atoms = sn.strip("/").split("/")
for key in app.config.keys():
key_atoms = key.strip("/").split("/")
if key_atoms[:len(sn_atoms)] == sn_atoms:
warnings.warn(
"The application mounted at %r has config "
"entries that start with its script name: %r" % (sn,
key))
def check_site_config_entries_in_app_config(self):
"""Check for mounted Applications that have site-scoped config."""
for sn, app in iteritems(cherrypy.tree.apps):
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
msg = []
for section, entries in iteritems(app.config):
if section.startswith('/'):
for key, value in iteritems(entries):
for n in ("engine.", "server.", "tree.", "checker."):
if key.startswith(n):
msg.append("[%s] %s = %s" %
(section, key, value))
if msg:
msg.insert(0,
"The application mounted at %r contains the "
"following config entries, which are only allowed "
"in site-wide config. Move them to a [global] "
"section and pass them to cherrypy.config.update() "
"instead of tree.mount()." % sn)
warnings.warn(os.linesep.join(msg))
def check_skipped_app_config(self):
"""Check for mounted Applications that have no config."""
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
if not app.config:
msg = "The Application mounted at %r has an empty config." % sn
if self.global_config_contained_paths:
msg += (" It looks like the config you passed to "
"cherrypy.config.update() contains application-"
"specific sections. You must explicitly pass "
"application config via "
"cherrypy.tree.mount(..., config=app_config)")
warnings.warn(msg)
return
def check_app_config_brackets(self):
"""Check for Application config with extraneous brackets in section
names.
"""
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
if not app.config:
continue
for key in app.config.keys():
if key.startswith("[") or key.endswith("]"):
warnings.warn(
"The application mounted at %r has config "
"section names with extraneous brackets: %r. "
"Config *files* need brackets; config *dicts* "
"(e.g. passed to tree.mount) do not." % (sn, key))
def check_static_paths(self):
"""Check Application config for incorrect static paths."""
# Use the dummy Request object in the main thread.
request = cherrypy.request
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
request.app = app
for section in app.config:
# get_resource will populate request.config
request.get_resource(section + "/dummy.html")
conf = request.config.get
if conf("tools.staticdir.on", False):
msg = ""
root = conf("tools.staticdir.root")
dir = conf("tools.staticdir.dir")
if dir is None:
msg = "tools.staticdir.dir is not set."
else:
fulldir = ""
if os.path.isabs(dir):
fulldir = dir
if root:
msg = ("dir is an absolute path, even "
"though a root is provided.")
testdir = os.path.join(root, dir[1:])
if os.path.exists(testdir):
msg += (
"\nIf you meant to serve the "
"filesystem folder at %r, remove the "
"leading slash from dir." % (testdir,))
else:
if not root:
msg = (
"dir is a relative path and "
"no root provided.")
else:
fulldir = os.path.join(root, dir)
if not os.path.isabs(fulldir):
msg = ("%r is not an absolute path." % (
fulldir,))
if fulldir and not os.path.exists(fulldir):
if msg:
msg += "\n"
msg += ("%r (root + dir) is not an existing "
"filesystem path." % fulldir)
if msg:
warnings.warn("%s\nsection: [%s]\nroot: %r\ndir: %r"
% (msg, section, root, dir))
# -------------------------- Compatibility -------------------------- #
obsolete = {
'server.default_content_type': 'tools.response_headers.headers',
'log_access_file': 'log.access_file',
'log_config_options': None,
'log_file': 'log.error_file',
'log_file_not_found': None,
'log_request_headers': 'tools.log_headers.on',
'log_to_screen': 'log.screen',
'show_tracebacks': 'request.show_tracebacks',
'throw_errors': 'request.throw_errors',
'profiler.on': ('cherrypy.tree.mount(profiler.make_app('
'cherrypy.Application(Root())))'),
}
deprecated = {}
def _compat(self, config):
"""Process config and warn on each obsolete or deprecated entry."""
for section, conf in config.items():
if isinstance(conf, dict):
for k, v in conf.items():
if k in self.obsolete:
warnings.warn("%r is obsolete. Use %r instead.\n"
"section: [%s]" %
(k, self.obsolete[k], section))
elif k in self.deprecated:
warnings.warn("%r is deprecated. Use %r instead.\n"
"section: [%s]" %
(k, self.deprecated[k], section))
else:
if section in self.obsolete:
warnings.warn("%r is obsolete. Use %r instead."
% (section, self.obsolete[section]))
elif section in self.deprecated:
warnings.warn("%r is deprecated. Use %r instead."
% (section, self.deprecated[section]))
def check_compatibility(self):
"""Process config and warn on each obsolete or deprecated entry."""
self._compat(cherrypy.config)
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
self._compat(app.config)
# ------------------------ Known Namespaces ------------------------ #
extra_config_namespaces = []
def _known_ns(self, app):
ns = ["wsgi"]
ns.extend(copykeys(app.toolboxes))
ns.extend(copykeys(app.namespaces))
ns.extend(copykeys(app.request_class.namespaces))
ns.extend(copykeys(cherrypy.config.namespaces))
ns += self.extra_config_namespaces
for section, conf in app.config.items():
is_path_section = section.startswith("/")
if is_path_section and isinstance(conf, dict):
for k, v in conf.items():
atoms = k.split(".")
if len(atoms) > 1:
if atoms[0] not in ns:
# Spit out a special warning if a known
# namespace is preceded by "cherrypy."
if atoms[0] == "cherrypy" and atoms[1] in ns:
msg = (
"The config entry %r is invalid; "
"try %r instead.\nsection: [%s]"
% (k, ".".join(atoms[1:]), section))
else:
msg = (
"The config entry %r is invalid, "
"because the %r config namespace "
"is unknown.\n"
"section: [%s]" % (k, atoms[0], section))
warnings.warn(msg)
elif atoms[0] == "tools":
if atoms[1] not in dir(cherrypy.tools):
msg = (
"The config entry %r may be invalid, "
"because the %r tool was not found.\n"
"section: [%s]" % (k, atoms[1], section))
warnings.warn(msg)
def check_config_namespaces(self):
"""Process config and warn on each unknown config namespace."""
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
self._known_ns(app)
# -------------------------- Config Types -------------------------- #
known_config_types = {}
def _populate_known_types(self):
b = [x for x in vars(builtins).values()
if type(x) is type(str)]
def traverse(obj, namespace):
for name in dir(obj):
# Hack for 3.2's warning about body_params
if name == 'body_params':
continue
vtype = type(getattr(obj, name, None))
if vtype in b:
self.known_config_types[namespace + "." + name] = vtype
traverse(cherrypy.request, "request")
traverse(cherrypy.response, "response")
traverse(cherrypy.server, "server")
traverse(cherrypy.engine, "engine")
traverse(cherrypy.log, "log")
def _known_types(self, config):
msg = ("The config entry %r in section %r is of type %r, "
"which does not match the expected type %r.")
for section, conf in config.items():
if isinstance(conf, dict):
for k, v in conf.items():
if v is not None:
expected_type = self.known_config_types.get(k, None)
vtype = type(v)
if expected_type and vtype != expected_type:
warnings.warn(msg % (k, section, vtype.__name__,
expected_type.__name__))
else:
k, v = section, conf
if v is not None:
expected_type = self.known_config_types.get(k, None)
vtype = type(v)
if expected_type and vtype != expected_type:
warnings.warn(msg % (k, section, vtype.__name__,
expected_type.__name__))
def check_config_types(self):
"""Assert that config values are of the same type as default values."""
self._known_types(cherrypy.config)
for sn, app in cherrypy.tree.apps.items():
if not isinstance(app, cherrypy.Application):
continue
self._known_types(app.config)
# -------------------- Specific config warnings -------------------- #
def check_localhost(self):
"""Warn if any socket_host is 'localhost'. See #711."""
for k, v in cherrypy.config.items():
if k == 'server.socket_host' and v == 'localhost':
warnings.warn("The use of 'localhost' as a socket host can "
"cause problems on newer systems, since "
"'localhost' can map to either an IPv4 or an "
"IPv6 address. You should use '127.0.0.1' "
"or '[::1]' instead.")

@ -1,383 +0,0 @@
"""Compatibility code for using CherryPy with various versions of Python.
CherryPy 3.2 is compatible with Python versions 2.3+. This module provides a
useful abstraction over the differences between Python versions, sometimes by
preferring a newer idiom, sometimes an older one, and sometimes a custom one.
In particular, Python 2 uses str and '' for byte strings, while Python 3
uses str and '' for unicode strings. We will call each of these the 'native
string' type for each version. Because of this major difference, this module
provides new 'bytestr', 'unicodestr', and 'nativestr' attributes, as well as
two functions: 'ntob', which translates native strings (of type 'str') into
byte strings regardless of Python version, and 'ntou', which translates native
strings to unicode strings. This also provides a 'BytesIO' name for dealing
specifically with bytes, and a 'StringIO' name for dealing with native strings.
It also provides a 'base64_decode' function with native strings as input and
output.
"""
import os
import re
import sys
import threading
if sys.version_info >= (3, 0):
py3k = True
bytestr = bytes
unicodestr = str
nativestr = unicodestr
basestring = (bytes, str)
def ntob(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the given native string as a byte string in the given
encoding.
"""
assert_native(n)
# In Python 3, the native string type is unicode
return n.encode(encoding)
def ntou(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the given native string as a unicode string with the given
encoding.
"""
assert_native(n)
# In Python 3, the native string type is unicode
return n
def tonative(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the given string as a native string in the given encoding."""
# In Python 3, the native string type is unicode
if isinstance(n, bytes):
return n.decode(encoding)
return n
# type("")
from io import StringIO
# bytes:
from io import BytesIO as BytesIO
else:
# Python 2
py3k = False
bytestr = str
unicodestr = unicode
nativestr = bytestr
basestring = basestring
def ntob(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the given native string as a byte string in the given
encoding.
"""
assert_native(n)
# In Python 2, the native string type is bytes. Assume it's already
# in the given encoding, which for ISO-8859-1 is almost always what
# was intended.
return n
def ntou(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the given native string as a unicode string with the given
encoding.
"""
assert_native(n)
# In Python 2, the native string type is bytes.
# First, check for the special encoding 'escape'. The test suite uses
# this to signal that it wants to pass a string with embedded \uXXXX
# escapes, but without having to prefix it with u'' for Python 2,
# but no prefix for Python 3.
if encoding == 'escape':
return unicode(
re.sub(r'\\u([0-9a-zA-Z]{4})',
lambda m: unichr(int(m.group(1), 16)),
n.decode('ISO-8859-1')))
# Assume it's already in the given encoding, which for ISO-8859-1
# is almost always what was intended.
return n.decode(encoding)
def tonative(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the given string as a native string in the given encoding."""
# In Python 2, the native string type is bytes.
if isinstance(n, unicode):
return n.encode(encoding)
return n
try:
# type("")
from cStringIO import StringIO
except ImportError:
# type("")
from StringIO import StringIO
# bytes:
BytesIO = StringIO
def assert_native(n):
if not isinstance(n, nativestr):
raise TypeError("n must be a native str (got %s)" % type(n).__name__)
try:
set = set
except NameError:
from sets import Set as set
try:
# Python 3.1+
from base64 import decodebytes as _base64_decodebytes
except ImportError:
# Python 3.0-
# since CherryPy claims compability with Python 2.3, we must use
# the legacy API of base64
from base64 import decodestring as _base64_decodebytes
def base64_decode(n, encoding='ISO-8859-1'):
"""Return the native string base64-decoded (as a native string)."""
if isinstance(n, unicodestr):
b = n.encode(encoding)
else:
b = n
b = _base64_decodebytes(b)
if nativestr is unicodestr:
return b.decode(encoding)
else:
return b
try:
# Python 2.5+
from hashlib import md5
except ImportError:
from md5 import new as md5
try:
# Python 2.5+
from hashlib import sha1 as sha
except ImportError:
from sha import new as sha
try:
sorted = sorted
except NameError:
def sorted(i):
i = i[:]
i.sort()
return i
try:
reversed = reversed
except NameError:
def reversed(x):
i = len(x)
while i > 0:
i -= 1
yield x[i]
try:
# Python 3
from urllib.parse import urljoin, urlencode
from urllib.parse import quote, quote_plus
from urllib.request import unquote, urlopen
from urllib.request import parse_http_list, parse_keqv_list
except ImportError:
# Python 2
from urlparse import urljoin
from urllib import urlencode, urlopen
from urllib import quote, quote_plus
from urllib import unquote
from urllib2 import parse_http_list, parse_keqv_list
try:
from threading import local as threadlocal
except ImportError:
from cherrypy._cpthreadinglocal import local as threadlocal
try:
dict.iteritems
# Python 2
iteritems = lambda d: d.iteritems()
copyitems = lambda d: d.items()
except AttributeError:
# Python 3
iteritems = lambda d: d.items()
copyitems = lambda d: list(d.items())
try:
dict.iterkeys
# Python 2
iterkeys = lambda d: d.iterkeys()
copykeys = lambda d: d.keys()
except AttributeError:
# Python 3
iterkeys = lambda d: d.keys()
copykeys = lambda d: list(d.keys())
try:
dict.itervalues
# Python 2
itervalues = lambda d: d.itervalues()
copyvalues = lambda d: d.values()
except AttributeError:
# Python 3
itervalues = lambda d: d.values()
copyvalues = lambda d: list(d.values())
try:
# Python 3
import builtins
except ImportError:
# Python 2
import __builtin__ as builtins
try:
# Python 2. We try Python 2 first clients on Python 2
# don't try to import the 'http' module from cherrypy.lib
from Cookie import SimpleCookie, CookieError
from httplib import BadStatusLine, HTTPConnection, IncompleteRead
from httplib import NotConnected
from BaseHTTPServer import BaseHTTPRequestHandler
except ImportError:
# Python 3
from http.cookies import SimpleCookie, CookieError
from http.client import BadStatusLine, HTTPConnection, IncompleteRead
from http.client import NotConnected
from http.server import BaseHTTPRequestHandler
# Some platforms don't expose HTTPSConnection, so handle it separately
if py3k:
try:
from http.client import HTTPSConnection
except ImportError:
# Some platforms which don't have SSL don't expose HTTPSConnection
HTTPSConnection = None
else:
try:
from httplib import HTTPSConnection
except ImportError:
HTTPSConnection = None
try:
# Python 2
xrange = xrange
except NameError:
# Python 3
xrange = range
import threading
if hasattr(threading.Thread, "daemon"):
# Python 2.6+
def get_daemon(t):
return t.daemon
def set_daemon(t, val):
t.daemon = val
else:
def get_daemon(t):
return t.isDaemon()
def set_daemon(t, val):
t.setDaemon(val)
try:
from email.utils import formatdate
def HTTPDate(timeval=None):
return formatdate(timeval, usegmt=True)
except ImportError:
from rfc822 import formatdate as HTTPDate
try:
# Python 3
from urllib.parse import unquote as parse_unquote
def unquote_qs(atom, encoding, errors='strict'):
return parse_unquote(
atom.replace('+', ' '),
encoding=encoding,
errors=errors)
except ImportError:
# Python 2
from urllib import unquote as parse_unquote
def unquote_qs(atom, encoding, errors='strict'):
return parse_unquote(atom.replace('+', ' ')).decode(encoding, errors)
try:
# Prefer simplejson, which is usually more advanced than the builtin
# module.
import simplejson as json
json_decode = json.JSONDecoder().decode
_json_encode = json.JSONEncoder().iterencode
except ImportError:
if sys.version_info >= (2, 6):
# Python >=2.6 : json is part of the standard library
import json
json_decode = json.JSONDecoder().decode
_json_encode = json.JSONEncoder().iterencode
else:
json = None
def json_decode(s):
raise ValueError('No JSON library is available')
def _json_encode(s):
raise ValueError('No JSON library is available')
finally:
if json and py3k:
# The two Python 3 implementations (simplejson/json)
# outputs str. We need bytes.
def json_encode(value):
for chunk in _json_encode(value):
yield chunk.encode('utf8')
else:
json_encode = _json_encode
try:
import cPickle as pickle
except ImportError:
# In Python 2, pickle is a Python version.
# In Python 3, pickle is the sped-up C version.
import pickle
try:
os.urandom(20)
import binascii
def random20():
return binascii.hexlify(os.urandom(20)).decode('ascii')
except (AttributeError, NotImplementedError):
import random
# os.urandom not available until Python 2.4. Fall back to random.random.
def random20():
return sha('%s' % random.random()).hexdigest()
try:
from _thread import get_ident as get_thread_ident
except ImportError:
from thread import get_ident as get_thread_ident
try:
# Python 3
next = next
except NameError:
# Python 2
def next(i):
return i.next()
if sys.version_info >= (3, 3):
Timer = threading.Timer
Event = threading.Event
else:
# Python 3.2 and earlier
Timer = threading._Timer
Event = threading._Event
# Prior to Python 2.6, the Thread class did not have a .daemon property.
# This mix-in adds that property.
class SetDaemonProperty:
def __get_daemon(self):
return self.isDaemon()
def __set_daemon(self, daemon):
self.setDaemon(daemon)
if sys.version_info < (2, 6):
daemon = property(__get_daemon, __set_daemon)

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

@ -1,317 +0,0 @@
"""
Configuration system for CherryPy.
Configuration in CherryPy is implemented via dictionaries. Keys are strings
which name the mapped value, which may be of any type.
Architecture
------------
CherryPy Requests are part of an Application, which runs in a global context,
and configuration data may apply to any of those three scopes:
Global
Configuration entries which apply everywhere are stored in
cherrypy.config.
Application
Entries which apply to each mounted application are stored
on the Application object itself, as 'app.config'. This is a two-level
dict where each key is a path, or "relative URL" (for example, "/" or
"/path/to/my/page"), and each value is a config dict. Usually, this
data is provided in the call to tree.mount(root(), config=conf),
although you may also use app.merge(conf).
Request
Each Request object possesses a single 'Request.config' dict.
Early in the request process, this dict is populated by merging global
config entries, Application entries (whose path equals or is a parent
of Request.path_info), and any config acquired while looking up the
page handler (see next).
Declaration
-----------
Configuration data may be supplied as a Python dictionary, as a filename,
or as an open file object. When you supply a filename or file, CherryPy
uses Python's builtin ConfigParser; you declare Application config by
writing each path as a section header::
[/path/to/my/page]
request.stream = True
To declare global configuration entries, place them in a [global] section.
You may also declare config entries directly on the classes and methods
(page handlers) that make up your CherryPy application via the ``_cp_config``
attribute. For example::
class Demo:
_cp_config = {'tools.gzip.on': True}
def index(self):
return "Hello world"
index.exposed = True
index._cp_config = {'request.show_tracebacks': False}
.. note::
This behavior is only guaranteed for the default dispatcher.
Other dispatchers may have different restrictions on where
you can attach _cp_config attributes.
Namespaces
----------
Configuration keys are separated into namespaces by the first "." in the key.
Current namespaces:
engine
Controls the 'application engine', including autoreload.
These can only be declared in the global config.
tree
Grafts cherrypy.Application objects onto cherrypy.tree.
These can only be declared in the global config.
hooks
Declares additional request-processing functions.
log
Configures the logging for each application.
These can only be declared in the global or / config.
request
Adds attributes to each Request.
response
Adds attributes to each Response.
server
Controls the default HTTP server via cherrypy.server.
These can only be declared in the global config.
tools
Runs and configures additional request-processing packages.
wsgi
Adds WSGI middleware to an Application's "pipeline".
These can only be declared in the app's root config ("/").
checker
Controls the 'checker', which looks for common errors in
app state (including config) when the engine starts.
Global config only.
The only key that does not exist in a namespace is the "environment" entry.
This special entry 'imports' other config entries from a template stored in
cherrypy._cpconfig.environments[environment]. It only applies to the global
config, and only when you use cherrypy.config.update.
You can define your own namespaces to be called at the Global, Application,
or Request level, by adding a named handler to cherrypy.config.namespaces,
app.namespaces, or app.request_class.namespaces. The name can
be any string, and the handler must be either a callable or a (Python 2.5
style) context manager.
"""
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import set, basestring
from cherrypy.lib import reprconf
# Deprecated in CherryPy 3.2--remove in 3.3
NamespaceSet = reprconf.NamespaceSet
def merge(base, other):
"""Merge one app config (from a dict, file, or filename) into another.
If the given config is a filename, it will be appended to
the list of files to monitor for "autoreload" changes.
"""
if isinstance(other, basestring):
cherrypy.engine.autoreload.files.add(other)
# Load other into base
for section, value_map in reprconf.as_dict(other).items():
if not isinstance(value_map, dict):
raise ValueError(
"Application config must include section headers, but the "
"config you tried to merge doesn't have any sections. "
"Wrap your config in another dict with paths as section "
"headers, for example: {'/': config}.")
base.setdefault(section, {}).update(value_map)
class Config(reprconf.Config):
"""The 'global' configuration data for the entire CherryPy process."""
def update(self, config):
"""Update self from a dict, file or filename."""
if isinstance(config, basestring):
# Filename
cherrypy.engine.autoreload.files.add(config)
reprconf.Config.update(self, config)
def _apply(self, config):
"""Update self from a dict."""
if isinstance(config.get("global"), dict):
if len(config) > 1:
cherrypy.checker.global_config_contained_paths = True
config = config["global"]
if 'tools.staticdir.dir' in config:
config['tools.staticdir.section'] = "global"
reprconf.Config._apply(self, config)
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Decorator for page handlers to set _cp_config."""
if args:
raise TypeError(
"The cherrypy.config decorator does not accept positional "
"arguments; you must use keyword arguments.")
def tool_decorator(f):
if not hasattr(f, "_cp_config"):
f._cp_config = {}
for k, v in kwargs.items():
f._cp_config[k] = v
return f
return tool_decorator
# Sphinx begin config.environments
Config.environments = environments = {
"staging": {
'engine.autoreload.on': False,
'checker.on': False,
'tools.log_headers.on': False,
'request.show_tracebacks': False,
'request.show_mismatched_params': False,
},
"production": {
'engine.autoreload.on': False,
'checker.on': False,
'tools.log_headers.on': False,
'request.show_tracebacks': False,
'request.show_mismatched_params': False,
'log.screen': False,
},
"embedded": {
# For use with CherryPy embedded in another deployment stack.
'engine.autoreload.on': False,
'checker.on': False,
'tools.log_headers.on': False,
'request.show_tracebacks': False,
'request.show_mismatched_params': False,
'log.screen': False,
'engine.SIGHUP': None,
'engine.SIGTERM': None,
},
"test_suite": {
'engine.autoreload.on': False,
'checker.on': False,
'tools.log_headers.on': False,
'request.show_tracebacks': True,
'request.show_mismatched_params': True,
'log.screen': False,
},
}
# Sphinx end config.environments
def _server_namespace_handler(k, v):
"""Config handler for the "server" namespace."""
atoms = k.split(".", 1)
if len(atoms) > 1:
# Special-case config keys of the form 'server.servername.socket_port'
# to configure additional HTTP servers.
if not hasattr(cherrypy, "servers"):
cherrypy.servers = {}
servername, k = atoms
if servername not in cherrypy.servers:
from cherrypy import _cpserver
cherrypy.servers[servername] = _cpserver.Server()
# On by default, but 'on = False' can unsubscribe it (see below).
cherrypy.servers[servername].subscribe()
if k == 'on':
if v:
cherrypy.servers[servername].subscribe()
else:
cherrypy.servers[servername].unsubscribe()
else:
setattr(cherrypy.servers[servername], k, v)
else:
setattr(cherrypy.server, k, v)
Config.namespaces["server"] = _server_namespace_handler
def _engine_namespace_handler(k, v):
"""Backward compatibility handler for the "engine" namespace."""
engine = cherrypy.engine
deprecated = {
'autoreload_on': 'autoreload.on',
'autoreload_frequency': 'autoreload.frequency',
'autoreload_match': 'autoreload.match',
'reload_files': 'autoreload.files',
'deadlock_poll_freq': 'timeout_monitor.frequency'
}
if k in deprecated:
engine.log(
'WARNING: Use of engine.%s is deprecated and will be removed in a '
'future version. Use engine.%s instead.' % (k, deprecated[k]))
if k == 'autoreload_on':
if v:
engine.autoreload.subscribe()
else:
engine.autoreload.unsubscribe()
elif k == 'autoreload_frequency':
engine.autoreload.frequency = v
elif k == 'autoreload_match':
engine.autoreload.match = v
elif k == 'reload_files':
engine.autoreload.files = set(v)
elif k == 'deadlock_poll_freq':
engine.timeout_monitor.frequency = v
elif k == 'SIGHUP':
engine.listeners['SIGHUP'] = set([v])
elif k == 'SIGTERM':
engine.listeners['SIGTERM'] = set([v])
elif "." in k:
plugin, attrname = k.split(".", 1)
plugin = getattr(engine, plugin)
if attrname == 'on':
if v and hasattr(getattr(plugin, 'subscribe', None), '__call__'):
plugin.subscribe()
return
elif (
(not v) and
hasattr(getattr(plugin, 'unsubscribe', None), '__call__')
):
plugin.unsubscribe()
return
setattr(plugin, attrname, v)
else:
setattr(engine, k, v)
Config.namespaces["engine"] = _engine_namespace_handler
def _tree_namespace_handler(k, v):
"""Namespace handler for the 'tree' config namespace."""
if isinstance(v, dict):
for script_name, app in v.items():
cherrypy.tree.graft(app, script_name)
cherrypy.engine.log("Mounted: %s on %s" %
(app, script_name or "/"))
else:
cherrypy.tree.graft(v, v.script_name)
cherrypy.engine.log("Mounted: %s on %s" % (v, v.script_name or "/"))
Config.namespaces["tree"] = _tree_namespace_handler

@ -1,686 +0,0 @@
"""CherryPy dispatchers.
A 'dispatcher' is the object which looks up the 'page handler' callable
and collects config for the current request based on the path_info, other
request attributes, and the application architecture. The core calls the
dispatcher as early as possible, passing it a 'path_info' argument.
The default dispatcher discovers the page handler by matching path_info
to a hierarchical arrangement of objects, starting at request.app.root.
"""
import string
import sys
import types
try:
classtype = (type, types.ClassType)
except AttributeError:
classtype = type
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import set
class PageHandler(object):
"""Callable which sets response.body."""
def __init__(self, callable, *args, **kwargs):
self.callable = callable
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
def get_args(self):
return cherrypy.serving.request.args
def set_args(self, args):
cherrypy.serving.request.args = args
return cherrypy.serving.request.args
args = property(
get_args,
set_args,
doc="The ordered args should be accessible from post dispatch hooks"
)
def get_kwargs(self):
return cherrypy.serving.request.kwargs
def set_kwargs(self, kwargs):
cherrypy.serving.request.kwargs = kwargs
return cherrypy.serving.request.kwargs
kwargs = property(
get_kwargs,
set_kwargs,
doc="The named kwargs should be accessible from post dispatch hooks"
)
def __call__(self):
try:
return self.callable(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
except TypeError:
x = sys.exc_info()[1]
try:
test_callable_spec(self.callable, self.args, self.kwargs)
except cherrypy.HTTPError:
raise sys.exc_info()[1]
except:
raise x
raise
def test_callable_spec(callable, callable_args, callable_kwargs):
"""
Inspect callable and test to see if the given args are suitable for it.
When an error occurs during the handler's invoking stage there are 2
erroneous cases:
1. Too many parameters passed to a function which doesn't define
one of *args or **kwargs.
2. Too little parameters are passed to the function.
There are 3 sources of parameters to a cherrypy handler.
1. query string parameters are passed as keyword parameters to the
handler.
2. body parameters are also passed as keyword parameters.
3. when partial matching occurs, the final path atoms are passed as
positional args.
Both the query string and path atoms are part of the URI. If they are
incorrect, then a 404 Not Found should be raised. Conversely the body
parameters are part of the request; if they are invalid a 400 Bad Request.
"""
show_mismatched_params = getattr(
cherrypy.serving.request, 'show_mismatched_params', False)
try:
(args, varargs, varkw, defaults) = getargspec(callable)
except TypeError:
if isinstance(callable, object) and hasattr(callable, '__call__'):
(args, varargs, varkw,
defaults) = getargspec(callable.__call__)
else:
# If it wasn't one of our own types, re-raise
# the original error
raise
if args and args[0] == 'self':
args = args[1:]
arg_usage = dict([(arg, 0,) for arg in args])
vararg_usage = 0
varkw_usage = 0
extra_kwargs = set()
for i, value in enumerate(callable_args):
try:
arg_usage[args[i]] += 1
except IndexError:
vararg_usage += 1
for key in callable_kwargs.keys():
try:
arg_usage[key] += 1
except KeyError:
varkw_usage += 1
extra_kwargs.add(key)
# figure out which args have defaults.
args_with_defaults = args[-len(defaults or []):]
for i, val in enumerate(defaults or []):
# Defaults take effect only when the arg hasn't been used yet.
if arg_usage[args_with_defaults[i]] == 0:
arg_usage[args_with_defaults[i]] += 1
missing_args = []
multiple_args = []
for key, usage in arg_usage.items():
if usage == 0:
missing_args.append(key)
elif usage > 1:
multiple_args.append(key)
if missing_args:
# In the case where the method allows body arguments
# there are 3 potential errors:
# 1. not enough query string parameters -> 404
# 2. not enough body parameters -> 400
# 3. not enough path parts (partial matches) -> 404
#
# We can't actually tell which case it is,
# so I'm raising a 404 because that covers 2/3 of the
# possibilities
#
# In the case where the method does not allow body
# arguments it's definitely a 404.
message = None
if show_mismatched_params:
message = "Missing parameters: %s" % ",".join(missing_args)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(404, message=message)
# the extra positional arguments come from the path - 404 Not Found
if not varargs and vararg_usage > 0:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(404)
body_params = cherrypy.serving.request.body.params or {}
body_params = set(body_params.keys())
qs_params = set(callable_kwargs.keys()) - body_params
if multiple_args:
if qs_params.intersection(set(multiple_args)):
# If any of the multiple parameters came from the query string then
# it's a 404 Not Found
error = 404
else:
# Otherwise it's a 400 Bad Request
error = 400
message = None
if show_mismatched_params:
message = "Multiple values for parameters: "\
"%s" % ",".join(multiple_args)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(error, message=message)
if not varkw and varkw_usage > 0:
# If there were extra query string parameters, it's a 404 Not Found
extra_qs_params = set(qs_params).intersection(extra_kwargs)
if extra_qs_params:
message = None
if show_mismatched_params:
message = "Unexpected query string "\
"parameters: %s" % ", ".join(extra_qs_params)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(404, message=message)
# If there were any extra body parameters, it's a 400 Not Found
extra_body_params = set(body_params).intersection(extra_kwargs)
if extra_body_params:
message = None
if show_mismatched_params:
message = "Unexpected body parameters: "\
"%s" % ", ".join(extra_body_params)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, message=message)
try:
import inspect
except ImportError:
test_callable_spec = lambda callable, args, kwargs: None
else:
getargspec = inspect.getargspec
# Python 3 requires using getfullargspec if keyword-only arguments are present
if hasattr(inspect, 'getfullargspec'):
def getargspec(callable):
return inspect.getfullargspec(callable)[:4]
class LateParamPageHandler(PageHandler):
"""When passing cherrypy.request.params to the page handler, we do not
want to capture that dict too early; we want to give tools like the
decoding tool a chance to modify the params dict in-between the lookup
of the handler and the actual calling of the handler. This subclass
takes that into account, and allows request.params to be 'bound late'
(it's more complicated than that, but that's the effect).
"""
def _get_kwargs(self):
kwargs = cherrypy.serving.request.params.copy()
if self._kwargs:
kwargs.update(self._kwargs)
return kwargs
def _set_kwargs(self, kwargs):
cherrypy.serving.request.kwargs = kwargs
self._kwargs = kwargs
kwargs = property(_get_kwargs, _set_kwargs,
doc='page handler kwargs (with '
'cherrypy.request.params copied in)')
if sys.version_info < (3, 0):
punctuation_to_underscores = string.maketrans(
string.punctuation, '_' * len(string.punctuation))
def validate_translator(t):
if not isinstance(t, str) or len(t) != 256:
raise ValueError(
"The translate argument must be a str of len 256.")
else:
punctuation_to_underscores = str.maketrans(
string.punctuation, '_' * len(string.punctuation))
def validate_translator(t):
if not isinstance(t, dict):
raise ValueError("The translate argument must be a dict.")
class Dispatcher(object):
"""CherryPy Dispatcher which walks a tree of objects to find a handler.
The tree is rooted at cherrypy.request.app.root, and each hierarchical
component in the path_info argument is matched to a corresponding nested
attribute of the root object. Matching handlers must have an 'exposed'
attribute which evaluates to True. The special method name "index"
matches a URI which ends in a slash ("/"). The special method name
"default" may match a portion of the path_info (but only when no longer
substring of the path_info matches some other object).
This is the default, built-in dispatcher for CherryPy.
"""
dispatch_method_name = '_cp_dispatch'
"""
The name of the dispatch method that nodes may optionally implement
to provide their own dynamic dispatch algorithm.
"""
def __init__(self, dispatch_method_name=None,
translate=punctuation_to_underscores):
validate_translator(translate)
self.translate = translate
if dispatch_method_name:
self.dispatch_method_name = dispatch_method_name
def __call__(self, path_info):
"""Set handler and config for the current request."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
func, vpath = self.find_handler(path_info)
if func:
# Decode any leftover %2F in the virtual_path atoms.
vpath = [x.replace("%2F", "/") for x in vpath]
request.handler = LateParamPageHandler(func, *vpath)
else:
request.handler = cherrypy.NotFound()
def find_handler(self, path):
"""Return the appropriate page handler, plus any virtual path.
This will return two objects. The first will be a callable,
which can be used to generate page output. Any parameters from
the query string or request body will be sent to that callable
as keyword arguments.
The callable is found by traversing the application's tree,
starting from cherrypy.request.app.root, and matching path
components to successive objects in the tree. For example, the
URL "/path/to/handler" might return root.path.to.handler.
The second object returned will be a list of names which are
'virtual path' components: parts of the URL which are dynamic,
and were not used when looking up the handler.
These virtual path components are passed to the handler as
positional arguments.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
app = request.app
root = app.root
dispatch_name = self.dispatch_method_name
# Get config for the root object/path.
fullpath = [x for x in path.strip('/').split('/') if x] + ['index']
fullpath_len = len(fullpath)
segleft = fullpath_len
nodeconf = {}
if hasattr(root, "_cp_config"):
nodeconf.update(root._cp_config)
if "/" in app.config:
nodeconf.update(app.config["/"])
object_trail = [['root', root, nodeconf, segleft]]
node = root
iternames = fullpath[:]
while iternames:
name = iternames[0]
# map to legal Python identifiers (e.g. replace '.' with '_')
objname = name.translate(self.translate)
nodeconf = {}
subnode = getattr(node, objname, None)
pre_len = len(iternames)
if subnode is None:
dispatch = getattr(node, dispatch_name, None)
if dispatch and hasattr(dispatch, '__call__') and not \
getattr(dispatch, 'exposed', False) and \
pre_len > 1:
# Don't expose the hidden 'index' token to _cp_dispatch
# We skip this if pre_len == 1 since it makes no sense
# to call a dispatcher when we have no tokens left.
index_name = iternames.pop()
subnode = dispatch(vpath=iternames)
iternames.append(index_name)
else:
# We didn't find a path, but keep processing in case there
# is a default() handler.
iternames.pop(0)
else:
# We found the path, remove the vpath entry
iternames.pop(0)
segleft = len(iternames)
if segleft > pre_len:
# No path segment was removed. Raise an error.
raise cherrypy.CherryPyException(
"A vpath segment was added. Custom dispatchers may only "
+ "remove elements. While trying to process "
+ "{0} in {1}".format(name, fullpath)
)
elif segleft == pre_len:
# Assume that the handler used the current path segment, but
# did not pop it. This allows things like
# return getattr(self, vpath[0], None)
iternames.pop(0)
segleft -= 1
node = subnode
if node is not None:
# Get _cp_config attached to this node.
if hasattr(node, "_cp_config"):
nodeconf.update(node._cp_config)
# Mix in values from app.config for this path.
existing_len = fullpath_len - pre_len
if existing_len != 0:
curpath = '/' + '/'.join(fullpath[0:existing_len])
else:
curpath = ''
new_segs = fullpath[fullpath_len - pre_len:fullpath_len - segleft]
for seg in new_segs:
curpath += '/' + seg
if curpath in app.config:
nodeconf.update(app.config[curpath])
object_trail.append([name, node, nodeconf, segleft])
def set_conf():
"""Collapse all object_trail config into cherrypy.request.config.
"""
base = cherrypy.config.copy()
# Note that we merge the config from each node
# even if that node was None.
for name, obj, conf, segleft in object_trail:
base.update(conf)
if 'tools.staticdir.dir' in conf:
base['tools.staticdir.section'] = '/' + \
'/'.join(fullpath[0:fullpath_len - segleft])
return base
# Try successive objects (reverse order)
num_candidates = len(object_trail) - 1
for i in range(num_candidates, -1, -1):
name, candidate, nodeconf, segleft = object_trail[i]
if candidate is None:
continue
# Try a "default" method on the current leaf.
if hasattr(candidate, "default"):
defhandler = candidate.default
if getattr(defhandler, 'exposed', False):
# Insert any extra _cp_config from the default handler.
conf = getattr(defhandler, "_cp_config", {})
object_trail.insert(
i + 1, ["default", defhandler, conf, segleft])
request.config = set_conf()
# See https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/613
request.is_index = path.endswith("/")
return defhandler, fullpath[fullpath_len - segleft:-1]
# Uncomment the next line to restrict positional params to
# "default".
# if i < num_candidates - 2: continue
# Try the current leaf.
if getattr(candidate, 'exposed', False):
request.config = set_conf()
if i == num_candidates:
# We found the extra ".index". Mark request so tools
# can redirect if path_info has no trailing slash.
request.is_index = True
else:
# We're not at an 'index' handler. Mark request so tools
# can redirect if path_info has NO trailing slash.
# Note that this also includes handlers which take
# positional parameters (virtual paths).
request.is_index = False
return candidate, fullpath[fullpath_len - segleft:-1]
# We didn't find anything
request.config = set_conf()
return None, []
class MethodDispatcher(Dispatcher):
"""Additional dispatch based on cherrypy.request.method.upper().
Methods named GET, POST, etc will be called on an exposed class.
The method names must be all caps; the appropriate Allow header
will be output showing all capitalized method names as allowable
HTTP verbs.
Note that the containing class must be exposed, not the methods.
"""
def __call__(self, path_info):
"""Set handler and config for the current request."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
resource, vpath = self.find_handler(path_info)
if resource:
# Set Allow header
avail = [m for m in dir(resource) if m.isupper()]
if "GET" in avail and "HEAD" not in avail:
avail.append("HEAD")
avail.sort()
cherrypy.serving.response.headers['Allow'] = ", ".join(avail)
# Find the subhandler
meth = request.method.upper()
func = getattr(resource, meth, None)
if func is None and meth == "HEAD":
func = getattr(resource, "GET", None)
if func:
# Grab any _cp_config on the subhandler.
if hasattr(func, "_cp_config"):
request.config.update(func._cp_config)
# Decode any leftover %2F in the virtual_path atoms.
vpath = [x.replace("%2F", "/") for x in vpath]
request.handler = LateParamPageHandler(func, *vpath)
else:
request.handler = cherrypy.HTTPError(405)
else:
request.handler = cherrypy.NotFound()
class RoutesDispatcher(object):
"""A Routes based dispatcher for CherryPy."""
def __init__(self, full_result=False, **mapper_options):
"""
Routes dispatcher
Set full_result to True if you wish the controller
and the action to be passed on to the page handler
parameters. By default they won't be.
"""
import routes
self.full_result = full_result
self.controllers = {}
self.mapper = routes.Mapper(**mapper_options)
self.mapper.controller_scan = self.controllers.keys
def connect(self, name, route, controller, **kwargs):
self.controllers[name] = controller
self.mapper.connect(name, route, controller=name, **kwargs)
def redirect(self, url):
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(url)
def __call__(self, path_info):
"""Set handler and config for the current request."""
func = self.find_handler(path_info)
if func:
cherrypy.serving.request.handler = LateParamPageHandler(func)
else:
cherrypy.serving.request.handler = cherrypy.NotFound()
def find_handler(self, path_info):
"""Find the right page handler, and set request.config."""
import routes
request = cherrypy.serving.request
config = routes.request_config()
config.mapper = self.mapper
if hasattr(request, 'wsgi_environ'):
config.environ = request.wsgi_environ
config.host = request.headers.get('Host', None)
config.protocol = request.scheme
config.redirect = self.redirect
result = self.mapper.match(path_info)
config.mapper_dict = result
params = {}
if result:
params = result.copy()
if not self.full_result:
params.pop('controller', None)
params.pop('action', None)
request.params.update(params)
# Get config for the root object/path.
request.config = base = cherrypy.config.copy()
curpath = ""
def merge(nodeconf):
if 'tools.staticdir.dir' in nodeconf:
nodeconf['tools.staticdir.section'] = curpath or "/"
base.update(nodeconf)
app = request.app
root = app.root
if hasattr(root, "_cp_config"):
merge(root._cp_config)
if "/" in app.config:
merge(app.config["/"])
# Mix in values from app.config.
atoms = [x for x in path_info.split("/") if x]
if atoms:
last = atoms.pop()
else:
last = None
for atom in atoms:
curpath = "/".join((curpath, atom))
if curpath in app.config:
merge(app.config[curpath])
handler = None
if result:
controller = result.get('controller')
controller = self.controllers.get(controller, controller)
if controller:
if isinstance(controller, classtype):
controller = controller()
# Get config from the controller.
if hasattr(controller, "_cp_config"):
merge(controller._cp_config)
action = result.get('action')
if action is not None:
handler = getattr(controller, action, None)
# Get config from the handler
if hasattr(handler, "_cp_config"):
merge(handler._cp_config)
else:
handler = controller
# Do the last path atom here so it can
# override the controller's _cp_config.
if last:
curpath = "/".join((curpath, last))
if curpath in app.config:
merge(app.config[curpath])
return handler
def XMLRPCDispatcher(next_dispatcher=Dispatcher()):
from cherrypy.lib import xmlrpcutil
def xmlrpc_dispatch(path_info):
path_info = xmlrpcutil.patched_path(path_info)
return next_dispatcher(path_info)
return xmlrpc_dispatch
def VirtualHost(next_dispatcher=Dispatcher(), use_x_forwarded_host=True,
**domains):
"""
Select a different handler based on the Host header.
This can be useful when running multiple sites within one CP server.
It allows several domains to point to different parts of a single
website structure. For example::
http://www.domain.example -> root
http://www.domain2.example -> root/domain2/
http://www.domain2.example:443 -> root/secure
can be accomplished via the following config::
[/]
request.dispatch = cherrypy.dispatch.VirtualHost(
**{'www.domain2.example': '/domain2',
'www.domain2.example:443': '/secure',
})
next_dispatcher
The next dispatcher object in the dispatch chain.
The VirtualHost dispatcher adds a prefix to the URL and calls
another dispatcher. Defaults to cherrypy.dispatch.Dispatcher().
use_x_forwarded_host
If True (the default), any "X-Forwarded-Host"
request header will be used instead of the "Host" header. This
is commonly added by HTTP servers (such as Apache) when proxying.
``**domains``
A dict of {host header value: virtual prefix} pairs.
The incoming "Host" request header is looked up in this dict,
and, if a match is found, the corresponding "virtual prefix"
value will be prepended to the URL path before calling the
next dispatcher. Note that you often need separate entries
for "example.com" and "www.example.com". In addition, "Host"
headers may contain the port number.
"""
from cherrypy.lib import httputil
def vhost_dispatch(path_info):
request = cherrypy.serving.request
header = request.headers.get
domain = header('Host', '')
if use_x_forwarded_host:
domain = header("X-Forwarded-Host", domain)
prefix = domains.get(domain, "")
if prefix:
path_info = httputil.urljoin(prefix, path_info)
result = next_dispatcher(path_info)
# Touch up staticdir config. See
# https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/614.
section = request.config.get('tools.staticdir.section')
if section:
section = section[len(prefix):]
request.config['tools.staticdir.section'] = section
return result
return vhost_dispatch

@ -1,611 +0,0 @@
"""Exception classes for CherryPy.
CherryPy provides (and uses) exceptions for declaring that the HTTP response
should be a status other than the default "200 OK". You can ``raise`` them like
normal Python exceptions. You can also call them and they will raise
themselves; this means you can set an
:class:`HTTPError<cherrypy._cperror.HTTPError>`
or :class:`HTTPRedirect<cherrypy._cperror.HTTPRedirect>` as the
:attr:`request.handler<cherrypy._cprequest.Request.handler>`.
.. _redirectingpost:
Redirecting POST
================
When you GET a resource and are redirected by the server to another Location,
there's generally no problem since GET is both a "safe method" (there should
be no side-effects) and an "idempotent method" (multiple calls are no different
than a single call).
POST, however, is neither safe nor idempotent--if you
charge a credit card, you don't want to be charged twice by a redirect!
For this reason, *none* of the 3xx responses permit a user-agent (browser) to
resubmit a POST on redirection without first confirming the action with the
user:
===== ================================= ===========
300 Multiple Choices Confirm with the user
301 Moved Permanently Confirm with the user
302 Found (Object moved temporarily) Confirm with the user
303 See Other GET the new URI--no confirmation
304 Not modified (for conditional GET only--POST should not raise this error)
305 Use Proxy Confirm with the user
307 Temporary Redirect Confirm with the user
===== ================================= ===========
However, browsers have historically implemented these restrictions poorly;
in particular, many browsers do not force the user to confirm 301, 302
or 307 when redirecting POST. For this reason, CherryPy defaults to 303,
which most user-agents appear to have implemented correctly. Therefore, if
you raise HTTPRedirect for a POST request, the user-agent will most likely
attempt to GET the new URI (without asking for confirmation from the user).
We realize this is confusing for developers, but it's the safest thing we
could do. You are of course free to raise ``HTTPRedirect(uri, status=302)``
or any other 3xx status if you know what you're doing, but given the
environment, we couldn't let any of those be the default.
Custom Error Handling
=====================
.. image:: /refman/cperrors.gif
Anticipated HTTP responses
--------------------------
The 'error_page' config namespace can be used to provide custom HTML output for
expected responses (like 404 Not Found). Supply a filename from which the
output will be read. The contents will be interpolated with the values
%(status)s, %(message)s, %(traceback)s, and %(version)s using plain old Python
`string formatting <http://docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html#string-formatting-operations>`_.
::
_cp_config = {
'error_page.404': os.path.join(localDir, "static/index.html")
}
Beginning in version 3.1, you may also provide a function or other callable as
an error_page entry. It will be passed the same status, message, traceback and
version arguments that are interpolated into templates::
def error_page_402(status, message, traceback, version):
return "Error %s - Well, I'm very sorry but you haven't paid!" % status
cherrypy.config.update({'error_page.402': error_page_402})
Also in 3.1, in addition to the numbered error codes, you may also supply
"error_page.default" to handle all codes which do not have their own error_page
entry.
Unanticipated errors
--------------------
CherryPy also has a generic error handling mechanism: whenever an unanticipated
error occurs in your code, it will call
:func:`Request.error_response<cherrypy._cprequest.Request.error_response>` to
set the response status, headers, and body. By default, this is the same
output as
:class:`HTTPError(500) <cherrypy._cperror.HTTPError>`. If you want to provide
some other behavior, you generally replace "request.error_response".
Here is some sample code that shows how to display a custom error message and
send an e-mail containing the error::
from cherrypy import _cperror
def handle_error():
cherrypy.response.status = 500
cherrypy.response.body = [
"<html><body>Sorry, an error occured</body></html>"
]
sendMail('error@domain.com',
'Error in your web app',
_cperror.format_exc())
class Root:
_cp_config = {'request.error_response': handle_error}
Note that you have to explicitly set
:attr:`response.body <cherrypy._cprequest.Response.body>`
and not simply return an error message as a result.
"""
#fails in python 3.9
# from cgi import escape as _escape
from html import escape as _escape
from sys import exc_info as _exc_info
from traceback import format_exception as _format_exception
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, bytestr, iteritems, ntob
from cherrypy._cpcompat import tonative, urljoin as _urljoin
from cherrypy.lib import httputil as _httputil
class CherryPyException(Exception):
"""A base class for CherryPy exceptions."""
pass
class TimeoutError(CherryPyException):
"""Exception raised when Response.timed_out is detected."""
pass
class InternalRedirect(CherryPyException):
"""Exception raised to switch to the handler for a different URL.
This exception will redirect processing to another path within the site
(without informing the client). Provide the new path as an argument when
raising the exception. Provide any params in the querystring for the new
URL.
"""
def __init__(self, path, query_string=""):
import cherrypy
self.request = cherrypy.serving.request
self.query_string = query_string
if "?" in path:
# Separate any params included in the path
path, self.query_string = path.split("?", 1)
# Note that urljoin will "do the right thing" whether url is:
# 1. a URL relative to root (e.g. "/dummy")
# 2. a URL relative to the current path
# Note that any query string will be discarded.
path = _urljoin(self.request.path_info, path)
# Set a 'path' member attribute so that code which traps this
# error can have access to it.
self.path = path
CherryPyException.__init__(self, path, self.query_string)
class HTTPRedirect(CherryPyException):
"""Exception raised when the request should be redirected.
This exception will force a HTTP redirect to the URL or URL's you give it.
The new URL must be passed as the first argument to the Exception,
e.g., HTTPRedirect(newUrl). Multiple URLs are allowed in a list.
If a URL is absolute, it will be used as-is. If it is relative, it is
assumed to be relative to the current cherrypy.request.path_info.
If one of the provided URL is a unicode object, it will be encoded
using the default encoding or the one passed in parameter.
There are multiple types of redirect, from which you can select via the
``status`` argument. If you do not provide a ``status`` arg, it defaults to
303 (or 302 if responding with HTTP/1.0).
Examples::
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect("")
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect("/abs/path", 307)
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(["path1", "path2?a=1&b=2"], 301)
See :ref:`redirectingpost` for additional caveats.
"""
status = None
"""The integer HTTP status code to emit."""
urls = None
"""The list of URL's to emit."""
encoding = 'utf-8'
"""The encoding when passed urls are not native strings"""
def __init__(self, urls, status=None, encoding=None):
import cherrypy
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if isinstance(urls, basestring):
urls = [urls]
abs_urls = []
for url in urls:
url = tonative(url, encoding or self.encoding)
# Note that urljoin will "do the right thing" whether url is:
# 1. a complete URL with host (e.g. "http://www.example.com/test")
# 2. a URL relative to root (e.g. "/dummy")
# 3. a URL relative to the current path
# Note that any query string in cherrypy.request is discarded.
url = _urljoin(cherrypy.url(), url)
abs_urls.append(url)
self.urls = abs_urls
# RFC 2616 indicates a 301 response code fits our goal; however,
# browser support for 301 is quite messy. Do 302/303 instead. See
# http://www.alanflavell.org.uk/www/post-redirect.html
if status is None:
if request.protocol >= (1, 1):
status = 303
else:
status = 302
else:
status = int(status)
if status < 300 or status > 399:
raise ValueError("status must be between 300 and 399.")
self.status = status
CherryPyException.__init__(self, abs_urls, status)
def set_response(self):
"""Modify cherrypy.response status, headers, and body to represent
self.
CherryPy uses this internally, but you can also use it to create an
HTTPRedirect object and set its output without *raising* the exception.
"""
import cherrypy
response = cherrypy.serving.response
response.status = status = self.status
if status in (300, 301, 302, 303, 307):
response.headers['Content-Type'] = "text/html;charset=utf-8"
# "The ... URI SHOULD be given by the Location field
# in the response."
response.headers['Location'] = self.urls[0]
# "Unless the request method was HEAD, the entity of the response
# SHOULD contain a short hypertext note with a hyperlink to the
# new URI(s)."
msg = {
300: "This resource can be found at ",
301: "This resource has permanently moved to ",
302: "This resource resides temporarily at ",
303: "This resource can be found at ",
307: "This resource has moved temporarily to ",
}[status]
msg += '<a href=%s>%s</a>.'
from xml.sax import saxutils
msgs = [msg % (saxutils.quoteattr(u), u) for u in self.urls]
response.body = ntob("<br />\n".join(msgs), 'utf-8')
# Previous code may have set C-L, so we have to reset it
# (allow finalize to set it).
response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
elif status == 304:
# Not Modified.
# "The response MUST include the following header fields:
# Date, unless its omission is required by section 14.18.1"
# The "Date" header should have been set in Response.__init__
# "...the response SHOULD NOT include other entity-headers."
for key in ('Allow', 'Content-Encoding', 'Content-Language',
'Content-Length', 'Content-Location', 'Content-MD5',
'Content-Range', 'Content-Type', 'Expires',
'Last-Modified'):
if key in response.headers:
del response.headers[key]
# "The 304 response MUST NOT contain a message-body."
response.body = None
# Previous code may have set C-L, so we have to reset it.
response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
elif status == 305:
# Use Proxy.
# self.urls[0] should be the URI of the proxy.
response.headers['Location'] = self.urls[0]
response.body = None
# Previous code may have set C-L, so we have to reset it.
response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
else:
raise ValueError("The %s status code is unknown." % status)
def __call__(self):
"""Use this exception as a request.handler (raise self)."""
raise self
def clean_headers(status):
"""Remove any headers which should not apply to an error response."""
import cherrypy
response = cherrypy.serving.response
# Remove headers which applied to the original content,
# but do not apply to the error page.
respheaders = response.headers
for key in ["Accept-Ranges", "Age", "ETag", "Location", "Retry-After",
"Vary", "Content-Encoding", "Content-Length", "Expires",
"Content-Location", "Content-MD5", "Last-Modified"]:
if key in respheaders:
del respheaders[key]
if status != 416:
# A server sending a response with status code 416 (Requested
# range not satisfiable) SHOULD include a Content-Range field
# with a byte-range-resp-spec of "*". The instance-length
# specifies the current length of the selected resource.
# A response with status code 206 (Partial Content) MUST NOT
# include a Content-Range field with a byte-range- resp-spec of "*".
if "Content-Range" in respheaders:
del respheaders["Content-Range"]
class HTTPError(CherryPyException):
"""Exception used to return an HTTP error code (4xx-5xx) to the client.
This exception can be used to automatically send a response using a
http status code, with an appropriate error page. It takes an optional
``status`` argument (which must be between 400 and 599); it defaults to 500
("Internal Server Error"). It also takes an optional ``message`` argument,
which will be returned in the response body. See
`RFC2616 <http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.4>`_
for a complete list of available error codes and when to use them.
Examples::
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(403)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
"403 Forbidden", "You are not allowed to access this resource.")
"""
status = None
"""The HTTP status code. May be of type int or str (with a Reason-Phrase).
"""
code = None
"""The integer HTTP status code."""
reason = None
"""The HTTP Reason-Phrase string."""
def __init__(self, status=500, message=None):
self.status = status
try:
self.code, self.reason, defaultmsg = _httputil.valid_status(status)
except ValueError:
raise self.__class__(500, _exc_info()[1].args[0])
if self.code < 400 or self.code > 599:
raise ValueError("status must be between 400 and 599.")
# See http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0352/
# self.message = message
self._message = message or defaultmsg
CherryPyException.__init__(self, status, message)
def set_response(self):
"""Modify cherrypy.response status, headers, and body to represent
self.
CherryPy uses this internally, but you can also use it to create an
HTTPError object and set its output without *raising* the exception.
"""
import cherrypy
response = cherrypy.serving.response
clean_headers(self.code)
# In all cases, finalize will be called after this method,
# so don't bother cleaning up response values here.
response.status = self.status
tb = None
if cherrypy.serving.request.show_tracebacks:
tb = format_exc()
response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
content = self.get_error_page(self.status, traceback=tb,
message=self._message)
response.body = content
_be_ie_unfriendly(self.code)
def get_error_page(self, *args, **kwargs):
return get_error_page(*args, **kwargs)
def __call__(self):
"""Use this exception as a request.handler (raise self)."""
raise self
class NotFound(HTTPError):
"""Exception raised when a URL could not be mapped to any handler (404).
This is equivalent to raising
:class:`HTTPError("404 Not Found") <cherrypy._cperror.HTTPError>`.
"""
def __init__(self, path=None):
if path is None:
import cherrypy
request = cherrypy.serving.request
path = request.script_name + request.path_info
self.args = (path,)
HTTPError.__init__(self, 404, "The path '%s' was not found." % path)
_HTTPErrorTemplate = '''<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC
"-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></meta>
<title>%(status)s</title>
<style type="text/css">
#powered_by {
margin-top: 20px;
border-top: 2px solid black;
font-style: italic;
}
#traceback {
color: red;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h2>%(status)s</h2>
<p>%(message)s</p>
<pre id="traceback">%(traceback)s</pre>
<div id="powered_by">
<span>
Powered by <a href="http://www.cherrypy.org">CherryPy %(version)s</a>
</span>
</div>
</body>
</html>
'''
def get_error_page(status, **kwargs):
"""Return an HTML page, containing a pretty error response.
status should be an int or a str.
kwargs will be interpolated into the page template.
"""
import cherrypy
try:
code, reason, message = _httputil.valid_status(status)
except ValueError:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(500, _exc_info()[1].args[0])
# We can't use setdefault here, because some
# callers send None for kwarg values.
if kwargs.get('status') is None:
kwargs['status'] = "%s %s" % (code, reason)
if kwargs.get('message') is None:
kwargs['message'] = message
if kwargs.get('traceback') is None:
kwargs['traceback'] = ''
if kwargs.get('version') is None:
kwargs['version'] = cherrypy.__version__
for k, v in iteritems(kwargs):
if v is None:
kwargs[k] = ""
else:
kwargs[k] = _escape(kwargs[k])
# Use a custom template or callable for the error page?
pages = cherrypy.serving.request.error_page
error_page = pages.get(code) or pages.get('default')
# Default template, can be overridden below.
template = _HTTPErrorTemplate
if error_page:
try:
if hasattr(error_page, '__call__'):
# The caller function may be setting headers manually,
# so we delegate to it completely. We may be returning
# an iterator as well as a string here.
#
# We *must* make sure any content is not unicode.
result = error_page(**kwargs)
if cherrypy.lib.is_iterator(result):
from cherrypy.lib.encoding import UTF8StreamEncoder
return UTF8StreamEncoder(result)
elif isinstance(result, cherrypy._cpcompat.unicodestr):
return result.encode('utf-8')
else:
if not isinstance(result, cherrypy._cpcompat.bytestr):
raise ValueError('error page function did not '
'return a bytestring, unicodestring or an '
'iterator - returned object of type %s.'
% (type(result).__name__))
return result
else:
# Load the template from this path.
template = tonative(open(error_page, 'rb').read())
except:
e = _format_exception(*_exc_info())[-1]
m = kwargs['message']
if m:
m += "<br />"
m += "In addition, the custom error page failed:\n<br />%s" % e
kwargs['message'] = m
response = cherrypy.serving.response
response.headers['Content-Type'] = "text/html;charset=utf-8"
result = template % kwargs
return result.encode('utf-8')
_ie_friendly_error_sizes = {
400: 512, 403: 256, 404: 512, 405: 256,
406: 512, 408: 512, 409: 512, 410: 256,
500: 512, 501: 512, 505: 512,
}
def _be_ie_unfriendly(status):
import cherrypy
response = cherrypy.serving.response
# For some statuses, Internet Explorer 5+ shows "friendly error
# messages" instead of our response.body if the body is smaller
# than a given size. Fix this by returning a body over that size
# (by adding whitespace).
# See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q218155/
s = _ie_friendly_error_sizes.get(status, 0)
if s:
s += 1
# Since we are issuing an HTTP error status, we assume that
# the entity is short, and we should just collapse it.
content = response.collapse_body()
l = len(content)
if l and l < s:
# IN ADDITION: the response must be written to IE
# in one chunk or it will still get replaced! Bah.
content = content + (ntob(" ") * (s - l))
response.body = content
response.headers['Content-Length'] = str(len(content))
def format_exc(exc=None):
"""Return exc (or sys.exc_info if None), formatted."""
try:
if exc is None:
exc = _exc_info()
if exc == (None, None, None):
return ""
import traceback
return "".join(traceback.format_exception(*exc))
finally:
del exc
def bare_error(extrabody=None):
"""Produce status, headers, body for a critical error.
Returns a triple without calling any other questionable functions,
so it should be as error-free as possible. Call it from an HTTP server
if you get errors outside of the request.
If extrabody is None, a friendly but rather unhelpful error message
is set in the body. If extrabody is a string, it will be appended
as-is to the body.
"""
# The whole point of this function is to be a last line-of-defense
# in handling errors. That is, it must not raise any errors itself;
# it cannot be allowed to fail. Therefore, don't add to it!
# In particular, don't call any other CP functions.
body = ntob("Unrecoverable error in the server.")
if extrabody is not None:
if not isinstance(extrabody, bytestr):
extrabody = extrabody.encode('utf-8')
body += ntob("\n") + extrabody
return (ntob("500 Internal Server Error"),
[(ntob('Content-Type'), ntob('text/plain')),
(ntob('Content-Length'), ntob(str(len(body)), 'ISO-8859-1'))],
[body])

@ -1,461 +0,0 @@
"""
Simple config
=============
Although CherryPy uses the :mod:`Python logging module <logging>`, it does so
behind the scenes so that simple logging is simple, but complicated logging
is still possible. "Simple" logging means that you can log to the screen
(i.e. console/stdout) or to a file, and that you can easily have separate
error and access log files.
Here are the simplified logging settings. You use these by adding lines to
your config file or dict. You should set these at either the global level or
per application (see next), but generally not both.
* ``log.screen``: Set this to True to have both "error" and "access" messages
printed to stdout.
* ``log.access_file``: Set this to an absolute filename where you want
"access" messages written.
* ``log.error_file``: Set this to an absolute filename where you want "error"
messages written.
Many events are automatically logged; to log your own application events, call
:func:`cherrypy.log`.
Architecture
============
Separate scopes
---------------
CherryPy provides log managers at both the global and application layers.
This means you can have one set of logging rules for your entire site,
and another set of rules specific to each application. The global log
manager is found at :func:`cherrypy.log`, and the log manager for each
application is found at :attr:`app.log<cherrypy._cptree.Application.log>`.
If you're inside a request, the latter is reachable from
``cherrypy.request.app.log``; if you're outside a request, you'll have to
obtain a reference to the ``app``: either the return value of
:func:`tree.mount()<cherrypy._cptree.Tree.mount>` or, if you used
:func:`quickstart()<cherrypy.quickstart>` instead, via
``cherrypy.tree.apps['/']``.
By default, the global logs are named "cherrypy.error" and "cherrypy.access",
and the application logs are named "cherrypy.error.2378745" and
"cherrypy.access.2378745" (the number is the id of the Application object).
This means that the application logs "bubble up" to the site logs, so if your
application has no log handlers, the site-level handlers will still log the
messages.
Errors vs. Access
-----------------
Each log manager handles both "access" messages (one per HTTP request) and
"error" messages (everything else). Note that the "error" log is not just for
errors! The format of access messages is highly formalized, but the error log
isn't--it receives messages from a variety of sources (including full error
tracebacks, if enabled).
If you are logging the access log and error log to the same source, then there
is a possibility that a specially crafted error message may replicate an access
log message as described in CWE-117. In this case it is the application
developer's responsibility to manually escape data before using CherryPy's log()
functionality, or they may create an application that is vulnerable to CWE-117.
This would be achieved by using a custom handler escape any special characters,
and attached as described below.
Custom Handlers
===============
The simple settings above work by manipulating Python's standard :mod:`logging`
module. So when you need something more complex, the full power of the standard
module is yours to exploit. You can borrow or create custom handlers, formats,
filters, and much more. Here's an example that skips the standard FileHandler
and uses a RotatingFileHandler instead:
::
#python
log = app.log
# Remove the default FileHandlers if present.
log.error_file = ""
log.access_file = ""
maxBytes = getattr(log, "rot_maxBytes", 10000000)
backupCount = getattr(log, "rot_backupCount", 1000)
# Make a new RotatingFileHandler for the error log.
fname = getattr(log, "rot_error_file", "error.log")
h = handlers.RotatingFileHandler(fname, 'a', maxBytes, backupCount)
h.setLevel(DEBUG)
h.setFormatter(_cplogging.logfmt)
log.error_log.addHandler(h)
# Make a new RotatingFileHandler for the access log.
fname = getattr(log, "rot_access_file", "access.log")
h = handlers.RotatingFileHandler(fname, 'a', maxBytes, backupCount)
h.setLevel(DEBUG)
h.setFormatter(_cplogging.logfmt)
log.access_log.addHandler(h)
The ``rot_*`` attributes are pulled straight from the application log object.
Since "log.*" config entries simply set attributes on the log object, you can
add custom attributes to your heart's content. Note that these handlers are
used ''instead'' of the default, simple handlers outlined above (so don't set
the "log.error_file" config entry, for example).
"""
import datetime
import logging
# Silence the no-handlers "warning" (stderr write!) in stdlib logging
logging.Logger.manager.emittedNoHandlerWarning = 1
logfmt = logging.Formatter("%(message)s")
import os
import sys
import cherrypy
from cherrypy import _cperror
from cherrypy._cpcompat import ntob, py3k
class NullHandler(logging.Handler):
"""A no-op logging handler to silence the logging.lastResort handler."""
def handle(self, record):
pass
def emit(self, record):
pass
def createLock(self):
self.lock = None
class LogManager(object):
"""An object to assist both simple and advanced logging.
``cherrypy.log`` is an instance of this class.
"""
appid = None
"""The id() of the Application object which owns this log manager. If this
is a global log manager, appid is None."""
error_log = None
"""The actual :class:`logging.Logger` instance for error messages."""
access_log = None
"""The actual :class:`logging.Logger` instance for access messages."""
if py3k:
access_log_format = \
'{h} {l} {u} {t} "{r}" {s} {b} "{f}" "{a}"'
else:
access_log_format = \
'%(h)s %(l)s %(u)s %(t)s "%(r)s" %(s)s %(b)s "%(f)s" "%(a)s"'
logger_root = None
"""The "top-level" logger name.
This string will be used as the first segment in the Logger names.
The default is "cherrypy", for example, in which case the Logger names
will be of the form::
cherrypy.error.<appid>
cherrypy.access.<appid>
"""
def __init__(self, appid=None, logger_root="cherrypy"):
self.logger_root = logger_root
self.appid = appid
if appid is None:
self.error_log = logging.getLogger("%s.error" % logger_root)
self.access_log = logging.getLogger("%s.access" % logger_root)
else:
self.error_log = logging.getLogger(
"%s.error.%s" % (logger_root, appid))
self.access_log = logging.getLogger(
"%s.access.%s" % (logger_root, appid))
self.error_log.setLevel(logging.INFO)
self.access_log.setLevel(logging.INFO)
# Silence the no-handlers "warning" (stderr write!) in stdlib logging
self.error_log.addHandler(NullHandler())
self.access_log.addHandler(NullHandler())
cherrypy.engine.subscribe('graceful', self.reopen_files)
def reopen_files(self):
"""Close and reopen all file handlers."""
for log in (self.error_log, self.access_log):
for h in log.handlers:
if isinstance(h, logging.FileHandler):
h.acquire()
h.stream.close()
h.stream = open(h.baseFilename, h.mode)
h.release()
def error(self, msg='', context='', severity=logging.INFO,
traceback=False):
"""Write the given ``msg`` to the error log.
This is not just for errors! Applications may call this at any time
to log application-specific information.
If ``traceback`` is True, the traceback of the current exception
(if any) will be appended to ``msg``.
"""
exc_info = None
if traceback:
exc_info = _cperror._exc_info()
self.error_log.log(severity, ' '.join((self.time(), context, msg)), exc_info=exc_info)
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""An alias for ``error``."""
return self.error(*args, **kwargs)
def access(self):
"""Write to the access log (in Apache/NCSA Combined Log format).
See the
`apache documentation <http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/logs.html#combined>`_
for format details.
CherryPy calls this automatically for you. Note there are no arguments;
it collects the data itself from
:class:`cherrypy.request<cherrypy._cprequest.Request>`.
Like Apache started doing in 2.0.46, non-printable and other special
characters in %r (and we expand that to all parts) are escaped using
\\xhh sequences, where hh stands for the hexadecimal representation
of the raw byte. Exceptions from this rule are " and \\, which are
escaped by prepending a backslash, and all whitespace characters,
which are written in their C-style notation (\\n, \\t, etc).
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
remote = request.remote
response = cherrypy.serving.response
outheaders = response.headers
inheaders = request.headers
if response.output_status is None:
status = "-"
else:
status = response.output_status.split(ntob(" "), 1)[0]
if py3k:
status = status.decode('ISO-8859-1')
atoms = {'h': remote.name or remote.ip,
'l': '-',
'u': getattr(request, "login", None) or "-",
't': self.time(),
'r': request.request_line,
's': status,
'b': dict.get(outheaders, 'Content-Length', '') or "-",
'f': dict.get(inheaders, 'Referer', ''),
'a': dict.get(inheaders, 'User-Agent', ''),
'o': dict.get(inheaders, 'Host', '-'),
}
if py3k:
for k, v in atoms.items():
if not isinstance(v, str):
v = str(v)
v = v.replace('"', '\\"').encode('utf8')
# Fortunately, repr(str) escapes unprintable chars, \n, \t, etc
# and backslash for us. All we have to do is strip the quotes.
v = repr(v)[2:-1]
# in python 3.0 the repr of bytes (as returned by encode)
# uses double \'s. But then the logger escapes them yet, again
# resulting in quadruple slashes. Remove the extra one here.
v = v.replace('\\\\', '\\')
# Escape double-quote.
atoms[k] = v
try:
self.access_log.log(
logging.INFO, self.access_log_format.format(**atoms))
except:
self(traceback=True)
else:
for k, v in atoms.items():
if isinstance(v, unicode):
v = v.encode('utf8')
elif not isinstance(v, str):
v = str(v)
# Fortunately, repr(str) escapes unprintable chars, \n, \t, etc
# and backslash for us. All we have to do is strip the quotes.
v = repr(v)[1:-1]
# Escape double-quote.
atoms[k] = v.replace('"', '\\"')
try:
self.access_log.log(
logging.INFO, self.access_log_format % atoms)
except:
self(traceback=True)
def time(self):
"""Return now() in Apache Common Log Format (no timezone)."""
now = datetime.datetime.now()
monthnames = ['jan', 'feb', 'mar', 'apr', 'may', 'jun',
'jul', 'aug', 'sep', 'oct', 'nov', 'dec']
month = monthnames[now.month - 1].capitalize()
return ('[%02d/%s/%04d:%02d:%02d:%02d]' %
(now.day, month, now.year, now.hour, now.minute, now.second))
def _get_builtin_handler(self, log, key):
for h in log.handlers:
if getattr(h, "_cpbuiltin", None) == key:
return h
# ------------------------- Screen handlers ------------------------- #
def _set_screen_handler(self, log, enable, stream=None):
h = self._get_builtin_handler(log, "screen")
if enable:
if not h:
if stream is None:
stream = sys.stderr
h = logging.StreamHandler(stream)
h.setFormatter(logfmt)
h._cpbuiltin = "screen"
log.addHandler(h)
elif h:
log.handlers.remove(h)
def _get_screen(self):
h = self._get_builtin_handler
has_h = h(self.error_log, "screen") or h(self.access_log, "screen")
return bool(has_h)
def _set_screen(self, newvalue):
self._set_screen_handler(self.error_log, newvalue, stream=sys.stderr)
self._set_screen_handler(self.access_log, newvalue, stream=sys.stdout)
screen = property(_get_screen, _set_screen,
doc="""Turn stderr/stdout logging on or off.
If you set this to True, it'll add the appropriate StreamHandler for
you. If you set it to False, it will remove the handler.
""")
# -------------------------- File handlers -------------------------- #
def _add_builtin_file_handler(self, log, fname):
h = logging.FileHandler(fname)
h.setFormatter(logfmt)
h._cpbuiltin = "file"
log.addHandler(h)
def _set_file_handler(self, log, filename):
h = self._get_builtin_handler(log, "file")
if filename:
if h:
if h.baseFilename != os.path.abspath(filename):
h.close()
log.handlers.remove(h)
self._add_builtin_file_handler(log, filename)
else:
self._add_builtin_file_handler(log, filename)
else:
if h:
h.close()
log.handlers.remove(h)
def _get_error_file(self):
h = self._get_builtin_handler(self.error_log, "file")
if h:
return h.baseFilename
return ''
def _set_error_file(self, newvalue):
self._set_file_handler(self.error_log, newvalue)
error_file = property(_get_error_file, _set_error_file,
doc="""The filename for self.error_log.
If you set this to a string, it'll add the appropriate FileHandler for
you. If you set it to ``None`` or ``''``, it will remove the handler.
""")
def _get_access_file(self):
h = self._get_builtin_handler(self.access_log, "file")
if h:
return h.baseFilename
return ''
def _set_access_file(self, newvalue):
self._set_file_handler(self.access_log, newvalue)
access_file = property(_get_access_file, _set_access_file,
doc="""The filename for self.access_log.
If you set this to a string, it'll add the appropriate FileHandler for
you. If you set it to ``None`` or ``''``, it will remove the handler.
""")
# ------------------------- WSGI handlers ------------------------- #
def _set_wsgi_handler(self, log, enable):
h = self._get_builtin_handler(log, "wsgi")
if enable:
if not h:
h = WSGIErrorHandler()
h.setFormatter(logfmt)
h._cpbuiltin = "wsgi"
log.addHandler(h)
elif h:
log.handlers.remove(h)
def _get_wsgi(self):
return bool(self._get_builtin_handler(self.error_log, "wsgi"))
def _set_wsgi(self, newvalue):
self._set_wsgi_handler(self.error_log, newvalue)
wsgi = property(_get_wsgi, _set_wsgi,
doc="""Write errors to wsgi.errors.
If you set this to True, it'll add the appropriate
:class:`WSGIErrorHandler<cherrypy._cplogging.WSGIErrorHandler>` for you
(which writes errors to ``wsgi.errors``).
If you set it to False, it will remove the handler.
""")
class WSGIErrorHandler(logging.Handler):
"A handler class which writes logging records to environ['wsgi.errors']."
def flush(self):
"""Flushes the stream."""
try:
stream = cherrypy.serving.request.wsgi_environ.get('wsgi.errors')
except (AttributeError, KeyError):
pass
else:
stream.flush()
def emit(self, record):
"""Emit a record."""
try:
stream = cherrypy.serving.request.wsgi_environ.get('wsgi.errors')
except (AttributeError, KeyError):
pass
else:
try:
msg = self.format(record)
fs = "%s\n"
import types
# if no unicode support...
if not hasattr(types, "UnicodeType"):
stream.write(fs % msg)
else:
try:
stream.write(fs % msg)
except UnicodeError:
stream.write(fs % msg.encode("UTF-8"))
self.flush()
except:
self.handleError(record)

@ -1,353 +0,0 @@
"""Native adapter for serving CherryPy via mod_python
Basic usage:
##########################################
# Application in a module called myapp.py
##########################################
import cherrypy
class Root:
@cherrypy.expose
def index(self):
return 'Hi there, Ho there, Hey there'
# We will use this method from the mod_python configuration
# as the entry point to our application
def setup_server():
cherrypy.tree.mount(Root())
cherrypy.config.update({'environment': 'production',
'log.screen': False,
'show_tracebacks': False})
##########################################
# mod_python settings for apache2
# This should reside in your httpd.conf
# or a file that will be loaded at
# apache startup
##########################################
# Start
DocumentRoot "/"
Listen 8080
LoadModule python_module /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_python.so
<Location "/">
PythonPath "sys.path+['/path/to/my/application']"
SetHandler python-program
PythonHandler cherrypy._cpmodpy::handler
PythonOption cherrypy.setup myapp::setup_server
PythonDebug On
</Location>
# End
The actual path to your mod_python.so is dependent on your
environment. In this case we suppose a global mod_python
installation on a Linux distribution such as Ubuntu.
We do set the PythonPath configuration setting so that
your application can be found by from the user running
the apache2 instance. Of course if your application
resides in the global site-package this won't be needed.
Then restart apache2 and access http://127.0.0.1:8080
"""
import logging
import sys
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import BytesIO, copyitems, ntob
from cherrypy._cperror import format_exc, bare_error
from cherrypy.lib import httputil
# ------------------------------ Request-handling
def setup(req):
from mod_python import apache
# Run any setup functions defined by a "PythonOption cherrypy.setup"
# directive.
options = req.get_options()
if 'cherrypy.setup' in options:
for function in options['cherrypy.setup'].split():
atoms = function.split('::', 1)
if len(atoms) == 1:
mod = __import__(atoms[0], globals(), locals())
else:
modname, fname = atoms
mod = __import__(modname, globals(), locals(), [fname])
func = getattr(mod, fname)
func()
cherrypy.config.update({'log.screen': False,
"tools.ignore_headers.on": True,
"tools.ignore_headers.headers": ['Range'],
})
engine = cherrypy.engine
if hasattr(engine, "signal_handler"):
engine.signal_handler.unsubscribe()
if hasattr(engine, "console_control_handler"):
engine.console_control_handler.unsubscribe()
engine.autoreload.unsubscribe()
cherrypy.server.unsubscribe()
def _log(msg, level):
newlevel = apache.APLOG_ERR
if logging.DEBUG >= level:
newlevel = apache.APLOG_DEBUG
elif logging.INFO >= level:
newlevel = apache.APLOG_INFO
elif logging.WARNING >= level:
newlevel = apache.APLOG_WARNING
# On Windows, req.server is required or the msg will vanish. See
# http://www.modpython.org/pipermail/mod_python/2003-October/014291.html
# Also, "When server is not specified...LogLevel does not apply..."
apache.log_error(msg, newlevel, req.server)
engine.subscribe('log', _log)
engine.start()
def cherrypy_cleanup(data):
engine.exit()
try:
# apache.register_cleanup wasn't available until 3.1.4.
apache.register_cleanup(cherrypy_cleanup)
except AttributeError:
req.server.register_cleanup(req, cherrypy_cleanup)
class _ReadOnlyRequest:
expose = ('read', 'readline', 'readlines')
def __init__(self, req):
for method in self.expose:
self.__dict__[method] = getattr(req, method)
recursive = False
_isSetUp = False
def handler(req):
from mod_python import apache
try:
global _isSetUp
if not _isSetUp:
setup(req)
_isSetUp = True
# Obtain a Request object from CherryPy
local = req.connection.local_addr
local = httputil.Host(
local[0], local[1], req.connection.local_host or "")
remote = req.connection.remote_addr
remote = httputil.Host(
remote[0], remote[1], req.connection.remote_host or "")
scheme = req.parsed_uri[0] or 'http'
req.get_basic_auth_pw()
try:
# apache.mpm_query only became available in mod_python 3.1
q = apache.mpm_query
threaded = q(apache.AP_MPMQ_IS_THREADED)
forked = q(apache.AP_MPMQ_IS_FORKED)
except AttributeError:
bad_value = ("You must provide a PythonOption '%s', "
"either 'on' or 'off', when running a version "
"of mod_python < 3.1")
threaded = options.get('multithread', '').lower()
if threaded == 'on':
threaded = True
elif threaded == 'off':
threaded = False
else:
raise ValueError(bad_value % "multithread")
forked = options.get('multiprocess', '').lower()
if forked == 'on':
forked = True
elif forked == 'off':
forked = False
else:
raise ValueError(bad_value % "multiprocess")
sn = cherrypy.tree.script_name(req.uri or "/")
if sn is None:
send_response(req, '404 Not Found', [], '')
else:
app = cherrypy.tree.apps[sn]
method = req.method
path = req.uri
qs = req.args or ""
reqproto = req.protocol
headers = copyitems(req.headers_in)
rfile = _ReadOnlyRequest(req)
prev = None
try:
redirections = []
while True:
request, response = app.get_serving(local, remote, scheme,
"HTTP/1.1")
request.login = req.user
request.multithread = bool(threaded)
request.multiprocess = bool(forked)
request.app = app
request.prev = prev
# Run the CherryPy Request object and obtain the response
try:
request.run(method, path, qs, reqproto, headers, rfile)
break
except cherrypy.InternalRedirect:
ir = sys.exc_info()[1]
app.release_serving()
prev = request
if not recursive:
if ir.path in redirections:
raise RuntimeError(
"InternalRedirector visited the same URL "
"twice: %r" % ir.path)
else:
# Add the *previous* path_info + qs to
# redirections.
if qs:
qs = "?" + qs
redirections.append(sn + path + qs)
# Munge environment and try again.
method = "GET"
path = ir.path
qs = ir.query_string
rfile = BytesIO()
send_response(
req, response.output_status, response.header_list,
response.body, response.stream)
finally:
app.release_serving()
except:
tb = format_exc()
cherrypy.log(tb, 'MOD_PYTHON', severity=logging.ERROR)
s, h, b = bare_error()
send_response(req, s, h, b)
return apache.OK
def send_response(req, status, headers, body, stream=False):
# Set response status
req.status = int(status[:3])
# Set response headers
req.content_type = "text/plain"
for header, value in headers:
if header.lower() == 'content-type':
req.content_type = value
continue
req.headers_out.add(header, value)
if stream:
# Flush now so the status and headers are sent immediately.
req.flush()
# Set response body
if isinstance(body, basestring):
req.write(body)
else:
for seg in body:
req.write(seg)
# --------------- Startup tools for CherryPy + mod_python --------------- #
import os
import re
try:
import subprocess
def popen(fullcmd):
p = subprocess.Popen(fullcmd, shell=True,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
close_fds=True)
return p.stdout
except ImportError:
def popen(fullcmd):
pipein, pipeout = os.popen4(fullcmd)
return pipeout
def read_process(cmd, args=""):
fullcmd = "%s %s" % (cmd, args)
pipeout = popen(fullcmd)
try:
firstline = pipeout.readline()
cmd_not_found = re.search(
ntob("(not recognized|No such file|not found)"),
firstline,
re.IGNORECASE
)
if cmd_not_found:
raise IOError('%s must be on your system path.' % cmd)
output = firstline + pipeout.read()
finally:
pipeout.close()
return output
class ModPythonServer(object):
template = """
# Apache2 server configuration file for running CherryPy with mod_python.
DocumentRoot "/"
Listen %(port)s
LoadModule python_module modules/mod_python.so
<Location %(loc)s>
SetHandler python-program
PythonHandler %(handler)s
PythonDebug On
%(opts)s
</Location>
"""
def __init__(self, loc="/", port=80, opts=None, apache_path="apache",
handler="cherrypy._cpmodpy::handler"):
self.loc = loc
self.port = port
self.opts = opts
self.apache_path = apache_path
self.handler = handler
def start(self):
opts = "".join([" PythonOption %s %s\n" % (k, v)
for k, v in self.opts])
conf_data = self.template % {"port": self.port,
"loc": self.loc,
"opts": opts,
"handler": self.handler,
}
mpconf = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "cpmodpy.conf")
f = open(mpconf, 'wb')
try:
f.write(conf_data)
finally:
f.close()
response = read_process(self.apache_path, "-k start -f %s" % mpconf)
self.ready = True
return response
def stop(self):
os.popen("apache -k stop")
self.ready = False

@ -1,154 +0,0 @@
"""Native adapter for serving CherryPy via its builtin server."""
import logging
import sys
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import BytesIO
from cherrypy._cperror import format_exc, bare_error
from cherrypy.lib import httputil
from cherrypy import wsgiserver
class NativeGateway(wsgiserver.Gateway):
recursive = False
def respond(self):
req = self.req
try:
# Obtain a Request object from CherryPy
local = req.server.bind_addr
local = httputil.Host(local[0], local[1], "")
remote = req.conn.remote_addr, req.conn.remote_port
remote = httputil.Host(remote[0], remote[1], "")
scheme = req.scheme
sn = cherrypy.tree.script_name(req.uri or "/")
if sn is None:
self.send_response('404 Not Found', [], [''])
else:
app = cherrypy.tree.apps[sn]
method = req.method
path = req.path
qs = req.qs or ""
headers = req.inheaders.items()
rfile = req.rfile
prev = None
try:
redirections = []
while True:
request, response = app.get_serving(
local, remote, scheme, "HTTP/1.1")
request.multithread = True
request.multiprocess = False
request.app = app
request.prev = prev
# Run the CherryPy Request object and obtain the
# response
try:
request.run(method, path, qs,
req.request_protocol, headers, rfile)
break
except cherrypy.InternalRedirect:
ir = sys.exc_info()[1]
app.release_serving()
prev = request
if not self.recursive:
if ir.path in redirections:
raise RuntimeError(
"InternalRedirector visited the same "
"URL twice: %r" % ir.path)
else:
# Add the *previous* path_info + qs to
# redirections.
if qs:
qs = "?" + qs
redirections.append(sn + path + qs)
# Munge environment and try again.
method = "GET"
path = ir.path
qs = ir.query_string
rfile = BytesIO()
self.send_response(
response.output_status, response.header_list,
response.body)
finally:
app.release_serving()
except:
tb = format_exc()
# print tb
cherrypy.log(tb, 'NATIVE_ADAPTER', severity=logging.ERROR)
s, h, b = bare_error()
self.send_response(s, h, b)
def send_response(self, status, headers, body):
req = self.req
# Set response status
req.status = str(status or "500 Server Error")
# Set response headers
for header, value in headers:
req.outheaders.append((header, value))
if (req.ready and not req.sent_headers):
req.sent_headers = True
req.send_headers()
# Set response body
for seg in body:
req.write(seg)
class CPHTTPServer(wsgiserver.HTTPServer):
"""Wrapper for wsgiserver.HTTPServer.
wsgiserver has been designed to not reference CherryPy in any way,
so that it can be used in other frameworks and applications.
Therefore, we wrap it here, so we can apply some attributes
from config -> cherrypy.server -> HTTPServer.
"""
def __init__(self, server_adapter=cherrypy.server):
self.server_adapter = server_adapter
server_name = (self.server_adapter.socket_host or
self.server_adapter.socket_file or
None)
wsgiserver.HTTPServer.__init__(
self, server_adapter.bind_addr, NativeGateway,
minthreads=server_adapter.thread_pool,
maxthreads=server_adapter.thread_pool_max,
server_name=server_name)
self.max_request_header_size = (
self.server_adapter.max_request_header_size or 0)
self.max_request_body_size = (
self.server_adapter.max_request_body_size or 0)
self.request_queue_size = self.server_adapter.socket_queue_size
self.timeout = self.server_adapter.socket_timeout
self.shutdown_timeout = self.server_adapter.shutdown_timeout
self.protocol = self.server_adapter.protocol_version
self.nodelay = self.server_adapter.nodelay
ssl_module = self.server_adapter.ssl_module or 'pyopenssl'
if self.server_adapter.ssl_context:
adapter_class = wsgiserver.get_ssl_adapter_class(ssl_module)
self.ssl_adapter = adapter_class(
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate,
self.server_adapter.ssl_private_key,
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate_chain)
self.ssl_adapter.context = self.server_adapter.ssl_context
elif self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate:
adapter_class = wsgiserver.get_ssl_adapter_class(ssl_module)
self.ssl_adapter = adapter_class(
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate,
self.server_adapter.ssl_private_key,
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate_chain)

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

@ -1,973 +0,0 @@
import os
import sys
import time
import warnings
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, copykeys, ntob, unicodestr
from cherrypy._cpcompat import SimpleCookie, CookieError, py3k
from cherrypy import _cpreqbody, _cpconfig
from cherrypy._cperror import format_exc, bare_error
from cherrypy.lib import httputil, file_generator
class Hook(object):
"""A callback and its metadata: failsafe, priority, and kwargs."""
callback = None
"""
The bare callable that this Hook object is wrapping, which will
be called when the Hook is called."""
failsafe = False
"""
If True, the callback is guaranteed to run even if other callbacks
from the same call point raise exceptions."""
priority = 50
"""
Defines the order of execution for a list of Hooks. Priority numbers
should be limited to the closed interval [0, 100], but values outside
this range are acceptable, as are fractional values."""
kwargs = {}
"""
A set of keyword arguments that will be passed to the
callable on each call."""
def __init__(self, callback, failsafe=None, priority=None, **kwargs):
self.callback = callback
if failsafe is None:
failsafe = getattr(callback, "failsafe", False)
self.failsafe = failsafe
if priority is None:
priority = getattr(callback, "priority", 50)
self.priority = priority
self.kwargs = kwargs
def __lt__(self, other):
# Python 3
return self.priority < other.priority
def __cmp__(self, other):
# Python 2
return cmp(self.priority, other.priority)
def __call__(self):
"""Run self.callback(**self.kwargs)."""
return self.callback(**self.kwargs)
def __repr__(self):
cls = self.__class__
return ("%s.%s(callback=%r, failsafe=%r, priority=%r, %s)"
% (cls.__module__, cls.__name__, self.callback,
self.failsafe, self.priority,
", ".join(['%s=%r' % (k, v)
for k, v in self.kwargs.items()])))
class HookMap(dict):
"""A map of call points to lists of callbacks (Hook objects)."""
def __new__(cls, points=None):
d = dict.__new__(cls)
for p in points or []:
d[p] = []
return d
def __init__(self, *a, **kw):
pass
def attach(self, point, callback, failsafe=None, priority=None, **kwargs):
"""Append a new Hook made from the supplied arguments."""
self[point].append(Hook(callback, failsafe, priority, **kwargs))
def run(self, point):
"""Execute all registered Hooks (callbacks) for the given point."""
exc = None
hooks = self[point]
hooks.sort()
for hook in hooks:
# Some hooks are guaranteed to run even if others at
# the same hookpoint fail. We will still log the failure,
# but proceed on to the next hook. The only way
# to stop all processing from one of these hooks is
# to raise SystemExit and stop the whole server.
if exc is None or hook.failsafe:
try:
hook()
except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
raise
except (cherrypy.HTTPError, cherrypy.HTTPRedirect,
cherrypy.InternalRedirect):
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
except:
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
cherrypy.log(traceback=True, severity=40)
if exc:
raise exc
def __copy__(self):
newmap = self.__class__()
# We can't just use 'update' because we want copies of the
# mutable values (each is a list) as well.
for k, v in self.items():
newmap[k] = v[:]
return newmap
copy = __copy__
def __repr__(self):
cls = self.__class__
return "%s.%s(points=%r)" % (
cls.__module__,
cls.__name__,
copykeys(self)
)
# Config namespace handlers
def hooks_namespace(k, v):
"""Attach bare hooks declared in config."""
# Use split again to allow multiple hooks for a single
# hookpoint per path (e.g. "hooks.before_handler.1").
# Little-known fact you only get from reading source ;)
hookpoint = k.split(".", 1)[0]
if isinstance(v, basestring):
v = cherrypy.lib.attributes(v)
if not isinstance(v, Hook):
v = Hook(v)
cherrypy.serving.request.hooks[hookpoint].append(v)
def request_namespace(k, v):
"""Attach request attributes declared in config."""
# Provides config entries to set request.body attrs (like
# attempt_charsets).
if k[:5] == 'body.':
setattr(cherrypy.serving.request.body, k[5:], v)
else:
setattr(cherrypy.serving.request, k, v)
def response_namespace(k, v):
"""Attach response attributes declared in config."""
# Provides config entries to set default response headers
# http://cherrypy.org/ticket/889
if k[:8] == 'headers.':
cherrypy.serving.response.headers[k.split('.', 1)[1]] = v
else:
setattr(cherrypy.serving.response, k, v)
def error_page_namespace(k, v):
"""Attach error pages declared in config."""
if k != 'default':
k = int(k)
cherrypy.serving.request.error_page[k] = v
hookpoints = ['on_start_resource', 'before_request_body',
'before_handler', 'before_finalize',
'on_end_resource', 'on_end_request',
'before_error_response', 'after_error_response']
class Request(object):
"""An HTTP request.
This object represents the metadata of an HTTP request message;
that is, it contains attributes which describe the environment
in which the request URL, headers, and body were sent (if you
want tools to interpret the headers and body, those are elsewhere,
mostly in Tools). This 'metadata' consists of socket data,
transport characteristics, and the Request-Line. This object
also contains data regarding the configuration in effect for
the given URL, and the execution plan for generating a response.
"""
prev = None
"""
The previous Request object (if any). This should be None
unless we are processing an InternalRedirect."""
# Conversation/connection attributes
local = httputil.Host("127.0.0.1", 80)
"An httputil.Host(ip, port, hostname) object for the server socket."
remote = httputil.Host("127.0.0.1", 1111)
"An httputil.Host(ip, port, hostname) object for the client socket."
scheme = "http"
"""
The protocol used between client and server. In most cases,
this will be either 'http' or 'https'."""
server_protocol = "HTTP/1.1"
"""
The HTTP version for which the HTTP server is at least
conditionally compliant."""
base = ""
"""The (scheme://host) portion of the requested URL.
In some cases (e.g. when proxying via mod_rewrite), this may contain
path segments which cherrypy.url uses when constructing url's, but
which otherwise are ignored by CherryPy. Regardless, this value
MUST NOT end in a slash."""
# Request-Line attributes
request_line = ""
"""
The complete Request-Line received from the client. This is a
single string consisting of the request method, URI, and protocol
version (joined by spaces). Any final CRLF is removed."""
method = "GET"
"""
Indicates the HTTP method to be performed on the resource identified
by the Request-URI. Common methods include GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, and
DELETE. CherryPy allows any extension method; however, various HTTP
servers and gateways may restrict the set of allowable methods.
CherryPy applications SHOULD restrict the set (on a per-URI basis)."""
query_string = ""
"""
The query component of the Request-URI, a string of information to be
interpreted by the resource. The query portion of a URI follows the
path component, and is separated by a '?'. For example, the URI
'http://www.cherrypy.org/wiki?a=3&b=4' has the query component,
'a=3&b=4'."""
query_string_encoding = 'utf8'
"""
The encoding expected for query string arguments after % HEX HEX decoding).
If a query string is provided that cannot be decoded with this encoding,
404 is raised (since technically it's a different URI). If you want
arbitrary encodings to not error, set this to 'Latin-1'; you can then
encode back to bytes and re-decode to whatever encoding you like later.
"""
protocol = (1, 1)
"""The HTTP protocol version corresponding to the set
of features which should be allowed in the response. If BOTH
the client's request message AND the server's level of HTTP
compliance is HTTP/1.1, this attribute will be the tuple (1, 1).
If either is 1.0, this attribute will be the tuple (1, 0).
Lower HTTP protocol versions are not explicitly supported."""
params = {}
"""
A dict which combines query string (GET) and request entity (POST)
variables. This is populated in two stages: GET params are added
before the 'on_start_resource' hook, and POST params are added
between the 'before_request_body' and 'before_handler' hooks."""
# Message attributes
header_list = []
"""
A list of the HTTP request headers as (name, value) tuples.
In general, you should use request.headers (a dict) instead."""
headers = httputil.HeaderMap()
"""
A dict-like object containing the request headers. Keys are header
names (in Title-Case format); however, you may get and set them in
a case-insensitive manner. That is, headers['Content-Type'] and
headers['content-type'] refer to the same value. Values are header
values (decoded according to :rfc:`2047` if necessary). See also:
httputil.HeaderMap, httputil.HeaderElement."""
cookie = SimpleCookie()
"""See help(Cookie)."""
rfile = None
"""
If the request included an entity (body), it will be available
as a stream in this attribute. However, the rfile will normally
be read for you between the 'before_request_body' hook and the
'before_handler' hook, and the resulting string is placed into
either request.params or the request.body attribute.
You may disable the automatic consumption of the rfile by setting
request.process_request_body to False, either in config for the desired
path, or in an 'on_start_resource' or 'before_request_body' hook.
WARNING: In almost every case, you should not attempt to read from the
rfile stream after CherryPy's automatic mechanism has read it. If you
turn off the automatic parsing of rfile, you should read exactly the
number of bytes specified in request.headers['Content-Length'].
Ignoring either of these warnings may result in a hung request thread
or in corruption of the next (pipelined) request.
"""
process_request_body = True
"""
If True, the rfile (if any) is automatically read and parsed,
and the result placed into request.params or request.body."""
methods_with_bodies = ("POST", "PUT")
"""
A sequence of HTTP methods for which CherryPy will automatically
attempt to read a body from the rfile. If you are going to change
this property, modify it on the configuration (recommended)
or on the "hook point" `on_start_resource`.
"""
body = None
"""
If the request Content-Type is 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'
or multipart, this will be None. Otherwise, this will be an instance
of :class:`RequestBody<cherrypy._cpreqbody.RequestBody>` (which you
can .read()); this value is set between the 'before_request_body' and
'before_handler' hooks (assuming that process_request_body is True)."""
# Dispatch attributes
dispatch = cherrypy.dispatch.Dispatcher()
"""
The object which looks up the 'page handler' callable and collects
config for the current request based on the path_info, other
request attributes, and the application architecture. The core
calls the dispatcher as early as possible, passing it a 'path_info'
argument.
The default dispatcher discovers the page handler by matching path_info
to a hierarchical arrangement of objects, starting at request.app.root.
See help(cherrypy.dispatch) for more information."""
script_name = ""
"""
The 'mount point' of the application which is handling this request.
This attribute MUST NOT end in a slash. If the script_name refers to
the root of the URI, it MUST be an empty string (not "/").
"""
path_info = "/"
"""
The 'relative path' portion of the Request-URI. This is relative
to the script_name ('mount point') of the application which is
handling this request."""
login = None
"""
When authentication is used during the request processing this is
set to 'False' if it failed and to the 'username' value if it succeeded.
The default 'None' implies that no authentication happened."""
# Note that cherrypy.url uses "if request.app:" to determine whether
# the call is during a real HTTP request or not. So leave this None.
app = None
"""The cherrypy.Application object which is handling this request."""
handler = None
"""
The function, method, or other callable which CherryPy will call to
produce the response. The discovery of the handler and the arguments
it will receive are determined by the request.dispatch object.
By default, the handler is discovered by walking a tree of objects
starting at request.app.root, and is then passed all HTTP params
(from the query string and POST body) as keyword arguments."""
toolmaps = {}
"""
A nested dict of all Toolboxes and Tools in effect for this request,
of the form: {Toolbox.namespace: {Tool.name: config dict}}."""
config = None
"""
A flat dict of all configuration entries which apply to the
current request. These entries are collected from global config,
application config (based on request.path_info), and from handler
config (exactly how is governed by the request.dispatch object in
effect for this request; by default, handler config can be attached
anywhere in the tree between request.app.root and the final handler,
and inherits downward)."""
is_index = None
"""
This will be True if the current request is mapped to an 'index'
resource handler (also, a 'default' handler if path_info ends with
a slash). The value may be used to automatically redirect the
user-agent to a 'more canonical' URL which either adds or removes
the trailing slash. See cherrypy.tools.trailing_slash."""
hooks = HookMap(hookpoints)
"""
A HookMap (dict-like object) of the form: {hookpoint: [hook, ...]}.
Each key is a str naming the hook point, and each value is a list
of hooks which will be called at that hook point during this request.
The list of hooks is generally populated as early as possible (mostly
from Tools specified in config), but may be extended at any time.
See also: _cprequest.Hook, _cprequest.HookMap, and cherrypy.tools."""
error_response = cherrypy.HTTPError(500).set_response
"""
The no-arg callable which will handle unexpected, untrapped errors
during request processing. This is not used for expected exceptions
(like NotFound, HTTPError, or HTTPRedirect) which are raised in
response to expected conditions (those should be customized either
via request.error_page or by overriding HTTPError.set_response).
By default, error_response uses HTTPError(500) to return a generic
error response to the user-agent."""
error_page = {}
"""
A dict of {error code: response filename or callable} pairs.
The error code must be an int representing a given HTTP error code,
or the string 'default', which will be used if no matching entry
is found for a given numeric code.
If a filename is provided, the file should contain a Python string-
formatting template, and can expect by default to receive format
values with the mapping keys %(status)s, %(message)s, %(traceback)s,
and %(version)s. The set of format mappings can be extended by
overriding HTTPError.set_response.
If a callable is provided, it will be called by default with keyword
arguments 'status', 'message', 'traceback', and 'version', as for a
string-formatting template. The callable must return a string or
iterable of strings which will be set to response.body. It may also
override headers or perform any other processing.
If no entry is given for an error code, and no 'default' entry exists,
a default template will be used.
"""
show_tracebacks = True
"""
If True, unexpected errors encountered during request processing will
include a traceback in the response body."""
show_mismatched_params = True
"""
If True, mismatched parameters encountered during PageHandler invocation
processing will be included in the response body."""
throws = (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit, cherrypy.InternalRedirect)
"""The sequence of exceptions which Request.run does not trap."""
throw_errors = False
"""
If True, Request.run will not trap any errors (except HTTPRedirect and
HTTPError, which are more properly called 'exceptions', not errors)."""
closed = False
"""True once the close method has been called, False otherwise."""
stage = None
"""
A string containing the stage reached in the request-handling process.
This is useful when debugging a live server with hung requests."""
namespaces = _cpconfig.NamespaceSet(
**{"hooks": hooks_namespace,
"request": request_namespace,
"response": response_namespace,
"error_page": error_page_namespace,
"tools": cherrypy.tools,
})
def __init__(self, local_host, remote_host, scheme="http",
server_protocol="HTTP/1.1"):
"""Populate a new Request object.
local_host should be an httputil.Host object with the server info.
remote_host should be an httputil.Host object with the client info.
scheme should be a string, either "http" or "https".
"""
self.local = local_host
self.remote = remote_host
self.scheme = scheme
self.server_protocol = server_protocol
self.closed = False
# Put a *copy* of the class error_page into self.
self.error_page = self.error_page.copy()
# Put a *copy* of the class namespaces into self.
self.namespaces = self.namespaces.copy()
self.stage = None
def close(self):
"""Run cleanup code. (Core)"""
if not self.closed:
self.closed = True
self.stage = 'on_end_request'
self.hooks.run('on_end_request')
self.stage = 'close'
def run(self, method, path, query_string, req_protocol, headers, rfile):
r"""Process the Request. (Core)
method, path, query_string, and req_protocol should be pulled directly
from the Request-Line (e.g. "GET /path?key=val HTTP/1.0").
path
This should be %XX-unquoted, but query_string should not be.
When using Python 2, they both MUST be byte strings,
not unicode strings.
When using Python 3, they both MUST be unicode strings,
not byte strings, and preferably not bytes \x00-\xFF
disguised as unicode.
headers
A list of (name, value) tuples.
rfile
A file-like object containing the HTTP request entity.
When run() is done, the returned object should have 3 attributes:
* status, e.g. "200 OK"
* header_list, a list of (name, value) tuples
* body, an iterable yielding strings
Consumer code (HTTP servers) should then access these response
attributes to build the outbound stream.
"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
self.stage = 'run'
try:
self.error_response = cherrypy.HTTPError(500).set_response
self.method = method
path = path or "/"
self.query_string = query_string or ''
self.params = {}
# Compare request and server HTTP protocol versions, in case our
# server does not support the requested protocol. Limit our output
# to min(req, server). We want the following output:
# request server actual written supported response
# protocol protocol response protocol feature set
# a 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
# b 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.0
# c 1.1 1.0 1.0 1.0
# d 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1
# Notice that, in (b), the response will be "HTTP/1.1" even though
# the client only understands 1.0. RFC 2616 10.5.6 says we should
# only return 505 if the _major_ version is different.
rp = int(req_protocol[5]), int(req_protocol[7])
sp = int(self.server_protocol[5]), int(self.server_protocol[7])
self.protocol = min(rp, sp)
response.headers.protocol = self.protocol
# Rebuild first line of the request (e.g. "GET /path HTTP/1.0").
url = path
if query_string:
url += '?' + query_string
self.request_line = '%s %s %s' % (method, url, req_protocol)
self.header_list = list(headers)
self.headers = httputil.HeaderMap()
self.rfile = rfile
self.body = None
self.cookie = SimpleCookie()
self.handler = None
# path_info should be the path from the
# app root (script_name) to the handler.
self.script_name = self.app.script_name
self.path_info = pi = path[len(self.script_name):]
self.stage = 'respond'
self.respond(pi)
except self.throws:
raise
except:
if self.throw_errors:
raise
else:
# Failure in setup, error handler or finalize. Bypass them.
# Can't use handle_error because we may not have hooks yet.
cherrypy.log(traceback=True, severity=40)
if self.show_tracebacks:
body = format_exc()
else:
body = ""
r = bare_error(body)
response.output_status, response.header_list, response.body = r
if self.method == "HEAD":
# HEAD requests MUST NOT return a message-body in the response.
response.body = []
try:
cherrypy.log.access()
except:
cherrypy.log.error(traceback=True)
if response.timed_out:
raise cherrypy.TimeoutError()
return response
# Uncomment for stage debugging
# stage = property(lambda self: self._stage, lambda self, v: print(v))
def respond(self, path_info):
"""Generate a response for the resource at self.path_info. (Core)"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
try:
try:
try:
if self.app is None:
raise cherrypy.NotFound()
# Get the 'Host' header, so we can HTTPRedirect properly.
self.stage = 'process_headers'
self.process_headers()
# Make a copy of the class hooks
self.hooks = self.__class__.hooks.copy()
self.toolmaps = {}
self.stage = 'get_resource'
self.get_resource(path_info)
self.body = _cpreqbody.RequestBody(
self.rfile, self.headers, request_params=self.params)
self.namespaces(self.config)
self.stage = 'on_start_resource'
self.hooks.run('on_start_resource')
# Parse the querystring
self.stage = 'process_query_string'
self.process_query_string()
# Process the body
if self.process_request_body:
if self.method not in self.methods_with_bodies:
self.process_request_body = False
self.stage = 'before_request_body'
self.hooks.run('before_request_body')
if self.process_request_body:
self.body.process()
# Run the handler
self.stage = 'before_handler'
self.hooks.run('before_handler')
if self.handler:
self.stage = 'handler'
response.body = self.handler()
# Finalize
self.stage = 'before_finalize'
self.hooks.run('before_finalize')
response.finalize()
except (cherrypy.HTTPRedirect, cherrypy.HTTPError):
inst = sys.exc_info()[1]
inst.set_response()
self.stage = 'before_finalize (HTTPError)'
self.hooks.run('before_finalize')
response.finalize()
finally:
self.stage = 'on_end_resource'
self.hooks.run('on_end_resource')
except self.throws:
raise
except:
if self.throw_errors:
raise
self.handle_error()
def process_query_string(self):
"""Parse the query string into Python structures. (Core)"""
try:
p = httputil.parse_query_string(
self.query_string, encoding=self.query_string_encoding)
except UnicodeDecodeError:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
404, "The given query string could not be processed. Query "
"strings for this resource must be encoded with %r." %
self.query_string_encoding)
# Python 2 only: keyword arguments must be byte strings (type 'str').
if not py3k:
for key, value in p.items():
if isinstance(key, unicode):
del p[key]
p[key.encode(self.query_string_encoding)] = value
self.params.update(p)
def process_headers(self):
"""Parse HTTP header data into Python structures. (Core)"""
# Process the headers into self.headers
headers = self.headers
for name, value in self.header_list:
# Call title() now (and use dict.__method__(headers))
# so title doesn't have to be called twice.
name = name.title()
value = value.strip()
# Warning: if there is more than one header entry for cookies
# (AFAIK, only Konqueror does that), only the last one will
# remain in headers (but they will be correctly stored in
# request.cookie).
if "=?" in value:
dict.__setitem__(headers, name, httputil.decode_TEXT(value))
else:
dict.__setitem__(headers, name, value)
# Handle cookies differently because on Konqueror, multiple
# cookies come on different lines with the same key
if name == 'Cookie':
try:
self.cookie.load(value)
except CookieError:
msg = "Illegal cookie name %s" % value.split('=')[0]
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, msg)
if not dict.__contains__(headers, 'Host'):
# All Internet-based HTTP/1.1 servers MUST respond with a 400
# (Bad Request) status code to any HTTP/1.1 request message
# which lacks a Host header field.
if self.protocol >= (1, 1):
msg = "HTTP/1.1 requires a 'Host' request header."
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, msg)
host = dict.get(headers, 'Host')
if not host:
host = self.local.name or self.local.ip
self.base = "%s://%s" % (self.scheme, host)
def get_resource(self, path):
"""Call a dispatcher (which sets self.handler and .config). (Core)"""
# First, see if there is a custom dispatch at this URI. Custom
# dispatchers can only be specified in app.config, not in _cp_config
# (since custom dispatchers may not even have an app.root).
dispatch = self.app.find_config(
path, "request.dispatch", self.dispatch)
# dispatch() should set self.handler and self.config
dispatch(path)
def handle_error(self):
"""Handle the last unanticipated exception. (Core)"""
try:
self.hooks.run("before_error_response")
if self.error_response:
self.error_response()
self.hooks.run("after_error_response")
cherrypy.serving.response.finalize()
except cherrypy.HTTPRedirect:
inst = sys.exc_info()[1]
inst.set_response()
cherrypy.serving.response.finalize()
# ------------------------- Properties ------------------------- #
def _get_body_params(self):
warnings.warn(
"body_params is deprecated in CherryPy 3.2, will be removed in "
"CherryPy 3.3.",
DeprecationWarning
)
return self.body.params
body_params = property(_get_body_params,
doc="""
If the request Content-Type is 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' or
multipart, this will be a dict of the params pulled from the entity
body; that is, it will be the portion of request.params that come
from the message body (sometimes called "POST params", although they
can be sent with various HTTP method verbs). This value is set between
the 'before_request_body' and 'before_handler' hooks (assuming that
process_request_body is True).
Deprecated in 3.2, will be removed for 3.3 in favor of
:attr:`request.body.params<cherrypy._cprequest.RequestBody.params>`.""")
class ResponseBody(object):
"""The body of the HTTP response (the response entity)."""
if py3k:
unicode_err = ("Page handlers MUST return bytes. Use tools.encode "
"if you wish to return unicode.")
def __get__(self, obj, objclass=None):
if obj is None:
# When calling on the class instead of an instance...
return self
else:
return obj._body
def __set__(self, obj, value):
# Convert the given value to an iterable object.
if py3k and isinstance(value, str):
raise ValueError(self.unicode_err)
if isinstance(value, basestring):
# strings get wrapped in a list because iterating over a single
# item list is much faster than iterating over every character
# in a long string.
if value:
value = [value]
else:
# [''] doesn't evaluate to False, so replace it with [].
value = []
elif py3k and isinstance(value, list):
# every item in a list must be bytes...
for i, item in enumerate(value):
if isinstance(item, str):
raise ValueError(self.unicode_err)
# Don't use isinstance here; io.IOBase which has an ABC takes
# 1000 times as long as, say, isinstance(value, str)
elif hasattr(value, 'read'):
value = file_generator(value)
elif value is None:
value = []
obj._body = value
class Response(object):
"""An HTTP Response, including status, headers, and body."""
status = ""
"""The HTTP Status-Code and Reason-Phrase."""
header_list = []
"""
A list of the HTTP response headers as (name, value) tuples.
In general, you should use response.headers (a dict) instead. This
attribute is generated from response.headers and is not valid until
after the finalize phase."""
headers = httputil.HeaderMap()
"""
A dict-like object containing the response headers. Keys are header
names (in Title-Case format); however, you may get and set them in
a case-insensitive manner. That is, headers['Content-Type'] and
headers['content-type'] refer to the same value. Values are header
values (decoded according to :rfc:`2047` if necessary).
.. seealso:: classes :class:`HeaderMap`, :class:`HeaderElement`
"""
cookie = SimpleCookie()
"""See help(Cookie)."""
body = ResponseBody()
"""The body (entity) of the HTTP response."""
time = None
"""The value of time.time() when created. Use in HTTP dates."""
timeout = 300
"""Seconds after which the response will be aborted."""
timed_out = False
"""
Flag to indicate the response should be aborted, because it has
exceeded its timeout."""
stream = False
"""If False, buffer the response body."""
def __init__(self):
self.status = None
self.header_list = None
self._body = []
self.time = time.time()
self.headers = httputil.HeaderMap()
# Since we know all our keys are titled strings, we can
# bypass HeaderMap.update and get a big speed boost.
dict.update(self.headers, {
"Content-Type": 'text/html',
"Server": "CherryPy/" + cherrypy.__version__,
"Date": httputil.HTTPDate(self.time),
})
self.cookie = SimpleCookie()
def collapse_body(self):
"""Collapse self.body to a single string; replace it and return it."""
if isinstance(self.body, basestring):
return self.body
newbody = []
for chunk in self.body:
if py3k and not isinstance(chunk, bytes):
raise TypeError("Chunk %s is not of type 'bytes'." %
repr(chunk))
newbody.append(chunk)
newbody = ntob('').join(newbody)
self.body = newbody
return newbody
def finalize(self):
"""Transform headers (and cookies) into self.header_list. (Core)"""
try:
code, reason, _ = httputil.valid_status(self.status)
except ValueError:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(500, sys.exc_info()[1].args[0])
headers = self.headers
self.status = "%s %s" % (code, reason)
self.output_status = ntob(str(code), 'ascii') + \
ntob(" ") + headers.encode(reason)
if self.stream:
# The upshot: wsgiserver will chunk the response if
# you pop Content-Length (or set it explicitly to None).
# Note that lib.static sets C-L to the file's st_size.
if dict.get(headers, 'Content-Length') is None:
dict.pop(headers, 'Content-Length', None)
elif code < 200 or code in (204, 205, 304):
# "All 1xx (informational), 204 (no content),
# and 304 (not modified) responses MUST NOT
# include a message-body."
dict.pop(headers, 'Content-Length', None)
self.body = ntob("")
else:
# Responses which are not streamed should have a Content-Length,
# but allow user code to set Content-Length if desired.
if dict.get(headers, 'Content-Length') is None:
content = self.collapse_body()
dict.__setitem__(headers, 'Content-Length', len(content))
# Transform our header dict into a list of tuples.
self.header_list = h = headers.output()
cookie = self.cookie.output()
if cookie:
for line in cookie.split("\n"):
if line.endswith("\r"):
# Python 2.4 emits cookies joined by LF but 2.5+ by CRLF.
line = line[:-1]
name, value = line.split(": ", 1)
if isinstance(name, unicodestr):
name = name.encode("ISO-8859-1")
if isinstance(value, unicodestr):
value = headers.encode(value)
h.append((name, value))
def check_timeout(self):
"""If now > self.time + self.timeout, set self.timed_out.
This purposefully sets a flag, rather than raising an error,
so that a monitor thread can interrupt the Response thread.
"""
if time.time() > self.time + self.timeout:
self.timed_out = True

@ -1,226 +0,0 @@
"""Manage HTTP servers with CherryPy."""
import warnings
import cherrypy
from cherrypy.lib import attributes
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, py3k
# We import * because we want to export check_port
# et al as attributes of this module.
from cherrypy.process.servers import *
class Server(ServerAdapter):
"""An adapter for an HTTP server.
You can set attributes (like socket_host and socket_port)
on *this* object (which is probably cherrypy.server), and call
quickstart. For example::
cherrypy.server.socket_port = 80
cherrypy.quickstart()
"""
socket_port = 8080
"""The TCP port on which to listen for connections."""
_socket_host = '127.0.0.1'
def _get_socket_host(self):
return self._socket_host
def _set_socket_host(self, value):
if value == '':
raise ValueError("The empty string ('') is not an allowed value. "
"Use '0.0.0.0' instead to listen on all active "
"interfaces (INADDR_ANY).")
self._socket_host = value
socket_host = property(
_get_socket_host,
_set_socket_host,
doc="""The hostname or IP address on which to listen for connections.
Host values may be any IPv4 or IPv6 address, or any valid hostname.
The string 'localhost' is a synonym for '127.0.0.1' (or '::1', if
your hosts file prefers IPv6). The string '0.0.0.0' is a special
IPv4 entry meaning "any active interface" (INADDR_ANY), and '::'
is the similar IN6ADDR_ANY for IPv6. The empty string or None are
not allowed.""")
socket_file = None
"""If given, the name of the UNIX socket to use instead of TCP/IP.
When this option is not None, the `socket_host` and `socket_port` options
are ignored."""
socket_queue_size = 5
"""The 'backlog' argument to socket.listen(); specifies the maximum number
of queued connections (default 5)."""
socket_timeout = 10
"""The timeout in seconds for accepted connections (default 10)."""
accepted_queue_size = -1
"""The maximum number of requests which will be queued up before
the server refuses to accept it (default -1, meaning no limit)."""
accepted_queue_timeout = 10
"""The timeout in seconds for attempting to add a request to the
queue when the queue is full (default 10)."""
shutdown_timeout = 5
"""The time to wait for HTTP worker threads to clean up."""
protocol_version = 'HTTP/1.1'
"""The version string to write in the Status-Line of all HTTP responses,
for example, "HTTP/1.1" (the default). Depending on the HTTP server used,
this should also limit the supported features used in the response."""
thread_pool = 10
"""The number of worker threads to start up in the pool."""
thread_pool_max = -1
"""The maximum size of the worker-thread pool. Use -1 to indicate no limit.
"""
max_request_header_size = 500 * 1024
"""The maximum number of bytes allowable in the request headers.
If exceeded, the HTTP server should return "413 Request Entity Too Large".
"""
max_request_body_size = 100 * 1024 * 1024
"""The maximum number of bytes allowable in the request body. If exceeded,
the HTTP server should return "413 Request Entity Too Large"."""
instance = None
"""If not None, this should be an HTTP server instance (such as
CPWSGIServer) which cherrypy.server will control. Use this when you need
more control over object instantiation than is available in the various
configuration options."""
ssl_context = None
"""When using PyOpenSSL, an instance of SSL.Context."""
ssl_certificate = None
"""The filename of the SSL certificate to use."""
ssl_certificate_chain = None
"""When using PyOpenSSL, the certificate chain to pass to
Context.load_verify_locations."""
ssl_private_key = None
"""The filename of the private key to use with SSL."""
if py3k:
ssl_module = 'builtin'
"""The name of a registered SSL adaptation module to use with
the builtin WSGI server. Builtin options are: 'builtin' (to
use the SSL library built into recent versions of Python).
You may also register your own classes in the
wsgiserver.ssl_adapters dict."""
else:
ssl_module = 'pyopenssl'
"""The name of a registered SSL adaptation module to use with the
builtin WSGI server. Builtin options are 'builtin' (to use the SSL
library built into recent versions of Python) and 'pyopenssl' (to
use the PyOpenSSL project, which you must install separately). You
may also register your own classes in the wsgiserver.ssl_adapters
dict."""
statistics = False
"""Turns statistics-gathering on or off for aware HTTP servers."""
nodelay = True
"""If True (the default since 3.1), sets the TCP_NODELAY socket option."""
wsgi_version = (1, 0)
"""The WSGI version tuple to use with the builtin WSGI server.
The provided options are (1, 0) [which includes support for PEP 3333,
which declares it covers WSGI version 1.0.1 but still mandates the
wsgi.version (1, 0)] and ('u', 0), an experimental unicode version.
You may create and register your own experimental versions of the WSGI
protocol by adding custom classes to the wsgiserver.wsgi_gateways dict."""
def __init__(self):
self.bus = cherrypy.engine
self.httpserver = None
self.interrupt = None
self.running = False
def httpserver_from_self(self, httpserver=None):
"""Return a (httpserver, bind_addr) pair based on self attributes."""
if httpserver is None:
httpserver = self.instance
if httpserver is None:
from cherrypy import _cpwsgi_server
httpserver = _cpwsgi_server.CPWSGIServer(self)
if isinstance(httpserver, basestring):
# Is anyone using this? Can I add an arg?
httpserver = attributes(httpserver)(self)
return httpserver, self.bind_addr
def start(self):
"""Start the HTTP server."""
if not self.httpserver:
self.httpserver, self.bind_addr = self.httpserver_from_self()
ServerAdapter.start(self)
start.priority = 75
def _get_bind_addr(self):
if self.socket_file:
return self.socket_file
if self.socket_host is None and self.socket_port is None:
return None
return (self.socket_host, self.socket_port)
def _set_bind_addr(self, value):
if value is None:
self.socket_file = None
self.socket_host = None
self.socket_port = None
elif isinstance(value, basestring):
self.socket_file = value
self.socket_host = None
self.socket_port = None
else:
try:
self.socket_host, self.socket_port = value
self.socket_file = None
except ValueError:
raise ValueError("bind_addr must be a (host, port) tuple "
"(for TCP sockets) or a string (for Unix "
"domain sockets), not %r" % value)
bind_addr = property(
_get_bind_addr,
_set_bind_addr,
doc='A (host, port) tuple for TCP sockets or '
'a str for Unix domain sockets.')
def base(self):
"""Return the base (scheme://host[:port] or sock file) for this server.
"""
if self.socket_file:
return self.socket_file
host = self.socket_host
if host in ('0.0.0.0', '::'):
# 0.0.0.0 is INADDR_ANY and :: is IN6ADDR_ANY.
# Look up the host name, which should be the
# safest thing to spit out in a URL.
import socket
host = socket.gethostname()
port = self.socket_port
if self.ssl_certificate:
scheme = "https"
if port != 443:
host += ":%s" % port
else:
scheme = "http"
if port != 80:
host += ":%s" % port
return "%s://%s" % (scheme, host)

@ -1,241 +0,0 @@
# This is a backport of Python-2.4's threading.local() implementation
"""Thread-local objects
(Note that this module provides a Python version of thread
threading.local class. Depending on the version of Python you're
using, there may be a faster one available. You should always import
the local class from threading.)
Thread-local objects support the management of thread-local data.
If you have data that you want to be local to a thread, simply create
a thread-local object and use its attributes:
>>> mydata = local()
>>> mydata.number = 42
>>> mydata.number
42
You can also access the local-object's dictionary:
>>> mydata.__dict__
{'number': 42}
>>> mydata.__dict__.setdefault('widgets', [])
[]
>>> mydata.widgets
[]
What's important about thread-local objects is that their data are
local to a thread. If we access the data in a different thread:
>>> log = []
>>> def f():
... items = mydata.__dict__.items()
... items.sort()
... log.append(items)
... mydata.number = 11
... log.append(mydata.number)
>>> import threading
>>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f)
>>> thread.start()
>>> thread.join()
>>> log
[[], 11]
we get different data. Furthermore, changes made in the other thread
don't affect data seen in this thread:
>>> mydata.number
42
Of course, values you get from a local object, including a __dict__
attribute, are for whatever thread was current at the time the
attribute was read. For that reason, you generally don't want to save
these values across threads, as they apply only to the thread they
came from.
You can create custom local objects by subclassing the local class:
>>> class MyLocal(local):
... number = 2
... initialized = False
... def __init__(self, **kw):
... if self.initialized:
... raise SystemError('__init__ called too many times')
... self.initialized = True
... self.__dict__.update(kw)
... def squared(self):
... return self.number ** 2
This can be useful to support default values, methods and
initialization. Note that if you define an __init__ method, it will be
called each time the local object is used in a separate thread. This
is necessary to initialize each thread's dictionary.
Now if we create a local object:
>>> mydata = MyLocal(color='red')
Now we have a default number:
>>> mydata.number
2
an initial color:
>>> mydata.color
'red'
>>> del mydata.color
And a method that operates on the data:
>>> mydata.squared()
4
As before, we can access the data in a separate thread:
>>> log = []
>>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f)
>>> thread.start()
>>> thread.join()
>>> log
[[('color', 'red'), ('initialized', True)], 11]
without affecting this thread's data:
>>> mydata.number
2
>>> mydata.color
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: 'MyLocal' object has no attribute 'color'
Note that subclasses can define slots, but they are not thread
local. They are shared across threads:
>>> class MyLocal(local):
... __slots__ = 'number'
>>> mydata = MyLocal()
>>> mydata.number = 42
>>> mydata.color = 'red'
So, the separate thread:
>>> thread = threading.Thread(target=f)
>>> thread.start()
>>> thread.join()
affects what we see:
>>> mydata.number
11
>>> del mydata
"""
# Threading import is at end
class _localbase(object):
__slots__ = '_local__key', '_local__args', '_local__lock'
def __new__(cls, *args, **kw):
self = object.__new__(cls)
key = 'thread.local.' + str(id(self))
object.__setattr__(self, '_local__key', key)
object.__setattr__(self, '_local__args', (args, kw))
object.__setattr__(self, '_local__lock', RLock())
if args or kw and (cls.__init__ is object.__init__):
raise TypeError("Initialization arguments are not supported")
# We need to create the thread dict in anticipation of
# __init__ being called, to make sure we don't call it
# again ourselves.
dict = object.__getattribute__(self, '__dict__')
currentThread().__dict__[key] = dict
return self
def _patch(self):
key = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__key')
d = currentThread().__dict__.get(key)
if d is None:
d = {}
currentThread().__dict__[key] = d
object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d)
# we have a new instance dict, so call out __init__ if we have
# one
cls = type(self)
if cls.__init__ is not object.__init__:
args, kw = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__args')
cls.__init__(self, *args, **kw)
else:
object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d)
class local(_localbase):
def __getattribute__(self, name):
lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
lock.acquire()
try:
_patch(self)
return object.__getattribute__(self, name)
finally:
lock.release()
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
lock.acquire()
try:
_patch(self)
return object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
finally:
lock.release()
def __delattr__(self, name):
lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
lock.acquire()
try:
_patch(self)
return object.__delattr__(self, name)
finally:
lock.release()
def __del__():
threading_enumerate = enumerate
__getattribute__ = object.__getattribute__
def __del__(self):
key = __getattribute__(self, '_local__key')
try:
threads = list(threading_enumerate())
except:
# if enumerate fails, as it seems to do during
# shutdown, we'll skip cleanup under the assumption
# that there is nothing to clean up
return
for thread in threads:
try:
__dict__ = thread.__dict__
except AttributeError:
# Thread is dying, rest in peace
continue
if key in __dict__:
try:
del __dict__[key]
except KeyError:
pass # didn't have anything in this thread
return __del__
__del__ = __del__()
from threading import currentThread, enumerate, RLock

@ -1,529 +0,0 @@
"""CherryPy tools. A "tool" is any helper, adapted to CP.
Tools are usually designed to be used in a variety of ways (although some
may only offer one if they choose):
Library calls
All tools are callables that can be used wherever needed.
The arguments are straightforward and should be detailed within the
docstring.
Function decorators
All tools, when called, may be used as decorators which configure
individual CherryPy page handlers (methods on the CherryPy tree).
That is, "@tools.anytool()" should "turn on" the tool via the
decorated function's _cp_config attribute.
CherryPy config
If a tool exposes a "_setup" callable, it will be called
once per Request (if the feature is "turned on" via config).
Tools may be implemented as any object with a namespace. The builtins
are generally either modules or instances of the tools.Tool class.
"""
import sys
import warnings
import cherrypy
def _getargs(func):
"""Return the names of all static arguments to the given function."""
# Use this instead of importing inspect for less mem overhead.
import types
if sys.version_info >= (3, 0):
if isinstance(func, types.MethodType):
func = func.__func__
co = func.__code__
else:
if isinstance(func, types.MethodType):
func = func.im_func
co = func.func_code
return co.co_varnames[:co.co_argcount]
_attr_error = (
"CherryPy Tools cannot be turned on directly. Instead, turn them "
"on via config, or use them as decorators on your page handlers."
)
class Tool(object):
"""A registered function for use with CherryPy request-processing hooks.
help(tool.callable) should give you more information about this Tool.
"""
namespace = "tools"
def __init__(self, point, callable, name=None, priority=50):
self._point = point
self.callable = callable
self._name = name
self._priority = priority
self.__doc__ = self.callable.__doc__
self._setargs()
def _get_on(self):
raise AttributeError(_attr_error)
def _set_on(self, value):
raise AttributeError(_attr_error)
on = property(_get_on, _set_on)
def _setargs(self):
"""Copy func parameter names to obj attributes."""
try:
for arg in _getargs(self.callable):
setattr(self, arg, None)
except (TypeError, AttributeError):
if hasattr(self.callable, "__call__"):
for arg in _getargs(self.callable.__call__):
setattr(self, arg, None)
# IronPython 1.0 raises NotImplementedError because
# inspect.getargspec tries to access Python bytecode
# in co_code attribute.
except NotImplementedError:
pass
# IronPython 1B1 may raise IndexError in some cases,
# but if we trap it here it doesn't prevent CP from working.
except IndexError:
pass
def _merged_args(self, d=None):
"""Return a dict of configuration entries for this Tool."""
if d:
conf = d.copy()
else:
conf = {}
tm = cherrypy.serving.request.toolmaps[self.namespace]
if self._name in tm:
conf.update(tm[self._name])
if "on" in conf:
del conf["on"]
return conf
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Compile-time decorator (turn on the tool in config).
For example::
@tools.proxy()
def whats_my_base(self):
return cherrypy.request.base
whats_my_base.exposed = True
"""
if args:
raise TypeError("The %r Tool does not accept positional "
"arguments; you must use keyword arguments."
% self._name)
def tool_decorator(f):
if not hasattr(f, "_cp_config"):
f._cp_config = {}
subspace = self.namespace + "." + self._name + "."
f._cp_config[subspace + "on"] = True
for k, v in kwargs.items():
f._cp_config[subspace + k] = v
return f
return tool_decorator
def _setup(self):
"""Hook this tool into cherrypy.request.
The standard CherryPy request object will automatically call this
method when the tool is "turned on" in config.
"""
conf = self._merged_args()
p = conf.pop("priority", None)
if p is None:
p = getattr(self.callable, "priority", self._priority)
cherrypy.serving.request.hooks.attach(self._point, self.callable,
priority=p, **conf)
class HandlerTool(Tool):
"""Tool which is called 'before main', that may skip normal handlers.
If the tool successfully handles the request (by setting response.body),
if should return True. This will cause CherryPy to skip any 'normal' page
handler. If the tool did not handle the request, it should return False
to tell CherryPy to continue on and call the normal page handler. If the
tool is declared AS a page handler (see the 'handler' method), returning
False will raise NotFound.
"""
def __init__(self, callable, name=None):
Tool.__init__(self, 'before_handler', callable, name)
def handler(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Use this tool as a CherryPy page handler.
For example::
class Root:
nav = tools.staticdir.handler(section="/nav", dir="nav",
root=absDir)
"""
def handle_func(*a, **kw):
handled = self.callable(*args, **self._merged_args(kwargs))
if not handled:
raise cherrypy.NotFound()
return cherrypy.serving.response.body
handle_func.exposed = True
return handle_func
def _wrapper(self, **kwargs):
if self.callable(**kwargs):
cherrypy.serving.request.handler = None
def _setup(self):
"""Hook this tool into cherrypy.request.
The standard CherryPy request object will automatically call this
method when the tool is "turned on" in config.
"""
conf = self._merged_args()
p = conf.pop("priority", None)
if p is None:
p = getattr(self.callable, "priority", self._priority)
cherrypy.serving.request.hooks.attach(self._point, self._wrapper,
priority=p, **conf)
class HandlerWrapperTool(Tool):
"""Tool which wraps request.handler in a provided wrapper function.
The 'newhandler' arg must be a handler wrapper function that takes a
'next_handler' argument, plus ``*args`` and ``**kwargs``. Like all
page handler
functions, it must return an iterable for use as cherrypy.response.body.
For example, to allow your 'inner' page handlers to return dicts
which then get interpolated into a template::
def interpolator(next_handler, *args, **kwargs):
filename = cherrypy.request.config.get('template')
cherrypy.response.template = env.get_template(filename)
response_dict = next_handler(*args, **kwargs)
return cherrypy.response.template.render(**response_dict)
cherrypy.tools.jinja = HandlerWrapperTool(interpolator)
"""
def __init__(self, newhandler, point='before_handler', name=None,
priority=50):
self.newhandler = newhandler
self._point = point
self._name = name
self._priority = priority
def callable(self, *args, **kwargs):
innerfunc = cherrypy.serving.request.handler
def wrap(*args, **kwargs):
return self.newhandler(innerfunc, *args, **kwargs)
cherrypy.serving.request.handler = wrap
class ErrorTool(Tool):
"""Tool which is used to replace the default request.error_response."""
def __init__(self, callable, name=None):
Tool.__init__(self, None, callable, name)
def _wrapper(self):
self.callable(**self._merged_args())
def _setup(self):
"""Hook this tool into cherrypy.request.
The standard CherryPy request object will automatically call this
method when the tool is "turned on" in config.
"""
cherrypy.serving.request.error_response = self._wrapper
# Builtin tools #
from cherrypy.lib import cptools, encoding, auth, static, jsontools
from cherrypy.lib import sessions as _sessions, xmlrpcutil as _xmlrpc
from cherrypy.lib import caching as _caching
from cherrypy.lib import auth_basic, auth_digest
class SessionTool(Tool):
"""Session Tool for CherryPy.
sessions.locking
When 'implicit' (the default), the session will be locked for you,
just before running the page handler.
When 'early', the session will be locked before reading the request
body. This is off by default for safety reasons; for example,
a large upload would block the session, denying an AJAX
progress meter
(`issue <https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/630>`_).
When 'explicit' (or any other value), you need to call
cherrypy.session.acquire_lock() yourself before using
session data.
"""
def __init__(self):
# _sessions.init must be bound after headers are read
Tool.__init__(self, 'before_request_body', _sessions.init)
def _lock_session(self):
cherrypy.serving.session.acquire_lock()
def _setup(self):
"""Hook this tool into cherrypy.request.
The standard CherryPy request object will automatically call this
method when the tool is "turned on" in config.
"""
hooks = cherrypy.serving.request.hooks
conf = self._merged_args()
p = conf.pop("priority", None)
if p is None:
p = getattr(self.callable, "priority", self._priority)
hooks.attach(self._point, self.callable, priority=p, **conf)
locking = conf.pop('locking', 'implicit')
if locking == 'implicit':
hooks.attach('before_handler', self._lock_session)
elif locking == 'early':
# Lock before the request body (but after _sessions.init runs!)
hooks.attach('before_request_body', self._lock_session,
priority=60)
else:
# Don't lock
pass
hooks.attach('before_finalize', _sessions.save)
hooks.attach('on_end_request', _sessions.close)
def regenerate(self):
"""Drop the current session and make a new one (with a new id)."""
sess = cherrypy.serving.session
sess.regenerate()
# Grab cookie-relevant tool args
conf = dict([(k, v) for k, v in self._merged_args().items()
if k in ('path', 'path_header', 'name', 'timeout',
'domain', 'secure')])
_sessions.set_response_cookie(**conf)
class XMLRPCController(object):
"""A Controller (page handler collection) for XML-RPC.
To use it, have your controllers subclass this base class (it will
turn on the tool for you).
You can also supply the following optional config entries::
tools.xmlrpc.encoding: 'utf-8'
tools.xmlrpc.allow_none: 0
XML-RPC is a rather discontinuous layer over HTTP; dispatching to the
appropriate handler must first be performed according to the URL, and
then a second dispatch step must take place according to the RPC method
specified in the request body. It also allows a superfluous "/RPC2"
prefix in the URL, supplies its own handler args in the body, and
requires a 200 OK "Fault" response instead of 404 when the desired
method is not found.
Therefore, XML-RPC cannot be implemented for CherryPy via a Tool alone.
This Controller acts as the dispatch target for the first half (based
on the URL); it then reads the RPC method from the request body and
does its own second dispatch step based on that method. It also reads
body params, and returns a Fault on error.
The XMLRPCDispatcher strips any /RPC2 prefix; if you aren't using /RPC2
in your URL's, you can safely skip turning on the XMLRPCDispatcher.
Otherwise, you need to use declare it in config::
request.dispatch: cherrypy.dispatch.XMLRPCDispatcher()
"""
# Note we're hard-coding this into the 'tools' namespace. We could do
# a huge amount of work to make it relocatable, but the only reason why
# would be if someone actually disabled the default_toolbox. Meh.
_cp_config = {'tools.xmlrpc.on': True}
def default(self, *vpath, **params):
rpcparams, rpcmethod = _xmlrpc.process_body()
subhandler = self
for attr in str(rpcmethod).split('.'):
subhandler = getattr(subhandler, attr, None)
if subhandler and getattr(subhandler, "exposed", False):
body = subhandler(*(vpath + rpcparams), **params)
else:
# https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/533
# if a method is not found, an xmlrpclib.Fault should be returned
# raising an exception here will do that; see
# cherrypy.lib.xmlrpcutil.on_error
raise Exception('method "%s" is not supported' % attr)
conf = cherrypy.serving.request.toolmaps['tools'].get("xmlrpc", {})
_xmlrpc.respond(body,
conf.get('encoding', 'utf-8'),
conf.get('allow_none', 0))
return cherrypy.serving.response.body
default.exposed = True
class SessionAuthTool(HandlerTool):
def _setargs(self):
for name in dir(cptools.SessionAuth):
if not name.startswith("__"):
setattr(self, name, None)
class CachingTool(Tool):
"""Caching Tool for CherryPy."""
def _wrapper(self, **kwargs):
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if _caching.get(**kwargs):
request.handler = None
else:
if request.cacheable:
# Note the devious technique here of adding hooks on the fly
request.hooks.attach('before_finalize', _caching.tee_output,
priority=90)
_wrapper.priority = 20
def _setup(self):
"""Hook caching into cherrypy.request."""
conf = self._merged_args()
p = conf.pop("priority", None)
cherrypy.serving.request.hooks.attach('before_handler', self._wrapper,
priority=p, **conf)
class Toolbox(object):
"""A collection of Tools.
This object also functions as a config namespace handler for itself.
Custom toolboxes should be added to each Application's toolboxes dict.
"""
def __init__(self, namespace):
self.namespace = namespace
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
# If the Tool._name is None, supply it from the attribute name.
if isinstance(value, Tool):
if value._name is None:
value._name = name
value.namespace = self.namespace
object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
def __enter__(self):
"""Populate request.toolmaps from tools specified in config."""
cherrypy.serving.request.toolmaps[self.namespace] = map = {}
def populate(k, v):
toolname, arg = k.split(".", 1)
bucket = map.setdefault(toolname, {})
bucket[arg] = v
return populate
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
"""Run tool._setup() for each tool in our toolmap."""
map = cherrypy.serving.request.toolmaps.get(self.namespace)
if map:
for name, settings in map.items():
if settings.get("on", False):
tool = getattr(self, name)
tool._setup()
class DeprecatedTool(Tool):
_name = None
warnmsg = "This Tool is deprecated."
def __init__(self, point, warnmsg=None):
self.point = point
if warnmsg is not None:
self.warnmsg = warnmsg
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
warnings.warn(self.warnmsg)
def tool_decorator(f):
return f
return tool_decorator
def _setup(self):
warnings.warn(self.warnmsg)
default_toolbox = _d = Toolbox("tools")
_d.session_auth = SessionAuthTool(cptools.session_auth)
_d.allow = Tool('on_start_resource', cptools.allow)
_d.proxy = Tool('before_request_body', cptools.proxy, priority=30)
_d.response_headers = Tool('on_start_resource', cptools.response_headers)
_d.log_tracebacks = Tool('before_error_response', cptools.log_traceback)
_d.log_headers = Tool('before_error_response', cptools.log_request_headers)
_d.log_hooks = Tool('on_end_request', cptools.log_hooks, priority=100)
_d.err_redirect = ErrorTool(cptools.redirect)
_d.etags = Tool('before_finalize', cptools.validate_etags, priority=75)
_d.decode = Tool('before_request_body', encoding.decode)
# the order of encoding, gzip, caching is important
_d.encode = Tool('before_handler', encoding.ResponseEncoder, priority=70)
_d.gzip = Tool('before_finalize', encoding.gzip, priority=80)
_d.staticdir = HandlerTool(static.staticdir)
_d.staticfile = HandlerTool(static.staticfile)
_d.sessions = SessionTool()
_d.xmlrpc = ErrorTool(_xmlrpc.on_error)
_d.caching = CachingTool('before_handler', _caching.get, 'caching')
_d.expires = Tool('before_finalize', _caching.expires)
_d.tidy = DeprecatedTool(
'before_finalize',
"The tidy tool has been removed from the standard distribution of "
"CherryPy. The most recent version can be found at "
"http://tools.cherrypy.org/browser.")
_d.nsgmls = DeprecatedTool(
'before_finalize',
"The nsgmls tool has been removed from the standard distribution of "
"CherryPy. The most recent version can be found at "
"http://tools.cherrypy.org/browser.")
_d.ignore_headers = Tool('before_request_body', cptools.ignore_headers)
_d.referer = Tool('before_request_body', cptools.referer)
_d.basic_auth = Tool('on_start_resource', auth.basic_auth)
_d.digest_auth = Tool('on_start_resource', auth.digest_auth)
_d.trailing_slash = Tool('before_handler', cptools.trailing_slash, priority=60)
_d.flatten = Tool('before_finalize', cptools.flatten)
_d.accept = Tool('on_start_resource', cptools.accept)
_d.redirect = Tool('on_start_resource', cptools.redirect)
_d.autovary = Tool('on_start_resource', cptools.autovary, priority=0)
_d.json_in = Tool('before_request_body', jsontools.json_in, priority=30)
_d.json_out = Tool('before_handler', jsontools.json_out, priority=30)
_d.auth_basic = Tool('before_handler', auth_basic.basic_auth, priority=1)
_d.auth_digest = Tool('before_handler', auth_digest.digest_auth, priority=1)
del _d, cptools, encoding, auth, static

@ -1,299 +0,0 @@
"""CherryPy Application and Tree objects."""
import os
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import ntou, py3k
from cherrypy import _cpconfig, _cplogging, _cprequest, _cpwsgi, tools
from cherrypy.lib import httputil
class Application(object):
"""A CherryPy Application.
Servers and gateways should not instantiate Request objects directly.
Instead, they should ask an Application object for a request object.
An instance of this class may also be used as a WSGI callable
(WSGI application object) for itself.
"""
root = None
"""The top-most container of page handlers for this app. Handlers should
be arranged in a hierarchy of attributes, matching the expected URI
hierarchy; the default dispatcher then searches this hierarchy for a
matching handler. When using a dispatcher other than the default,
this value may be None."""
config = {}
"""A dict of {path: pathconf} pairs, where 'pathconf' is itself a dict
of {key: value} pairs."""
namespaces = _cpconfig.NamespaceSet()
toolboxes = {'tools': cherrypy.tools}
log = None
"""A LogManager instance. See _cplogging."""
wsgiapp = None
"""A CPWSGIApp instance. See _cpwsgi."""
request_class = _cprequest.Request
response_class = _cprequest.Response
relative_urls = False
def __init__(self, root, script_name="", config=None):
self.log = _cplogging.LogManager(id(self), cherrypy.log.logger_root)
self.root = root
self.script_name = script_name
self.wsgiapp = _cpwsgi.CPWSGIApp(self)
self.namespaces = self.namespaces.copy()
self.namespaces["log"] = lambda k, v: setattr(self.log, k, v)
self.namespaces["wsgi"] = self.wsgiapp.namespace_handler
self.config = self.__class__.config.copy()
if config:
self.merge(config)
def __repr__(self):
return "%s.%s(%r, %r)" % (self.__module__, self.__class__.__name__,
self.root, self.script_name)
script_name_doc = """The URI "mount point" for this app. A mount point
is that portion of the URI which is constant for all URIs that are
serviced by this application; it does not include scheme, host, or proxy
("virtual host") portions of the URI.
For example, if script_name is "/my/cool/app", then the URL
"http://www.example.com/my/cool/app/page1" might be handled by a
"page1" method on the root object.
The value of script_name MUST NOT end in a slash. If the script_name
refers to the root of the URI, it MUST be an empty string (not "/").
If script_name is explicitly set to None, then the script_name will be
provided for each call from request.wsgi_environ['SCRIPT_NAME'].
"""
def _get_script_name(self):
if self._script_name is not None:
return self._script_name
# A `_script_name` with a value of None signals that the script name
# should be pulled from WSGI environ.
return cherrypy.serving.request.wsgi_environ['SCRIPT_NAME'].rstrip("/")
def _set_script_name(self, value):
if value:
value = value.rstrip("/")
self._script_name = value
script_name = property(fget=_get_script_name, fset=_set_script_name,
doc=script_name_doc)
def merge(self, config):
"""Merge the given config into self.config."""
_cpconfig.merge(self.config, config)
# Handle namespaces specified in config.
self.namespaces(self.config.get("/", {}))
def find_config(self, path, key, default=None):
"""Return the most-specific value for key along path, or default."""
trail = path or "/"
while trail:
nodeconf = self.config.get(trail, {})
if key in nodeconf:
return nodeconf[key]
lastslash = trail.rfind("/")
if lastslash == -1:
break
elif lastslash == 0 and trail != "/":
trail = "/"
else:
trail = trail[:lastslash]
return default
def get_serving(self, local, remote, scheme, sproto):
"""Create and return a Request and Response object."""
req = self.request_class(local, remote, scheme, sproto)
req.app = self
for name, toolbox in self.toolboxes.items():
req.namespaces[name] = toolbox
resp = self.response_class()
cherrypy.serving.load(req, resp)
cherrypy.engine.publish('acquire_thread')
cherrypy.engine.publish('before_request')
return req, resp
def release_serving(self):
"""Release the current serving (request and response)."""
req = cherrypy.serving.request
cherrypy.engine.publish('after_request')
try:
req.close()
except:
cherrypy.log(traceback=True, severity=40)
cherrypy.serving.clear()
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
return self.wsgiapp(environ, start_response)
class Tree(object):
"""A registry of CherryPy applications, mounted at diverse points.
An instance of this class may also be used as a WSGI callable
(WSGI application object), in which case it dispatches to all
mounted apps.
"""
apps = {}
"""
A dict of the form {script name: application}, where "script name"
is a string declaring the URI mount point (no trailing slash), and
"application" is an instance of cherrypy.Application (or an arbitrary
WSGI callable if you happen to be using a WSGI server)."""
def __init__(self):
self.apps = {}
def mount(self, root, script_name="", config=None):
"""Mount a new app from a root object, script_name, and config.
root
An instance of a "controller class" (a collection of page
handler methods) which represents the root of the application.
This may also be an Application instance, or None if using
a dispatcher other than the default.
script_name
A string containing the "mount point" of the application.
This should start with a slash, and be the path portion of the
URL at which to mount the given root. For example, if root.index()
will handle requests to "http://www.example.com:8080/dept/app1/",
then the script_name argument would be "/dept/app1".
It MUST NOT end in a slash. If the script_name refers to the
root of the URI, it MUST be an empty string (not "/").
config
A file or dict containing application config.
"""
if script_name is None:
raise TypeError(
"The 'script_name' argument may not be None. Application "
"objects may, however, possess a script_name of None (in "
"order to inpect the WSGI environ for SCRIPT_NAME upon each "
"request). You cannot mount such Applications on this Tree; "
"you must pass them to a WSGI server interface directly.")
# Next line both 1) strips trailing slash and 2) maps "/" -> "".
script_name = script_name.rstrip("/")
if isinstance(root, Application):
app = root
if script_name != "" and script_name != app.script_name:
raise ValueError(
"Cannot specify a different script name and pass an "
"Application instance to cherrypy.mount")
script_name = app.script_name
else:
app = Application(root, script_name)
# If mounted at "", add favicon.ico
if (script_name == "" and root is not None
and not hasattr(root, "favicon_ico")):
favicon = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), os.path.dirname(__file__),
"favicon.ico")
root.favicon_ico = tools.staticfile.handler(favicon)
if config:
app.merge(config)
self.apps[script_name] = app
return app
def graft(self, wsgi_callable, script_name=""):
"""Mount a wsgi callable at the given script_name."""
# Next line both 1) strips trailing slash and 2) maps "/" -> "".
script_name = script_name.rstrip("/")
self.apps[script_name] = wsgi_callable
def script_name(self, path=None):
"""The script_name of the app at the given path, or None.
If path is None, cherrypy.request is used.
"""
if path is None:
try:
request = cherrypy.serving.request
path = httputil.urljoin(request.script_name,
request.path_info)
except AttributeError:
return None
while True:
if path in self.apps:
return path
if path == "":
return None
# Move one node up the tree and try again.
path = path[:path.rfind("/")]
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
# If you're calling this, then you're probably setting SCRIPT_NAME
# to '' (some WSGI servers always set SCRIPT_NAME to '').
# Try to look up the app using the full path.
env1x = environ
if environ.get(ntou('wsgi.version')) == (ntou('u'), 0):
env1x = _cpwsgi.downgrade_wsgi_ux_to_1x(environ)
path = httputil.urljoin(env1x.get('SCRIPT_NAME', ''),
env1x.get('PATH_INFO', ''))
sn = self.script_name(path or "/")
if sn is None:
start_response('404 Not Found', [])
return []
app = self.apps[sn]
# Correct the SCRIPT_NAME and PATH_INFO environ entries.
environ = environ.copy()
if not py3k:
if environ.get(ntou('wsgi.version')) == (ntou('u'), 0):
# Python 2/WSGI u.0: all strings MUST be of type unicode
enc = environ[ntou('wsgi.url_encoding')]
environ[ntou('SCRIPT_NAME')] = sn.decode(enc)
environ[ntou('PATH_INFO')] = path[
len(sn.rstrip("/")):].decode(enc)
else:
# Python 2/WSGI 1.x: all strings MUST be of type str
environ['SCRIPT_NAME'] = sn
environ['PATH_INFO'] = path[len(sn.rstrip("/")):]
else:
if environ.get(ntou('wsgi.version')) == (ntou('u'), 0):
# Python 3/WSGI u.0: all strings MUST be full unicode
environ['SCRIPT_NAME'] = sn
environ['PATH_INFO'] = path[len(sn.rstrip("/")):]
else:
# Python 3/WSGI 1.x: all strings MUST be ISO-8859-1 str
environ['SCRIPT_NAME'] = sn.encode(
'utf-8').decode('ISO-8859-1')
environ['PATH_INFO'] = path[
len(sn.rstrip("/")):].encode('utf-8').decode('ISO-8859-1')
return app(environ, start_response)

@ -1,438 +0,0 @@
"""WSGI interface (see PEP 333 and 3333).
Note that WSGI environ keys and values are 'native strings'; that is,
whatever the type of "" is. For Python 2, that's a byte string; for Python 3,
it's a unicode string. But PEP 3333 says: "even if Python's str type is
actually Unicode "under the hood", the content of native strings must
still be translatable to bytes via the Latin-1 encoding!"
"""
import sys as _sys
import cherrypy as _cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import BytesIO, bytestr, ntob, ntou, py3k, unicodestr
from cherrypy import _cperror
from cherrypy.lib import httputil
from cherrypy.lib import is_closable_iterator
def downgrade_wsgi_ux_to_1x(environ):
"""Return a new environ dict for WSGI 1.x from the given WSGI u.x environ.
"""
env1x = {}
url_encoding = environ[ntou('wsgi.url_encoding')]
for k, v in list(environ.items()):
if k in [ntou('PATH_INFO'), ntou('SCRIPT_NAME'), ntou('QUERY_STRING')]:
v = v.encode(url_encoding)
elif isinstance(v, unicodestr):
v = v.encode('ISO-8859-1')
env1x[k.encode('ISO-8859-1')] = v
return env1x
class VirtualHost(object):
"""Select a different WSGI application based on the Host header.
This can be useful when running multiple sites within one CP server.
It allows several domains to point to different applications. For example::
root = Root()
RootApp = cherrypy.Application(root)
Domain2App = cherrypy.Application(root)
SecureApp = cherrypy.Application(Secure())
vhost = cherrypy._cpwsgi.VirtualHost(RootApp,
domains={'www.domain2.example': Domain2App,
'www.domain2.example:443': SecureApp,
})
cherrypy.tree.graft(vhost)
"""
default = None
"""Required. The default WSGI application."""
use_x_forwarded_host = True
"""If True (the default), any "X-Forwarded-Host"
request header will be used instead of the "Host" header. This
is commonly added by HTTP servers (such as Apache) when proxying."""
domains = {}
"""A dict of {host header value: application} pairs.
The incoming "Host" request header is looked up in this dict,
and, if a match is found, the corresponding WSGI application
will be called instead of the default. Note that you often need
separate entries for "example.com" and "www.example.com".
In addition, "Host" headers may contain the port number.
"""
def __init__(self, default, domains=None, use_x_forwarded_host=True):
self.default = default
self.domains = domains or {}
self.use_x_forwarded_host = use_x_forwarded_host
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
domain = environ.get('HTTP_HOST', '')
if self.use_x_forwarded_host:
domain = environ.get("HTTP_X_FORWARDED_HOST", domain)
nextapp = self.domains.get(domain)
if nextapp is None:
nextapp = self.default
return nextapp(environ, start_response)
class InternalRedirector(object):
"""WSGI middleware that handles raised cherrypy.InternalRedirect."""
def __init__(self, nextapp, recursive=False):
self.nextapp = nextapp
self.recursive = recursive
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
redirections = []
while True:
environ = environ.copy()
try:
return self.nextapp(environ, start_response)
except _cherrypy.InternalRedirect:
ir = _sys.exc_info()[1]
sn = environ.get('SCRIPT_NAME', '')
path = environ.get('PATH_INFO', '')
qs = environ.get('QUERY_STRING', '')
# Add the *previous* path_info + qs to redirections.
old_uri = sn + path
if qs:
old_uri += "?" + qs
redirections.append(old_uri)
if not self.recursive:
# Check to see if the new URI has been redirected to
# already
new_uri = sn + ir.path
if ir.query_string:
new_uri += "?" + ir.query_string
if new_uri in redirections:
ir.request.close()
raise RuntimeError("InternalRedirector visited the "
"same URL twice: %r" % new_uri)
# Munge the environment and try again.
environ['REQUEST_METHOD'] = "GET"
environ['PATH_INFO'] = ir.path
environ['QUERY_STRING'] = ir.query_string
environ['wsgi.input'] = BytesIO()
environ['CONTENT_LENGTH'] = "0"
environ['cherrypy.previous_request'] = ir.request
class ExceptionTrapper(object):
"""WSGI middleware that traps exceptions."""
def __init__(self, nextapp, throws=(KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit)):
self.nextapp = nextapp
self.throws = throws
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
return _TrappedResponse(
self.nextapp,
environ,
start_response,
self.throws
)
class _TrappedResponse(object):
response = iter([])
def __init__(self, nextapp, environ, start_response, throws):
self.nextapp = nextapp
self.environ = environ
self.start_response = start_response
self.throws = throws
self.started_response = False
self.response = self.trap(
self.nextapp, self.environ, self.start_response)
self.iter_response = iter(self.response)
def __iter__(self):
self.started_response = True
return self
if py3k:
def __next__(self):
return self.trap(next, self.iter_response)
else:
def next(self):
return self.trap(self.iter_response.next)
def close(self):
if hasattr(self.response, 'close'):
self.response.close()
def trap(self, func, *args, **kwargs):
try:
return func(*args, **kwargs)
except self.throws:
raise
except StopIteration:
raise
except:
tb = _cperror.format_exc()
#print('trapped (started %s):' % self.started_response, tb)
_cherrypy.log(tb, severity=40)
if not _cherrypy.request.show_tracebacks:
tb = ""
s, h, b = _cperror.bare_error(tb)
if py3k:
# What fun.
s = s.decode('ISO-8859-1')
h = [(k.decode('ISO-8859-1'), v.decode('ISO-8859-1'))
for k, v in h]
if self.started_response:
# Empty our iterable (so future calls raise StopIteration)
self.iter_response = iter([])
else:
self.iter_response = iter(b)
try:
self.start_response(s, h, _sys.exc_info())
except:
# "The application must not trap any exceptions raised by
# start_response, if it called start_response with exc_info.
# Instead, it should allow such exceptions to propagate
# back to the server or gateway."
# But we still log and call close() to clean up ourselves.
_cherrypy.log(traceback=True, severity=40)
raise
if self.started_response:
return ntob("").join(b)
else:
return b
# WSGI-to-CP Adapter #
class AppResponse(object):
"""WSGI response iterable for CherryPy applications."""
def __init__(self, environ, start_response, cpapp):
self.cpapp = cpapp
try:
if not py3k:
if environ.get(ntou('wsgi.version')) == (ntou('u'), 0):
environ = downgrade_wsgi_ux_to_1x(environ)
self.environ = environ
self.run()
r = _cherrypy.serving.response
outstatus = r.output_status
if not isinstance(outstatus, bytestr):
raise TypeError("response.output_status is not a byte string.")
outheaders = []
for k, v in r.header_list:
if not isinstance(k, bytestr):
raise TypeError(
"response.header_list key %r is not a byte string." %
k)
if not isinstance(v, bytestr):
raise TypeError(
"response.header_list value %r is not a byte string." %
v)
outheaders.append((k, v))
if py3k:
# According to PEP 3333, when using Python 3, the response
# status and headers must be bytes masquerading as unicode;
# that is, they must be of type "str" but are restricted to
# code points in the "latin-1" set.
outstatus = outstatus.decode('ISO-8859-1')
outheaders = [(k.decode('ISO-8859-1'), v.decode('ISO-8859-1'))
for k, v in outheaders]
self.iter_response = iter(r.body)
self.write = start_response(outstatus, outheaders)
except:
self.close()
raise
def __iter__(self):
return self
if py3k:
def __next__(self):
return next(self.iter_response)
else:
def next(self):
return self.iter_response.next()
def close(self):
"""Close and de-reference the current request and response. (Core)"""
streaming = _cherrypy.serving.response.stream
self.cpapp.release_serving()
# We avoid the expense of examining the iterator to see if it's
# closable unless we are streaming the response, as that's the
# only situation where we are going to have an iterator which
# may not have been exhausted yet.
if streaming and is_closable_iterator(self.iter_response):
iter_close = self.iter_response.close
try:
iter_close()
except Exception:
_cherrypy.log(traceback=True, severity=40)
def run(self):
"""Create a Request object using environ."""
env = self.environ.get
local = httputil.Host('', int(env('SERVER_PORT', 80)),
env('SERVER_NAME', ''))
remote = httputil.Host(env('REMOTE_ADDR', ''),
int(env('REMOTE_PORT', -1) or -1),
env('REMOTE_HOST', ''))
scheme = env('wsgi.url_scheme')
sproto = env('ACTUAL_SERVER_PROTOCOL', "HTTP/1.1")
request, resp = self.cpapp.get_serving(local, remote, scheme, sproto)
# LOGON_USER is served by IIS, and is the name of the
# user after having been mapped to a local account.
# Both IIS and Apache set REMOTE_USER, when possible.
request.login = env('LOGON_USER') or env('REMOTE_USER') or None
request.multithread = self.environ['wsgi.multithread']
request.multiprocess = self.environ['wsgi.multiprocess']
request.wsgi_environ = self.environ
request.prev = env('cherrypy.previous_request', None)
meth = self.environ['REQUEST_METHOD']
path = httputil.urljoin(self.environ.get('SCRIPT_NAME', ''),
self.environ.get('PATH_INFO', ''))
qs = self.environ.get('QUERY_STRING', '')
if py3k:
# This isn't perfect; if the given PATH_INFO is in the
# wrong encoding, it may fail to match the appropriate config
# section URI. But meh.
old_enc = self.environ.get('wsgi.url_encoding', 'ISO-8859-1')
new_enc = self.cpapp.find_config(self.environ.get('PATH_INFO', ''),
"request.uri_encoding", 'utf-8')
if new_enc.lower() != old_enc.lower():
# Even though the path and qs are unicode, the WSGI server
# is required by PEP 3333 to coerce them to ISO-8859-1
# masquerading as unicode. So we have to encode back to
# bytes and then decode again using the "correct" encoding.
try:
u_path = path.encode(old_enc).decode(new_enc)
u_qs = qs.encode(old_enc).decode(new_enc)
except (UnicodeEncodeError, UnicodeDecodeError):
# Just pass them through without transcoding and hope.
pass
else:
# Only set transcoded values if they both succeed.
path = u_path
qs = u_qs
rproto = self.environ.get('SERVER_PROTOCOL')
headers = self.translate_headers(self.environ)
rfile = self.environ['wsgi.input']
request.run(meth, path, qs, rproto, headers, rfile)
headerNames = {'HTTP_CGI_AUTHORIZATION': 'Authorization',
'CONTENT_LENGTH': 'Content-Length',
'CONTENT_TYPE': 'Content-Type',
'REMOTE_HOST': 'Remote-Host',
'REMOTE_ADDR': 'Remote-Addr',
}
def translate_headers(self, environ):
"""Translate CGI-environ header names to HTTP header names."""
for cgiName in environ:
# We assume all incoming header keys are uppercase already.
if cgiName in self.headerNames:
yield self.headerNames[cgiName], environ[cgiName]
elif cgiName[:5] == "HTTP_":
# Hackish attempt at recovering original header names.
translatedHeader = cgiName[5:].replace("_", "-")
yield translatedHeader, environ[cgiName]
class CPWSGIApp(object):
"""A WSGI application object for a CherryPy Application."""
pipeline = [('ExceptionTrapper', ExceptionTrapper),
('InternalRedirector', InternalRedirector),
]
"""A list of (name, wsgiapp) pairs. Each 'wsgiapp' MUST be a
constructor that takes an initial, positional 'nextapp' argument,
plus optional keyword arguments, and returns a WSGI application
(that takes environ and start_response arguments). The 'name' can
be any you choose, and will correspond to keys in self.config."""
head = None
"""Rather than nest all apps in the pipeline on each call, it's only
done the first time, and the result is memoized into self.head. Set
this to None again if you change self.pipeline after calling self."""
config = {}
"""A dict whose keys match names listed in the pipeline. Each
value is a further dict which will be passed to the corresponding
named WSGI callable (from the pipeline) as keyword arguments."""
response_class = AppResponse
"""The class to instantiate and return as the next app in the WSGI chain.
"""
def __init__(self, cpapp, pipeline=None):
self.cpapp = cpapp
self.pipeline = self.pipeline[:]
if pipeline:
self.pipeline.extend(pipeline)
self.config = self.config.copy()
def tail(self, environ, start_response):
"""WSGI application callable for the actual CherryPy application.
You probably shouldn't call this; call self.__call__ instead,
so that any WSGI middleware in self.pipeline can run first.
"""
return self.response_class(environ, start_response, self.cpapp)
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
head = self.head
if head is None:
# Create and nest the WSGI apps in our pipeline (in reverse order).
# Then memoize the result in self.head.
head = self.tail
for name, callable in self.pipeline[::-1]:
conf = self.config.get(name, {})
head = callable(head, **conf)
self.head = head
return head(environ, start_response)
def namespace_handler(self, k, v):
"""Config handler for the 'wsgi' namespace."""
if k == "pipeline":
# Note this allows multiple 'wsgi.pipeline' config entries
# (but each entry will be processed in a 'random' order).
# It should also allow developers to set default middleware
# in code (passed to self.__init__) that deployers can add to
# (but not remove) via config.
self.pipeline.extend(v)
elif k == "response_class":
self.response_class = v
else:
name, arg = k.split(".", 1)
bucket = self.config.setdefault(name, {})
bucket[arg] = v

@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
"""WSGI server interface (see PEP 333). This adds some CP-specific bits to
the framework-agnostic wsgiserver package.
"""
import sys
import cherrypy
from cherrypy import wsgiserver
class CPWSGIServer(wsgiserver.CherryPyWSGIServer):
"""Wrapper for wsgiserver.CherryPyWSGIServer.
wsgiserver has been designed to not reference CherryPy in any way,
so that it can be used in other frameworks and applications. Therefore,
we wrap it here, so we can set our own mount points from cherrypy.tree
and apply some attributes from config -> cherrypy.server -> wsgiserver.
"""
def __init__(self, server_adapter=cherrypy.server):
self.server_adapter = server_adapter
self.max_request_header_size = (
self.server_adapter.max_request_header_size or 0
)
self.max_request_body_size = (
self.server_adapter.max_request_body_size or 0
)
server_name = (self.server_adapter.socket_host or
self.server_adapter.socket_file or
None)
self.wsgi_version = self.server_adapter.wsgi_version
s = wsgiserver.CherryPyWSGIServer
s.__init__(self, server_adapter.bind_addr, cherrypy.tree,
self.server_adapter.thread_pool,
server_name,
max=self.server_adapter.thread_pool_max,
request_queue_size=self.server_adapter.socket_queue_size,
timeout=self.server_adapter.socket_timeout,
shutdown_timeout=self.server_adapter.shutdown_timeout,
accepted_queue_size=self.server_adapter.accepted_queue_size,
accepted_queue_timeout=self.server_adapter.accepted_queue_timeout,
)
self.protocol = self.server_adapter.protocol_version
self.nodelay = self.server_adapter.nodelay
if sys.version_info >= (3, 0):
ssl_module = self.server_adapter.ssl_module or 'builtin'
else:
ssl_module = self.server_adapter.ssl_module or 'pyopenssl'
if self.server_adapter.ssl_context:
adapter_class = wsgiserver.get_ssl_adapter_class(ssl_module)
self.ssl_adapter = adapter_class(
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate,
self.server_adapter.ssl_private_key,
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate_chain)
self.ssl_adapter.context = self.server_adapter.ssl_context
elif self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate:
adapter_class = wsgiserver.get_ssl_adapter_class(ssl_module)
self.ssl_adapter = adapter_class(
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate,
self.server_adapter.ssl_private_key,
self.server_adapter.ssl_certificate_chain)
self.stats['Enabled'] = getattr(
self.server_adapter, 'statistics', False)
def error_log(self, msg="", level=20, traceback=False):
cherrypy.engine.log(msg, level, traceback)

@ -1,109 +0,0 @@
"""The CherryPy daemon."""
import sys
import cherrypy
from cherrypy.process import plugins, servers
from cherrypy import Application
def start(configfiles=None, daemonize=False, environment=None,
fastcgi=False, scgi=False, pidfile=None, imports=None,
cgi=False):
"""Subscribe all engine plugins and start the engine."""
sys.path = [''] + sys.path
for i in imports or []:
exec("import %s" % i)
for c in configfiles or []:
cherrypy.config.update(c)
# If there's only one app mounted, merge config into it.
if len(cherrypy.tree.apps) == 1:
for app in cherrypy.tree.apps.values():
if isinstance(app, Application):
app.merge(c)
engine = cherrypy.engine
if environment is not None:
cherrypy.config.update({'environment': environment})
# Only daemonize if asked to.
if daemonize:
# Don't print anything to stdout/sterr.
cherrypy.config.update({'log.screen': False})
plugins.Daemonizer(engine).subscribe()
if pidfile:
plugins.PIDFile(engine, pidfile).subscribe()
if hasattr(engine, "signal_handler"):
engine.signal_handler.subscribe()
if hasattr(engine, "console_control_handler"):
engine.console_control_handler.subscribe()
if (fastcgi and (scgi or cgi)) or (scgi and cgi):
cherrypy.log.error("You may only specify one of the cgi, fastcgi, and "
"scgi options.", 'ENGINE')
sys.exit(1)
elif fastcgi or scgi or cgi:
# Turn off autoreload when using *cgi.
cherrypy.config.update({'engine.autoreload_on': False})
# Turn off the default HTTP server (which is subscribed by default).
cherrypy.server.unsubscribe()
addr = cherrypy.server.bind_addr
if fastcgi:
f = servers.FlupFCGIServer(application=cherrypy.tree,
bindAddress=addr)
elif scgi:
f = servers.FlupSCGIServer(application=cherrypy.tree,
bindAddress=addr)
else:
f = servers.FlupCGIServer(application=cherrypy.tree,
bindAddress=addr)
s = servers.ServerAdapter(engine, httpserver=f, bind_addr=addr)
s.subscribe()
# Always start the engine; this will start all other services
try:
engine.start()
except:
# Assume the error has been logged already via bus.log.
sys.exit(1)
else:
engine.block()
def run():
from optparse import OptionParser
p = OptionParser()
p.add_option('-c', '--config', action="append", dest='config',
help="specify config file(s)")
p.add_option('-d', action="store_true", dest='daemonize',
help="run the server as a daemon")
p.add_option('-e', '--environment', dest='environment', default=None,
help="apply the given config environment")
p.add_option('-f', action="store_true", dest='fastcgi',
help="start a fastcgi server instead of the default HTTP "
"server")
p.add_option('-s', action="store_true", dest='scgi',
help="start a scgi server instead of the default HTTP server")
p.add_option('-x', action="store_true", dest='cgi',
help="start a cgi server instead of the default HTTP server")
p.add_option('-i', '--import', action="append", dest='imports',
help="specify modules to import")
p.add_option('-p', '--pidfile', dest='pidfile', default=None,
help="store the process id in the given file")
p.add_option('-P', '--Path', action="append", dest='Path',
help="add the given paths to sys.path")
options, args = p.parse_args()
if options.Path:
for p in options.Path:
sys.path.insert(0, p)
start(options.config, options.daemonize,
options.environment, options.fastcgi, options.scgi,
options.pidfile, options.imports, options.cgi)

@ -1,85 +0,0 @@
"""CherryPy Library"""
# Deprecated in CherryPy 3.2 -- remove in CherryPy 3.3
from cherrypy.lib.reprconf import unrepr, modules, attributes
def is_iterator(obj):
'''Returns a boolean indicating if the object provided implements
the iterator protocol (i.e. like a generator). This will return
false for objects which iterable, but not iterators themselves.'''
from types import GeneratorType
if isinstance(obj, GeneratorType):
return True
elif not hasattr(obj, '__iter__'):
return False
else:
# Types which implement the protocol must return themselves when
# invoking 'iter' upon them.
return iter(obj) is obj
def is_closable_iterator(obj):
# Not an iterator.
if not is_iterator(obj):
return False
# A generator - the easiest thing to deal with.
import inspect
if inspect.isgenerator(obj):
return True
# A custom iterator. Look for a close method...
if not (hasattr(obj, 'close') and callable(obj.close)):
return False
# ... which doesn't require any arguments.
try:
inspect.getcallargs(obj.close)
except TypeError:
return False
else:
return True
class file_generator(object):
"""Yield the given input (a file object) in chunks (default 64k). (Core)"""
def __init__(self, input, chunkSize=65536):
self.input = input
self.chunkSize = chunkSize
def __iter__(self):
return self
def __next__(self):
chunk = self.input.read(self.chunkSize)
if chunk:
return chunk
else:
if hasattr(self.input, 'close'):
self.input.close()
raise StopIteration()
next = __next__
def file_generator_limited(fileobj, count, chunk_size=65536):
"""Yield the given file object in chunks, stopping after `count`
bytes has been emitted. Default chunk size is 64kB. (Core)
"""
remaining = count
while remaining > 0:
chunk = fileobj.read(min(chunk_size, remaining))
chunklen = len(chunk)
if chunklen == 0:
return
remaining -= chunklen
yield chunk
def set_vary_header(response, header_name):
"Add a Vary header to a response"
varies = response.headers.get("Vary", "")
varies = [x.strip() for x in varies.split(",") if x.strip()]
if header_name not in varies:
varies.append(header_name)
response.headers['Vary'] = ", ".join(varies)

@ -1,97 +0,0 @@
import cherrypy
from cherrypy.lib import httpauth
def check_auth(users, encrypt=None, realm=None):
"""If an authorization header contains credentials, return True or False.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if 'authorization' in request.headers:
# make sure the provided credentials are correctly set
ah = httpauth.parseAuthorization(request.headers['authorization'])
if ah is None:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, 'Bad Request')
if not encrypt:
encrypt = httpauth.DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS[httpauth.MD5]
if hasattr(users, '__call__'):
try:
# backward compatibility
users = users() # expect it to return a dictionary
if not isinstance(users, dict):
raise ValueError(
"Authentication users must be a dictionary")
# fetch the user password
password = users.get(ah["username"], None)
except TypeError:
# returns a password (encrypted or clear text)
password = users(ah["username"])
else:
if not isinstance(users, dict):
raise ValueError("Authentication users must be a dictionary")
# fetch the user password
password = users.get(ah["username"], None)
# validate the authorization by re-computing it here
# and compare it with what the user-agent provided
if httpauth.checkResponse(ah, password, method=request.method,
encrypt=encrypt, realm=realm):
request.login = ah["username"]
return True
request.login = False
return False
def basic_auth(realm, users, encrypt=None, debug=False):
"""If auth fails, raise 401 with a basic authentication header.
realm
A string containing the authentication realm.
users
A dict of the form: {username: password} or a callable returning
a dict.
encrypt
callable used to encrypt the password returned from the user-agent.
if None it defaults to a md5 encryption.
"""
if check_auth(users, encrypt):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Auth successful', 'TOOLS.BASIC_AUTH')
return
# inform the user-agent this path is protected
cherrypy.serving.response.headers[
'www-authenticate'] = httpauth.basicAuth(realm)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
401, "You are not authorized to access that resource")
def digest_auth(realm, users, debug=False):
"""If auth fails, raise 401 with a digest authentication header.
realm
A string containing the authentication realm.
users
A dict of the form: {username: password} or a callable returning
a dict.
"""
if check_auth(users, realm=realm):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Auth successful', 'TOOLS.DIGEST_AUTH')
return
# inform the user-agent this path is protected
cherrypy.serving.response.headers[
'www-authenticate'] = httpauth.digestAuth(realm)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
401, "You are not authorized to access that resource")

@ -1,90 +0,0 @@
# This file is part of CherryPy <http://www.cherrypy.org/>
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab:fileencoding=utf-8
__doc__ = """This module provides a CherryPy 3.x tool which implements
the server-side of HTTP Basic Access Authentication, as described in
:rfc:`2617`.
Example usage, using the built-in checkpassword_dict function which uses a dict
as the credentials store::
userpassdict = {'bird' : 'bebop', 'ornette' : 'wayout'}
checkpassword = cherrypy.lib.auth_basic.checkpassword_dict(userpassdict)
basic_auth = {'tools.auth_basic.on': True,
'tools.auth_basic.realm': 'earth',
'tools.auth_basic.checkpassword': checkpassword,
}
app_config = { '/' : basic_auth }
"""
__author__ = 'visteya'
__date__ = 'April 2009'
import binascii
from cherrypy._cpcompat import base64_decode
import cherrypy
def checkpassword_dict(user_password_dict):
"""Returns a checkpassword function which checks credentials
against a dictionary of the form: {username : password}.
If you want a simple dictionary-based authentication scheme, use
checkpassword_dict(my_credentials_dict) as the value for the
checkpassword argument to basic_auth().
"""
def checkpassword(realm, user, password):
p = user_password_dict.get(user)
return p and p == password or False
return checkpassword
def basic_auth(realm, checkpassword, debug=False):
"""A CherryPy tool which hooks at before_handler to perform
HTTP Basic Access Authentication, as specified in :rfc:`2617`.
If the request has an 'authorization' header with a 'Basic' scheme, this
tool attempts to authenticate the credentials supplied in that header. If
the request has no 'authorization' header, or if it does but the scheme is
not 'Basic', or if authentication fails, the tool sends a 401 response with
a 'WWW-Authenticate' Basic header.
realm
A string containing the authentication realm.
checkpassword
A callable which checks the authentication credentials.
Its signature is checkpassword(realm, username, password). where
username and password are the values obtained from the request's
'authorization' header. If authentication succeeds, checkpassword
returns True, else it returns False.
"""
if '"' in realm:
raise ValueError('Realm cannot contain the " (quote) character.')
request = cherrypy.serving.request
auth_header = request.headers.get('authorization')
if auth_header is not None:
try:
scheme, params = auth_header.split(' ', 1)
if scheme.lower() == 'basic':
username, password = base64_decode(params).split(':', 1)
if checkpassword(realm, username, password):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Auth succeeded', 'TOOLS.AUTH_BASIC')
request.login = username
return # successful authentication
# split() error, base64.decodestring() error
except (ValueError, binascii.Error):
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, 'Bad Request')
# Respond with 401 status and a WWW-Authenticate header
cherrypy.serving.response.headers[
'www-authenticate'] = 'Basic realm="%s"' % realm
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
401, "You are not authorized to access that resource")

@ -1,390 +0,0 @@
# This file is part of CherryPy <http://www.cherrypy.org/>
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab:fileencoding=utf-8
__doc__ = """An implementation of the server-side of HTTP Digest Access
Authentication, which is described in :rfc:`2617`.
Example usage, using the built-in get_ha1_dict_plain function which uses a dict
of plaintext passwords as the credentials store::
userpassdict = {'alice' : '4x5istwelve'}
get_ha1 = cherrypy.lib.auth_digest.get_ha1_dict_plain(userpassdict)
digest_auth = {'tools.auth_digest.on': True,
'tools.auth_digest.realm': 'wonderland',
'tools.auth_digest.get_ha1': get_ha1,
'tools.auth_digest.key': 'a565c27146791cfb',
}
app_config = { '/' : digest_auth }
"""
__author__ = 'visteya'
__date__ = 'April 2009'
import time
from cherrypy._cpcompat import parse_http_list, parse_keqv_list
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import md5, ntob
md5_hex = lambda s: md5(ntob(s)).hexdigest()
qop_auth = 'auth'
qop_auth_int = 'auth-int'
valid_qops = (qop_auth, qop_auth_int)
valid_algorithms = ('MD5', 'MD5-sess')
def TRACE(msg):
cherrypy.log(msg, context='TOOLS.AUTH_DIGEST')
# Three helper functions for users of the tool, providing three variants
# of get_ha1() functions for three different kinds of credential stores.
def get_ha1_dict_plain(user_password_dict):
"""Returns a get_ha1 function which obtains a plaintext password from a
dictionary of the form: {username : password}.
If you want a simple dictionary-based authentication scheme, with plaintext
passwords, use get_ha1_dict_plain(my_userpass_dict) as the value for the
get_ha1 argument to digest_auth().
"""
def get_ha1(realm, username):
password = user_password_dict.get(username)
if password:
return md5_hex('%s:%s:%s' % (username, realm, password))
return None
return get_ha1
def get_ha1_dict(user_ha1_dict):
"""Returns a get_ha1 function which obtains a HA1 password hash from a
dictionary of the form: {username : HA1}.
If you want a dictionary-based authentication scheme, but with
pre-computed HA1 hashes instead of plain-text passwords, use
get_ha1_dict(my_userha1_dict) as the value for the get_ha1
argument to digest_auth().
"""
def get_ha1(realm, username):
return user_ha1_dict.get(username)
return get_ha1
def get_ha1_file_htdigest(filename):
"""Returns a get_ha1 function which obtains a HA1 password hash from a
flat file with lines of the same format as that produced by the Apache
htdigest utility. For example, for realm 'wonderland', username 'alice',
and password '4x5istwelve', the htdigest line would be::
alice:wonderland:3238cdfe91a8b2ed8e39646921a02d4c
If you want to use an Apache htdigest file as the credentials store,
then use get_ha1_file_htdigest(my_htdigest_file) as the value for the
get_ha1 argument to digest_auth(). It is recommended that the filename
argument be an absolute path, to avoid problems.
"""
def get_ha1(realm, username):
result = None
f = open(filename, 'r')
for line in f:
u, r, ha1 = line.rstrip().split(':')
if u == username and r == realm:
result = ha1
break
f.close()
return result
return get_ha1
def synthesize_nonce(s, key, timestamp=None):
"""Synthesize a nonce value which resists spoofing and can be checked
for staleness. Returns a string suitable as the value for 'nonce' in
the www-authenticate header.
s
A string related to the resource, such as the hostname of the server.
key
A secret string known only to the server.
timestamp
An integer seconds-since-the-epoch timestamp
"""
if timestamp is None:
timestamp = int(time.time())
h = md5_hex('%s:%s:%s' % (timestamp, s, key))
nonce = '%s:%s' % (timestamp, h)
return nonce
def H(s):
"""The hash function H"""
return md5_hex(s)
class HttpDigestAuthorization (object):
"""Class to parse a Digest Authorization header and perform re-calculation
of the digest.
"""
def errmsg(self, s):
return 'Digest Authorization header: %s' % s
def __init__(self, auth_header, http_method, debug=False):
self.http_method = http_method
self.debug = debug
scheme, params = auth_header.split(" ", 1)
self.scheme = scheme.lower()
if self.scheme != 'digest':
raise ValueError('Authorization scheme is not "Digest"')
self.auth_header = auth_header
# make a dict of the params
items = parse_http_list(params)
paramsd = parse_keqv_list(items)
self.realm = paramsd.get('realm')
self.username = paramsd.get('username')
self.nonce = paramsd.get('nonce')
self.uri = paramsd.get('uri')
self.method = paramsd.get('method')
self.response = paramsd.get('response') # the response digest
self.algorithm = paramsd.get('algorithm', 'MD5').upper()
self.cnonce = paramsd.get('cnonce')
self.opaque = paramsd.get('opaque')
self.qop = paramsd.get('qop') # qop
self.nc = paramsd.get('nc') # nonce count
# perform some correctness checks
if self.algorithm not in valid_algorithms:
raise ValueError(
self.errmsg("Unsupported value for algorithm: '%s'" %
self.algorithm))
has_reqd = (
self.username and
self.realm and
self.nonce and
self.uri and
self.response
)
if not has_reqd:
raise ValueError(
self.errmsg("Not all required parameters are present."))
if self.qop:
if self.qop not in valid_qops:
raise ValueError(
self.errmsg("Unsupported value for qop: '%s'" % self.qop))
if not (self.cnonce and self.nc):
raise ValueError(
self.errmsg("If qop is sent then "
"cnonce and nc MUST be present"))
else:
if self.cnonce or self.nc:
raise ValueError(
self.errmsg("If qop is not sent, "
"neither cnonce nor nc can be present"))
def __str__(self):
return 'authorization : %s' % self.auth_header
def validate_nonce(self, s, key):
"""Validate the nonce.
Returns True if nonce was generated by synthesize_nonce() and the
timestamp is not spoofed, else returns False.
s
A string related to the resource, such as the hostname of
the server.
key
A secret string known only to the server.
Both s and key must be the same values which were used to synthesize
the nonce we are trying to validate.
"""
try:
timestamp, hashpart = self.nonce.split(':', 1)
s_timestamp, s_hashpart = synthesize_nonce(
s, key, timestamp).split(':', 1)
is_valid = s_hashpart == hashpart
if self.debug:
TRACE('validate_nonce: %s' % is_valid)
return is_valid
except ValueError: # split() error
pass
return False
def is_nonce_stale(self, max_age_seconds=600):
"""Returns True if a validated nonce is stale. The nonce contains a
timestamp in plaintext and also a secure hash of the timestamp.
You should first validate the nonce to ensure the plaintext
timestamp is not spoofed.
"""
try:
timestamp, hashpart = self.nonce.split(':', 1)
if int(timestamp) + max_age_seconds > int(time.time()):
return False
except ValueError: # int() error
pass
if self.debug:
TRACE("nonce is stale")
return True
def HA2(self, entity_body=''):
"""Returns the H(A2) string. See :rfc:`2617` section 3.2.2.3."""
# RFC 2617 3.2.2.3
# If the "qop" directive's value is "auth" or is unspecified,
# then A2 is:
# A2 = method ":" digest-uri-value
#
# If the "qop" value is "auth-int", then A2 is:
# A2 = method ":" digest-uri-value ":" H(entity-body)
if self.qop is None or self.qop == "auth":
a2 = '%s:%s' % (self.http_method, self.uri)
elif self.qop == "auth-int":
a2 = "%s:%s:%s" % (self.http_method, self.uri, H(entity_body))
else:
# in theory, this should never happen, since I validate qop in
# __init__()
raise ValueError(self.errmsg("Unrecognized value for qop!"))
return H(a2)
def request_digest(self, ha1, entity_body=''):
"""Calculates the Request-Digest. See :rfc:`2617` section 3.2.2.1.
ha1
The HA1 string obtained from the credentials store.
entity_body
If 'qop' is set to 'auth-int', then A2 includes a hash
of the "entity body". The entity body is the part of the
message which follows the HTTP headers. See :rfc:`2617` section
4.3. This refers to the entity the user agent sent in the
request which has the Authorization header. Typically GET
requests don't have an entity, and POST requests do.
"""
ha2 = self.HA2(entity_body)
# Request-Digest -- RFC 2617 3.2.2.1
if self.qop:
req = "%s:%s:%s:%s:%s" % (
self.nonce, self.nc, self.cnonce, self.qop, ha2)
else:
req = "%s:%s" % (self.nonce, ha2)
# RFC 2617 3.2.2.2
#
# If the "algorithm" directive's value is "MD5" or is unspecified,
# then A1 is:
# A1 = unq(username-value) ":" unq(realm-value) ":" passwd
#
# If the "algorithm" directive's value is "MD5-sess", then A1 is
# calculated only once - on the first request by the client following
# receipt of a WWW-Authenticate challenge from the server.
# A1 = H( unq(username-value) ":" unq(realm-value) ":" passwd )
# ":" unq(nonce-value) ":" unq(cnonce-value)
if self.algorithm == 'MD5-sess':
ha1 = H('%s:%s:%s' % (ha1, self.nonce, self.cnonce))
digest = H('%s:%s' % (ha1, req))
return digest
def www_authenticate(realm, key, algorithm='MD5', nonce=None, qop=qop_auth,
stale=False):
"""Constructs a WWW-Authenticate header for Digest authentication."""
if qop not in valid_qops:
raise ValueError("Unsupported value for qop: '%s'" % qop)
if algorithm not in valid_algorithms:
raise ValueError("Unsupported value for algorithm: '%s'" % algorithm)
if nonce is None:
nonce = synthesize_nonce(realm, key)
s = 'Digest realm="%s", nonce="%s", algorithm="%s", qop="%s"' % (
realm, nonce, algorithm, qop)
if stale:
s += ', stale="true"'
return s
def digest_auth(realm, get_ha1, key, debug=False):
"""A CherryPy tool which hooks at before_handler to perform
HTTP Digest Access Authentication, as specified in :rfc:`2617`.
If the request has an 'authorization' header with a 'Digest' scheme,
this tool authenticates the credentials supplied in that header.
If the request has no 'authorization' header, or if it does but the
scheme is not "Digest", or if authentication fails, the tool sends
a 401 response with a 'WWW-Authenticate' Digest header.
realm
A string containing the authentication realm.
get_ha1
A callable which looks up a username in a credentials store
and returns the HA1 string, which is defined in the RFC to be
MD5(username : realm : password). The function's signature is:
``get_ha1(realm, username)``
where username is obtained from the request's 'authorization' header.
If username is not found in the credentials store, get_ha1() returns
None.
key
A secret string known only to the server, used in the synthesis
of nonces.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
auth_header = request.headers.get('authorization')
nonce_is_stale = False
if auth_header is not None:
try:
auth = HttpDigestAuthorization(
auth_header, request.method, debug=debug)
except ValueError:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
400, "The Authorization header could not be parsed.")
if debug:
TRACE(str(auth))
if auth.validate_nonce(realm, key):
ha1 = get_ha1(realm, auth.username)
if ha1 is not None:
# note that for request.body to be available we need to
# hook in at before_handler, not on_start_resource like
# 3.1.x digest_auth does.
digest = auth.request_digest(ha1, entity_body=request.body)
if digest == auth.response: # authenticated
if debug:
TRACE("digest matches auth.response")
# Now check if nonce is stale.
# The choice of ten minutes' lifetime for nonce is somewhat
# arbitrary
nonce_is_stale = auth.is_nonce_stale(max_age_seconds=600)
if not nonce_is_stale:
request.login = auth.username
if debug:
TRACE("authentication of %s successful" %
auth.username)
return
# Respond with 401 status and a WWW-Authenticate header
header = www_authenticate(realm, key, stale=nonce_is_stale)
if debug:
TRACE(header)
cherrypy.serving.response.headers['WWW-Authenticate'] = header
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
401, "You are not authorized to access that resource")

@ -1,470 +0,0 @@
"""
CherryPy implements a simple caching system as a pluggable Tool. This tool
tries to be an (in-process) HTTP/1.1-compliant cache. It's not quite there
yet, but it's probably good enough for most sites.
In general, GET responses are cached (along with selecting headers) and, if
another request arrives for the same resource, the caching Tool will return 304
Not Modified if possible, or serve the cached response otherwise. It also sets
request.cached to True if serving a cached representation, and sets
request.cacheable to False (so it doesn't get cached again).
If POST, PUT, or DELETE requests are made for a cached resource, they
invalidate (delete) any cached response.
Usage
=====
Configuration file example::
[/]
tools.caching.on = True
tools.caching.delay = 3600
You may use a class other than the default
:class:`MemoryCache<cherrypy.lib.caching.MemoryCache>` by supplying the config
entry ``cache_class``; supply the full dotted name of the replacement class
as the config value. It must implement the basic methods ``get``, ``put``,
``delete``, and ``clear``.
You may set any attribute, including overriding methods, on the cache
instance by providing them in config. The above sets the
:attr:`delay<cherrypy.lib.caching.MemoryCache.delay>` attribute, for example.
"""
import datetime
import sys
import threading
import time
import cherrypy
from cherrypy.lib import cptools, httputil
from cherrypy._cpcompat import copyitems, ntob, set_daemon, sorted, Event
class Cache(object):
"""Base class for Cache implementations."""
def get(self):
"""Return the current variant if in the cache, else None."""
raise NotImplemented
def put(self, obj, size):
"""Store the current variant in the cache."""
raise NotImplemented
def delete(self):
"""Remove ALL cached variants of the current resource."""
raise NotImplemented
def clear(self):
"""Reset the cache to its initial, empty state."""
raise NotImplemented
# ------------------------------ Memory Cache ------------------------------- #
class AntiStampedeCache(dict):
"""A storage system for cached items which reduces stampede collisions."""
def wait(self, key, timeout=5, debug=False):
"""Return the cached value for the given key, or None.
If timeout is not None, and the value is already
being calculated by another thread, wait until the given timeout has
elapsed. If the value is available before the timeout expires, it is
returned. If not, None is returned, and a sentinel placed in the cache
to signal other threads to wait.
If timeout is None, no waiting is performed nor sentinels used.
"""
value = self.get(key)
if isinstance(value, Event):
if timeout is None:
# Ignore the other thread and recalc it ourselves.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No timeout', 'TOOLS.CACHING')
return None
# Wait until it's done or times out.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Waiting up to %s seconds' %
timeout, 'TOOLS.CACHING')
value.wait(timeout)
if value.result is not None:
# The other thread finished its calculation. Use it.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Result!', 'TOOLS.CACHING')
return value.result
# Timed out. Stick an Event in the slot so other threads wait
# on this one to finish calculating the value.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Timed out', 'TOOLS.CACHING')
e = threading.Event()
e.result = None
dict.__setitem__(self, key, e)
return None
elif value is None:
# Stick an Event in the slot so other threads wait
# on this one to finish calculating the value.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Timed out', 'TOOLS.CACHING')
e = threading.Event()
e.result = None
dict.__setitem__(self, key, e)
return value
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
"""Set the cached value for the given key."""
existing = self.get(key)
dict.__setitem__(self, key, value)
if isinstance(existing, Event):
# Set Event.result so other threads waiting on it have
# immediate access without needing to poll the cache again.
existing.result = value
existing.set()
class MemoryCache(Cache):
"""An in-memory cache for varying response content.
Each key in self.store is a URI, and each value is an AntiStampedeCache.
The response for any given URI may vary based on the values of
"selecting request headers"; that is, those named in the Vary
response header. We assume the list of header names to be constant
for each URI throughout the lifetime of the application, and store
that list in ``self.store[uri].selecting_headers``.
The items contained in ``self.store[uri]`` have keys which are tuples of
request header values (in the same order as the names in its
selecting_headers), and values which are the actual responses.
"""
maxobjects = 1000
"""The maximum number of cached objects; defaults to 1000."""
maxobj_size = 100000
"""The maximum size of each cached object in bytes; defaults to 100 KB."""
maxsize = 10000000
"""The maximum size of the entire cache in bytes; defaults to 10 MB."""
delay = 600
"""Seconds until the cached content expires; defaults to 600 (10 minutes).
"""
antistampede_timeout = 5
"""Seconds to wait for other threads to release a cache lock."""
expire_freq = 0.1
"""Seconds to sleep between cache expiration sweeps."""
debug = False
def __init__(self):
self.clear()
# Run self.expire_cache in a separate daemon thread.
t = threading.Thread(target=self.expire_cache, name='expire_cache')
self.expiration_thread = t
set_daemon(t, True)
t.start()
def clear(self):
"""Reset the cache to its initial, empty state."""
self.store = {}
self.expirations = {}
self.tot_puts = 0
self.tot_gets = 0
self.tot_hist = 0
self.tot_expires = 0
self.tot_non_modified = 0
self.cursize = 0
def expire_cache(self):
"""Continuously examine cached objects, expiring stale ones.
This function is designed to be run in its own daemon thread,
referenced at ``self.expiration_thread``.
"""
# It's possible that "time" will be set to None
# arbitrarily, so we check "while time" to avoid exceptions.
# See tickets #99 and #180 for more information.
while time:
now = time.time()
# Must make a copy of expirations so it doesn't change size
# during iteration
for expiration_time, objects in copyitems(self.expirations):
if expiration_time <= now:
for obj_size, uri, sel_header_values in objects:
try:
del self.store[uri][tuple(sel_header_values)]
self.tot_expires += 1
self.cursize -= obj_size
except KeyError:
# the key may have been deleted elsewhere
pass
del self.expirations[expiration_time]
time.sleep(self.expire_freq)
def get(self):
"""Return the current variant if in the cache, else None."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
self.tot_gets += 1
uri = cherrypy.url(qs=request.query_string)
uricache = self.store.get(uri)
if uricache is None:
return None
header_values = [request.headers.get(h, '')
for h in uricache.selecting_headers]
variant = uricache.wait(key=tuple(sorted(header_values)),
timeout=self.antistampede_timeout,
debug=self.debug)
if variant is not None:
self.tot_hist += 1
return variant
def put(self, variant, size):
"""Store the current variant in the cache."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
uri = cherrypy.url(qs=request.query_string)
uricache = self.store.get(uri)
if uricache is None:
uricache = AntiStampedeCache()
uricache.selecting_headers = [
e.value for e in response.headers.elements('Vary')]
self.store[uri] = uricache
if len(self.store) < self.maxobjects:
total_size = self.cursize + size
# checks if there's space for the object
if (size < self.maxobj_size and total_size < self.maxsize):
# add to the expirations list
expiration_time = response.time + self.delay
bucket = self.expirations.setdefault(expiration_time, [])
bucket.append((size, uri, uricache.selecting_headers))
# add to the cache
header_values = [request.headers.get(h, '')
for h in uricache.selecting_headers]
uricache[tuple(sorted(header_values))] = variant
self.tot_puts += 1
self.cursize = total_size
def delete(self):
"""Remove ALL cached variants of the current resource."""
uri = cherrypy.url(qs=cherrypy.serving.request.query_string)
self.store.pop(uri, None)
def get(invalid_methods=("POST", "PUT", "DELETE"), debug=False, **kwargs):
"""Try to obtain cached output. If fresh enough, raise HTTPError(304).
If POST, PUT, or DELETE:
* invalidates (deletes) any cached response for this resource
* sets request.cached = False
* sets request.cacheable = False
else if a cached copy exists:
* sets request.cached = True
* sets request.cacheable = False
* sets response.headers to the cached values
* checks the cached Last-Modified response header against the
current If-(Un)Modified-Since request headers; raises 304
if necessary.
* sets response.status and response.body to the cached values
* returns True
otherwise:
* sets request.cached = False
* sets request.cacheable = True
* returns False
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
if not hasattr(cherrypy, "_cache"):
# Make a process-wide Cache object.
cherrypy._cache = kwargs.pop("cache_class", MemoryCache)()
# Take all remaining kwargs and set them on the Cache object.
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(cherrypy._cache, k, v)
cherrypy._cache.debug = debug
# POST, PUT, DELETE should invalidate (delete) the cached copy.
# See http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec13.html#sec13.10.
if request.method in invalid_methods:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.method %r in invalid_methods %r' %
(request.method, invalid_methods), 'TOOLS.CACHING')
cherrypy._cache.delete()
request.cached = False
request.cacheable = False
return False
if 'no-cache' in [e.value for e in request.headers.elements('Pragma')]:
request.cached = False
request.cacheable = True
return False
cache_data = cherrypy._cache.get()
request.cached = bool(cache_data)
request.cacheable = not request.cached
if request.cached:
# Serve the cached copy.
max_age = cherrypy._cache.delay
for v in [e.value for e in request.headers.elements('Cache-Control')]:
atoms = v.split('=', 1)
directive = atoms.pop(0)
if directive == 'max-age':
if len(atoms) != 1 or not atoms[0].isdigit():
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
400, "Invalid Cache-Control header")
max_age = int(atoms[0])
break
elif directive == 'no-cache':
if debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Ignoring cache due to Cache-Control: no-cache',
'TOOLS.CACHING')
request.cached = False
request.cacheable = True
return False
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Reading response from cache', 'TOOLS.CACHING')
s, h, b, create_time = cache_data
age = int(response.time - create_time)
if (age > max_age):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Ignoring cache due to age > %d' % max_age,
'TOOLS.CACHING')
request.cached = False
request.cacheable = True
return False
# Copy the response headers. See
# https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/721.
response.headers = rh = httputil.HeaderMap()
for k in h:
dict.__setitem__(rh, k, dict.__getitem__(h, k))
# Add the required Age header
response.headers["Age"] = str(age)
try:
# Note that validate_since depends on a Last-Modified header;
# this was put into the cached copy, and should have been
# resurrected just above (response.headers = cache_data[1]).
cptools.validate_since()
except cherrypy.HTTPRedirect:
x = sys.exc_info()[1]
if x.status == 304:
cherrypy._cache.tot_non_modified += 1
raise
# serve it & get out from the request
response.status = s
response.body = b
else:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request is not cached', 'TOOLS.CACHING')
return request.cached
def tee_output():
"""Tee response output to cache storage. Internal."""
# Used by CachingTool by attaching to request.hooks
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if 'no-store' in request.headers.values('Cache-Control'):
return
def tee(body):
"""Tee response.body into a list."""
if ('no-cache' in response.headers.values('Pragma') or
'no-store' in response.headers.values('Cache-Control')):
for chunk in body:
yield chunk
return
output = []
for chunk in body:
output.append(chunk)
yield chunk
# save the cache data
body = ntob('').join(output)
cherrypy._cache.put((response.status, response.headers or {},
body, response.time), len(body))
response = cherrypy.serving.response
response.body = tee(response.body)
def expires(secs=0, force=False, debug=False):
"""Tool for influencing cache mechanisms using the 'Expires' header.
secs
Must be either an int or a datetime.timedelta, and indicates the
number of seconds between response.time and when the response should
expire. The 'Expires' header will be set to response.time + secs.
If secs is zero, the 'Expires' header is set one year in the past, and
the following "cache prevention" headers are also set:
* Pragma: no-cache
* Cache-Control': no-cache, must-revalidate
force
If False, the following headers are checked:
* Etag
* Last-Modified
* Age
* Expires
If any are already present, none of the above response headers are set.
"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
headers = response.headers
cacheable = False
if not force:
# some header names that indicate that the response can be cached
for indicator in ('Etag', 'Last-Modified', 'Age', 'Expires'):
if indicator in headers:
cacheable = True
break
if not cacheable and not force:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request is not cacheable', 'TOOLS.EXPIRES')
else:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request is cacheable', 'TOOLS.EXPIRES')
if isinstance(secs, datetime.timedelta):
secs = (86400 * secs.days) + secs.seconds
if secs == 0:
if force or ("Pragma" not in headers):
headers["Pragma"] = "no-cache"
if cherrypy.serving.request.protocol >= (1, 1):
if force or "Cache-Control" not in headers:
headers["Cache-Control"] = "no-cache, must-revalidate"
# Set an explicit Expires date in the past.
expiry = httputil.HTTPDate(1169942400.0)
else:
expiry = httputil.HTTPDate(response.time + secs)
if force or "Expires" not in headers:
headers["Expires"] = expiry

@ -1,387 +0,0 @@
"""Code-coverage tools for CherryPy.
To use this module, or the coverage tools in the test suite,
you need to download 'coverage.py', either Gareth Rees' `original
implementation <http://www.garethrees.org/2001/12/04/python-coverage/>`_
or Ned Batchelder's `enhanced version:
<http://www.nedbatchelder.com/code/modules/coverage.html>`_
To turn on coverage tracing, use the following code::
cherrypy.engine.subscribe('start', covercp.start)
DO NOT subscribe anything on the 'start_thread' channel, as previously
recommended. Calling start once in the main thread should be sufficient
to start coverage on all threads. Calling start again in each thread
effectively clears any coverage data gathered up to that point.
Run your code, then use the ``covercp.serve()`` function to browse the
results in a web browser. If you run this module from the command line,
it will call ``serve()`` for you.
"""
import re
import sys
import cgi
from cherrypy._cpcompat import quote_plus
import os
import os.path
localFile = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "coverage.cache")
the_coverage = None
try:
from coverage import coverage
the_coverage = coverage(data_file=localFile)
def start():
the_coverage.start()
except ImportError:
# Setting the_coverage to None will raise errors
# that need to be trapped downstream.
the_coverage = None
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"No code coverage will be performed; "
"coverage.py could not be imported.")
def start():
pass
start.priority = 20
TEMPLATE_MENU = """<html>
<head>
<title>CherryPy Coverage Menu</title>
<style>
body {font: 9pt Arial, serif;}
#tree {
font-size: 8pt;
font-family: Andale Mono, monospace;
white-space: pre;
}
#tree a:active, a:focus {
background-color: black;
padding: 1px;
color: white;
border: 0px solid #9999FF;
-moz-outline-style: none;
}
.fail { color: red;}
.pass { color: #888;}
#pct { text-align: right;}
h3 {
font-size: small;
font-weight: bold;
font-style: italic;
margin-top: 5px;
}
input { border: 1px solid #ccc; padding: 2px; }
.directory {
color: #933;
font-style: italic;
font-weight: bold;
font-size: 10pt;
}
.file {
color: #400;
}
a { text-decoration: none; }
#crumbs {
color: white;
font-size: 8pt;
font-family: Andale Mono, monospace;
width: 100%;
background-color: black;
}
#crumbs a {
color: #f88;
}
#options {
line-height: 2.3em;
border: 1px solid black;
background-color: #eee;
padding: 4px;
}
#exclude {
width: 100%;
margin-bottom: 3px;
border: 1px solid #999;
}
#submit {
background-color: black;
color: white;
border: 0;
margin-bottom: -9px;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h2>CherryPy Coverage</h2>"""
TEMPLATE_FORM = """
<div id="options">
<form action='menu' method=GET>
<input type='hidden' name='base' value='%(base)s' />
Show percentages
<input type='checkbox' %(showpct)s name='showpct' value='checked' /><br />
Hide files over
<input type='text' id='pct' name='pct' value='%(pct)s' size='3' />%%<br />
Exclude files matching<br />
<input type='text' id='exclude' name='exclude'
value='%(exclude)s' size='20' />
<br />
<input type='submit' value='Change view' id="submit"/>
</form>
</div>"""
TEMPLATE_FRAMESET = """<html>
<head><title>CherryPy coverage data</title></head>
<frameset cols='250, 1*'>
<frame src='menu?base=%s' />
<frame name='main' src='' />
</frameset>
</html>
"""
TEMPLATE_COVERAGE = """<html>
<head>
<title>Coverage for %(name)s</title>
<style>
h2 { margin-bottom: .25em; }
p { margin: .25em; }
.covered { color: #000; background-color: #fff; }
.notcovered { color: #fee; background-color: #500; }
.excluded { color: #00f; background-color: #fff; }
table .covered, table .notcovered, table .excluded
{ font-family: Andale Mono, monospace;
font-size: 10pt; white-space: pre; }
.lineno { background-color: #eee;}
.notcovered .lineno { background-color: #000;}
table { border-collapse: collapse;
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h2>%(name)s</h2>
<p>%(fullpath)s</p>
<p>Coverage: %(pc)s%%</p>"""
TEMPLATE_LOC_COVERED = """<tr class="covered">
<td class="lineno">%s&nbsp;</td>
<td>%s</td>
</tr>\n"""
TEMPLATE_LOC_NOT_COVERED = """<tr class="notcovered">
<td class="lineno">%s&nbsp;</td>
<td>%s</td>
</tr>\n"""
TEMPLATE_LOC_EXCLUDED = """<tr class="excluded">
<td class="lineno">%s&nbsp;</td>
<td>%s</td>
</tr>\n"""
TEMPLATE_ITEM = (
"%s%s<a class='file' href='report?name=%s' target='main'>%s</a>\n"
)
def _percent(statements, missing):
s = len(statements)
e = s - len(missing)
if s > 0:
return int(round(100.0 * e / s))
return 0
def _show_branch(root, base, path, pct=0, showpct=False, exclude="",
coverage=the_coverage):
# Show the directory name and any of our children
dirs = [k for k, v in root.items() if v]
dirs.sort()
for name in dirs:
newpath = os.path.join(path, name)
if newpath.lower().startswith(base):
relpath = newpath[len(base):]
yield "| " * relpath.count(os.sep)
yield (
"<a class='directory' "
"href='menu?base=%s&exclude=%s'>%s</a>\n" %
(newpath, quote_plus(exclude), name)
)
for chunk in _show_branch(
root[name], base, newpath, pct, showpct,
exclude, coverage=coverage
):
yield chunk
# Now list the files
if path.lower().startswith(base):
relpath = path[len(base):]
files = [k for k, v in root.items() if not v]
files.sort()
for name in files:
newpath = os.path.join(path, name)
pc_str = ""
if showpct:
try:
_, statements, _, missing, _ = coverage.analysis2(newpath)
except:
# Yes, we really want to pass on all errors.
pass
else:
pc = _percent(statements, missing)
pc_str = ("%3d%% " % pc).replace(' ', '&nbsp;')
if pc < float(pct) or pc == -1:
pc_str = "<span class='fail'>%s</span>" % pc_str
else:
pc_str = "<span class='pass'>%s</span>" % pc_str
yield TEMPLATE_ITEM % ("| " * (relpath.count(os.sep) + 1),
pc_str, newpath, name)
def _skip_file(path, exclude):
if exclude:
return bool(re.search(exclude, path))
def _graft(path, tree):
d = tree
p = path
atoms = []
while True:
p, tail = os.path.split(p)
if not tail:
break
atoms.append(tail)
atoms.append(p)
if p != "/":
atoms.append("/")
atoms.reverse()
for node in atoms:
if node:
d = d.setdefault(node, {})
def get_tree(base, exclude, coverage=the_coverage):
"""Return covered module names as a nested dict."""
tree = {}
runs = coverage.data.executed_files()
for path in runs:
if not _skip_file(path, exclude) and not os.path.isdir(path):
_graft(path, tree)
return tree
class CoverStats(object):
def __init__(self, coverage, root=None):
self.coverage = coverage
if root is None:
# Guess initial depth. Files outside this path will not be
# reachable from the web interface.
import cherrypy
root = os.path.dirname(cherrypy.__file__)
self.root = root
def index(self):
return TEMPLATE_FRAMESET % self.root.lower()
index.exposed = True
def menu(self, base="/", pct="50", showpct="",
exclude=r'python\d\.\d|test|tut\d|tutorial'):
# The coverage module uses all-lower-case names.
base = base.lower().rstrip(os.sep)
yield TEMPLATE_MENU
yield TEMPLATE_FORM % locals()
# Start by showing links for parent paths
yield "<div id='crumbs'>"
path = ""
atoms = base.split(os.sep)
atoms.pop()
for atom in atoms:
path += atom + os.sep
yield ("<a href='menu?base=%s&exclude=%s'>%s</a> %s"
% (path, quote_plus(exclude), atom, os.sep))
yield "</div>"
yield "<div id='tree'>"
# Then display the tree
tree = get_tree(base, exclude, self.coverage)
if not tree:
yield "<p>No modules covered.</p>"
else:
for chunk in _show_branch(tree, base, "/", pct,
showpct == 'checked', exclude,
coverage=self.coverage):
yield chunk
yield "</div>"
yield "</body></html>"
menu.exposed = True
def annotated_file(self, filename, statements, excluded, missing):
source = open(filename, 'r')
buffer = []
for lineno, line in enumerate(source.readlines()):
lineno += 1
line = line.strip("\n\r")
empty_the_buffer = True
if lineno in excluded:
template = TEMPLATE_LOC_EXCLUDED
elif lineno in missing:
template = TEMPLATE_LOC_NOT_COVERED
elif lineno in statements:
template = TEMPLATE_LOC_COVERED
else:
empty_the_buffer = False
buffer.append((lineno, line))
if empty_the_buffer:
for lno, pastline in buffer:
yield template % (lno, cgi.escape(pastline))
buffer = []
yield template % (lineno, cgi.escape(line))
def report(self, name):
filename, statements, excluded, missing, _ = self.coverage.analysis2(
name)
pc = _percent(statements, missing)
yield TEMPLATE_COVERAGE % dict(name=os.path.basename(name),
fullpath=name,
pc=pc)
yield '<table>\n'
for line in self.annotated_file(filename, statements, excluded,
missing):
yield line
yield '</table>'
yield '</body>'
yield '</html>'
report.exposed = True
def serve(path=localFile, port=8080, root=None):
if coverage is None:
raise ImportError("The coverage module could not be imported.")
from coverage import coverage
cov = coverage(data_file=path)
cov.load()
import cherrypy
cherrypy.config.update({'server.socket_port': int(port),
'server.thread_pool': 10,
'environment': "production",
})
cherrypy.quickstart(CoverStats(cov, root))
if __name__ == "__main__":
serve(*tuple(sys.argv[1:]))

@ -1,687 +0,0 @@
"""CPStats, a package for collecting and reporting on program statistics.
Overview
========
Statistics about program operation are an invaluable monitoring and debugging
tool. Unfortunately, the gathering and reporting of these critical values is
usually ad-hoc. This package aims to add a centralized place for gathering
statistical performance data, a structure for recording that data which
provides for extrapolation of that data into more useful information,
and a method of serving that data to both human investigators and
monitoring software. Let's examine each of those in more detail.
Data Gathering
--------------
Just as Python's `logging` module provides a common importable for gathering
and sending messages, performance statistics would benefit from a similar
common mechanism, and one that does *not* require each package which wishes
to collect stats to import a third-party module. Therefore, we choose to
re-use the `logging` module by adding a `statistics` object to it.
That `logging.statistics` object is a nested dict. It is not a custom class,
because that would:
1. require libraries and applications to import a third-party module in
order to participate
2. inhibit innovation in extrapolation approaches and in reporting tools, and
3. be slow.
There are, however, some specifications regarding the structure of the dict.::
{
+----"SQLAlchemy": {
| "Inserts": 4389745,
| "Inserts per Second":
| lambda s: s["Inserts"] / (time() - s["Start"]),
| C +---"Table Statistics": {
| o | "widgets": {-----------+
N | l | "Rows": 1.3M, | Record
a | l | "Inserts": 400, |
m | e | },---------------------+
e | c | "froobles": {
s | t | "Rows": 7845,
p | i | "Inserts": 0,
a | o | },
c | n +---},
e | "Slow Queries":
| [{"Query": "SELECT * FROM widgets;",
| "Processing Time": 47.840923343,
| },
| ],
+----},
}
The `logging.statistics` dict has four levels. The topmost level is nothing
more than a set of names to introduce modularity, usually along the lines of
package names. If the SQLAlchemy project wanted to participate, for example,
it might populate the item `logging.statistics['SQLAlchemy']`, whose value
would be a second-layer dict we call a "namespace". Namespaces help multiple
packages to avoid collisions over key names, and make reports easier to read,
to boot. The maintainers of SQLAlchemy should feel free to use more than one
namespace if needed (such as 'SQLAlchemy ORM'). Note that there are no case
or other syntax constraints on the namespace names; they should be chosen
to be maximally readable by humans (neither too short nor too long).
Each namespace, then, is a dict of named statistical values, such as
'Requests/sec' or 'Uptime'. You should choose names which will look
good on a report: spaces and capitalization are just fine.
In addition to scalars, values in a namespace MAY be a (third-layer)
dict, or a list, called a "collection". For example, the CherryPy
:class:`StatsTool` keeps track of what each request is doing (or has most
recently done) in a 'Requests' collection, where each key is a thread ID; each
value in the subdict MUST be a fourth dict (whew!) of statistical data about
each thread. We call each subdict in the collection a "record". Similarly,
the :class:`StatsTool` also keeps a list of slow queries, where each record
contains data about each slow query, in order.
Values in a namespace or record may also be functions, which brings us to:
Extrapolation
-------------
The collection of statistical data needs to be fast, as close to unnoticeable
as possible to the host program. That requires us to minimize I/O, for example,
but in Python it also means we need to minimize function calls. So when you
are designing your namespace and record values, try to insert the most basic
scalar values you already have on hand.
When it comes time to report on the gathered data, however, we usually have
much more freedom in what we can calculate. Therefore, whenever reporting
tools (like the provided :class:`StatsPage` CherryPy class) fetch the contents
of `logging.statistics` for reporting, they first call
`extrapolate_statistics` (passing the whole `statistics` dict as the only
argument). This makes a deep copy of the statistics dict so that the
reporting tool can both iterate over it and even change it without harming
the original. But it also expands any functions in the dict by calling them.
For example, you might have a 'Current Time' entry in the namespace with the
value "lambda scope: time.time()". The "scope" parameter is the current
namespace dict (or record, if we're currently expanding one of those
instead), allowing you access to existing static entries. If you're truly
evil, you can even modify more than one entry at a time.
However, don't try to calculate an entry and then use its value in further
extrapolations; the order in which the functions are called is not guaranteed.
This can lead to a certain amount of duplicated work (or a redesign of your
schema), but that's better than complicating the spec.
After the whole thing has been extrapolated, it's time for:
Reporting
---------
The :class:`StatsPage` class grabs the `logging.statistics` dict, extrapolates
it all, and then transforms it to HTML for easy viewing. Each namespace gets
its own header and attribute table, plus an extra table for each collection.
This is NOT part of the statistics specification; other tools can format how
they like.
You can control which columns are output and how they are formatted by updating
StatsPage.formatting, which is a dict that mirrors the keys and nesting of
`logging.statistics`. The difference is that, instead of data values, it has
formatting values. Use None for a given key to indicate to the StatsPage that a
given column should not be output. Use a string with formatting
(such as '%.3f') to interpolate the value(s), or use a callable (such as
lambda v: v.isoformat()) for more advanced formatting. Any entry which is not
mentioned in the formatting dict is output unchanged.
Monitoring
----------
Although the HTML output takes pains to assign unique id's to each <td> with
statistical data, you're probably better off fetching /cpstats/data, which
outputs the whole (extrapolated) `logging.statistics` dict in JSON format.
That is probably easier to parse, and doesn't have any formatting controls,
so you get the "original" data in a consistently-serialized format.
Note: there's no treatment yet for datetime objects. Try time.time() instead
for now if you can. Nagios will probably thank you.
Turning Collection Off
----------------------
It is recommended each namespace have an "Enabled" item which, if False,
stops collection (but not reporting) of statistical data. Applications
SHOULD provide controls to pause and resume collection by setting these
entries to False or True, if present.
Usage
=====
To collect statistics on CherryPy applications::
from cherrypy.lib import cpstats
appconfig['/']['tools.cpstats.on'] = True
To collect statistics on your own code::
import logging
# Initialize the repository
if not hasattr(logging, 'statistics'): logging.statistics = {}
# Initialize my namespace
mystats = logging.statistics.setdefault('My Stuff', {})
# Initialize my namespace's scalars and collections
mystats.update({
'Enabled': True,
'Start Time': time.time(),
'Important Events': 0,
'Events/Second': lambda s: (
(s['Important Events'] / (time.time() - s['Start Time']))),
})
...
for event in events:
...
# Collect stats
if mystats.get('Enabled', False):
mystats['Important Events'] += 1
To report statistics::
root.cpstats = cpstats.StatsPage()
To format statistics reports::
See 'Reporting', above.
"""
# ------------------------------- Statistics -------------------------------- #
import logging
if not hasattr(logging, 'statistics'):
logging.statistics = {}
def extrapolate_statistics(scope):
"""Return an extrapolated copy of the given scope."""
c = {}
for k, v in list(scope.items()):
if isinstance(v, dict):
v = extrapolate_statistics(v)
elif isinstance(v, (list, tuple)):
v = [extrapolate_statistics(record) for record in v]
elif hasattr(v, '__call__'):
v = v(scope)
c[k] = v
return c
# -------------------- CherryPy Applications Statistics --------------------- #
import threading
import time
import cherrypy
appstats = logging.statistics.setdefault('CherryPy Applications', {})
appstats.update({
'Enabled': True,
'Bytes Read/Request': lambda s: (
s['Total Requests'] and
(s['Total Bytes Read'] / float(s['Total Requests'])) or
0.0
),
'Bytes Read/Second': lambda s: s['Total Bytes Read'] / s['Uptime'](s),
'Bytes Written/Request': lambda s: (
s['Total Requests'] and
(s['Total Bytes Written'] / float(s['Total Requests'])) or
0.0
),
'Bytes Written/Second': lambda s: (
s['Total Bytes Written'] / s['Uptime'](s)
),
'Current Time': lambda s: time.time(),
'Current Requests': 0,
'Requests/Second': lambda s: float(s['Total Requests']) / s['Uptime'](s),
'Server Version': cherrypy.__version__,
'Start Time': time.time(),
'Total Bytes Read': 0,
'Total Bytes Written': 0,
'Total Requests': 0,
'Total Time': 0,
'Uptime': lambda s: time.time() - s['Start Time'],
'Requests': {},
})
proc_time = lambda s: time.time() - s['Start Time']
class ByteCountWrapper(object):
"""Wraps a file-like object, counting the number of bytes read."""
def __init__(self, rfile):
self.rfile = rfile
self.bytes_read = 0
def read(self, size=-1):
data = self.rfile.read(size)
self.bytes_read += len(data)
return data
def readline(self, size=-1):
data = self.rfile.readline(size)
self.bytes_read += len(data)
return data
def readlines(self, sizehint=0):
# Shamelessly stolen from StringIO
total = 0
lines = []
line = self.readline()
while line:
lines.append(line)
total += len(line)
if 0 < sizehint <= total:
break
line = self.readline()
return lines
def close(self):
self.rfile.close()
def __iter__(self):
return self
def next(self):
data = self.rfile.next()
self.bytes_read += len(data)
return data
average_uriset_time = lambda s: s['Count'] and (s['Sum'] / s['Count']) or 0
class StatsTool(cherrypy.Tool):
"""Record various information about the current request."""
def __init__(self):
cherrypy.Tool.__init__(self, 'on_end_request', self.record_stop)
def _setup(self):
"""Hook this tool into cherrypy.request.
The standard CherryPy request object will automatically call this
method when the tool is "turned on" in config.
"""
if appstats.get('Enabled', False):
cherrypy.Tool._setup(self)
self.record_start()
def record_start(self):
"""Record the beginning of a request."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if not hasattr(request.rfile, 'bytes_read'):
request.rfile = ByteCountWrapper(request.rfile)
request.body.fp = request.rfile
r = request.remote
appstats['Current Requests'] += 1
appstats['Total Requests'] += 1
appstats['Requests'][threading._get_ident()] = {
'Bytes Read': None,
'Bytes Written': None,
# Use a lambda so the ip gets updated by tools.proxy later
'Client': lambda s: '%s:%s' % (r.ip, r.port),
'End Time': None,
'Processing Time': proc_time,
'Request-Line': request.request_line,
'Response Status': None,
'Start Time': time.time(),
}
def record_stop(
self, uriset=None, slow_queries=1.0, slow_queries_count=100,
debug=False, **kwargs):
"""Record the end of a request."""
resp = cherrypy.serving.response
w = appstats['Requests'][threading._get_ident()]
r = cherrypy.request.rfile.bytes_read
w['Bytes Read'] = r
appstats['Total Bytes Read'] += r
if resp.stream:
w['Bytes Written'] = 'chunked'
else:
cl = int(resp.headers.get('Content-Length', 0))
w['Bytes Written'] = cl
appstats['Total Bytes Written'] += cl
w['Response Status'] = getattr(
resp, 'output_status', None) or resp.status
w['End Time'] = time.time()
p = w['End Time'] - w['Start Time']
w['Processing Time'] = p
appstats['Total Time'] += p
appstats['Current Requests'] -= 1
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Stats recorded: %s' % repr(w), 'TOOLS.CPSTATS')
if uriset:
rs = appstats.setdefault('URI Set Tracking', {})
r = rs.setdefault(uriset, {
'Min': None, 'Max': None, 'Count': 0, 'Sum': 0,
'Avg': average_uriset_time})
if r['Min'] is None or p < r['Min']:
r['Min'] = p
if r['Max'] is None or p > r['Max']:
r['Max'] = p
r['Count'] += 1
r['Sum'] += p
if slow_queries and p > slow_queries:
sq = appstats.setdefault('Slow Queries', [])
sq.append(w.copy())
if len(sq) > slow_queries_count:
sq.pop(0)
import cherrypy
cherrypy.tools.cpstats = StatsTool()
# ---------------------- CherryPy Statistics Reporting ---------------------- #
import os
thisdir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
try:
import json
except ImportError:
try:
import simplejson as json
except ImportError:
json = None
missing = object()
locale_date = lambda v: time.strftime('%c', time.gmtime(v))
iso_format = lambda v: time.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S', time.gmtime(v))
def pause_resume(ns):
def _pause_resume(enabled):
pause_disabled = ''
resume_disabled = ''
if enabled:
resume_disabled = 'disabled="disabled" '
else:
pause_disabled = 'disabled="disabled" '
return """
<form action="pause" method="POST" style="display:inline">
<input type="hidden" name="namespace" value="%s" />
<input type="submit" value="Pause" %s/>
</form>
<form action="resume" method="POST" style="display:inline">
<input type="hidden" name="namespace" value="%s" />
<input type="submit" value="Resume" %s/>
</form>
""" % (ns, pause_disabled, ns, resume_disabled)
return _pause_resume
class StatsPage(object):
formatting = {
'CherryPy Applications': {
'Enabled': pause_resume('CherryPy Applications'),
'Bytes Read/Request': '%.3f',
'Bytes Read/Second': '%.3f',
'Bytes Written/Request': '%.3f',
'Bytes Written/Second': '%.3f',
'Current Time': iso_format,
'Requests/Second': '%.3f',
'Start Time': iso_format,
'Total Time': '%.3f',
'Uptime': '%.3f',
'Slow Queries': {
'End Time': None,
'Processing Time': '%.3f',
'Start Time': iso_format,
},
'URI Set Tracking': {
'Avg': '%.3f',
'Max': '%.3f',
'Min': '%.3f',
'Sum': '%.3f',
},
'Requests': {
'Bytes Read': '%s',
'Bytes Written': '%s',
'End Time': None,
'Processing Time': '%.3f',
'Start Time': None,
},
},
'CherryPy WSGIServer': {
'Enabled': pause_resume('CherryPy WSGIServer'),
'Connections/second': '%.3f',
'Start time': iso_format,
},
}
def index(self):
# Transform the raw data into pretty output for HTML
yield """
<html>
<head>
<title>Statistics</title>
<style>
th, td {
padding: 0.25em 0.5em;
border: 1px solid #666699;
}
table {
border-collapse: collapse;
}
table.stats1 {
width: 100%;
}
table.stats1 th {
font-weight: bold;
text-align: right;
background-color: #CCD5DD;
}
table.stats2, h2 {
margin-left: 50px;
}
table.stats2 th {
font-weight: bold;
text-align: center;
background-color: #CCD5DD;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
"""
for title, scalars, collections in self.get_namespaces():
yield """
<h1>%s</h1>
<table class='stats1'>
<tbody>
""" % title
for i, (key, value) in enumerate(scalars):
colnum = i % 3
if colnum == 0:
yield """
<tr>"""
yield (
"""
<th>%(key)s</th><td id='%(title)s-%(key)s'>%(value)s</td>""" %
vars()
)
if colnum == 2:
yield """
</tr>"""
if colnum == 0:
yield """
<th></th><td></td>
<th></th><td></td>
</tr>"""
elif colnum == 1:
yield """
<th></th><td></td>
</tr>"""
yield """
</tbody>
</table>"""
for subtitle, headers, subrows in collections:
yield """
<h2>%s</h2>
<table class='stats2'>
<thead>
<tr>""" % subtitle
for key in headers:
yield """
<th>%s</th>""" % key
yield """
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>"""
for subrow in subrows:
yield """
<tr>"""
for value in subrow:
yield """
<td>%s</td>""" % value
yield """
</tr>"""
yield """
</tbody>
</table>"""
yield """
</body>
</html>
"""
index.exposed = True
def get_namespaces(self):
"""Yield (title, scalars, collections) for each namespace."""
s = extrapolate_statistics(logging.statistics)
for title, ns in sorted(s.items()):
scalars = []
collections = []
ns_fmt = self.formatting.get(title, {})
for k, v in sorted(ns.items()):
fmt = ns_fmt.get(k, {})
if isinstance(v, dict):
headers, subrows = self.get_dict_collection(v, fmt)
collections.append((k, ['ID'] + headers, subrows))
elif isinstance(v, (list, tuple)):
headers, subrows = self.get_list_collection(v, fmt)
collections.append((k, headers, subrows))
else:
format = ns_fmt.get(k, missing)
if format is None:
# Don't output this column.
continue
if hasattr(format, '__call__'):
v = format(v)
elif format is not missing:
v = format % v
scalars.append((k, v))
yield title, scalars, collections
def get_dict_collection(self, v, formatting):
"""Return ([headers], [rows]) for the given collection."""
# E.g., the 'Requests' dict.
headers = []
for record in v.itervalues():
for k3 in record:
format = formatting.get(k3, missing)
if format is None:
# Don't output this column.
continue
if k3 not in headers:
headers.append(k3)
headers.sort()
subrows = []
for k2, record in sorted(v.items()):
subrow = [k2]
for k3 in headers:
v3 = record.get(k3, '')
format = formatting.get(k3, missing)
if format is None:
# Don't output this column.
continue
if hasattr(format, '__call__'):
v3 = format(v3)
elif format is not missing:
v3 = format % v3
subrow.append(v3)
subrows.append(subrow)
return headers, subrows
def get_list_collection(self, v, formatting):
"""Return ([headers], [subrows]) for the given collection."""
# E.g., the 'Slow Queries' list.
headers = []
for record in v:
for k3 in record:
format = formatting.get(k3, missing)
if format is None:
# Don't output this column.
continue
if k3 not in headers:
headers.append(k3)
headers.sort()
subrows = []
for record in v:
subrow = []
for k3 in headers:
v3 = record.get(k3, '')
format = formatting.get(k3, missing)
if format is None:
# Don't output this column.
continue
if hasattr(format, '__call__'):
v3 = format(v3)
elif format is not missing:
v3 = format % v3
subrow.append(v3)
subrows.append(subrow)
return headers, subrows
if json is not None:
def data(self):
s = extrapolate_statistics(logging.statistics)
cherrypy.response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'application/json'
return json.dumps(s, sort_keys=True, indent=4)
data.exposed = True
def pause(self, namespace):
logging.statistics.get(namespace, {})['Enabled'] = False
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect('./')
pause.exposed = True
pause.cp_config = {'tools.allow.on': True,
'tools.allow.methods': ['POST']}
def resume(self, namespace):
logging.statistics.get(namespace, {})['Enabled'] = True
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect('./')
resume.exposed = True
resume.cp_config = {'tools.allow.on': True,
'tools.allow.methods': ['POST']}

@ -1,630 +0,0 @@
"""Functions for builtin CherryPy tools."""
import logging
import re
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, md5, set, unicodestr
from cherrypy.lib import httputil as _httputil
from cherrypy.lib import is_iterator
# Conditional HTTP request support #
def validate_etags(autotags=False, debug=False):
"""Validate the current ETag against If-Match, If-None-Match headers.
If autotags is True, an ETag response-header value will be provided
from an MD5 hash of the response body (unless some other code has
already provided an ETag header). If False (the default), the ETag
will not be automatic.
WARNING: the autotags feature is not designed for URL's which allow
methods other than GET. For example, if a POST to the same URL returns
no content, the automatic ETag will be incorrect, breaking a fundamental
use for entity tags in a possibly destructive fashion. Likewise, if you
raise 304 Not Modified, the response body will be empty, the ETag hash
will be incorrect, and your application will break.
See :rfc:`2616` Section 14.24.
"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
# Guard against being run twice.
if hasattr(response, "ETag"):
return
status, reason, msg = _httputil.valid_status(response.status)
etag = response.headers.get('ETag')
# Automatic ETag generation. See warning in docstring.
if etag:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('ETag already set: %s' % etag, 'TOOLS.ETAGS')
elif not autotags:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Autotags off', 'TOOLS.ETAGS')
elif status != 200:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Status not 200', 'TOOLS.ETAGS')
else:
etag = response.collapse_body()
etag = '"%s"' % md5(etag).hexdigest()
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Setting ETag: %s' % etag, 'TOOLS.ETAGS')
response.headers['ETag'] = etag
response.ETag = etag
# "If the request would, without the If-Match header field, result in
# anything other than a 2xx or 412 status, then the If-Match header
# MUST be ignored."
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Status: %s' % status, 'TOOLS.ETAGS')
if status >= 200 and status <= 299:
request = cherrypy.serving.request
conditions = request.headers.elements('If-Match') or []
conditions = [str(x) for x in conditions]
if debug:
cherrypy.log('If-Match conditions: %s' % repr(conditions),
'TOOLS.ETAGS')
if conditions and not (conditions == ["*"] or etag in conditions):
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(412, "If-Match failed: ETag %r did "
"not match %r" % (etag, conditions))
conditions = request.headers.elements('If-None-Match') or []
conditions = [str(x) for x in conditions]
if debug:
cherrypy.log('If-None-Match conditions: %s' % repr(conditions),
'TOOLS.ETAGS')
if conditions == ["*"] or etag in conditions:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.method: %s' %
request.method, 'TOOLS.ETAGS')
if request.method in ("GET", "HEAD"):
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect([], 304)
else:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(412, "If-None-Match failed: ETag %r "
"matched %r" % (etag, conditions))
def validate_since():
"""Validate the current Last-Modified against If-Modified-Since headers.
If no code has set the Last-Modified response header, then no validation
will be performed.
"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
lastmod = response.headers.get('Last-Modified')
if lastmod:
status, reason, msg = _httputil.valid_status(response.status)
request = cherrypy.serving.request
since = request.headers.get('If-Unmodified-Since')
if since and since != lastmod:
if (status >= 200 and status <= 299) or status == 412:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(412)
since = request.headers.get('If-Modified-Since')
if since and since == lastmod:
if (status >= 200 and status <= 299) or status == 304:
if request.method in ("GET", "HEAD"):
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect([], 304)
else:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(412)
# Tool code #
def allow(methods=None, debug=False):
"""Raise 405 if request.method not in methods (default ['GET', 'HEAD']).
The given methods are case-insensitive, and may be in any order.
If only one method is allowed, you may supply a single string;
if more than one, supply a list of strings.
Regardless of whether the current method is allowed or not, this
also emits an 'Allow' response header, containing the given methods.
"""
if not isinstance(methods, (tuple, list)):
methods = [methods]
methods = [m.upper() for m in methods if m]
if not methods:
methods = ['GET', 'HEAD']
elif 'GET' in methods and 'HEAD' not in methods:
methods.append('HEAD')
cherrypy.response.headers['Allow'] = ', '.join(methods)
if cherrypy.request.method not in methods:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.method %r not in methods %r' %
(cherrypy.request.method, methods), 'TOOLS.ALLOW')
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(405)
else:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.method %r in methods %r' %
(cherrypy.request.method, methods), 'TOOLS.ALLOW')
def proxy(base=None, local='X-Forwarded-Host', remote='X-Forwarded-For',
scheme='X-Forwarded-Proto', debug=False):
"""Change the base URL (scheme://host[:port][/path]).
For running a CP server behind Apache, lighttpd, or other HTTP server.
For Apache and lighttpd, you should leave the 'local' argument at the
default value of 'X-Forwarded-Host'. For Squid, you probably want to set
tools.proxy.local = 'Origin'.
If you want the new request.base to include path info (not just the host),
you must explicitly set base to the full base path, and ALSO set 'local'
to '', so that the X-Forwarded-Host request header (which never includes
path info) does not override it. Regardless, the value for 'base' MUST
NOT end in a slash.
cherrypy.request.remote.ip (the IP address of the client) will be
rewritten if the header specified by the 'remote' arg is valid.
By default, 'remote' is set to 'X-Forwarded-For'. If you do not
want to rewrite remote.ip, set the 'remote' arg to an empty string.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if scheme:
s = request.headers.get(scheme, None)
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Testing scheme %r:%r' % (scheme, s), 'TOOLS.PROXY')
if s == 'on' and 'ssl' in scheme.lower():
# This handles e.g. webfaction's 'X-Forwarded-Ssl: on' header
scheme = 'https'
else:
# This is for lighttpd/pound/Mongrel's 'X-Forwarded-Proto: https'
scheme = s
if not scheme:
scheme = request.base[:request.base.find("://")]
if local:
lbase = request.headers.get(local, None)
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Testing local %r:%r' % (local, lbase), 'TOOLS.PROXY')
if lbase is not None:
base = lbase.split(',')[0]
if not base:
port = request.local.port
if port == 80:
base = '127.0.0.1'
else:
base = '127.0.0.1:%s' % port
if base.find("://") == -1:
# add http:// or https:// if needed
base = scheme + "://" + base
request.base = base
if remote:
xff = request.headers.get(remote)
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Testing remote %r:%r' % (remote, xff), 'TOOLS.PROXY')
if xff:
if remote == 'X-Forwarded-For':
#Bug #1268
xff = xff.split(',')[0].strip()
request.remote.ip = xff
def ignore_headers(headers=('Range',), debug=False):
"""Delete request headers whose field names are included in 'headers'.
This is a useful tool for working behind certain HTTP servers;
for example, Apache duplicates the work that CP does for 'Range'
headers, and will doubly-truncate the response.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
for name in headers:
if name in request.headers:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Ignoring request header %r' % name,
'TOOLS.IGNORE_HEADERS')
del request.headers[name]
def response_headers(headers=None, debug=False):
"""Set headers on the response."""
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Setting response headers: %s' % repr(headers),
'TOOLS.RESPONSE_HEADERS')
for name, value in (headers or []):
cherrypy.serving.response.headers[name] = value
response_headers.failsafe = True
def referer(pattern, accept=True, accept_missing=False, error=403,
message='Forbidden Referer header.', debug=False):
"""Raise HTTPError if Referer header does/does not match the given pattern.
pattern
A regular expression pattern to test against the Referer.
accept
If True, the Referer must match the pattern; if False,
the Referer must NOT match the pattern.
accept_missing
If True, permit requests with no Referer header.
error
The HTTP error code to return to the client on failure.
message
A string to include in the response body on failure.
"""
try:
ref = cherrypy.serving.request.headers['Referer']
match = bool(re.match(pattern, ref))
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Referer %r matches %r' % (ref, pattern),
'TOOLS.REFERER')
if accept == match:
return
except KeyError:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No Referer header', 'TOOLS.REFERER')
if accept_missing:
return
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(error, message)
class SessionAuth(object):
"""Assert that the user is logged in."""
session_key = "username"
debug = False
def check_username_and_password(self, username, password):
pass
def anonymous(self):
"""Provide a temporary user name for anonymous users."""
pass
def on_login(self, username):
pass
def on_logout(self, username):
pass
def on_check(self, username):
pass
def login_screen(self, from_page='..', username='', error_msg='',
**kwargs):
return (unicodestr("""<html><body>
Message: %(error_msg)s
<form method="post" action="do_login">
Login: <input type="text" name="username" value="%(username)s" size="10" />
<br />
Password: <input type="password" name="password" size="10" />
<br />
<input type="hidden" name="from_page" value="%(from_page)s" />
<br />
<input type="submit" />
</form>
</body></html>""") % vars()).encode("utf-8")
def do_login(self, username, password, from_page='..', **kwargs):
"""Login. May raise redirect, or return True if request handled."""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
error_msg = self.check_username_and_password(username, password)
if error_msg:
body = self.login_screen(from_page, username, error_msg)
response.body = body
if "Content-Length" in response.headers:
# Delete Content-Length header so finalize() recalcs it.
del response.headers["Content-Length"]
return True
else:
cherrypy.serving.request.login = username
cherrypy.session[self.session_key] = username
self.on_login(username)
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(from_page or "/")
def do_logout(self, from_page='..', **kwargs):
"""Logout. May raise redirect, or return True if request handled."""
sess = cherrypy.session
username = sess.get(self.session_key)
sess[self.session_key] = None
if username:
cherrypy.serving.request.login = None
self.on_logout(username)
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(from_page)
def do_check(self):
"""Assert username. Raise redirect, or return True if request handled.
"""
sess = cherrypy.session
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
username = sess.get(self.session_key)
if not username:
sess[self.session_key] = username = self.anonymous()
self._debug_message('No session[username], trying anonymous')
if not username:
url = cherrypy.url(qs=request.query_string)
self._debug_message(
'No username, routing to login_screen with from_page %(url)r',
locals(),
)
response.body = self.login_screen(url)
if "Content-Length" in response.headers:
# Delete Content-Length header so finalize() recalcs it.
del response.headers["Content-Length"]
return True
self._debug_message('Setting request.login to %(username)r', locals())
request.login = username
self.on_check(username)
def _debug_message(self, template, context={}):
if not self.debug:
return
cherrypy.log(template % context, 'TOOLS.SESSAUTH')
def run(self):
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
path = request.path_info
if path.endswith('login_screen'):
self._debug_message('routing %(path)r to login_screen', locals())
response.body = self.login_screen()
return True
elif path.endswith('do_login'):
if request.method != 'POST':
response.headers['Allow'] = "POST"
self._debug_message('do_login requires POST')
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(405)
self._debug_message('routing %(path)r to do_login', locals())
return self.do_login(**request.params)
elif path.endswith('do_logout'):
if request.method != 'POST':
response.headers['Allow'] = "POST"
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(405)
self._debug_message('routing %(path)r to do_logout', locals())
return self.do_logout(**request.params)
else:
self._debug_message('No special path, running do_check')
return self.do_check()
def session_auth(**kwargs):
sa = SessionAuth()
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(sa, k, v)
return sa.run()
session_auth.__doc__ = """Session authentication hook.
Any attribute of the SessionAuth class may be overridden via a keyword arg
to this function:
""" + "\n".join(["%s: %s" % (k, type(getattr(SessionAuth, k)).__name__)
for k in dir(SessionAuth) if not k.startswith("__")])
def log_traceback(severity=logging.ERROR, debug=False):
"""Write the last error's traceback to the cherrypy error log."""
cherrypy.log("", "HTTP", severity=severity, traceback=True)
def log_request_headers(debug=False):
"""Write request headers to the cherrypy error log."""
h = [" %s: %s" % (k, v) for k, v in cherrypy.serving.request.header_list]
cherrypy.log('\nRequest Headers:\n' + '\n'.join(h), "HTTP")
def log_hooks(debug=False):
"""Write request.hooks to the cherrypy error log."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
msg = []
# Sort by the standard points if possible.
from cherrypy import _cprequest
points = _cprequest.hookpoints
for k in request.hooks.keys():
if k not in points:
points.append(k)
for k in points:
msg.append(" %s:" % k)
v = request.hooks.get(k, [])
v.sort()
for h in v:
msg.append(" %r" % h)
cherrypy.log('\nRequest Hooks for ' + cherrypy.url() +
':\n' + '\n'.join(msg), "HTTP")
def redirect(url='', internal=True, debug=False):
"""Raise InternalRedirect or HTTPRedirect to the given url."""
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Redirecting %sto: %s' %
({True: 'internal ', False: ''}[internal], url),
'TOOLS.REDIRECT')
if internal:
raise cherrypy.InternalRedirect(url)
else:
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(url)
def trailing_slash(missing=True, extra=False, status=None, debug=False):
"""Redirect if path_info has (missing|extra) trailing slash."""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
pi = request.path_info
if debug:
cherrypy.log('is_index: %r, missing: %r, extra: %r, path_info: %r' %
(request.is_index, missing, extra, pi),
'TOOLS.TRAILING_SLASH')
if request.is_index is True:
if missing:
if not pi.endswith('/'):
new_url = cherrypy.url(pi + '/', request.query_string)
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(new_url, status=status or 301)
elif request.is_index is False:
if extra:
# If pi == '/', don't redirect to ''!
if pi.endswith('/') and pi != '/':
new_url = cherrypy.url(pi[:-1], request.query_string)
raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(new_url, status=status or 301)
def flatten(debug=False):
"""Wrap response.body in a generator that recursively iterates over body.
This allows cherrypy.response.body to consist of 'nested generators';
that is, a set of generators that yield generators.
"""
def flattener(input):
numchunks = 0
for x in input:
if not is_iterator(x):
numchunks += 1
yield x
else:
for y in flattener(x):
numchunks += 1
yield y
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Flattened %d chunks' % numchunks, 'TOOLS.FLATTEN')
response = cherrypy.serving.response
response.body = flattener(response.body)
def accept(media=None, debug=False):
"""Return the client's preferred media-type (from the given Content-Types).
If 'media' is None (the default), no test will be performed.
If 'media' is provided, it should be the Content-Type value (as a string)
or values (as a list or tuple of strings) which the current resource
can emit. The client's acceptable media ranges (as declared in the
Accept request header) will be matched in order to these Content-Type
values; the first such string is returned. That is, the return value
will always be one of the strings provided in the 'media' arg (or None
if 'media' is None).
If no match is found, then HTTPError 406 (Not Acceptable) is raised.
Note that most web browsers send */* as a (low-quality) acceptable
media range, which should match any Content-Type. In addition, "...if
no Accept header field is present, then it is assumed that the client
accepts all media types."
Matching types are checked in order of client preference first,
and then in the order of the given 'media' values.
Note that this function does not honor accept-params (other than "q").
"""
if not media:
return
if isinstance(media, basestring):
media = [media]
request = cherrypy.serving.request
# Parse the Accept request header, and try to match one
# of the requested media-ranges (in order of preference).
ranges = request.headers.elements('Accept')
if not ranges:
# Any media type is acceptable.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No Accept header elements', 'TOOLS.ACCEPT')
return media[0]
else:
# Note that 'ranges' is sorted in order of preference
for element in ranges:
if element.qvalue > 0:
if element.value == "*/*":
# Matches any type or subtype
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Match due to */*', 'TOOLS.ACCEPT')
return media[0]
elif element.value.endswith("/*"):
# Matches any subtype
mtype = element.value[:-1] # Keep the slash
for m in media:
if m.startswith(mtype):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Match due to %s' % element.value,
'TOOLS.ACCEPT')
return m
else:
# Matches exact value
if element.value in media:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Match due to %s' % element.value,
'TOOLS.ACCEPT')
return element.value
# No suitable media-range found.
ah = request.headers.get('Accept')
if ah is None:
msg = "Your client did not send an Accept header."
else:
msg = "Your client sent this Accept header: %s." % ah
msg += (" But this resource only emits these media types: %s." %
", ".join(media))
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(406, msg)
class MonitoredHeaderMap(_httputil.HeaderMap):
def __init__(self):
self.accessed_headers = set()
def __getitem__(self, key):
self.accessed_headers.add(key)
return _httputil.HeaderMap.__getitem__(self, key)
def __contains__(self, key):
self.accessed_headers.add(key)
return _httputil.HeaderMap.__contains__(self, key)
def get(self, key, default=None):
self.accessed_headers.add(key)
return _httputil.HeaderMap.get(self, key, default=default)
if hasattr({}, 'has_key'):
# Python 2
def has_key(self, key):
self.accessed_headers.add(key)
return _httputil.HeaderMap.has_key(self, key)
def autovary(ignore=None, debug=False):
"""Auto-populate the Vary response header based on request.header access.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
req_h = request.headers
request.headers = MonitoredHeaderMap()
request.headers.update(req_h)
if ignore is None:
ignore = set(['Content-Disposition', 'Content-Length', 'Content-Type'])
def set_response_header():
resp_h = cherrypy.serving.response.headers
v = set([e.value for e in resp_h.elements('Vary')])
if debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Accessed headers: %s' % request.headers.accessed_headers,
'TOOLS.AUTOVARY')
v = v.union(request.headers.accessed_headers)
v = v.difference(ignore)
v = list(v)
v.sort()
resp_h['Vary'] = ', '.join(v)
request.hooks.attach('before_finalize', set_response_header, 95)

@ -1,421 +0,0 @@
import struct
import time
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, BytesIO, ntob, set, unicodestr
from cherrypy.lib import file_generator
from cherrypy.lib import is_closable_iterator
from cherrypy.lib import set_vary_header
def decode(encoding=None, default_encoding='utf-8'):
"""Replace or extend the list of charsets used to decode a request entity.
Either argument may be a single string or a list of strings.
encoding
If not None, restricts the set of charsets attempted while decoding
a request entity to the given set (even if a different charset is
given in the Content-Type request header).
default_encoding
Only in effect if the 'encoding' argument is not given.
If given, the set of charsets attempted while decoding a request
entity is *extended* with the given value(s).
"""
body = cherrypy.request.body
if encoding is not None:
if not isinstance(encoding, list):
encoding = [encoding]
body.attempt_charsets = encoding
elif default_encoding:
if not isinstance(default_encoding, list):
default_encoding = [default_encoding]
body.attempt_charsets = body.attempt_charsets + default_encoding
class UTF8StreamEncoder:
def __init__(self, iterator):
self._iterator = iterator
def __iter__(self):
return self
def next(self):
return self.__next__()
def __next__(self):
res = next(self._iterator)
if isinstance(res, unicodestr):
res = res.encode('utf-8')
return res
def close(self):
if is_closable_iterator(self._iterator):
self._iterator.close()
def __getattr__(self, attr):
if attr.startswith('__'):
raise AttributeError(self, attr)
return getattr(self._iterator, attr)
class ResponseEncoder:
default_encoding = 'utf-8'
failmsg = "Response body could not be encoded with %r."
encoding = None
errors = 'strict'
text_only = True
add_charset = True
debug = False
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(self, k, v)
self.attempted_charsets = set()
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if request.handler is not None:
# Replace request.handler with self
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Replacing request.handler', 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
self.oldhandler = request.handler
request.handler = self
def encode_stream(self, encoding):
"""Encode a streaming response body.
Use a generator wrapper, and just pray it works as the stream is
being written out.
"""
if encoding in self.attempted_charsets:
return False
self.attempted_charsets.add(encoding)
def encoder(body):
for chunk in body:
if isinstance(chunk, unicodestr):
chunk = chunk.encode(encoding, self.errors)
yield chunk
self.body = encoder(self.body)
return True
def encode_string(self, encoding):
"""Encode a buffered response body."""
if encoding in self.attempted_charsets:
return False
self.attempted_charsets.add(encoding)
body = []
for chunk in self.body:
if isinstance(chunk, unicodestr):
try:
chunk = chunk.encode(encoding, self.errors)
except (LookupError, UnicodeError):
return False
body.append(chunk)
self.body = body
return True
def find_acceptable_charset(self):
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('response.stream %r' %
response.stream, 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if response.stream:
encoder = self.encode_stream
else:
encoder = self.encode_string
if "Content-Length" in response.headers:
# Delete Content-Length header so finalize() recalcs it.
# Encoded strings may be of different lengths from their
# unicode equivalents, and even from each other. For example:
# >>> t = u"\u7007\u3040"
# >>> len(t)
# 2
# >>> len(t.encode("UTF-8"))
# 6
# >>> len(t.encode("utf7"))
# 8
del response.headers["Content-Length"]
# Parse the Accept-Charset request header, and try to provide one
# of the requested charsets (in order of user preference).
encs = request.headers.elements('Accept-Charset')
charsets = [enc.value.lower() for enc in encs]
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('charsets %s' % repr(charsets), 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if self.encoding is not None:
# If specified, force this encoding to be used, or fail.
encoding = self.encoding.lower()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Specified encoding %r' %
encoding, 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if (not charsets) or "*" in charsets or encoding in charsets:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Attempting encoding %r' %
encoding, 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if encoder(encoding):
return encoding
else:
if not encs:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Attempting default encoding %r' %
self.default_encoding, 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
# Any character-set is acceptable.
if encoder(self.default_encoding):
return self.default_encoding
else:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(500, self.failmsg %
self.default_encoding)
else:
for element in encs:
if element.qvalue > 0:
if element.value == "*":
# Matches any charset. Try our default.
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Attempting default encoding due '
'to %r' % element, 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if encoder(self.default_encoding):
return self.default_encoding
else:
encoding = element.value
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Attempting encoding %s (qvalue >'
'0)' % element, 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if encoder(encoding):
return encoding
if "*" not in charsets:
# If no "*" is present in an Accept-Charset field, then all
# character sets not explicitly mentioned get a quality
# value of 0, except for ISO-8859-1, which gets a quality
# value of 1 if not explicitly mentioned.
iso = 'iso-8859-1'
if iso not in charsets:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Attempting ISO-8859-1 encoding',
'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if encoder(iso):
return iso
# No suitable encoding found.
ac = request.headers.get('Accept-Charset')
if ac is None:
msg = "Your client did not send an Accept-Charset header."
else:
msg = "Your client sent this Accept-Charset header: %s." % ac
_charsets = ", ".join(sorted(self.attempted_charsets))
msg += " We tried these charsets: %s." % (_charsets,)
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(406, msg)
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
response = cherrypy.serving.response
self.body = self.oldhandler(*args, **kwargs)
if isinstance(self.body, basestring):
# strings get wrapped in a list because iterating over a single
# item list is much faster than iterating over every character
# in a long string.
if self.body:
self.body = [self.body]
else:
# [''] doesn't evaluate to False, so replace it with [].
self.body = []
elif hasattr(self.body, 'read'):
self.body = file_generator(self.body)
elif self.body is None:
self.body = []
ct = response.headers.elements("Content-Type")
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Content-Type: %r' % [str(h)
for h in ct], 'TOOLS.ENCODE')
if ct and self.add_charset:
ct = ct[0]
if self.text_only:
if ct.value.lower().startswith("text/"):
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Content-Type %s starts with "text/"' % ct,
'TOOLS.ENCODE')
do_find = True
else:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Not finding because Content-Type %s '
'does not start with "text/"' % ct,
'TOOLS.ENCODE')
do_find = False
else:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Finding because not text_only',
'TOOLS.ENCODE')
do_find = True
if do_find:
# Set "charset=..." param on response Content-Type header
ct.params['charset'] = self.find_acceptable_charset()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Setting Content-Type %s' % ct,
'TOOLS.ENCODE')
response.headers["Content-Type"] = str(ct)
return self.body
# GZIP
def compress(body, compress_level):
"""Compress 'body' at the given compress_level."""
import zlib
# See http://www.gzip.org/zlib/rfc-gzip.html
yield ntob('\x1f\x8b') # ID1 and ID2: gzip marker
yield ntob('\x08') # CM: compression method
yield ntob('\x00') # FLG: none set
# MTIME: 4 bytes
yield struct.pack("<L", int(time.time()) & int('FFFFFFFF', 16))
yield ntob('\x02') # XFL: max compression, slowest algo
yield ntob('\xff') # OS: unknown
crc = zlib.crc32(ntob(""))
size = 0
zobj = zlib.compressobj(compress_level,
zlib.DEFLATED, -zlib.MAX_WBITS,
zlib.DEF_MEM_LEVEL, 0)
for line in body:
size += len(line)
crc = zlib.crc32(line, crc)
yield zobj.compress(line)
yield zobj.flush()
# CRC32: 4 bytes
yield struct.pack("<L", crc & int('FFFFFFFF', 16))
# ISIZE: 4 bytes
yield struct.pack("<L", size & int('FFFFFFFF', 16))
def decompress(body):
import gzip
zbuf = BytesIO()
zbuf.write(body)
zbuf.seek(0)
zfile = gzip.GzipFile(mode='rb', fileobj=zbuf)
data = zfile.read()
zfile.close()
return data
def gzip(compress_level=5, mime_types=['text/html', 'text/plain'],
debug=False):
"""Try to gzip the response body if Content-Type in mime_types.
cherrypy.response.headers['Content-Type'] must be set to one of the
values in the mime_types arg before calling this function.
The provided list of mime-types must be of one of the following form:
* type/subtype
* type/*
* type/*+subtype
No compression is performed if any of the following hold:
* The client sends no Accept-Encoding request header
* No 'gzip' or 'x-gzip' is present in the Accept-Encoding header
* No 'gzip' or 'x-gzip' with a qvalue > 0 is present
* The 'identity' value is given with a qvalue > 0.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
set_vary_header(response, "Accept-Encoding")
if not response.body:
# Response body is empty (might be a 304 for instance)
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No response body', context='TOOLS.GZIP')
return
# If returning cached content (which should already have been gzipped),
# don't re-zip.
if getattr(request, "cached", False):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Not gzipping cached response', context='TOOLS.GZIP')
return
acceptable = request.headers.elements('Accept-Encoding')
if not acceptable:
# If no Accept-Encoding field is present in a request,
# the server MAY assume that the client will accept any
# content coding. In this case, if "identity" is one of
# the available content-codings, then the server SHOULD use
# the "identity" content-coding, unless it has additional
# information that a different content-coding is meaningful
# to the client.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No Accept-Encoding', context='TOOLS.GZIP')
return
ct = response.headers.get('Content-Type', '').split(';')[0]
for coding in acceptable:
if coding.value == 'identity' and coding.qvalue != 0:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Non-zero identity qvalue: %s' % coding,
context='TOOLS.GZIP')
return
if coding.value in ('gzip', 'x-gzip'):
if coding.qvalue == 0:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Zero gzip qvalue: %s' % coding,
context='TOOLS.GZIP')
return
if ct not in mime_types:
# If the list of provided mime-types contains tokens
# such as 'text/*' or 'application/*+xml',
# we go through them and find the most appropriate one
# based on the given content-type.
# The pattern matching is only caring about the most
# common cases, as stated above, and doesn't support
# for extra parameters.
found = False
if '/' in ct:
ct_media_type, ct_sub_type = ct.split('/')
for mime_type in mime_types:
if '/' in mime_type:
media_type, sub_type = mime_type.split('/')
if ct_media_type == media_type:
if sub_type == '*':
found = True
break
elif '+' in sub_type and '+' in ct_sub_type:
ct_left, ct_right = ct_sub_type.split('+')
left, right = sub_type.split('+')
if left == '*' and ct_right == right:
found = True
break
if not found:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Content-Type %s not in mime_types %r' %
(ct, mime_types), context='TOOLS.GZIP')
return
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Gzipping', context='TOOLS.GZIP')
# Return a generator that compresses the page
response.headers['Content-Encoding'] = 'gzip'
response.body = compress(response.body, compress_level)
if "Content-Length" in response.headers:
# Delete Content-Length header so finalize() recalcs it.
del response.headers["Content-Length"]
return
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No acceptable encoding found.', context='GZIP')
cherrypy.HTTPError(406, "identity, gzip").set_response()

@ -1,217 +0,0 @@
import gc
import inspect
import os
import sys
import time
try:
import objgraph
except ImportError:
objgraph = None
import cherrypy
from cherrypy import _cprequest, _cpwsgi
from cherrypy.process.plugins import SimplePlugin
class ReferrerTree(object):
"""An object which gathers all referrers of an object to a given depth."""
peek_length = 40
def __init__(self, ignore=None, maxdepth=2, maxparents=10):
self.ignore = ignore or []
self.ignore.append(inspect.currentframe().f_back)
self.maxdepth = maxdepth
self.maxparents = maxparents
def ascend(self, obj, depth=1):
"""Return a nested list containing referrers of the given object."""
depth += 1
parents = []
# Gather all referrers in one step to minimize
# cascading references due to repr() logic.
refs = gc.get_referrers(obj)
self.ignore.append(refs)
if len(refs) > self.maxparents:
return [("[%s referrers]" % len(refs), [])]
try:
ascendcode = self.ascend.__code__
except AttributeError:
ascendcode = self.ascend.im_func.func_code
for parent in refs:
if inspect.isframe(parent) and parent.f_code is ascendcode:
continue
if parent in self.ignore:
continue
if depth <= self.maxdepth:
parents.append((parent, self.ascend(parent, depth)))
else:
parents.append((parent, []))
return parents
def peek(self, s):
"""Return s, restricted to a sane length."""
if len(s) > (self.peek_length + 3):
half = self.peek_length // 2
return s[:half] + '...' + s[-half:]
else:
return s
def _format(self, obj, descend=True):
"""Return a string representation of a single object."""
if inspect.isframe(obj):
filename, lineno, func, context, index = inspect.getframeinfo(obj)
return "<frame of function '%s'>" % func
if not descend:
return self.peek(repr(obj))
if isinstance(obj, dict):
return "{" + ", ".join(["%s: %s" % (self._format(k, descend=False),
self._format(v, descend=False))
for k, v in obj.items()]) + "}"
elif isinstance(obj, list):
return "[" + ", ".join([self._format(item, descend=False)
for item in obj]) + "]"
elif isinstance(obj, tuple):
return "(" + ", ".join([self._format(item, descend=False)
for item in obj]) + ")"
r = self.peek(repr(obj))
if isinstance(obj, (str, int, float)):
return r
return "%s: %s" % (type(obj), r)
def format(self, tree):
"""Return a list of string reprs from a nested list of referrers."""
output = []
def ascend(branch, depth=1):
for parent, grandparents in branch:
output.append((" " * depth) + self._format(parent))
if grandparents:
ascend(grandparents, depth + 1)
ascend(tree)
return output
def get_instances(cls):
return [x for x in gc.get_objects() if isinstance(x, cls)]
class RequestCounter(SimplePlugin):
def start(self):
self.count = 0
def before_request(self):
self.count += 1
def after_request(self):
self.count -= 1
request_counter = RequestCounter(cherrypy.engine)
request_counter.subscribe()
def get_context(obj):
if isinstance(obj, _cprequest.Request):
return "path=%s;stage=%s" % (obj.path_info, obj.stage)
elif isinstance(obj, _cprequest.Response):
return "status=%s" % obj.status
elif isinstance(obj, _cpwsgi.AppResponse):
return "PATH_INFO=%s" % obj.environ.get('PATH_INFO', '')
elif hasattr(obj, "tb_lineno"):
return "tb_lineno=%s" % obj.tb_lineno
return ""
class GCRoot(object):
"""A CherryPy page handler for testing reference leaks."""
classes = [
(_cprequest.Request, 2, 2,
"Should be 1 in this request thread and 1 in the main thread."),
(_cprequest.Response, 2, 2,
"Should be 1 in this request thread and 1 in the main thread."),
(_cpwsgi.AppResponse, 1, 1,
"Should be 1 in this request thread only."),
]
def index(self):
return "Hello, world!"
index.exposed = True
def stats(self):
output = ["Statistics:"]
for trial in range(10):
if request_counter.count > 0:
break
time.sleep(0.5)
else:
output.append("\nNot all requests closed properly.")
# gc_collect isn't perfectly synchronous, because it may
# break reference cycles that then take time to fully
# finalize. Call it thrice and hope for the best.
gc.collect()
gc.collect()
unreachable = gc.collect()
if unreachable:
if objgraph is not None:
final = objgraph.by_type('Nondestructible')
if final:
objgraph.show_backrefs(final, filename='finalizers.png')
trash = {}
for x in gc.garbage:
trash[type(x)] = trash.get(type(x), 0) + 1
if trash:
output.insert(0, "\n%s unreachable objects:" % unreachable)
trash = [(v, k) for k, v in trash.items()]
trash.sort()
for pair in trash:
output.append(" " + repr(pair))
# Check declared classes to verify uncollected instances.
# These don't have to be part of a cycle; they can be
# any objects that have unanticipated referrers that keep
# them from being collected.
allobjs = {}
for cls, minobj, maxobj, msg in self.classes:
allobjs[cls] = get_instances(cls)
for cls, minobj, maxobj, msg in self.classes:
objs = allobjs[cls]
lenobj = len(objs)
if lenobj < minobj or lenobj > maxobj:
if minobj == maxobj:
output.append(
"\nExpected %s %r references, got %s." %
(minobj, cls, lenobj))
else:
output.append(
"\nExpected %s to %s %r references, got %s." %
(minobj, maxobj, cls, lenobj))
for obj in objs:
if objgraph is not None:
ig = [id(objs), id(inspect.currentframe())]
fname = "graph_%s_%s.png" % (cls.__name__, id(obj))
objgraph.show_backrefs(
obj, extra_ignore=ig, max_depth=4, too_many=20,
filename=fname, extra_info=get_context)
output.append("\nReferrers for %s (refcount=%s):" %
(repr(obj), sys.getrefcount(obj)))
t = ReferrerTree(ignore=[objs], maxdepth=3)
tree = t.ascend(obj)
output.extend(t.format(tree))
return "\n".join(output)
stats.exposed = True

@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
import warnings
warnings.warn('cherrypy.lib.http has been deprecated and will be removed '
'in CherryPy 3.3 use cherrypy.lib.httputil instead.',
DeprecationWarning)
from cherrypy.lib.httputil import *

@ -1,371 +0,0 @@
"""
This module defines functions to implement HTTP Digest Authentication
(:rfc:`2617`).
This has full compliance with 'Digest' and 'Basic' authentication methods. In
'Digest' it supports both MD5 and MD5-sess algorithms.
Usage:
First use 'doAuth' to request the client authentication for a
certain resource. You should send an httplib.UNAUTHORIZED response to the
client so he knows he has to authenticate itself.
Then use 'parseAuthorization' to retrieve the 'auth_map' used in
'checkResponse'.
To use 'checkResponse' you must have already verified the password
associated with the 'username' key in 'auth_map' dict. Then you use the
'checkResponse' function to verify if the password matches the one sent
by the client.
SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM - list of supported 'Digest' algorithms
SUPPORTED_QOP - list of supported 'Digest' 'qop'.
"""
__version__ = 1, 0, 1
__author__ = "Tiago Cogumbreiro <cogumbreiro@users.sf.net>"
__credits__ = """
Peter van Kampen for its recipe which implement most of Digest
authentication:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/302378
"""
__license__ = """
Copyright (c) 2005, Tiago Cogumbreiro <cogumbreiro@users.sf.net>
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither the name of Sylvain Hellegouarch nor the names of his
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "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 COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS 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.
"""
__all__ = ("digestAuth", "basicAuth", "doAuth", "checkResponse",
"parseAuthorization", "SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM", "md5SessionKey",
"calculateNonce", "SUPPORTED_QOP")
##########################################################################
import time
from cherrypy._cpcompat import base64_decode, ntob, md5
from cherrypy._cpcompat import parse_http_list, parse_keqv_list
MD5 = "MD5"
MD5_SESS = "MD5-sess"
AUTH = "auth"
AUTH_INT = "auth-int"
SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM = (MD5, MD5_SESS)
SUPPORTED_QOP = (AUTH, AUTH_INT)
##########################################################################
# doAuth
#
DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS = {
MD5: lambda val: md5(ntob(val)).hexdigest(),
MD5_SESS: lambda val: md5(ntob(val)).hexdigest(),
# SHA: lambda val: sha.new(ntob(val)).hexdigest (),
}
def calculateNonce(realm, algorithm=MD5):
"""This is an auxaliary function that calculates 'nonce' value. It is used
to handle sessions."""
global SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM, DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS
assert algorithm in SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM
try:
encoder = DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS[algorithm]
except KeyError:
raise NotImplementedError("The chosen algorithm (%s) does not have "
"an implementation yet" % algorithm)
return encoder("%d:%s" % (time.time(), realm))
def digestAuth(realm, algorithm=MD5, nonce=None, qop=AUTH):
"""Challenges the client for a Digest authentication."""
global SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM, DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS, SUPPORTED_QOP
assert algorithm in SUPPORTED_ALGORITHM
assert qop in SUPPORTED_QOP
if nonce is None:
nonce = calculateNonce(realm, algorithm)
return 'Digest realm="%s", nonce="%s", algorithm="%s", qop="%s"' % (
realm, nonce, algorithm, qop
)
def basicAuth(realm):
"""Challengenes the client for a Basic authentication."""
assert '"' not in realm, "Realms cannot contain the \" (quote) character."
return 'Basic realm="%s"' % realm
def doAuth(realm):
"""'doAuth' function returns the challenge string b giving priority over
Digest and fallback to Basic authentication when the browser doesn't
support the first one.
This should be set in the HTTP header under the key 'WWW-Authenticate'."""
return digestAuth(realm) + " " + basicAuth(realm)
##########################################################################
# Parse authorization parameters
#
def _parseDigestAuthorization(auth_params):
# Convert the auth params to a dict
items = parse_http_list(auth_params)
params = parse_keqv_list(items)
# Now validate the params
# Check for required parameters
required = ["username", "realm", "nonce", "uri", "response"]
for k in required:
if k not in params:
return None
# If qop is sent then cnonce and nc MUST be present
if "qop" in params and not ("cnonce" in params
and "nc" in params):
return None
# If qop is not sent, neither cnonce nor nc can be present
if ("cnonce" in params or "nc" in params) and \
"qop" not in params:
return None
return params
def _parseBasicAuthorization(auth_params):
username, password = base64_decode(auth_params).split(":", 1)
return {"username": username, "password": password}
AUTH_SCHEMES = {
"basic": _parseBasicAuthorization,
"digest": _parseDigestAuthorization,
}
def parseAuthorization(credentials):
"""parseAuthorization will convert the value of the 'Authorization' key in
the HTTP header to a map itself. If the parsing fails 'None' is returned.
"""
global AUTH_SCHEMES
auth_scheme, auth_params = credentials.split(" ", 1)
auth_scheme = auth_scheme.lower()
parser = AUTH_SCHEMES[auth_scheme]
params = parser(auth_params)
if params is None:
return
assert "auth_scheme" not in params
params["auth_scheme"] = auth_scheme
return params
##########################################################################
# Check provided response for a valid password
#
def md5SessionKey(params, password):
"""
If the "algorithm" directive's value is "MD5-sess", then A1
[the session key] is calculated only once - on the first request by the
client following receipt of a WWW-Authenticate challenge from the server.
This creates a 'session key' for the authentication of subsequent
requests and responses which is different for each "authentication
session", thus limiting the amount of material hashed with any one
key.
Because the server need only use the hash of the user
credentials in order to create the A1 value, this construction could
be used in conjunction with a third party authentication service so
that the web server would not need the actual password value. The
specification of such a protocol is beyond the scope of this
specification.
"""
keys = ("username", "realm", "nonce", "cnonce")
params_copy = {}
for key in keys:
params_copy[key] = params[key]
params_copy["algorithm"] = MD5_SESS
return _A1(params_copy, password)
def _A1(params, password):
algorithm = params.get("algorithm", MD5)
H = DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS[algorithm]
if algorithm == MD5:
# If the "algorithm" directive's value is "MD5" or is
# unspecified, then A1 is:
# A1 = unq(username-value) ":" unq(realm-value) ":" passwd
return "%s:%s:%s" % (params["username"], params["realm"], password)
elif algorithm == MD5_SESS:
# This is A1 if qop is set
# A1 = H( unq(username-value) ":" unq(realm-value) ":" passwd )
# ":" unq(nonce-value) ":" unq(cnonce-value)
h_a1 = H("%s:%s:%s" % (params["username"], params["realm"], password))
return "%s:%s:%s" % (h_a1, params["nonce"], params["cnonce"])
def _A2(params, method, kwargs):
# If the "qop" directive's value is "auth" or is unspecified, then A2 is:
# A2 = Method ":" digest-uri-value
qop = params.get("qop", "auth")
if qop == "auth":
return method + ":" + params["uri"]
elif qop == "auth-int":
# If the "qop" value is "auth-int", then A2 is:
# A2 = Method ":" digest-uri-value ":" H(entity-body)
entity_body = kwargs.get("entity_body", "")
H = kwargs["H"]
return "%s:%s:%s" % (
method,
params["uri"],
H(entity_body)
)
else:
raise NotImplementedError("The 'qop' method is unknown: %s" % qop)
def _computeDigestResponse(auth_map, password, method="GET", A1=None,
**kwargs):
"""
Generates a response respecting the algorithm defined in RFC 2617
"""
params = auth_map
algorithm = params.get("algorithm", MD5)
H = DIGEST_AUTH_ENCODERS[algorithm]
KD = lambda secret, data: H(secret + ":" + data)
qop = params.get("qop", None)
H_A2 = H(_A2(params, method, kwargs))
if algorithm == MD5_SESS and A1 is not None:
H_A1 = H(A1)
else:
H_A1 = H(_A1(params, password))
if qop in ("auth", "auth-int"):
# If the "qop" value is "auth" or "auth-int":
# request-digest = <"> < KD ( H(A1), unq(nonce-value)
# ":" nc-value
# ":" unq(cnonce-value)
# ":" unq(qop-value)
# ":" H(A2)
# ) <">
request = "%s:%s:%s:%s:%s" % (
params["nonce"],
params["nc"],
params["cnonce"],
params["qop"],
H_A2,
)
elif qop is None:
# If the "qop" directive is not present (this construction is
# for compatibility with RFC 2069):
# request-digest =
# <"> < KD ( H(A1), unq(nonce-value) ":" H(A2) ) > <">
request = "%s:%s" % (params["nonce"], H_A2)
return KD(H_A1, request)
def _checkDigestResponse(auth_map, password, method="GET", A1=None, **kwargs):
"""This function is used to verify the response given by the client when
he tries to authenticate.
Optional arguments:
entity_body - when 'qop' is set to 'auth-int' you MUST provide the
raw data you are going to send to the client (usually the
HTML page.
request_uri - the uri from the request line compared with the 'uri'
directive of the authorization map. They must represent
the same resource (unused at this time).
"""
if auth_map['realm'] != kwargs.get('realm', None):
return False
response = _computeDigestResponse(
auth_map, password, method, A1, **kwargs)
return response == auth_map["response"]
def _checkBasicResponse(auth_map, password, method='GET', encrypt=None,
**kwargs):
# Note that the Basic response doesn't provide the realm value so we cannot
# test it
pass_through = lambda password, username=None: password
encrypt = encrypt or pass_through
try:
candidate = encrypt(auth_map["password"], auth_map["username"])
except TypeError:
# if encrypt only takes one parameter, it's the password
candidate = encrypt(auth_map["password"])
return candidate == password
AUTH_RESPONSES = {
"basic": _checkBasicResponse,
"digest": _checkDigestResponse,
}
def checkResponse(auth_map, password, method="GET", encrypt=None, **kwargs):
"""'checkResponse' compares the auth_map with the password and optionally
other arguments that each implementation might need.
If the response is of type 'Basic' then the function has the following
signature::
checkBasicResponse(auth_map, password) -> bool
If the response is of type 'Digest' then the function has the following
signature::
checkDigestResponse(auth_map, password, method='GET', A1=None) -> bool
The 'A1' argument is only used in MD5_SESS algorithm based responses.
Check md5SessionKey() for more info.
"""
checker = AUTH_RESPONSES[auth_map["auth_scheme"]]
return checker(auth_map, password, method=method, encrypt=encrypt,
**kwargs)

@ -1,536 +0,0 @@
"""HTTP library functions.
This module contains functions for building an HTTP application
framework: any one, not just one whose name starts with "Ch". ;) If you
reference any modules from some popular framework inside *this* module,
FuManChu will personally hang you up by your thumbs and submit you
to a public caning.
"""
from binascii import b2a_base64
from cherrypy._cpcompat import BaseHTTPRequestHandler, HTTPDate, ntob, ntou
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, bytestr, iteritems, nativestr
from cherrypy._cpcompat import reversed, sorted, unicodestr, unquote_qs
response_codes = BaseHTTPRequestHandler.responses.copy()
# From https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/361
response_codes[500] = ('Internal Server Error',
'The server encountered an unexpected condition '
'which prevented it from fulfilling the request.')
response_codes[503] = ('Service Unavailable',
'The server is currently unable to handle the '
'request due to a temporary overloading or '
'maintenance of the server.')
import re
import urllib
def urljoin(*atoms):
"""Return the given path \*atoms, joined into a single URL.
This will correctly join a SCRIPT_NAME and PATH_INFO into the
original URL, even if either atom is blank.
"""
url = "/".join([x for x in atoms if x])
while "//" in url:
url = url.replace("//", "/")
# Special-case the final url of "", and return "/" instead.
return url or "/"
def urljoin_bytes(*atoms):
"""Return the given path *atoms, joined into a single URL.
This will correctly join a SCRIPT_NAME and PATH_INFO into the
original URL, even if either atom is blank.
"""
url = ntob("/").join([x for x in atoms if x])
while ntob("//") in url:
url = url.replace(ntob("//"), ntob("/"))
# Special-case the final url of "", and return "/" instead.
return url or ntob("/")
def protocol_from_http(protocol_str):
"""Return a protocol tuple from the given 'HTTP/x.y' string."""
return int(protocol_str[5]), int(protocol_str[7])
def get_ranges(headervalue, content_length):
"""Return a list of (start, stop) indices from a Range header, or None.
Each (start, stop) tuple will be composed of two ints, which are suitable
for use in a slicing operation. That is, the header "Range: bytes=3-6",
if applied against a Python string, is requesting resource[3:7]. This
function will return the list [(3, 7)].
If this function returns an empty list, you should return HTTP 416.
"""
if not headervalue:
return None
result = []
bytesunit, byteranges = headervalue.split("=", 1)
for brange in byteranges.split(","):
start, stop = [x.strip() for x in brange.split("-", 1)]
if start:
if not stop:
stop = content_length - 1
start, stop = int(start), int(stop)
if start >= content_length:
# From rfc 2616 sec 14.16:
# "If the server receives a request (other than one
# including an If-Range request-header field) with an
# unsatisfiable Range request-header field (that is,
# all of whose byte-range-spec values have a first-byte-pos
# value greater than the current length of the selected
# resource), it SHOULD return a response code of 416
# (Requested range not satisfiable)."
continue
if stop < start:
# From rfc 2616 sec 14.16:
# "If the server ignores a byte-range-spec because it
# is syntactically invalid, the server SHOULD treat
# the request as if the invalid Range header field
# did not exist. (Normally, this means return a 200
# response containing the full entity)."
return None
result.append((start, stop + 1))
else:
if not stop:
# See rfc quote above.
return None
# Negative subscript (last N bytes)
#
# RFC 2616 Section 14.35.1:
# If the entity is shorter than the specified suffix-length,
# the entire entity-body is used.
if int(stop) > content_length:
result.append((0, content_length))
else:
result.append((content_length - int(stop), content_length))
return result
class HeaderElement(object):
"""An element (with parameters) from an HTTP header's element list."""
def __init__(self, value, params=None):
self.value = value
if params is None:
params = {}
self.params = params
def __cmp__(self, other):
return cmp(self.value, other.value)
def __lt__(self, other):
return self.value < other.value
def __str__(self):
p = [";%s=%s" % (k, v) for k, v in iteritems(self.params)]
return str("%s%s" % (self.value, "".join(p)))
def __bytes__(self):
return ntob(self.__str__())
def __unicode__(self):
return ntou(self.__str__())
def parse(elementstr):
"""Transform 'token;key=val' to ('token', {'key': 'val'})."""
# Split the element into a value and parameters. The 'value' may
# be of the form, "token=token", but we don't split that here.
atoms = [x.strip() for x in elementstr.split(";") if x.strip()]
if not atoms:
initial_value = ''
else:
initial_value = atoms.pop(0).strip()
params = {}
for atom in atoms:
atom = [x.strip() for x in atom.split("=", 1) if x.strip()]
key = atom.pop(0)
if atom:
val = atom[0]
else:
val = ""
params[key] = val
return initial_value, params
parse = staticmethod(parse)
def from_str(cls, elementstr):
"""Construct an instance from a string of the form 'token;key=val'."""
ival, params = cls.parse(elementstr)
return cls(ival, params)
from_str = classmethod(from_str)
q_separator = re.compile(r'; *q *=')
class AcceptElement(HeaderElement):
"""An element (with parameters) from an Accept* header's element list.
AcceptElement objects are comparable; the more-preferred object will be
"less than" the less-preferred object. They are also therefore sortable;
if you sort a list of AcceptElement objects, they will be listed in
priority order; the most preferred value will be first. Yes, it should
have been the other way around, but it's too late to fix now.
"""
def from_str(cls, elementstr):
qvalue = None
# The first "q" parameter (if any) separates the initial
# media-range parameter(s) (if any) from the accept-params.
atoms = q_separator.split(elementstr, 1)
media_range = atoms.pop(0).strip()
if atoms:
# The qvalue for an Accept header can have extensions. The other
# headers cannot, but it's easier to parse them as if they did.
qvalue = HeaderElement.from_str(atoms[0].strip())
media_type, params = cls.parse(media_range)
if qvalue is not None:
params["q"] = qvalue
return cls(media_type, params)
from_str = classmethod(from_str)
def qvalue(self):
val = self.params.get("q", "1")
if isinstance(val, HeaderElement):
val = val.value
return float(val)
qvalue = property(qvalue, doc="The qvalue, or priority, of this value.")
def __cmp__(self, other):
diff = cmp(self.qvalue, other.qvalue)
if diff == 0:
diff = cmp(str(self), str(other))
return diff
def __lt__(self, other):
if self.qvalue == other.qvalue:
return str(self) < str(other)
else:
return self.qvalue < other.qvalue
RE_HEADER_SPLIT = re.compile(',(?=(?:[^"]*"[^"]*")*[^"]*$)')
def header_elements(fieldname, fieldvalue):
"""Return a sorted HeaderElement list from a comma-separated header string.
"""
if not fieldvalue:
return []
result = []
for element in RE_HEADER_SPLIT.split(fieldvalue):
if fieldname.startswith("Accept") or fieldname == 'TE':
hv = AcceptElement.from_str(element)
else:
hv = HeaderElement.from_str(element)
result.append(hv)
return list(reversed(sorted(result)))
def decode_TEXT(value):
r"""Decode :rfc:`2047` TEXT (e.g. "=?utf-8?q?f=C3=BCr?=" -> "f\xfcr")."""
try:
# Python 3
from email.header import decode_header
except ImportError:
from email.Header import decode_header
atoms = decode_header(value)
decodedvalue = ""
for atom, charset in atoms:
if charset is not None:
atom = atom.decode(charset)
decodedvalue += atom
return decodedvalue
def valid_status(status):
"""Return legal HTTP status Code, Reason-phrase and Message.
The status arg must be an int, or a str that begins with an int.
If status is an int, or a str and no reason-phrase is supplied,
a default reason-phrase will be provided.
"""
if not status:
status = 200
status = str(status)
parts = status.split(" ", 1)
if len(parts) == 1:
# No reason supplied.
code, = parts
reason = None
else:
code, reason = parts
reason = reason.strip()
try:
code = int(code)
except ValueError:
raise ValueError("Illegal response status from server "
"(%s is non-numeric)." % repr(code))
if code < 100 or code > 599:
raise ValueError("Illegal response status from server "
"(%s is out of range)." % repr(code))
if code not in response_codes:
# code is unknown but not illegal
default_reason, message = "", ""
else:
default_reason, message = response_codes[code]
if reason is None:
reason = default_reason
return code, reason, message
# NOTE: the parse_qs functions that follow are modified version of those
# in the python3.0 source - we need to pass through an encoding to the unquote
# method, but the default parse_qs function doesn't allow us to. These do.
def _parse_qs(qs, keep_blank_values=0, strict_parsing=0, encoding='utf-8'):
"""Parse a query given as a string argument.
Arguments:
qs: URL-encoded query string to be parsed
keep_blank_values: flag indicating whether blank values in
URL encoded queries should be treated as blank strings. A
true value indicates that blanks should be retained as blank
strings. The default false value indicates that blank values
are to be ignored and treated as if they were not included.
strict_parsing: flag indicating what to do with parsing errors. If
false (the default), errors are silently ignored. If true,
errors raise a ValueError exception.
Returns a dict, as G-d intended.
"""
pairs = [s2 for s1 in qs.split('&') for s2 in s1.split(';')]
d = {}
for name_value in pairs:
if not name_value and not strict_parsing:
continue
nv = name_value.split('=', 1)
if len(nv) != 2:
if strict_parsing:
raise ValueError("bad query field: %r" % (name_value,))
# Handle case of a control-name with no equal sign
if keep_blank_values:
nv.append('')
else:
continue
if len(nv[1]) or keep_blank_values:
name = unquote_qs(nv[0], encoding)
value = unquote_qs(nv[1], encoding)
if name in d:
if not isinstance(d[name], list):
d[name] = [d[name]]
d[name].append(value)
else:
d[name] = value
return d
image_map_pattern = re.compile(r"[0-9]+,[0-9]+")
def parse_query_string(query_string, keep_blank_values=True, encoding='utf-8'):
"""Build a params dictionary from a query_string.
Duplicate key/value pairs in the provided query_string will be
returned as {'key': [val1, val2, ...]}. Single key/values will
be returned as strings: {'key': 'value'}.
"""
if image_map_pattern.match(query_string):
# Server-side image map. Map the coords to 'x' and 'y'
# (like CGI::Request does).
pm = query_string.split(",")
pm = {'x': int(pm[0]), 'y': int(pm[1])}
else:
pm = _parse_qs(query_string, keep_blank_values, encoding=encoding)
return pm
class CaseInsensitiveDict(dict):
"""A case-insensitive dict subclass.
Each key is changed on entry to str(key).title().
"""
def __getitem__(self, key):
return dict.__getitem__(self, str(key).title())
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
dict.__setitem__(self, str(key).title(), value)
def __delitem__(self, key):
dict.__delitem__(self, str(key).title())
def __contains__(self, key):
return dict.__contains__(self, str(key).title())
def get(self, key, default=None):
return dict.get(self, str(key).title(), default)
if hasattr({}, 'has_key'):
def has_key(self, key):
return str(key).title() in self
def update(self, E):
for k in E.keys():
self[str(k).title()] = E[k]
def fromkeys(cls, seq, value=None):
newdict = cls()
for k in seq:
newdict[str(k).title()] = value
return newdict
fromkeys = classmethod(fromkeys)
def setdefault(self, key, x=None):
key = str(key).title()
try:
return self[key]
except KeyError:
self[key] = x
return x
def pop(self, key, default):
return dict.pop(self, str(key).title(), default)
# TEXT = <any OCTET except CTLs, but including LWS>
#
# A CRLF is allowed in the definition of TEXT only as part of a header
# field continuation. It is expected that the folding LWS will be
# replaced with a single SP before interpretation of the TEXT value."
if nativestr == bytestr:
header_translate_table = ''.join([chr(i) for i in xrange(256)])
header_translate_deletechars = ''.join(
[chr(i) for i in xrange(32)]) + chr(127)
else:
header_translate_table = None
header_translate_deletechars = bytes(range(32)) + bytes([127])
class HeaderMap(CaseInsensitiveDict):
"""A dict subclass for HTTP request and response headers.
Each key is changed on entry to str(key).title(). This allows headers
to be case-insensitive and avoid duplicates.
Values are header values (decoded according to :rfc:`2047` if necessary).
"""
protocol = (1, 1)
encodings = ["ISO-8859-1"]
# Someday, when http-bis is done, this will probably get dropped
# since few servers, clients, or intermediaries do it. But until then,
# we're going to obey the spec as is.
# "Words of *TEXT MAY contain characters from character sets other than
# ISO-8859-1 only when encoded according to the rules of RFC 2047."
use_rfc_2047 = True
def elements(self, key):
"""Return a sorted list of HeaderElements for the given header."""
key = str(key).title()
value = self.get(key)
return header_elements(key, value)
def values(self, key):
"""Return a sorted list of HeaderElement.value for the given header."""
return [e.value for e in self.elements(key)]
def output(self):
"""Transform self into a list of (name, value) tuples."""
return list(self.encode_header_items(self.items()))
def encode_header_items(cls, header_items):
"""
Prepare the sequence of name, value tuples into a form suitable for
transmitting on the wire for HTTP.
"""
for k, v in header_items:
if isinstance(k, unicodestr):
k = cls.encode(k)
if not isinstance(v, basestring):
v = str(v)
if isinstance(v, unicodestr):
v = cls.encode(v)
# See header_translate_* constants above.
# Replace only if you really know what you're doing.
k = k.translate(header_translate_table,
header_translate_deletechars)
v = v.translate(header_translate_table,
header_translate_deletechars)
yield (k, v)
encode_header_items = classmethod(encode_header_items)
def encode(cls, v):
"""Return the given header name or value, encoded for HTTP output."""
for enc in cls.encodings:
try:
return v.encode(enc)
except UnicodeEncodeError:
continue
if cls.protocol == (1, 1) and cls.use_rfc_2047:
# Encode RFC-2047 TEXT
# (e.g. u"\u8200" -> "=?utf-8?b?6IiA?=").
# We do our own here instead of using the email module
# because we never want to fold lines--folding has
# been deprecated by the HTTP working group.
v = b2a_base64(v.encode('utf-8'))
return (ntob('=?utf-8?b?') + v.strip(ntob('\n')) + ntob('?='))
raise ValueError("Could not encode header part %r using "
"any of the encodings %r." %
(v, cls.encodings))
encode = classmethod(encode)
class Host(object):
"""An internet address.
name
Should be the client's host name. If not available (because no DNS
lookup is performed), the IP address should be used instead.
"""
ip = "0.0.0.0"
port = 80
name = "unknown.tld"
def __init__(self, ip, port, name=None):
self.ip = ip
self.port = port
if name is None:
name = ip
self.name = name
def __repr__(self):
return "httputil.Host(%r, %r, %r)" % (self.ip, self.port, self.name)

@ -1,96 +0,0 @@
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, ntou, json_encode, json_decode
def json_processor(entity):
"""Read application/json data into request.json."""
if not entity.headers.get(ntou("Content-Length"), ntou("")):
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(411)
body = entity.fp.read()
try:
cherrypy.serving.request.json = json_decode(body.decode('utf-8'))
except ValueError:
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, 'Invalid JSON document')
def json_in(content_type=[ntou('application/json'), ntou('text/javascript')],
force=True, debug=False, processor=json_processor):
"""Add a processor to parse JSON request entities:
The default processor places the parsed data into request.json.
Incoming request entities which match the given content_type(s) will
be deserialized from JSON to the Python equivalent, and the result
stored at cherrypy.request.json. The 'content_type' argument may
be a Content-Type string or a list of allowable Content-Type strings.
If the 'force' argument is True (the default), then entities of other
content types will not be allowed; "415 Unsupported Media Type" is
raised instead.
Supply your own processor to use a custom decoder, or to handle the parsed
data differently. The processor can be configured via
tools.json_in.processor or via the decorator method.
Note that the deserializer requires the client send a Content-Length
request header, or it will raise "411 Length Required". If for any
other reason the request entity cannot be deserialized from JSON,
it will raise "400 Bad Request: Invalid JSON document".
You must be using Python 2.6 or greater, or have the 'simplejson'
package importable; otherwise, ValueError is raised during processing.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if isinstance(content_type, basestring):
content_type = [content_type]
if force:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Removing body processors %s' %
repr(request.body.processors.keys()), 'TOOLS.JSON_IN')
request.body.processors.clear()
request.body.default_proc = cherrypy.HTTPError(
415, 'Expected an entity of content type %s' %
', '.join(content_type))
for ct in content_type:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Adding body processor for %s' % ct, 'TOOLS.JSON_IN')
request.body.processors[ct] = processor
def json_handler(*args, **kwargs):
value = cherrypy.serving.request._json_inner_handler(*args, **kwargs)
return json_encode(value)
def json_out(content_type='application/json', debug=False,
handler=json_handler):
"""Wrap request.handler to serialize its output to JSON. Sets Content-Type.
If the given content_type is None, the Content-Type response header
is not set.
Provide your own handler to use a custom encoder. For example
cherrypy.config['tools.json_out.handler'] = <function>, or
@json_out(handler=function).
You must be using Python 2.6 or greater, or have the 'simplejson'
package importable; otherwise, ValueError is raised during processing.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
# request.handler may be set to None by e.g. the caching tool
# to signal to all components that a response body has already
# been attached, in which case we don't need to wrap anything.
if request.handler is None:
return
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Replacing %s with JSON handler' % request.handler,
'TOOLS.JSON_OUT')
request._json_inner_handler = request.handler
request.handler = handler
if content_type is not None:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Setting Content-Type to %s' %
content_type, 'TOOLS.JSON_OUT')
cherrypy.serving.response.headers['Content-Type'] = content_type

@ -1,147 +0,0 @@
"""
Platform-independent file locking. Inspired by and modeled after zc.lockfile.
"""
import os
try:
import msvcrt
except ImportError:
pass
try:
import fcntl
except ImportError:
pass
class LockError(Exception):
"Could not obtain a lock"
msg = "Unable to lock %r"
def __init__(self, path):
super(LockError, self).__init__(self.msg % path)
class UnlockError(LockError):
"Could not release a lock"
msg = "Unable to unlock %r"
# first, a default, naive locking implementation
class LockFile(object):
"""
A default, naive locking implementation. Always fails if the file
already exists.
"""
def __init__(self, path):
self.path = path
try:
fd = os.open(path, os.O_CREAT | os.O_WRONLY | os.O_EXCL)
except OSError:
raise LockError(self.path)
os.close(fd)
def release(self):
os.remove(self.path)
def remove(self):
pass
class SystemLockFile(object):
"""
An abstract base class for platform-specific locking.
"""
def __init__(self, path):
self.path = path
try:
# Open lockfile for writing without truncation:
self.fp = open(path, 'r+')
except IOError:
# If the file doesn't exist, IOError is raised; Use a+ instead.
# Note that there may be a race here. Multiple processes
# could fail on the r+ open and open the file a+, but only
# one will get the the lock and write a pid.
self.fp = open(path, 'a+')
try:
self._lock_file()
except:
self.fp.seek(1)
self.fp.close()
del self.fp
raise
self.fp.write(" %s\n" % os.getpid())
self.fp.truncate()
self.fp.flush()
def release(self):
if not hasattr(self, 'fp'):
return
self._unlock_file()
self.fp.close()
del self.fp
def remove(self):
"""
Attempt to remove the file
"""
try:
os.remove(self.path)
except:
pass
#@abc.abstract_method
# def _lock_file(self):
# """Attempt to obtain the lock on self.fp. Raise LockError if not
# acquired."""
def _unlock_file(self):
"""Attempt to obtain the lock on self.fp. Raise UnlockError if not
released."""
class WindowsLockFile(SystemLockFile):
def _lock_file(self):
# Lock just the first byte
try:
msvcrt.locking(self.fp.fileno(), msvcrt.LK_NBLCK, 1)
except IOError:
raise LockError(self.fp.name)
def _unlock_file(self):
try:
self.fp.seek(0)
msvcrt.locking(self.fp.fileno(), msvcrt.LK_UNLCK, 1)
except IOError:
raise UnlockError(self.fp.name)
if 'msvcrt' in globals():
LockFile = WindowsLockFile
class UnixLockFile(SystemLockFile):
def _lock_file(self):
flags = fcntl.LOCK_EX | fcntl.LOCK_NB
try:
fcntl.flock(self.fp.fileno(), flags)
except IOError:
raise LockError(self.fp.name)
# no need to implement _unlock_file, it will be unlocked on close()
if 'fcntl' in globals():
LockFile = UnixLockFile

@ -1,47 +0,0 @@
import datetime
class NeverExpires(object):
def expired(self):
return False
class Timer(object):
"""
A simple timer that will indicate when an expiration time has passed.
"""
def __init__(self, expiration):
"Create a timer that expires at `expiration` (UTC datetime)"
self.expiration = expiration
@classmethod
def after(cls, elapsed):
"""
Return a timer that will expire after `elapsed` passes.
"""
return cls(datetime.datetime.utcnow() + elapsed)
def expired(self):
return datetime.datetime.utcnow() >= self.expiration
class LockTimeout(Exception):
"An exception when a lock could not be acquired before a timeout period"
class LockChecker(object):
"""
Keep track of the time and detect if a timeout has expired
"""
def __init__(self, session_id, timeout):
self.session_id = session_id
if timeout:
self.timer = Timer.after(timeout)
else:
self.timer = NeverExpires()
def expired(self):
if self.timer.expired():
raise LockTimeout(
"Timeout acquiring lock for %(session_id)s" % vars(self))
return False

@ -1,216 +0,0 @@
"""Profiler tools for CherryPy.
CherryPy users
==============
You can profile any of your pages as follows::
from cherrypy.lib import profiler
class Root:
p = profile.Profiler("/path/to/profile/dir")
def index(self):
self.p.run(self._index)
index.exposed = True
def _index(self):
return "Hello, world!"
cherrypy.tree.mount(Root())
You can also turn on profiling for all requests
using the ``make_app`` function as WSGI middleware.
CherryPy developers
===================
This module can be used whenever you make changes to CherryPy,
to get a quick sanity-check on overall CP performance. Use the
``--profile`` flag when running the test suite. Then, use the ``serve()``
function to browse the results in a web browser. If you run this
module from the command line, it will call ``serve()`` for you.
"""
def new_func_strip_path(func_name):
"""Make profiler output more readable by adding `__init__` modules' parents
"""
filename, line, name = func_name
if filename.endswith("__init__.py"):
return os.path.basename(filename[:-12]) + filename[-12:], line, name
return os.path.basename(filename), line, name
try:
import profile
import pstats
pstats.func_strip_path = new_func_strip_path
except ImportError:
profile = None
pstats = None
import os
import os.path
import sys
import warnings
from cherrypy._cpcompat import StringIO
_count = 0
class Profiler(object):
def __init__(self, path=None):
if not path:
path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "profile")
self.path = path
if not os.path.exists(path):
os.makedirs(path)
def run(self, func, *args, **params):
"""Dump profile data into self.path."""
global _count
c = _count = _count + 1
path = os.path.join(self.path, "cp_%04d.prof" % c)
prof = profile.Profile()
result = prof.runcall(func, *args, **params)
prof.dump_stats(path)
return result
def statfiles(self):
""":rtype: list of available profiles.
"""
return [f for f in os.listdir(self.path)
if f.startswith("cp_") and f.endswith(".prof")]
def stats(self, filename, sortby='cumulative'):
""":rtype stats(index): output of print_stats() for the given profile.
"""
sio = StringIO()
if sys.version_info >= (2, 5):
s = pstats.Stats(os.path.join(self.path, filename), stream=sio)
s.strip_dirs()
s.sort_stats(sortby)
s.print_stats()
else:
# pstats.Stats before Python 2.5 didn't take a 'stream' arg,
# but just printed to stdout. So re-route stdout.
s = pstats.Stats(os.path.join(self.path, filename))
s.strip_dirs()
s.sort_stats(sortby)
oldout = sys.stdout
try:
sys.stdout = sio
s.print_stats()
finally:
sys.stdout = oldout
response = sio.getvalue()
sio.close()
return response
def index(self):
return """<html>
<head><title>CherryPy profile data</title></head>
<frameset cols='200, 1*'>
<frame src='menu' />
<frame name='main' src='' />
</frameset>
</html>
"""
index.exposed = True
def menu(self):
yield "<h2>Profiling runs</h2>"
yield "<p>Click on one of the runs below to see profiling data.</p>"
runs = self.statfiles()
runs.sort()
for i in runs:
yield "<a href='report?filename=%s' target='main'>%s</a><br />" % (
i, i)
menu.exposed = True
def report(self, filename):
import cherrypy
cherrypy.response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/plain'
return self.stats(filename)
report.exposed = True
class ProfileAggregator(Profiler):
def __init__(self, path=None):
Profiler.__init__(self, path)
global _count
self.count = _count = _count + 1
self.profiler = profile.Profile()
def run(self, func, *args, **params):
path = os.path.join(self.path, "cp_%04d.prof" % self.count)
result = self.profiler.runcall(func, *args, **params)
self.profiler.dump_stats(path)
return result
class make_app:
def __init__(self, nextapp, path=None, aggregate=False):
"""Make a WSGI middleware app which wraps 'nextapp' with profiling.
nextapp
the WSGI application to wrap, usually an instance of
cherrypy.Application.
path
where to dump the profiling output.
aggregate
if True, profile data for all HTTP requests will go in
a single file. If False (the default), each HTTP request will
dump its profile data into a separate file.
"""
if profile is None or pstats is None:
msg = ("Your installation of Python does not have a profile "
"module. If you're on Debian, try "
"`sudo apt-get install python-profiler`. "
"See http://www.cherrypy.org/wiki/ProfilingOnDebian "
"for details.")
warnings.warn(msg)
self.nextapp = nextapp
self.aggregate = aggregate
if aggregate:
self.profiler = ProfileAggregator(path)
else:
self.profiler = Profiler(path)
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
def gather():
result = []
for line in self.nextapp(environ, start_response):
result.append(line)
return result
return self.profiler.run(gather)
def serve(path=None, port=8080):
if profile is None or pstats is None:
msg = ("Your installation of Python does not have a profile module. "
"If you're on Debian, try "
"`sudo apt-get install python-profiler`. "
"See http://www.cherrypy.org/wiki/ProfilingOnDebian "
"for details.")
warnings.warn(msg)
import cherrypy
cherrypy.config.update({'server.socket_port': int(port),
'server.thread_pool': 10,
'environment': "production",
})
cherrypy.quickstart(Profiler(path))
if __name__ == "__main__":
serve(*tuple(sys.argv[1:]))

@ -1,503 +0,0 @@
"""Generic configuration system using unrepr.
Configuration data may be supplied as a Python dictionary, as a filename,
or as an open file object. When you supply a filename or file, Python's
builtin ConfigParser is used (with some extensions).
Namespaces
----------
Configuration keys are separated into namespaces by the first "." in the key.
The only key that cannot exist in a namespace is the "environment" entry.
This special entry 'imports' other config entries from a template stored in
the Config.environments dict.
You can define your own namespaces to be called when new config is merged
by adding a named handler to Config.namespaces. The name can be any string,
and the handler must be either a callable or a context manager.
"""
try:
# Python 3.0+
from configparser import ConfigParser
except ImportError:
from ConfigParser import ConfigParser
try:
set
except NameError:
from sets import Set as set
try:
basestring
except NameError:
basestring = str
try:
# Python 3
import builtins
except ImportError:
# Python 2
import __builtin__ as builtins
import operator as _operator
import sys
def as_dict(config):
"""Return a dict from 'config' whether it is a dict, file, or filename."""
if isinstance(config, basestring):
config = Parser().dict_from_file(config)
elif hasattr(config, 'read'):
config = Parser().dict_from_file(config)
return config
class NamespaceSet(dict):
"""A dict of config namespace names and handlers.
Each config entry should begin with a namespace name; the corresponding
namespace handler will be called once for each config entry in that
namespace, and will be passed two arguments: the config key (with the
namespace removed) and the config value.
Namespace handlers may be any Python callable; they may also be
Python 2.5-style 'context managers', in which case their __enter__
method should return a callable to be used as the handler.
See cherrypy.tools (the Toolbox class) for an example.
"""
def __call__(self, config):
"""Iterate through config and pass it to each namespace handler.
config
A flat dict, where keys use dots to separate
namespaces, and values are arbitrary.
The first name in each config key is used to look up the corresponding
namespace handler. For example, a config entry of {'tools.gzip.on': v}
will call the 'tools' namespace handler with the args: ('gzip.on', v)
"""
# Separate the given config into namespaces
ns_confs = {}
for k in config:
if "." in k:
ns, name = k.split(".", 1)
bucket = ns_confs.setdefault(ns, {})
bucket[name] = config[k]
# I chose __enter__ and __exit__ so someday this could be
# rewritten using Python 2.5's 'with' statement:
# for ns, handler in self.iteritems():
# with handler as callable:
# for k, v in ns_confs.get(ns, {}).iteritems():
# callable(k, v)
for ns, handler in self.items():
exit = getattr(handler, "__exit__", None)
if exit:
callable = handler.__enter__()
no_exc = True
try:
try:
for k, v in ns_confs.get(ns, {}).items():
callable(k, v)
except:
# The exceptional case is handled here
no_exc = False
if exit is None:
raise
if not exit(*sys.exc_info()):
raise
# The exception is swallowed if exit() returns true
finally:
# The normal and non-local-goto cases are handled here
if no_exc and exit:
exit(None, None, None)
else:
for k, v in ns_confs.get(ns, {}).items():
handler(k, v)
def __repr__(self):
return "%s.%s(%s)" % (self.__module__, self.__class__.__name__,
dict.__repr__(self))
def __copy__(self):
newobj = self.__class__()
newobj.update(self)
return newobj
copy = __copy__
class Config(dict):
"""A dict-like set of configuration data, with defaults and namespaces.
May take a file, filename, or dict.
"""
defaults = {}
environments = {}
namespaces = NamespaceSet()
def __init__(self, file=None, **kwargs):
self.reset()
if file is not None:
self.update(file)
if kwargs:
self.update(kwargs)
def reset(self):
"""Reset self to default values."""
self.clear()
dict.update(self, self.defaults)
def update(self, config):
"""Update self from a dict, file or filename."""
if isinstance(config, basestring):
# Filename
config = Parser().dict_from_file(config)
elif hasattr(config, 'read'):
# Open file object
config = Parser().dict_from_file(config)
else:
config = config.copy()
self._apply(config)
def _apply(self, config):
"""Update self from a dict."""
which_env = config.get('environment')
if which_env:
env = self.environments[which_env]
for k in env:
if k not in config:
config[k] = env[k]
dict.update(self, config)
self.namespaces(config)
def __setitem__(self, k, v):
dict.__setitem__(self, k, v)
self.namespaces({k: v})
class Parser(ConfigParser):
"""Sub-class of ConfigParser that keeps the case of options and that
raises an exception if the file cannot be read.
"""
def optionxform(self, optionstr):
return optionstr
def read(self, filenames):
if isinstance(filenames, basestring):
filenames = [filenames]
for filename in filenames:
# try:
# fp = open(filename)
# except IOError:
# continue
fp = open(filename)
try:
self._read(fp, filename)
finally:
fp.close()
def as_dict(self, raw=False, vars=None):
"""Convert an INI file to a dictionary"""
# Load INI file into a dict
result = {}
for section in self.sections():
if section not in result:
result[section] = {}
for option in self.options(section):
value = self.get(section, option, raw=raw, vars=vars)
try:
value = unrepr(value)
except Exception:
x = sys.exc_info()[1]
msg = ("Config error in section: %r, option: %r, "
"value: %r. Config values must be valid Python." %
(section, option, value))
raise ValueError(msg, x.__class__.__name__, x.args)
result[section][option] = value
return result
def dict_from_file(self, file):
if hasattr(file, 'read'):
self.readfp(file)
else:
self.read(file)
return self.as_dict()
# public domain "unrepr" implementation, found on the web and then improved.
class _Builder2:
def build(self, o):
m = getattr(self, 'build_' + o.__class__.__name__, None)
if m is None:
raise TypeError("unrepr does not recognize %s" %
repr(o.__class__.__name__))
return m(o)
def astnode(self, s):
"""Return a Python2 ast Node compiled from a string."""
try:
import compiler
except ImportError:
# Fallback to eval when compiler package is not available,
# e.g. IronPython 1.0.
return eval(s)
p = compiler.parse("__tempvalue__ = " + s)
return p.getChildren()[1].getChildren()[0].getChildren()[1]
def build_Subscript(self, o):
expr, flags, subs = o.getChildren()
expr = self.build(expr)
subs = self.build(subs)
return expr[subs]
def build_CallFunc(self, o):
children = o.getChildren()
# Build callee from first child
callee = self.build(children[0])
# Build args and kwargs from remaining children
args = []
kwargs = {}
for child in children[1:]:
class_name = child.__class__.__name__
# None is ignored
if class_name == 'NoneType':
continue
# Keywords become kwargs
if class_name == 'Keyword':
kwargs.update(self.build(child))
# Everything else becomes args
else :
args.append(self.build(child))
return callee(*args, **kwargs)
def build_Keyword(self, o):
key, value_obj = o.getChildren()
value = self.build(value_obj)
kw_dict = {key: value}
return kw_dict
def build_List(self, o):
return map(self.build, o.getChildren())
def build_Const(self, o):
return o.value
def build_Dict(self, o):
d = {}
i = iter(map(self.build, o.getChildren()))
for el in i:
d[el] = i.next()
return d
def build_Tuple(self, o):
return tuple(self.build_List(o))
def build_Name(self, o):
name = o.name
if name == 'None':
return None
if name == 'True':
return True
if name == 'False':
return False
# See if the Name is a package or module. If it is, import it.
try:
return modules(name)
except ImportError:
pass
# See if the Name is in builtins.
try:
return getattr(builtins, name)
except AttributeError:
pass
raise TypeError("unrepr could not resolve the name %s" % repr(name))
def build_Add(self, o):
left, right = map(self.build, o.getChildren())
return left + right
def build_Mul(self, o):
left, right = map(self.build, o.getChildren())
return left * right
def build_Getattr(self, o):
parent = self.build(o.expr)
return getattr(parent, o.attrname)
def build_NoneType(self, o):
return None
def build_UnarySub(self, o):
return -self.build(o.getChildren()[0])
def build_UnaryAdd(self, o):
return self.build(o.getChildren()[0])
class _Builder3:
def build(self, o):
m = getattr(self, 'build_' + o.__class__.__name__, None)
if m is None:
raise TypeError("unrepr does not recognize %s" %
repr(o.__class__.__name__))
return m(o)
def astnode(self, s):
"""Return a Python3 ast Node compiled from a string."""
try:
import ast
except ImportError:
# Fallback to eval when ast package is not available,
# e.g. IronPython 1.0.
return eval(s)
p = ast.parse("__tempvalue__ = " + s)
return p.body[0].value
def build_Subscript(self, o):
return self.build(o.value)[self.build(o.slice)]
def build_Index(self, o):
return self.build(o.value)
def build_Call(self, o):
callee = self.build(o.func)
if o.args is None:
args = ()
else:
args = tuple([self.build(a) for a in o.args])
if o.starargs is None:
starargs = ()
else:
starargs = self.build(o.starargs)
if o.kwargs is None:
kwargs = {}
else:
kwargs = self.build(o.kwargs)
return callee(*(args + starargs), **kwargs)
def build_List(self, o):
return list(map(self.build, o.elts))
def build_Str(self, o):
return o.s
def build_Num(self, o):
return o.n
def build_Dict(self, o):
return dict([(self.build(k), self.build(v))
for k, v in zip(o.keys, o.values)])
def build_Tuple(self, o):
return tuple(self.build_List(o))
def build_Name(self, o):
name = o.id
if name == 'None':
return None
if name == 'True':
return True
if name == 'False':
return False
# See if the Name is a package or module. If it is, import it.
try:
return modules(name)
except ImportError:
pass
# See if the Name is in builtins.
try:
import builtins
return getattr(builtins, name)
except AttributeError:
pass
raise TypeError("unrepr could not resolve the name %s" % repr(name))
def build_NameConstant(self, o):
return o.value
def build_UnaryOp(self, o):
op, operand = map(self.build, [o.op, o.operand])
return op(operand)
def build_BinOp(self, o):
left, op, right = map(self.build, [o.left, o.op, o.right])
return op(left, right)
def build_Add(self, o):
return _operator.add
def build_Mult(self, o):
return _operator.mul
def build_USub(self, o):
return _operator.neg
def build_Attribute(self, o):
parent = self.build(o.value)
return getattr(parent, o.attr)
def build_NoneType(self, o):
return None
def unrepr(s):
"""Return a Python object compiled from a string."""
if not s:
return s
if sys.version_info < (3, 0):
b = _Builder2()
else:
b = _Builder3()
obj = b.astnode(s)
return b.build(obj)
def modules(modulePath):
"""Load a module and retrieve a reference to that module."""
__import__(modulePath)
return sys.modules[modulePath]
def attributes(full_attribute_name):
"""Load a module and retrieve an attribute of that module."""
# Parse out the path, module, and attribute
last_dot = full_attribute_name.rfind(".")
attr_name = full_attribute_name[last_dot + 1:]
mod_path = full_attribute_name[:last_dot]
mod = modules(mod_path)
# Let an AttributeError propagate outward.
try:
attr = getattr(mod, attr_name)
except AttributeError:
raise AttributeError("'%s' object has no attribute '%s'"
% (mod_path, attr_name))
# Return a reference to the attribute.
return attr

@ -1,968 +0,0 @@
"""Session implementation for CherryPy.
You need to edit your config file to use sessions. Here's an example::
[/]
tools.sessions.on = True
tools.sessions.storage_type = "file"
tools.sessions.storage_path = "/home/site/sessions"
tools.sessions.timeout = 60
This sets the session to be stored in files in the directory
/home/site/sessions, and the session timeout to 60 minutes. If you omit
``storage_type`` the sessions will be saved in RAM.
``tools.sessions.on`` is the only required line for working sessions,
the rest are optional.
By default, the session ID is passed in a cookie, so the client's browser must
have cookies enabled for your site.
To set data for the current session, use
``cherrypy.session['fieldname'] = 'fieldvalue'``;
to get data use ``cherrypy.session.get('fieldname')``.
================
Locking sessions
================
By default, the ``'locking'`` mode of sessions is ``'implicit'``, which means
the session is locked early and unlocked late. Be mindful of this default mode
for any requests that take a long time to process (streaming responses,
expensive calculations, database lookups, API calls, etc), as other concurrent
requests that also utilize sessions will hang until the session is unlocked.
If you want to control when the session data is locked and unlocked,
set ``tools.sessions.locking = 'explicit'``. Then call
``cherrypy.session.acquire_lock()`` and ``cherrypy.session.release_lock()``.
Regardless of which mode you use, the session is guaranteed to be unlocked when
the request is complete.
=================
Expiring Sessions
=================
You can force a session to expire with :func:`cherrypy.lib.sessions.expire`.
Simply call that function at the point you want the session to expire, and it
will cause the session cookie to expire client-side.
===========================
Session Fixation Protection
===========================
If CherryPy receives, via a request cookie, a session id that it does not
recognize, it will reject that id and create a new one to return in the
response cookie. This `helps prevent session fixation attacks
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Session_fixation#Regenerate_SID_on_each_request>`_.
However, CherryPy "recognizes" a session id by looking up the saved session
data for that id. Therefore, if you never save any session data,
**you will get a new session id for every request**.
================
Sharing Sessions
================
If you run multiple instances of CherryPy (for example via mod_python behind
Apache prefork), you most likely cannot use the RAM session backend, since each
instance of CherryPy will have its own memory space. Use a different backend
instead, and verify that all instances are pointing at the same file or db
location. Alternately, you might try a load balancer which makes sessions
"sticky". Google is your friend, there.
================
Expiration Dates
================
The response cookie will possess an expiration date to inform the client at
which point to stop sending the cookie back in requests. If the server time
and client time differ, expect sessions to be unreliable. **Make sure the
system time of your server is accurate**.
CherryPy defaults to a 60-minute session timeout, which also applies to the
cookie which is sent to the client. Unfortunately, some versions of Safari
("4 public beta" on Windows XP at least) appear to have a bug in their parsing
of the GMT expiration date--they appear to interpret the date as one hour in
the past. Sixty minutes minus one hour is pretty close to zero, so you may
experience this bug as a new session id for every request, unless the requests
are less than one second apart. To fix, try increasing the session.timeout.
On the other extreme, some users report Firefox sending cookies after their
expiration date, although this was on a system with an inaccurate system time.
Maybe FF doesn't trust system time.
"""
import sys
import datetime
import os
import time
import threading
import types
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import copyitems, pickle, random20, unicodestr
from cherrypy.lib import httputil
from cherrypy.lib import lockfile
from cherrypy.lib import locking
from cherrypy.lib import is_iterator
missing = object()
class Session(object):
"""A CherryPy dict-like Session object (one per request)."""
_id = None
id_observers = None
"A list of callbacks to which to pass new id's."
def _get_id(self):
return self._id
def _set_id(self, value):
self._id = value
for o in self.id_observers:
o(value)
id = property(_get_id, _set_id, doc="The current session ID.")
timeout = 60
"Number of minutes after which to delete session data."
locked = False
"""
If True, this session instance has exclusive read/write access
to session data."""
loaded = False
"""
If True, data has been retrieved from storage. This should happen
automatically on the first attempt to access session data."""
clean_thread = None
"Class-level Monitor which calls self.clean_up."
clean_freq = 5
"The poll rate for expired session cleanup in minutes."
originalid = None
"The session id passed by the client. May be missing or unsafe."
missing = False
"True if the session requested by the client did not exist."
regenerated = False
"""
True if the application called session.regenerate(). This is not set by
internal calls to regenerate the session id."""
debug = False
"If True, log debug information."
# --------------------- Session management methods --------------------- #
def __init__(self, id=None, **kwargs):
self.id_observers = []
self._data = {}
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(self, k, v)
self.originalid = id
self.missing = False
if id is None:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('No id given; making a new one', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
self._regenerate()
else:
self.id = id
if self._exists():
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Set id to %s.' % id, 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
else:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Expired or malicious session %r; '
'making a new one' % id, 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
# Expired or malicious session. Make a new one.
# See https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/709.
self.id = None
self.missing = True
self._regenerate()
def now(self):
"""Generate the session specific concept of 'now'.
Other session providers can override this to use alternative,
possibly timezone aware, versions of 'now'.
"""
return datetime.datetime.now()
def regenerate(self):
"""Replace the current session (with a new id)."""
self.regenerated = True
self._regenerate()
def _regenerate(self):
if self.id is not None:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Deleting the existing session %r before '
'regeneration.' % self.id,
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
self.delete()
old_session_was_locked = self.locked
if old_session_was_locked:
self.release_lock()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Old lock released.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
self.id = None
while self.id is None:
self.id = self.generate_id()
# Assert that the generated id is not already stored.
if self._exists():
self.id = None
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Set id to generated %s.' % self.id,
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
if old_session_was_locked:
self.acquire_lock()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Regenerated lock acquired.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
def clean_up(self):
"""Clean up expired sessions."""
pass
def generate_id(self):
"""Return a new session id."""
return random20()
def save(self):
"""Save session data."""
try:
# If session data has never been loaded then it's never been
# accessed: no need to save it
if self.loaded:
t = datetime.timedelta(seconds=self.timeout * 60)
expiration_time = self.now() + t
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Saving session %r with expiry %s' %
(self.id, expiration_time),
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
self._save(expiration_time)
else:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Skipping save of session %r (no session loaded).' %
self.id, 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
finally:
if self.locked:
# Always release the lock if the user didn't release it
self.release_lock()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Lock released after save.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
def load(self):
"""Copy stored session data into this session instance."""
data = self._load()
# data is either None or a tuple (session_data, expiration_time)
if data is None or data[1] < self.now():
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Expired session %r, flushing data.' % self.id,
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
self._data = {}
else:
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Data loaded for session %r.' % self.id,
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
self._data = data[0]
self.loaded = True
# Stick the clean_thread in the class, not the instance.
# The instances are created and destroyed per-request.
cls = self.__class__
if self.clean_freq and not cls.clean_thread:
# clean_up is an instancemethod and not a classmethod,
# so that tool config can be accessed inside the method.
t = cherrypy.process.plugins.Monitor(
cherrypy.engine, self.clean_up, self.clean_freq * 60,
name='Session cleanup')
t.subscribe()
cls.clean_thread = t
t.start()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Started cleanup thread.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
def delete(self):
"""Delete stored session data."""
self._delete()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Deleted session %s.' % self.id,
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
# -------------------- Application accessor methods -------------------- #
def __getitem__(self, key):
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return self._data[key]
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
self._data[key] = value
def __delitem__(self, key):
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
del self._data[key]
def pop(self, key, default=missing):
"""Remove the specified key and return the corresponding value.
If key is not found, default is returned if given,
otherwise KeyError is raised.
"""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
if default is missing:
return self._data.pop(key)
else:
return self._data.pop(key, default)
def __contains__(self, key):
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return key in self._data
if hasattr({}, 'has_key'):
def has_key(self, key):
"""D.has_key(k) -> True if D has a key k, else False."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return key in self._data
def get(self, key, default=None):
"""D.get(k[,d]) -> D[k] if k in D, else d. d defaults to None."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return self._data.get(key, default)
def update(self, d):
"""D.update(E) -> None. Update D from E: for k in E: D[k] = E[k]."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
self._data.update(d)
def setdefault(self, key, default=None):
"""D.setdefault(k[,d]) -> D.get(k,d), also set D[k]=d if k not in D."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return self._data.setdefault(key, default)
def clear(self):
"""D.clear() -> None. Remove all items from D."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
self._data.clear()
def keys(self):
"""D.keys() -> list of D's keys."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return self._data.keys()
def items(self):
"""D.items() -> list of D's (key, value) pairs, as 2-tuples."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return self._data.items()
def values(self):
"""D.values() -> list of D's values."""
if not self.loaded:
self.load()
return self._data.values()
class RamSession(Session):
# Class-level objects. Don't rebind these!
cache = {}
locks = {}
def clean_up(self):
"""Clean up expired sessions."""
now = self.now()
for _id, (data, expiration_time) in copyitems(self.cache):
if expiration_time <= now:
try:
del self.cache[_id]
except KeyError:
pass
try:
if self.locks[_id].acquire(blocking=False):
lock = self.locks.pop(_id)
lock.release()
except KeyError:
pass
# added to remove obsolete lock objects
for _id in list(self.locks):
if _id not in self.cache and self.locks[_id].acquire(blocking=False):
lock = self.locks.pop(_id)
lock.release()
def _exists(self):
return self.id in self.cache
def _load(self):
return self.cache.get(self.id)
def _save(self, expiration_time):
self.cache[self.id] = (self._data, expiration_time)
def _delete(self):
self.cache.pop(self.id, None)
def acquire_lock(self):
"""Acquire an exclusive lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
self.locked = True
self.locks.setdefault(self.id, threading.RLock()).acquire()
def release_lock(self):
"""Release the lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
self.locks[self.id].release()
self.locked = False
def __len__(self):
"""Return the number of active sessions."""
return len(self.cache)
class FileSession(Session):
"""Implementation of the File backend for sessions
storage_path
The folder where session data will be saved. Each session
will be saved as pickle.dump(data, expiration_time) in its own file;
the filename will be self.SESSION_PREFIX + self.id.
lock_timeout
A timedelta or numeric seconds indicating how long
to block acquiring a lock. If None (default), acquiring a lock
will block indefinitely.
"""
SESSION_PREFIX = 'session-'
LOCK_SUFFIX = '.lock'
pickle_protocol = pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL
def __init__(self, id=None, **kwargs):
# The 'storage_path' arg is required for file-based sessions.
kwargs['storage_path'] = os.path.abspath(kwargs['storage_path'])
kwargs.setdefault('lock_timeout', None)
Session.__init__(self, id=id, **kwargs)
# validate self.lock_timeout
if isinstance(self.lock_timeout, (int, float)):
self.lock_timeout = datetime.timedelta(seconds=self.lock_timeout)
if not isinstance(self.lock_timeout, (datetime.timedelta, type(None))):
raise ValueError("Lock timeout must be numeric seconds or "
"a timedelta instance.")
def setup(cls, **kwargs):
"""Set up the storage system for file-based sessions.
This should only be called once per process; this will be done
automatically when using sessions.init (as the built-in Tool does).
"""
# The 'storage_path' arg is required for file-based sessions.
kwargs['storage_path'] = os.path.abspath(kwargs['storage_path'])
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(cls, k, v)
setup = classmethod(setup)
def _get_file_path(self):
f = os.path.join(self.storage_path, self.SESSION_PREFIX + self.id)
if not os.path.abspath(f).startswith(self.storage_path):
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(400, "Invalid session id in cookie.")
return f
def _exists(self):
path = self._get_file_path()
return os.path.exists(path)
def _load(self, path=None):
assert self.locked, ("The session load without being locked. "
"Check your tools' priority levels.")
if path is None:
path = self._get_file_path()
try:
f = open(path, "rb")
try:
return pickle.load(f)
finally:
f.close()
except (IOError, EOFError):
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log("Error loading the session pickle: %s" %
e, 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
return None
def _save(self, expiration_time):
assert self.locked, ("The session was saved without being locked. "
"Check your tools' priority levels.")
f = open(self._get_file_path(), "wb")
try:
pickle.dump((self._data, expiration_time), f, self.pickle_protocol)
finally:
f.close()
def _delete(self):
assert self.locked, ("The session deletion without being locked. "
"Check your tools' priority levels.")
try:
os.unlink(self._get_file_path())
except OSError:
pass
def acquire_lock(self, path=None):
"""Acquire an exclusive lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
if path is None:
path = self._get_file_path()
path += self.LOCK_SUFFIX
checker = locking.LockChecker(self.id, self.lock_timeout)
while not checker.expired():
try:
self.lock = lockfile.LockFile(path)
except lockfile.LockError:
time.sleep(0.1)
else:
break
self.locked = True
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Lock acquired.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
def release_lock(self, path=None):
"""Release the lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
self.lock.release()
self.lock.remove()
self.locked = False
def clean_up(self):
"""Clean up expired sessions."""
now = self.now()
# Iterate over all session files in self.storage_path
for fname in os.listdir(self.storage_path):
if (fname.startswith(self.SESSION_PREFIX)
and not fname.endswith(self.LOCK_SUFFIX)):
# We have a session file: lock and load it and check
# if it's expired. If it fails, nevermind.
path = os.path.join(self.storage_path, fname)
self.acquire_lock(path)
if self.debug:
# This is a bit of a hack, since we're calling clean_up
# on the first instance rather than the entire class,
# so depending on whether you have "debug" set on the
# path of the first session called, this may not run.
cherrypy.log('Cleanup lock acquired.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
try:
contents = self._load(path)
# _load returns None on IOError
if contents is not None:
data, expiration_time = contents
if expiration_time < now:
# Session expired: deleting it
os.unlink(path)
finally:
self.release_lock(path)
def __len__(self):
"""Return the number of active sessions."""
return len([fname for fname in os.listdir(self.storage_path)
if (fname.startswith(self.SESSION_PREFIX)
and not fname.endswith(self.LOCK_SUFFIX))])
class PostgresqlSession(Session):
""" Implementation of the PostgreSQL backend for sessions. It assumes
a table like this::
create table session (
id varchar(40),
data text,
expiration_time timestamp
)
You must provide your own get_db function.
"""
pickle_protocol = pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL
def __init__(self, id=None, **kwargs):
Session.__init__(self, id, **kwargs)
self.cursor = self.db.cursor()
def setup(cls, **kwargs):
"""Set up the storage system for Postgres-based sessions.
This should only be called once per process; this will be done
automatically when using sessions.init (as the built-in Tool does).
"""
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(cls, k, v)
self.db = self.get_db()
setup = classmethod(setup)
def __del__(self):
if self.cursor:
self.cursor.close()
self.db.commit()
def _exists(self):
# Select session data from table
self.cursor.execute('select data, expiration_time from session '
'where id=%s', (self.id,))
rows = self.cursor.fetchall()
return bool(rows)
def _load(self):
# Select session data from table
self.cursor.execute('select data, expiration_time from session '
'where id=%s', (self.id,))
rows = self.cursor.fetchall()
if not rows:
return None
pickled_data, expiration_time = rows[0]
data = pickle.loads(pickled_data)
return data, expiration_time
def _save(self, expiration_time):
pickled_data = pickle.dumps(self._data, self.pickle_protocol)
self.cursor.execute('update session set data = %s, '
'expiration_time = %s where id = %s',
(pickled_data, expiration_time, self.id))
def _delete(self):
self.cursor.execute('delete from session where id=%s', (self.id,))
def acquire_lock(self):
"""Acquire an exclusive lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
# We use the "for update" clause to lock the row
self.locked = True
self.cursor.execute('select id from session where id=%s for update',
(self.id,))
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Lock acquired.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
def release_lock(self):
"""Release the lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
# We just close the cursor and that will remove the lock
# introduced by the "for update" clause
self.cursor.close()
self.locked = False
def clean_up(self):
"""Clean up expired sessions."""
self.cursor.execute('delete from session where expiration_time < %s',
(self.now(),))
class MemcachedSession(Session):
# The most popular memcached client for Python isn't thread-safe.
# Wrap all .get and .set operations in a single lock.
mc_lock = threading.RLock()
# This is a seperate set of locks per session id.
locks = {}
servers = ['127.0.0.1:11211']
def setup(cls, **kwargs):
"""Set up the storage system for memcached-based sessions.
This should only be called once per process; this will be done
automatically when using sessions.init (as the built-in Tool does).
"""
for k, v in kwargs.items():
setattr(cls, k, v)
import memcache
cls.cache = memcache.Client(cls.servers)
setup = classmethod(setup)
def _get_id(self):
return self._id
def _set_id(self, value):
# This encode() call is where we differ from the superclass.
# Memcache keys MUST be byte strings, not unicode.
if isinstance(value, unicodestr):
value = value.encode('utf-8')
self._id = value
for o in self.id_observers:
o(value)
id = property(_get_id, _set_id, doc="The current session ID.")
def _exists(self):
self.mc_lock.acquire()
try:
return bool(self.cache.get(self.id))
finally:
self.mc_lock.release()
def _load(self):
self.mc_lock.acquire()
try:
return self.cache.get(self.id)
finally:
self.mc_lock.release()
def _save(self, expiration_time):
# Send the expiration time as "Unix time" (seconds since 1/1/1970)
td = int(time.mktime(expiration_time.timetuple()))
self.mc_lock.acquire()
try:
if not self.cache.set(self.id, (self._data, expiration_time), td):
raise AssertionError(
"Session data for id %r not set." % self.id)
finally:
self.mc_lock.release()
def _delete(self):
self.cache.delete(self.id)
def acquire_lock(self):
"""Acquire an exclusive lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
self.locked = True
self.locks.setdefault(self.id, threading.RLock()).acquire()
if self.debug:
cherrypy.log('Lock acquired.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
def release_lock(self):
"""Release the lock on the currently-loaded session data."""
self.locks[self.id].release()
self.locked = False
def __len__(self):
"""Return the number of active sessions."""
raise NotImplementedError
# Hook functions (for CherryPy tools)
def save():
"""Save any changed session data."""
if not hasattr(cherrypy.serving, "session"):
return
request = cherrypy.serving.request
response = cherrypy.serving.response
# Guard against running twice
if hasattr(request, "_sessionsaved"):
return
request._sessionsaved = True
if response.stream:
# If the body is being streamed, we have to save the data
# *after* the response has been written out
request.hooks.attach('on_end_request', cherrypy.session.save)
else:
# If the body is not being streamed, we save the data now
# (so we can release the lock).
if is_iterator(response.body):
response.collapse_body()
cherrypy.session.save()
save.failsafe = True
def close():
"""Close the session object for this request."""
sess = getattr(cherrypy.serving, "session", None)
if getattr(sess, "locked", False):
# If the session is still locked we release the lock
sess.release_lock()
if sess.debug:
cherrypy.log('Lock released on close.', 'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
close.failsafe = True
close.priority = 90
def init(storage_type='ram', path=None, path_header=None, name='session_id',
timeout=60, domain=None, secure=False, clean_freq=5,
persistent=True, httponly=False, debug=False, **kwargs):
"""Initialize session object (using cookies).
storage_type
One of 'ram', 'file', 'postgresql', 'memcached'. This will be
used to look up the corresponding class in cherrypy.lib.sessions
globals. For example, 'file' will use the FileSession class.
path
The 'path' value to stick in the response cookie metadata.
path_header
If 'path' is None (the default), then the response
cookie 'path' will be pulled from request.headers[path_header].
name
The name of the cookie.
timeout
The expiration timeout (in minutes) for the stored session data.
If 'persistent' is True (the default), this is also the timeout
for the cookie.
domain
The cookie domain.
secure
If False (the default) the cookie 'secure' value will not
be set. If True, the cookie 'secure' value will be set (to 1).
clean_freq (minutes)
The poll rate for expired session cleanup.
persistent
If True (the default), the 'timeout' argument will be used
to expire the cookie. If False, the cookie will not have an expiry,
and the cookie will be a "session cookie" which expires when the
browser is closed.
httponly
If False (the default) the cookie 'httponly' value will not be set.
If True, the cookie 'httponly' value will be set (to 1).
Any additional kwargs will be bound to the new Session instance,
and may be specific to the storage type. See the subclass of Session
you're using for more information.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
# Guard against running twice
if hasattr(request, "_session_init_flag"):
return
request._session_init_flag = True
# Check if request came with a session ID
id = None
if name in request.cookie:
id = request.cookie[name].value
if debug:
cherrypy.log('ID obtained from request.cookie: %r' % id,
'TOOLS.SESSIONS')
# Find the storage class and call setup (first time only).
storage_class = storage_type.title() + 'Session'
storage_class = globals()[storage_class]
if not hasattr(cherrypy, "session"):
if hasattr(storage_class, "setup"):
storage_class.setup(**kwargs)
# Create and attach a new Session instance to cherrypy.serving.
# It will possess a reference to (and lock, and lazily load)
# the requested session data.
kwargs['timeout'] = timeout
kwargs['clean_freq'] = clean_freq
cherrypy.serving.session = sess = storage_class(id, **kwargs)
sess.debug = debug
def update_cookie(id):
"""Update the cookie every time the session id changes."""
cherrypy.serving.response.cookie[name] = id
sess.id_observers.append(update_cookie)
# Create cherrypy.session which will proxy to cherrypy.serving.session
if not hasattr(cherrypy, "session"):
cherrypy.session = cherrypy._ThreadLocalProxy('session')
if persistent:
cookie_timeout = timeout
else:
# See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/223799/EN-US/
# and http://support.mozilla.com/en-US/kb/Cookies
cookie_timeout = None
set_response_cookie(path=path, path_header=path_header, name=name,
timeout=cookie_timeout, domain=domain, secure=secure,
httponly=httponly)
def set_response_cookie(path=None, path_header=None, name='session_id',
timeout=60, domain=None, secure=False, httponly=False):
"""Set a response cookie for the client.
path
the 'path' value to stick in the response cookie metadata.
path_header
if 'path' is None (the default), then the response
cookie 'path' will be pulled from request.headers[path_header].
name
the name of the cookie.
timeout
the expiration timeout for the cookie. If 0 or other boolean
False, no 'expires' param will be set, and the cookie will be a
"session cookie" which expires when the browser is closed.
domain
the cookie domain.
secure
if False (the default) the cookie 'secure' value will not
be set. If True, the cookie 'secure' value will be set (to 1).
httponly
If False (the default) the cookie 'httponly' value will not be set.
If True, the cookie 'httponly' value will be set (to 1).
"""
# Set response cookie
cookie = cherrypy.serving.response.cookie
cookie[name] = cherrypy.serving.session.id
cookie[name]['path'] = (
path or
cherrypy.serving.request.headers.get(path_header) or
'/'
)
# We'd like to use the "max-age" param as indicated in
# http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2109.html but IE doesn't
# save it to disk and the session is lost if people close
# the browser. So we have to use the old "expires" ... sigh ...
## cookie[name]['max-age'] = timeout * 60
if timeout:
e = time.time() + (timeout * 60)
cookie[name]['expires'] = httputil.HTTPDate(e)
if domain is not None:
cookie[name]['domain'] = domain
if secure:
cookie[name]['secure'] = 1
if httponly:
if not cookie[name].isReservedKey('httponly'):
raise ValueError("The httponly cookie token is not supported.")
cookie[name]['httponly'] = 1
def expire():
"""Expire the current session cookie."""
name = cherrypy.serving.request.config.get(
'tools.sessions.name', 'session_id')
one_year = 60 * 60 * 24 * 365
e = time.time() - one_year
cherrypy.serving.response.cookie[name]['expires'] = httputil.HTTPDate(e)

@ -1,378 +0,0 @@
import os
import re
import stat
import mimetypes
try:
from io import UnsupportedOperation
except ImportError:
UnsupportedOperation = object()
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import ntob, unquote
from cherrypy.lib import cptools, httputil, file_generator_limited
mimetypes.init()
mimetypes.types_map['.dwg'] = 'image/x-dwg'
mimetypes.types_map['.ico'] = 'image/x-icon'
mimetypes.types_map['.bz2'] = 'application/x-bzip2'
mimetypes.types_map['.gz'] = 'application/x-gzip'
def serve_file(path, content_type=None, disposition=None, name=None,
debug=False):
"""Set status, headers, and body in order to serve the given path.
The Content-Type header will be set to the content_type arg, if provided.
If not provided, the Content-Type will be guessed by the file extension
of the 'path' argument.
If disposition is not None, the Content-Disposition header will be set
to "<disposition>; filename=<name>". If name is None, it will be set
to the basename of path. If disposition is None, no Content-Disposition
header will be written.
"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
# If path is relative, users should fix it by making path absolute.
# That is, CherryPy should not guess where the application root is.
# It certainly should *not* use cwd (since CP may be invoked from a
# variety of paths). If using tools.staticdir, you can make your relative
# paths become absolute by supplying a value for "tools.staticdir.root".
if not os.path.isabs(path):
msg = "'%s' is not an absolute path." % path
if debug:
cherrypy.log(msg, 'TOOLS.STATICFILE')
raise ValueError(msg)
try:
st = os.stat(path)
except OSError:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('os.stat(%r) failed' % path, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
raise cherrypy.NotFound()
# Check if path is a directory.
if stat.S_ISDIR(st.st_mode):
# Let the caller deal with it as they like.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('%r is a directory' % path, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
raise cherrypy.NotFound()
# Set the Last-Modified response header, so that
# modified-since validation code can work.
response.headers['Last-Modified'] = httputil.HTTPDate(st.st_mtime)
cptools.validate_since()
if content_type is None:
# Set content-type based on filename extension
ext = ""
i = path.rfind('.')
if i != -1:
ext = path[i:].lower()
content_type = mimetypes.types_map.get(ext, None)
if content_type is not None:
response.headers['Content-Type'] = content_type
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Content-Type: %r' % content_type, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
cd = None
if disposition is not None:
if name is None:
name = os.path.basename(path)
cd = '%s; filename="%s"' % (disposition, name)
response.headers["Content-Disposition"] = cd
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Content-Disposition: %r' % cd, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
# Set Content-Length and use an iterable (file object)
# this way CP won't load the whole file in memory
content_length = st.st_size
fileobj = open(path, 'rb')
return _serve_fileobj(fileobj, content_type, content_length, debug=debug)
def serve_fileobj(fileobj, content_type=None, disposition=None, name=None,
debug=False):
"""Set status, headers, and body in order to serve the given file object.
The Content-Type header will be set to the content_type arg, if provided.
If disposition is not None, the Content-Disposition header will be set
to "<disposition>; filename=<name>". If name is None, 'filename' will
not be set. If disposition is None, no Content-Disposition header will
be written.
CAUTION: If the request contains a 'Range' header, one or more seek()s will
be performed on the file object. This may cause undesired behavior if
the file object is not seekable. It could also produce undesired results
if the caller set the read position of the file object prior to calling
serve_fileobj(), expecting that the data would be served starting from that
position.
"""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
try:
st = os.fstat(fileobj.fileno())
except AttributeError:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('os has no fstat attribute', 'TOOLS.STATIC')
content_length = None
except UnsupportedOperation:
content_length = None
else:
# Set the Last-Modified response header, so that
# modified-since validation code can work.
response.headers['Last-Modified'] = httputil.HTTPDate(st.st_mtime)
cptools.validate_since()
content_length = st.st_size
if content_type is not None:
response.headers['Content-Type'] = content_type
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Content-Type: %r' % content_type, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
cd = None
if disposition is not None:
if name is None:
cd = disposition
else:
cd = '%s; filename="%s"' % (disposition, name)
response.headers["Content-Disposition"] = cd
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Content-Disposition: %r' % cd, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
return _serve_fileobj(fileobj, content_type, content_length, debug=debug)
def _serve_fileobj(fileobj, content_type, content_length, debug=False):
"""Internal. Set response.body to the given file object, perhaps ranged."""
response = cherrypy.serving.response
# HTTP/1.0 didn't have Range/Accept-Ranges headers, or the 206 code
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if request.protocol >= (1, 1):
response.headers["Accept-Ranges"] = "bytes"
r = httputil.get_ranges(request.headers.get('Range'), content_length)
if r == []:
response.headers['Content-Range'] = "bytes */%s" % content_length
message = ("Invalid Range (first-byte-pos greater than "
"Content-Length)")
if debug:
cherrypy.log(message, 'TOOLS.STATIC')
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(416, message)
if r:
if len(r) == 1:
# Return a single-part response.
start, stop = r[0]
if stop > content_length:
stop = content_length
r_len = stop - start
if debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Single part; start: %r, stop: %r' % (start, stop),
'TOOLS.STATIC')
response.status = "206 Partial Content"
response.headers['Content-Range'] = (
"bytes %s-%s/%s" % (start, stop - 1, content_length))
response.headers['Content-Length'] = r_len
fileobj.seek(start)
response.body = file_generator_limited(fileobj, r_len)
else:
# Return a multipart/byteranges response.
response.status = "206 Partial Content"
try:
# Python 3
from email.generator import _make_boundary as make_boundary
except ImportError:
# Python 2
from mimetools import choose_boundary as make_boundary
boundary = make_boundary()
ct = "multipart/byteranges; boundary=%s" % boundary
response.headers['Content-Type'] = ct
if "Content-Length" in response.headers:
# Delete Content-Length header so finalize() recalcs it.
del response.headers["Content-Length"]
def file_ranges():
# Apache compatibility:
yield ntob("\r\n")
for start, stop in r:
if debug:
cherrypy.log(
'Multipart; start: %r, stop: %r' % (
start, stop),
'TOOLS.STATIC')
yield ntob("--" + boundary, 'ascii')
yield ntob("\r\nContent-type: %s" % content_type,
'ascii')
yield ntob(
"\r\nContent-range: bytes %s-%s/%s\r\n\r\n" % (
start, stop - 1, content_length),
'ascii')
fileobj.seek(start)
gen = file_generator_limited(fileobj, stop - start)
for chunk in gen:
yield chunk
yield ntob("\r\n")
# Final boundary
yield ntob("--" + boundary + "--", 'ascii')
# Apache compatibility:
yield ntob("\r\n")
response.body = file_ranges()
return response.body
else:
if debug:
cherrypy.log('No byteranges requested', 'TOOLS.STATIC')
# Set Content-Length and use an iterable (file object)
# this way CP won't load the whole file in memory
response.headers['Content-Length'] = content_length
response.body = fileobj
return response.body
def serve_download(path, name=None):
"""Serve 'path' as an application/x-download attachment."""
# This is such a common idiom I felt it deserved its own wrapper.
return serve_file(path, "application/x-download", "attachment", name)
def _attempt(filename, content_types, debug=False):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Attempting %r (content_types %r)' %
(filename, content_types), 'TOOLS.STATICDIR')
try:
# you can set the content types for a
# complete directory per extension
content_type = None
if content_types:
r, ext = os.path.splitext(filename)
content_type = content_types.get(ext[1:], None)
serve_file(filename, content_type=content_type, debug=debug)
return True
except cherrypy.NotFound:
# If we didn't find the static file, continue handling the
# request. We might find a dynamic handler instead.
if debug:
cherrypy.log('NotFound', 'TOOLS.STATICFILE')
return False
def staticdir(section, dir, root="", match="", content_types=None, index="",
debug=False):
"""Serve a static resource from the given (root +) dir.
match
If given, request.path_info will be searched for the given
regular expression before attempting to serve static content.
content_types
If given, it should be a Python dictionary of
{file-extension: content-type} pairs, where 'file-extension' is
a string (e.g. "gif") and 'content-type' is the value to write
out in the Content-Type response header (e.g. "image/gif").
index
If provided, it should be the (relative) name of a file to
serve for directory requests. For example, if the dir argument is
'/home/me', the Request-URI is 'myapp', and the index arg is
'index.html', the file '/home/me/myapp/index.html' will be sought.
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if request.method not in ('GET', 'HEAD'):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.method not GET or HEAD', 'TOOLS.STATICDIR')
return False
if match and not re.search(match, request.path_info):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.path_info %r does not match pattern %r' %
(request.path_info, match), 'TOOLS.STATICDIR')
return False
# Allow the use of '~' to refer to a user's home directory.
dir = os.path.expanduser(dir)
# If dir is relative, make absolute using "root".
if not os.path.isabs(dir):
if not root:
msg = "Static dir requires an absolute dir (or root)."
if debug:
cherrypy.log(msg, 'TOOLS.STATICDIR')
raise ValueError(msg)
dir = os.path.join(root, dir)
# Determine where we are in the object tree relative to 'section'
# (where the static tool was defined).
if section == 'global':
section = "/"
section = section.rstrip(r"\/")
branch = request.path_info[len(section) + 1:]
branch = unquote(branch.lstrip(r"\/"))
# If branch is "", filename will end in a slash
filename = os.path.join(dir, branch)
if debug:
cherrypy.log('Checking file %r to fulfill %r' %
(filename, request.path_info), 'TOOLS.STATICDIR')
# There's a chance that the branch pulled from the URL might
# have ".." or similar uplevel attacks in it. Check that the final
# filename is a child of dir.
if not os.path.normpath(filename).startswith(os.path.normpath(dir)):
raise cherrypy.HTTPError(403) # Forbidden
handled = _attempt(filename, content_types)
if not handled:
# Check for an index file if a folder was requested.
if index:
handled = _attempt(os.path.join(filename, index), content_types)
if handled:
request.is_index = filename[-1] in (r"\/")
return handled
def staticfile(filename, root=None, match="", content_types=None, debug=False):
"""Serve a static resource from the given (root +) filename.
match
If given, request.path_info will be searched for the given
regular expression before attempting to serve static content.
content_types
If given, it should be a Python dictionary of
{file-extension: content-type} pairs, where 'file-extension' is
a string (e.g. "gif") and 'content-type' is the value to write
out in the Content-Type response header (e.g. "image/gif").
"""
request = cherrypy.serving.request
if request.method not in ('GET', 'HEAD'):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.method not GET or HEAD', 'TOOLS.STATICFILE')
return False
if match and not re.search(match, request.path_info):
if debug:
cherrypy.log('request.path_info %r does not match pattern %r' %
(request.path_info, match), 'TOOLS.STATICFILE')
return False
# If filename is relative, make absolute using "root".
if not os.path.isabs(filename):
if not root:
msg = "Static tool requires an absolute filename (got '%s')." % (
filename,)
if debug:
cherrypy.log(msg, 'TOOLS.STATICFILE')
raise ValueError(msg)
filename = os.path.join(root, filename)
return _attempt(filename, content_types, debug=debug)

@ -1,57 +0,0 @@
import sys
import cherrypy
from cherrypy._cpcompat import ntob
def get_xmlrpclib():
try:
import xmlrpc.client as x
except ImportError:
import xmlrpclib as x
return x
def process_body():
"""Return (params, method) from request body."""
try:
return get_xmlrpclib().loads(cherrypy.request.body.read())
except Exception:
return ('ERROR PARAMS', ), 'ERRORMETHOD'
def patched_path(path):
"""Return 'path', doctored for RPC."""
if not path.endswith('/'):
path += '/'
if path.startswith('/RPC2/'):
# strip the first /rpc2
path = path[5:]
return path
def _set_response(body):
# The XML-RPC spec (http://www.xmlrpc.com/spec) says:
# "Unless there's a lower-level error, always return 200 OK."
# Since Python's xmlrpclib interprets a non-200 response
# as a "Protocol Error", we'll just return 200 every time.
response = cherrypy.response
response.status = '200 OK'
response.body = ntob(body, 'utf-8')
response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/xml'
response.headers['Content-Length'] = len(body)
def respond(body, encoding='utf-8', allow_none=0):
xmlrpclib = get_xmlrpclib()
if not isinstance(body, xmlrpclib.Fault):
body = (body,)
_set_response(xmlrpclib.dumps(body, methodresponse=1,
encoding=encoding,
allow_none=allow_none))
def on_error(*args, **kwargs):
body = str(sys.exc_info()[1])
xmlrpclib = get_xmlrpclib()
_set_response(xmlrpclib.dumps(xmlrpclib.Fault(1, body)))

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
"""Site container for an HTTP server.
A Web Site Process Bus object is used to connect applications, servers,
and frameworks with site-wide services such as daemonization, process
reload, signal handling, drop privileges, PID file management, logging
for all of these, and many more.
The 'plugins' module defines a few abstract and concrete services for
use with the bus. Some use tool-specific channels; see the documentation
for each class.
"""
from cherrypy.process.wspbus import bus
from cherrypy.process import plugins, servers

@ -1,717 +0,0 @@
"""Site services for use with a Web Site Process Bus."""
import os
import re
import signal as _signal
import sys
import time
import threading
from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, get_daemon, get_thread_ident
from cherrypy._cpcompat import ntob, set, Timer, SetDaemonProperty
# _module__file__base is used by Autoreload to make
# absolute any filenames retrieved from sys.modules which are not
# already absolute paths. This is to work around Python's quirk
# of importing the startup script and using a relative filename
# for it in sys.modules.
#
# Autoreload examines sys.modules afresh every time it runs. If an application
# changes the current directory by executing os.chdir(), then the next time
# Autoreload runs, it will not be able to find any filenames which are
# not absolute paths, because the current directory is not the same as when the
# module was first imported. Autoreload will then wrongly conclude the file
# has "changed", and initiate the shutdown/re-exec sequence.
# See ticket #917.
# For this workaround to have a decent probability of success, this module
# needs to be imported as early as possible, before the app has much chance
# to change the working directory.
_module__file__base = os.getcwd()
class SimplePlugin(object):
"""Plugin base class which auto-subscribes methods for known channels."""
bus = None
"""A :class:`Bus <cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus>`, usually cherrypy.engine.
"""
def __init__(self, bus):
self.bus = bus
def subscribe(self):
"""Register this object as a (multi-channel) listener on the bus."""
for channel in self.bus.listeners:
# Subscribe self.start, self.exit, etc. if present.
method = getattr(self, channel, None)
if method is not None:
self.bus.subscribe(channel, method)
def unsubscribe(self):
"""Unregister this object as a listener on the bus."""
for channel in self.bus.listeners:
# Unsubscribe self.start, self.exit, etc. if present.
method = getattr(self, channel, None)
if method is not None:
self.bus.unsubscribe(channel, method)
class SignalHandler(object):
"""Register bus channels (and listeners) for system signals.
You can modify what signals your application listens for, and what it does
when it receives signals, by modifying :attr:`SignalHandler.handlers`,
a dict of {signal name: callback} pairs. The default set is::
handlers = {'SIGTERM': self.bus.exit,
'SIGHUP': self.handle_SIGHUP,
'SIGUSR1': self.bus.graceful,
}
The :func:`SignalHandler.handle_SIGHUP`` method calls
:func:`bus.restart()<cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus.restart>`
if the process is daemonized, but
:func:`bus.exit()<cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus.exit>`
if the process is attached to a TTY. This is because Unix window
managers tend to send SIGHUP to terminal windows when the user closes them.
Feel free to add signals which are not available on every platform.
The :class:`SignalHandler` will ignore errors raised from attempting
to register handlers for unknown signals.
"""
handlers = {}
"""A map from signal names (e.g. 'SIGTERM') to handlers (e.g. bus.exit)."""
signals = {}
"""A map from signal numbers to names."""
for k, v in vars(_signal).items():
if k.startswith('SIG') and not k.startswith('SIG_'):
signals[v] = k
del k, v
def __init__(self, bus):
self.bus = bus
# Set default handlers
self.handlers = {'SIGTERM': self.bus.exit,
'SIGHUP': self.handle_SIGHUP,
'SIGUSR1': self.bus.graceful,
}
if sys.platform[:4] == 'java':
del self.handlers['SIGUSR1']
self.handlers['SIGUSR2'] = self.bus.graceful
self.bus.log("SIGUSR1 cannot be set on the JVM platform. "
"Using SIGUSR2 instead.")
self.handlers['SIGINT'] = self._jython_SIGINT_handler
self._previous_handlers = {}
def _jython_SIGINT_handler(self, signum=None, frame=None):
# See http://bugs.jython.org/issue1313
self.bus.log('Keyboard Interrupt: shutting down bus')
self.bus.exit()
def subscribe(self):
"""Subscribe self.handlers to signals."""
for sig, func in self.handlers.items():
try:
self.set_handler(sig, func)
except ValueError:
pass
def unsubscribe(self):
"""Unsubscribe self.handlers from signals."""
for signum, handler in self._previous_handlers.items():
signame = self.signals[signum]
if handler is None:
self.bus.log("Restoring %s handler to SIG_DFL." % signame)
handler = _signal.SIG_DFL
else:
self.bus.log("Restoring %s handler %r." % (signame, handler))
try:
our_handler = _signal.signal(signum, handler)
if our_handler is None:
self.bus.log("Restored old %s handler %r, but our "
"handler was not registered." %
(signame, handler), level=30)
except ValueError:
self.bus.log("Unable to restore %s handler %r." %
(signame, handler), level=40, traceback=True)
def set_handler(self, signal, listener=None):
"""Subscribe a handler for the given signal (number or name).
If the optional 'listener' argument is provided, it will be
subscribed as a listener for the given signal's channel.
If the given signal name or number is not available on the current
platform, ValueError is raised.
"""
if isinstance(signal, basestring):
signum = getattr(_signal, signal, None)
if signum is None:
raise ValueError("No such signal: %r" % signal)
signame = signal
else:
try:
signame = self.signals[signal]
except KeyError:
raise ValueError("No such signal: %r" % signal)
signum = signal
prev = _signal.signal(signum, self._handle_signal)
self._previous_handlers[signum] = prev
if listener is not None:
self.bus.log("Listening for %s." % signame)
self.bus.subscribe(signame, listener)
def _handle_signal(self, signum=None, frame=None):
"""Python signal handler (self.set_handler subscribes it for you)."""
signame = self.signals[signum]
self.bus.log("Caught signal %s." % signame)
self.bus.publish(signame)
def handle_SIGHUP(self):
"""Restart if daemonized, else exit."""
if os.isatty(sys.stdin.fileno()):
# not daemonized (may be foreground or background)
self.bus.log("SIGHUP caught but not daemonized. Exiting.")
self.bus.exit()
else:
self.bus.log("SIGHUP caught while daemonized. Restarting.")
self.bus.restart()
try:
import pwd
import grp
except ImportError:
pwd, grp = None, None
class DropPrivileges(SimplePlugin):
"""Drop privileges. uid/gid arguments not available on Windows.
Special thanks to `Gavin Baker <http://antonym.org/2005/12/dropping-privileges-in-python.html>`_
"""
def __init__(self, bus, umask=None, uid=None, gid=None):
SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
self.finalized = False
self.uid = uid
self.gid = gid
self.umask = umask
def _get_uid(self):
return self._uid
def _set_uid(self, val):
if val is not None:
if pwd is None:
self.bus.log("pwd module not available; ignoring uid.",
level=30)
val = None
elif isinstance(val, basestring):
val = pwd.getpwnam(val)[2]
self._uid = val
uid = property(_get_uid, _set_uid,
doc="The uid under which to run. Availability: Unix.")
def _get_gid(self):
return self._gid
def _set_gid(self, val):
if val is not None:
if grp is None:
self.bus.log("grp module not available; ignoring gid.",
level=30)
val = None
elif isinstance(val, basestring):
val = grp.getgrnam(val)[2]
self._gid = val
gid = property(_get_gid, _set_gid,
doc="The gid under which to run. Availability: Unix.")
def _get_umask(self):
return self._umask
def _set_umask(self, val):
if val is not None:
try:
os.umask
except AttributeError:
self.bus.log("umask function not available; ignoring umask.",
level=30)
val = None
self._umask = val
umask = property(
_get_umask,
_set_umask,
doc="""The default permission mode for newly created files and
directories.
Usually expressed in octal format, for example, ``0644``.
Availability: Unix, Windows.
""")
def start(self):
# uid/gid
def current_ids():
"""Return the current (uid, gid) if available."""
name, group = None, None
if pwd:
name = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[0]
if grp:
group = grp.getgrgid(os.getgid())[0]
return name, group
if self.finalized:
if not (self.uid is None and self.gid is None):
self.bus.log('Already running as uid: %r gid: %r' %
current_ids())
else:
if self.uid is None and self.gid is None:
if pwd or grp:
self.bus.log('uid/gid not set', level=30)
else:
self.bus.log('Started as uid: %r gid: %r' % current_ids())
if self.gid is not None:
os.setgid(self.gid)
os.setgroups([])
if self.uid is not None:
os.setuid(self.uid)
self.bus.log('Running as uid: %r gid: %r' % current_ids())
# umask
if self.finalized:
if self.umask is not None:
self.bus.log('umask already set to: %03o' % self.umask)
else:
if self.umask is None:
self.bus.log('umask not set', level=30)
else:
old_umask = os.umask(self.umask)
self.bus.log('umask old: %03o, new: %03o' %
(old_umask, self.umask))
self.finalized = True
# This is slightly higher than the priority for server.start
# in order to facilitate the most common use: starting on a low
# port (which requires root) and then dropping to another user.
start.priority = 77
class Daemonizer(SimplePlugin):
"""Daemonize the running script.
Use this with a Web Site Process Bus via::
Daemonizer(bus).subscribe()
When this component finishes, the process is completely decoupled from
the parent environment. Please note that when this component is used,
the return code from the parent process will still be 0 if a startup
error occurs in the forked children. Errors in the initial daemonizing
process still return proper exit codes. Therefore, if you use this
plugin to daemonize, don't use the return code as an accurate indicator
of whether the process fully started. In fact, that return code only
indicates if the process succesfully finished the first fork.
"""
def __init__(self, bus, stdin='/dev/null', stdout='/dev/null',
stderr='/dev/null'):
SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
self.stdin = stdin
self.stdout = stdout
self.stderr = stderr
self.finalized = False
def start(self):
if self.finalized:
self.bus.log('Already deamonized.')
# forking has issues with threads:
# http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/functions/fork.html
# "The general problem with making fork() work in a multi-threaded
# world is what to do with all of the threads..."
# So we check for active threads:
if threading.activeCount() != 1:
self.bus.log('There are %r active threads. '
'Daemonizing now may cause strange failures.' %
threading.enumerate(), level=30)
# See http://www.erlenstar.demon.co.uk/unix/faq_2.html#SEC16
# (or http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/programmer/faq/ section 1.7)
# and http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/66012
# Finish up with the current stdout/stderr
sys.stdout.flush()
sys.stderr.flush()
# Do first fork.
try:
pid = os.fork()
if pid == 0:
# This is the child process. Continue.
pass
else:
# This is the first parent. Exit, now that we've forked.
self.bus.log('Forking once.')
os._exit(0)
except OSError:
# Python raises OSError rather than returning negative numbers.
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
sys.exit("%s: fork #1 failed: (%d) %s\n"
% (sys.argv[0], exc.errno, exc.strerror))
os.setsid()
# Do second fork
try:
pid = os.fork()
if pid > 0:
self.bus.log('Forking twice.')
os._exit(0) # Exit second parent
except OSError:
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
sys.exit("%s: fork #2 failed: (%d) %s\n"
% (sys.argv[0], exc.errno, exc.strerror))
os.chdir("/")
os.umask(0)
si = open(self.stdin, "r")
so = open(self.stdout, "a+")
se = open(self.stderr, "a+")
# os.dup2(fd, fd2) will close fd2 if necessary,
# so we don't explicitly close stdin/out/err.
# See http://docs.python.org/lib/os-fd-ops.html
os.dup2(si.fileno(), sys.stdin.fileno())
os.dup2(so.fileno(), sys.stdout.fileno())
os.dup2(se.fileno(), sys.stderr.fileno())
self.bus.log('Daemonized to PID: %s' % os.getpid())
self.finalized = True
start.priority = 65
class PIDFile(SimplePlugin):
"""Maintain a PID file via a WSPBus."""
def __init__(self, bus, pidfile):
SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
self.pidfile = pidfile
self.finalized = False
def start(self):
pid = os.getpid()
if self.finalized:
self.bus.log('PID %r already written to %r.' % (pid, self.pidfile))
else:
open(self.pidfile, "wb").write(ntob("%s\n" % pid, 'utf8'))
self.bus.log('PID %r written to %r.' % (pid, self.pidfile))
self.finalized = True
start.priority = 70
def exit(self):
try:
os.remove(self.pidfile)
self.bus.log('PID file removed: %r.' % self.pidfile)
except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
raise
except:
pass
class PerpetualTimer(Timer):
"""A responsive subclass of threading.Timer whose run() method repeats.
Use this timer only when you really need a very interruptible timer;
this checks its 'finished' condition up to 20 times a second, which can
results in pretty high CPU usage
"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"Override parent constructor to allow 'bus' to be provided."
self.bus = kwargs.pop('bus', None)
super(PerpetualTimer, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def run(self):
while True:
self.finished.wait(self.interval)
if self.finished.isSet():
return
try:
self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
except Exception:
if self.bus:
self.bus.log(
"Error in perpetual timer thread function %r." %
self.function, level=40, traceback=True)
# Quit on first error to avoid massive logs.
raise
class BackgroundTask(SetDaemonProperty, threading.Thread):
"""A subclass of threading.Thread whose run() method repeats.
Use this class for most repeating tasks. It uses time.sleep() to wait
for each interval, which isn't very responsive; that is, even if you call
self.cancel(), you'll have to wait until the sleep() call finishes before
the thread stops. To compensate, it defaults to being daemonic, which means
it won't delay stopping the whole process.
"""
def __init__(self, interval, function, args=[], kwargs={}, bus=None):
threading.Thread.__init__(self)
self.interval = interval
self.function = function
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
self.running = False
self.bus = bus
# default to daemonic
self.daemon = True
def cancel(self):
self.running = False
def run(self):
self.running = True
while self.running:
time.sleep(self.interval)
if not self.running:
return
try:
self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
except Exception:
if self.bus:
self.bus.log("Error in background task thread function %r."
% self.function, level=40, traceback=True)
# Quit on first error to avoid massive logs.
raise
class Monitor(SimplePlugin):
"""WSPBus listener to periodically run a callback in its own thread."""
callback = None
"""The function to call at intervals."""
frequency = 60
"""The time in seconds between callback runs."""
thread = None
"""A :class:`BackgroundTask<cherrypy.process.plugins.BackgroundTask>`
thread.
"""
def __init__(self, bus, callback, frequency=60, name=None):
SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
self.callback = callback
self.frequency = frequency
self.thread = None
self.name = name
def start(self):
"""Start our callback in its own background thread."""
if self.frequency > 0:
threadname = self.name or self.__class__.__name__
if self.thread is None:
self.thread = BackgroundTask(self.frequency, self.callback,
bus=self.bus)
self.thread.setName(threadname)
self.thread.start()
self.bus.log("Started monitor thread %r." % threadname)
else:
self.bus.log("Monitor thread %r already started." % threadname)
start.priority = 70
def stop(self):
"""Stop our callback's background task thread."""
if self.thread is None:
self.bus.log("No thread running for %s." %
self.name or self.__class__.__name__)
else:
if self.thread is not threading.currentThread():
name = self.thread.getName()
self.thread.cancel()
if not get_daemon(self.thread):
self.bus.log("Joining %r" % name)
self.thread.join()
self.bus.log("Stopped thread %r." % name)
self.thread = None
def graceful(self):
"""Stop the callback's background task thread and restart it."""
self.stop()
self.start()
class Autoreloader(Monitor):
"""Monitor which re-executes the process when files change.
This :ref:`plugin<plugins>` restarts the process (via :func:`os.execv`)
if any of the files it monitors change (or is deleted). By default, the
autoreloader monitors all imported modules; you can add to the
set by adding to ``autoreload.files``::
cherrypy.engine.autoreload.files.add(myFile)
If there are imported files you do *not* wish to monitor, you can
adjust the ``match`` attribute, a regular expression. For example,
to stop monitoring cherrypy itself::
cherrypy.engine.autoreload.match = r'^(?!cherrypy).+'
Like all :class:`Monitor<cherrypy.process.plugins.Monitor>` plugins,
the autoreload plugin takes a ``frequency`` argument. The default is
1 second; that is, the autoreloader will examine files once each second.
"""
files = None
"""The set of files to poll for modifications."""
frequency = 1
"""The interval in seconds at which to poll for modified files."""
match = '.*'
"""A regular expression by which to match filenames."""
def __init__(self, bus, frequency=1, match='.*'):
self.mtimes = {}
self.files = set()
self.match = match
Monitor.__init__(self, bus, self.run, frequency)
def start(self):
"""Start our own background task thread for self.run."""
if self.thread is None:
self.mtimes = {}
Monitor.start(self)
start.priority = 70
def sysfiles(self):
"""Return a Set of sys.modules filenames to monitor."""
files = set()
for k, m in list(sys.modules.items()):
if re.match(self.match, k):
if (
hasattr(m, '__loader__') and
hasattr(m.__loader__, 'archive')
):
f = m.__loader__.archive
else:
f = getattr(m, '__file__', None)
if f is not None and not os.path.isabs(f):
# ensure absolute paths so a os.chdir() in the app
# doesn't break me
f = os.path.normpath(
os.path.join(_module__file__base, f))
files.add(f)
return files
def run(self):
"""Reload the process if registered files have been modified."""
for filename in self.sysfiles() | self.files:
if filename:
if filename.endswith('.pyc'):
filename = filename[:-1]
oldtime = self.mtimes.get(filename, 0)
if oldtime is None:
# Module with no .py file. Skip it.
continue
try:
mtime = os.stat(filename).st_mtime
except OSError:
# Either a module with no .py file, or it's been deleted.
mtime = None
if filename not in self.mtimes:
# If a module has no .py file, this will be None.
self.mtimes[filename] = mtime
else:
if mtime is None or mtime > oldtime:
# The file has been deleted or modified.
self.bus.log("Restarting because %s changed." %
filename)
self.thread.cancel()
self.bus.log("Stopped thread %r." %
self.thread.getName())
self.bus.restart()
return
class ThreadManager(SimplePlugin):
"""Manager for HTTP request threads.
If you have control over thread creation and destruction, publish to
the 'acquire_thread' and 'release_thread' channels (for each thread).
This will register/unregister the current thread and publish to
'start_thread' and 'stop_thread' listeners in the bus as needed.
If threads are created and destroyed by code you do not control
(e.g., Apache), then, at the beginning of every HTTP request,
publish to 'acquire_thread' only. You should not publish to
'release_thread' in this case, since you do not know whether
the thread will be re-used or not. The bus will call
'stop_thread' listeners for you when it stops.
"""
threads = None
"""A map of {thread ident: index number} pairs."""
def __init__(self, bus):
self.threads = {}
SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('acquire_thread', set())
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('start_thread', set())
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('release_thread', set())
self.bus.listeners.setdefault('stop_thread', set())
def acquire_thread(self):
"""Run 'start_thread' listeners for the current thread.
If the current thread has already been seen, any 'start_thread'
listeners will not be run again.
"""
thread_ident = get_thread_ident()
if thread_ident not in self.threads:
# We can't just use get_ident as the thread ID
# because some platforms reuse thread ID's.
i = len(self.threads) + 1
self.threads[thread_ident] = i
self.bus.publish('start_thread', i)
def release_thread(self):
"""Release the current thread and run 'stop_thread' listeners."""
thread_ident = get_thread_ident()
i = self.threads.pop(thread_ident, None)
if i is not None:
self.bus.publish('stop_thread', i)
def stop(self):
"""Release all threads and run all 'stop_thread' listeners."""
for thread_ident, i in self.threads.items():
self.bus.publish('stop_thread', i)
self.threads.clear()
graceful = stop

@ -1,466 +0,0 @@
"""
Starting in CherryPy 3.1, cherrypy.server is implemented as an
:ref:`Engine Plugin<plugins>`. It's an instance of
:class:`cherrypy._cpserver.Server`, which is a subclass of
:class:`cherrypy.process.servers.ServerAdapter`. The ``ServerAdapter`` class
is designed to control other servers, as well.
Multiple servers/ports
======================
If you need to start more than one HTTP server (to serve on multiple ports, or
protocols, etc.), you can manually register each one and then start them all
with engine.start::
s1 = ServerAdapter(cherrypy.engine, MyWSGIServer(host='0.0.0.0', port=80))
s2 = ServerAdapter(cherrypy.engine,
another.HTTPServer(host='127.0.0.1',
SSL=True))
s1.subscribe()
s2.subscribe()
cherrypy.engine.start()
.. index:: SCGI
FastCGI/SCGI
============
There are also Flup\ **F**\ CGIServer and Flup\ **S**\ CGIServer classes in
:mod:`cherrypy.process.servers`. To start an fcgi server, for example,
wrap an instance of it in a ServerAdapter::
addr = ('0.0.0.0', 4000)
f = servers.FlupFCGIServer(application=cherrypy.tree, bindAddress=addr)
s = servers.ServerAdapter(cherrypy.engine, httpserver=f, bind_addr=addr)
s.subscribe()
The :doc:`cherryd</deployguide/cherryd>` startup script will do the above for
you via its `-f` flag.
Note that you need to download and install `flup <http://trac.saddi.com/flup>`_
yourself, whether you use ``cherryd`` or not.
.. _fastcgi:
.. index:: FastCGI
FastCGI
-------
A very simple setup lets your cherry run with FastCGI.
You just need the flup library,
plus a running Apache server (with ``mod_fastcgi``) or lighttpd server.
CherryPy code
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
hello.py::
#!/usr/bin/python
import cherrypy
class HelloWorld:
\"""Sample request handler class.\"""
def index(self):
return "Hello world!"
index.exposed = True
cherrypy.tree.mount(HelloWorld())
# CherryPy autoreload must be disabled for the flup server to work
cherrypy.config.update({'engine.autoreload.on':False})
Then run :doc:`/deployguide/cherryd` with the '-f' arg::
cherryd -c <myconfig> -d -f -i hello.py
Apache
^^^^^^
At the top level in httpd.conf::
FastCgiIpcDir /tmp
FastCgiServer /path/to/cherry.fcgi -idle-timeout 120 -processes 4
And inside the relevant VirtualHost section::
# FastCGI config
AddHandler fastcgi-script .fcgi
ScriptAliasMatch (.*$) /path/to/cherry.fcgi$1
Lighttpd
^^^^^^^^
For `Lighttpd <http://www.lighttpd.net/>`_ you can follow these
instructions. Within ``lighttpd.conf`` make sure ``mod_fastcgi`` is
active within ``server.modules``. Then, within your ``$HTTP["host"]``
directive, configure your fastcgi script like the following::
$HTTP["url"] =~ "" {
fastcgi.server = (
"/" => (
"script.fcgi" => (
"bin-path" => "/path/to/your/script.fcgi",
"socket" => "/tmp/script.sock",
"check-local" => "disable",
"disable-time" => 1,
"min-procs" => 1,
"max-procs" => 1, # adjust as needed
),
),
)
} # end of $HTTP["url"] =~ "^/"
Please see `Lighttpd FastCGI Docs
<http://redmine.lighttpd.net/wiki/lighttpd/Docs:ModFastCGI>`_ for
an explanation of the possible configuration options.
"""
import sys
import time
import warnings
class ServerAdapter(object):
"""Adapter for an HTTP server.
If you need to start more than one HTTP server (to serve on multiple
ports, or protocols, etc.), you can manually register each one and then
start them all with bus.start::
s1 = ServerAdapter(bus, MyWSGIServer(host='0.0.0.0', port=80))
s2 = ServerAdapter(bus, another.HTTPServer(host='127.0.0.1', SSL=True))
s1.subscribe()
s2.subscribe()
bus.start()
"""
def __init__(self, bus, httpserver=None, bind_addr=None):
self.bus = bus
self.httpserver = httpserver
self.bind_addr = bind_addr
self.interrupt = None
self.running = False
def subscribe(self):
self.bus.subscribe('start', self.start)
self.bus.subscribe('stop', self.stop)
def unsubscribe(self):
self.bus.unsubscribe('start', self.start)
self.bus.unsubscribe('stop', self.stop)
def start(self):
"""Start the HTTP server."""
if self.bind_addr is None:
on_what = "unknown interface (dynamic?)"
elif isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple):
on_what = self._get_base()
else:
on_what = "socket file: %s" % self.bind_addr
if self.running:
self.bus.log("Already serving on %s" % on_what)
return
self.interrupt = None
if not self.httpserver:
raise ValueError("No HTTP server has been created.")
# Start the httpserver in a new thread.
if isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple):
wait_for_free_port(*self.bind_addr)
import threading
t = threading.Thread(target=self._start_http_thread)
t.setName("HTTPServer " + t.getName())
t.start()
self.wait()
self.running = True
self.bus.log("Serving on %s" % on_what)
start.priority = 75
def _get_base(self):
if not self.httpserver:
return ''
host, port = self.bind_addr
if getattr(self.httpserver, 'ssl_certificate', None) or \
getattr(self.httpserver, 'ssl_adapter', None):
scheme = "https"
if port != 443:
host += ":%s" % port
else:
scheme = "http"
if port != 80:
host += ":%s" % port
return "%s://%s" % (scheme, host)
def _start_http_thread(self):
"""HTTP servers MUST be running in new threads, so that the
main thread persists to receive KeyboardInterrupt's. If an
exception is raised in the httpserver's thread then it's
trapped here, and the bus (and therefore our httpserver)
are shut down.
"""
try:
self.httpserver.start()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
self.bus.log("<Ctrl-C> hit: shutting down HTTP server")
self.interrupt = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.bus.exit()
except SystemExit:
self.bus.log("SystemExit raised: shutting down HTTP server")
self.interrupt = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.bus.exit()
raise
except:
self.interrupt = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.bus.log("Error in HTTP server: shutting down",
traceback=True, level=40)
self.bus.exit()
raise
def wait(self):
"""Wait until the HTTP server is ready to receive requests."""
while not getattr(self.httpserver, "ready", False):
if self.interrupt:
raise self.interrupt
time.sleep(.1)
# Wait for port to be occupied
if isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple):
host, port = self.bind_addr
wait_for_occupied_port(host, port)
def stop(self):
"""Stop the HTTP server."""
if self.running:
# stop() MUST block until the server is *truly* stopped.
self.httpserver.stop()
# Wait for the socket to be truly freed.
if isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple):
wait_for_free_port(*self.bind_addr)
self.running = False
self.bus.log("HTTP Server %s shut down" % self.httpserver)
else:
self.bus.log("HTTP Server %s already shut down" % self.httpserver)
stop.priority = 25
def restart(self):
"""Restart the HTTP server."""
self.stop()
self.start()
class FlupCGIServer(object):
"""Adapter for a flup.server.cgi.WSGIServer."""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
self.ready = False
def start(self):
"""Start the CGI server."""
# We have to instantiate the server class here because its __init__
# starts a threadpool. If we do it too early, daemonize won't work.
from flup.server.cgi import WSGIServer
self.cgiserver = WSGIServer(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
self.ready = True
self.cgiserver.run()
def stop(self):
"""Stop the HTTP server."""
self.ready = False
class FlupFCGIServer(object):
"""Adapter for a flup.server.fcgi.WSGIServer."""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
if kwargs.get('bindAddress', None) is None:
import socket
if not hasattr(socket, 'fromfd'):
raise ValueError(
'Dynamic FCGI server not available on this platform. '
'You must use a static or external one by providing a '
'legal bindAddress.')
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
self.ready = False
def start(self):
"""Start the FCGI server."""
# We have to instantiate the server class here because its __init__
# starts a threadpool. If we do it too early, daemonize won't work.
from flup.server.fcgi import WSGIServer
self.fcgiserver = WSGIServer(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
# TODO: report this bug upstream to flup.
# If we don't set _oldSIGs on Windows, we get:
# File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py",
# line 108, in run
# self._restoreSignalHandlers()
# File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py",
# line 156, in _restoreSignalHandlers
# for signum,handler in self._oldSIGs:
# AttributeError: 'WSGIServer' object has no attribute '_oldSIGs'
self.fcgiserver._installSignalHandlers = lambda: None
self.fcgiserver._oldSIGs = []
self.ready = True
self.fcgiserver.run()
def stop(self):
"""Stop the HTTP server."""
# Forcibly stop the fcgi server main event loop.
self.fcgiserver._keepGoing = False
# Force all worker threads to die off.
self.fcgiserver._threadPool.maxSpare = (
self.fcgiserver._threadPool._idleCount)
self.ready = False
class FlupSCGIServer(object):
"""Adapter for a flup.server.scgi.WSGIServer."""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
self.ready = False
def start(self):
"""Start the SCGI server."""
# We have to instantiate the server class here because its __init__
# starts a threadpool. If we do it too early, daemonize won't work.
from flup.server.scgi import WSGIServer
self.scgiserver = WSGIServer(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
# TODO: report this bug upstream to flup.
# If we don't set _oldSIGs on Windows, we get:
# File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py",
# line 108, in run
# self._restoreSignalHandlers()
# File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py",
# line 156, in _restoreSignalHandlers
# for signum,handler in self._oldSIGs:
# AttributeError: 'WSGIServer' object has no attribute '_oldSIGs'
self.scgiserver._installSignalHandlers = lambda: None
self.scgiserver._oldSIGs = []
self.ready = True
self.scgiserver.run()
def stop(self):
"""Stop the HTTP server."""
self.ready = False
# Forcibly stop the scgi server main event loop.
self.scgiserver._keepGoing = False
# Force all worker threads to die off.
self.scgiserver._threadPool.maxSpare = 0
def client_host(server_host):
"""Return the host on which a client can connect to the given listener."""
if server_host == '0.0.0.0':
# 0.0.0.0 is INADDR_ANY, which should answer on localhost.
return '127.0.0.1'
if server_host in ('::', '::0', '::0.0.0.0'):
# :: is IN6ADDR_ANY, which should answer on localhost.
# ::0 and ::0.0.0.0 are non-canonical but common
# ways to write IN6ADDR_ANY.
return '::1'
return server_host
def check_port(host, port, timeout=1.0):
"""Raise an error if the given port is not free on the given host."""
if not host:
raise ValueError("Host values of '' or None are not allowed.")
host = client_host(host)
port = int(port)
import socket
# AF_INET or AF_INET6 socket
# Get the correct address family for our host (allows IPv6 addresses)
try:
info = socket.getaddrinfo(host, port, socket.AF_UNSPEC,
socket.SOCK_STREAM)
except socket.gaierror:
if ':' in host:
info = [(
socket.AF_INET6, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "", (host, port, 0, 0)
)]
else:
info = [(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "", (host, port))]
for res in info:
af, socktype, proto, canonname, sa = res
s = None
try:
s = socket.socket(af, socktype, proto)
# See http://groups.google.com/group/cherrypy-users/
# browse_frm/thread/bbfe5eb39c904fe0
s.settimeout(timeout)
s.connect((host, port))
s.close()
except socket.error:
if s:
s.close()
else:
raise IOError("Port %s is in use on %s; perhaps the previous "
"httpserver did not shut down properly." %
(repr(port), repr(host)))
# Feel free to increase these defaults on slow systems:
free_port_timeout = 0.1
occupied_port_timeout = 1.0
def wait_for_free_port(host, port, timeout=None):
"""Wait for the specified port to become free (drop requests)."""
if not host:
raise ValueError("Host values of '' or None are not allowed.")
if timeout is None:
timeout = free_port_timeout
for trial in range(50):
try:
# we are expecting a free port, so reduce the timeout
check_port(host, port, timeout=timeout)
except IOError:
# Give the old server thread time to free the port.
time.sleep(timeout)
else:
return
raise IOError("Port %r not free on %r" % (port, host))
def wait_for_occupied_port(host, port, timeout=None):
"""Wait for the specified port to become active (receive requests)."""
if not host:
raise ValueError("Host values of '' or None are not allowed.")
if timeout is None:
timeout = occupied_port_timeout
for trial in range(50):
try:
check_port(host, port, timeout=timeout)
except IOError:
# port is occupied
return
else:
time.sleep(timeout)
if host == client_host(host):
raise IOError("Port %r not bound on %r" % (port, host))
# On systems where a loopback interface is not available and the
# server is bound to all interfaces, it's difficult to determine
# whether the server is in fact occupying the port. In this case,
# just issue a warning and move on. See issue #1100.
msg = "Unable to verify that the server is bound on %r" % port
warnings.warn(msg)

@ -1,180 +0,0 @@
"""Windows service. Requires pywin32."""
import os
import win32api
import win32con
import win32event
import win32service
import win32serviceutil
from cherrypy.process import wspbus, plugins
class ConsoleCtrlHandler(plugins.SimplePlugin):
"""A WSPBus plugin for handling Win32 console events (like Ctrl-C)."""
def __init__(self, bus):
self.is_set = False
plugins.SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus)
def start(self):
if self.is_set:
self.bus.log('Handler for console events already set.', level=40)
return
result = win32api.SetConsoleCtrlHandler(self.handle, 1)
if result == 0:
self.bus.log('Could not SetConsoleCtrlHandler (error %r)' %
win32api.GetLastError(), level=40)
else:
self.bus.log('Set handler for console events.', level=40)
self.is_set = True
def stop(self):
if not self.is_set:
self.bus.log('Handler for console events already off.', level=40)
return
try:
result = win32api.SetConsoleCtrlHandler(self.handle, 0)
except ValueError:
# "ValueError: The object has not been registered"
result = 1
if result == 0:
self.bus.log('Could not remove SetConsoleCtrlHandler (error %r)' %
win32api.GetLastError(), level=40)
else:
self.bus.log('Removed handler for console events.', level=40)
self.is_set = False
def handle(self, event):
"""Handle console control events (like Ctrl-C)."""
if event in (win32con.CTRL_C_EVENT, win32con.CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT,
win32con.CTRL_BREAK_EVENT, win32con.CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT,
win32con.CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT):
self.bus.log('Console event %s: shutting down bus' % event)
# Remove self immediately so repeated Ctrl-C doesn't re-call it.
try:
self.stop()
except ValueError:
pass
self.bus.exit()
# 'First to return True stops the calls'
return 1
return 0
class Win32Bus(wspbus.Bus):
"""A Web Site Process Bus implementation for Win32.
Instead of time.sleep, this bus blocks using native win32event objects.
"""
def __init__(self):
self.events = {}
wspbus.Bus.__init__(self)
def _get_state_event(self, state):
"""Return a win32event for the given state (creating it if needed)."""
try:
return self.events[state]
except KeyError:
event = win32event.CreateEvent(None, 0, 0,
"WSPBus %s Event (pid=%r)" %
(state.name, os.getpid()))
self.events[state] = event
return event
def _get_state(self):
return self._state
def _set_state(self, value):
self._state = value
event = self._get_state_event(value)
win32event.PulseEvent(event)
state = property(_get_state, _set_state)
def wait(self, state, interval=0.1, channel=None):
"""Wait for the given state(s), KeyboardInterrupt or SystemExit.
Since this class uses native win32event objects, the interval
argument is ignored.
"""
if isinstance(state, (tuple, list)):
# Don't wait for an event that beat us to the punch ;)
if self.state not in state:
events = tuple([self._get_state_event(s) for s in state])
win32event.WaitForMultipleObjects(
events, 0, win32event.INFINITE)
else:
# Don't wait for an event that beat us to the punch ;)
if self.state != state:
event = self._get_state_event(state)
win32event.WaitForSingleObject(event, win32event.INFINITE)
class _ControlCodes(dict):
"""Control codes used to "signal" a service via ControlService.
User-defined control codes are in the range 128-255. We generally use
the standard Python value for the Linux signal and add 128. Example:
>>> signal.SIGUSR1
10
control_codes['graceful'] = 128 + 10
"""
def key_for(self, obj):
"""For the given value, return its corresponding key."""
for key, val in self.items():
if val is obj:
return key
raise ValueError("The given object could not be found: %r" % obj)
control_codes = _ControlCodes({'graceful': 138})
def signal_child(service, command):
if command == 'stop':
win32serviceutil.StopService(service)
elif command == 'restart':
win32serviceutil.RestartService(service)
else:
win32serviceutil.ControlService(service, control_codes[command])
class PyWebService(win32serviceutil.ServiceFramework):
"""Python Web Service."""
_svc_name_ = "Python Web Service"
_svc_display_name_ = "Python Web Service"
_svc_deps_ = None # sequence of service names on which this depends
_exe_name_ = "pywebsvc"
_exe_args_ = None # Default to no arguments
# Only exists on Windows 2000 or later, ignored on windows NT
_svc_description_ = "Python Web Service"
def SvcDoRun(self):
from cherrypy import process
process.bus.start()
process.bus.block()
def SvcStop(self):
from cherrypy import process
self.ReportServiceStatus(win32service.SERVICE_STOP_PENDING)
process.bus.exit()
def SvcOther(self, control):
process.bus.publish(control_codes.key_for(control))
if __name__ == '__main__':
win32serviceutil.HandleCommandLine(PyWebService)

@ -1,448 +0,0 @@
"""An implementation of the Web Site Process Bus.
This module is completely standalone, depending only on the stdlib.
Web Site Process Bus
--------------------
A Bus object is used to contain and manage site-wide behavior:
daemonization, HTTP server start/stop, process reload, signal handling,
drop privileges, PID file management, logging for all of these,
and many more.
In addition, a Bus object provides a place for each web framework
to register code that runs in response to site-wide events (like
process start and stop), or which controls or otherwise interacts with
the site-wide components mentioned above. For example, a framework which
uses file-based templates would add known template filenames to an
autoreload component.
Ideally, a Bus object will be flexible enough to be useful in a variety
of invocation scenarios:
1. The deployer starts a site from the command line via a
framework-neutral deployment script; applications from multiple frameworks
are mixed in a single site. Command-line arguments and configuration
files are used to define site-wide components such as the HTTP server,
WSGI component graph, autoreload behavior, signal handling, etc.
2. The deployer starts a site via some other process, such as Apache;
applications from multiple frameworks are mixed in a single site.
Autoreload and signal handling (from Python at least) are disabled.
3. The deployer starts a site via a framework-specific mechanism;
for example, when running tests, exploring tutorials, or deploying
single applications from a single framework. The framework controls
which site-wide components are enabled as it sees fit.
The Bus object in this package uses topic-based publish-subscribe
messaging to accomplish all this. A few topic channels are built in
('start', 'stop', 'exit', 'graceful', 'log', and 'main'). Frameworks and
site containers are free to define their own. If a message is sent to a
channel that has not been defined or has no listeners, there is no effect.
In general, there should only ever be a single Bus object per process.
Frameworks and site containers share a single Bus object by publishing
messages and subscribing listeners.
The Bus object works as a finite state machine which models the current
state of the process. Bus methods move it from one state to another;
those methods then publish to subscribed listeners on the channel for
the new state.::
O
|
V
STOPPING --> STOPPED --> EXITING -> X
A A |
| \___ |
| \ |
| V V
STARTED <-- STARTING
"""
import atexit
import os
import sys
import threading
import time
import traceback as _traceback
import warnings
from cherrypy._cpcompat import set
# Here I save the value of os.getcwd(), which, if I am imported early enough,
# will be the directory from which the startup script was run. This is needed
# by _do_execv(), to change back to the original directory before execv()ing a
# new process. This is a defense against the application having changed the
# current working directory (which could make sys.executable "not found" if
# sys.executable is a relative-path, and/or cause other problems).
_startup_cwd = os.getcwd()
class ChannelFailures(Exception):
"""Exception raised when errors occur in a listener during Bus.publish().
"""
delimiter = '\n'
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
# Don't use 'super' here; Exceptions are old-style in Py2.4
# See https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/959
Exception.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
self._exceptions = list()
def handle_exception(self):
"""Append the current exception to self."""
self._exceptions.append(sys.exc_info()[1])
def get_instances(self):
"""Return a list of seen exception instances."""
return self._exceptions[:]
def __str__(self):
exception_strings = map(repr, self.get_instances())
return self.delimiter.join(exception_strings)
__repr__ = __str__
def __bool__(self):
return bool(self._exceptions)
__nonzero__ = __bool__
# Use a flag to indicate the state of the bus.
class _StateEnum(object):
class State(object):
name = None
def __repr__(self):
return "states.%s" % self.name
def __setattr__(self, key, value):
if isinstance(value, self.State):
value.name = key
object.__setattr__(self, key, value)
states = _StateEnum()
states.STOPPED = states.State()
states.STARTING = states.State()
states.STARTED = states.State()
states.STOPPING = states.State()
states.EXITING = states.State()
try:
import fcntl
except ImportError:
max_files = 0
else:
try:
max_files = os.sysconf('SC_OPEN_MAX')
except AttributeError:
max_files = 1024
class Bus(object):
"""Process state-machine and messenger for HTTP site deployment.
All listeners for a given channel are guaranteed to be called even
if others at the same channel fail. Each failure is logged, but
execution proceeds on to the next listener. The only way to stop all
processing from inside a listener is to raise SystemExit and stop the
whole server.
"""
states = states
state = states.STOPPED
execv = False
max_cloexec_files = max_files
def __init__(self):
self.execv = False
self.state = states.STOPPED
self.listeners = dict(
[(channel, set()) for channel
in ('start', 'stop', 'exit', 'graceful', 'log', 'main')])
self._priorities = {}
def subscribe(self, channel, callback, priority=None):
"""Add the given callback at the given channel (if not present)."""
if channel not in self.listeners:
self.listeners[channel] = set()
self.listeners[channel].add(callback)
if priority is None:
priority = getattr(callback, 'priority', 50)
self._priorities[(channel, callback)] = priority
def unsubscribe(self, channel, callback):
"""Discard the given callback (if present)."""
listeners = self.listeners.get(channel)
if listeners and callback in listeners:
listeners.discard(callback)
del self._priorities[(channel, callback)]
def publish(self, channel, *args, **kwargs):
"""Return output of all subscribers for the given channel."""
if channel not in self.listeners:
return []
exc = ChannelFailures()
output = []
items = [(self._priorities[(channel, listener)], listener)
for listener in self.listeners[channel]]
try:
items.sort(key=lambda item: item[0])
except TypeError:
# Python 2.3 had no 'key' arg, but that doesn't matter
# since it could sort dissimilar types just fine.
items.sort()
for priority, listener in items:
try:
output.append(listener(*args, **kwargs))
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
except SystemExit:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
# If we have previous errors ensure the exit code is non-zero
if exc and e.code == 0:
e.code = 1
raise
except:
exc.handle_exception()
if channel == 'log':
# Assume any further messages to 'log' will fail.
pass
else:
self.log("Error in %r listener %r" % (channel, listener),
level=40, traceback=True)
if exc:
raise exc
return output
def _clean_exit(self):
"""An atexit handler which asserts the Bus is not running."""
if self.state != states.EXITING:
warnings.warn(
"The main thread is exiting, but the Bus is in the %r state; "
"shutting it down automatically now. You must either call "
"bus.block() after start(), or call bus.exit() before the "
"main thread exits." % self.state, RuntimeWarning)
self.exit()
def start(self):
"""Start all services."""
atexit.register(self._clean_exit)
self.state = states.STARTING
self.log('Bus STARTING')
try:
self.publish('start')
self.state = states.STARTED
self.log('Bus STARTED')
except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
raise
except:
self.log("Shutting down due to error in start listener:",
level=40, traceback=True)
e_info = sys.exc_info()[1]
try:
self.exit()
except:
# Any stop/exit errors will be logged inside publish().
pass
# Re-raise the original error
raise e_info
def exit(self):
"""Stop all services and prepare to exit the process."""
exitstate = self.state
try:
self.stop()
self.state = states.EXITING
self.log('Bus EXITING')
self.publish('exit')
# This isn't strictly necessary, but it's better than seeing
# "Waiting for child threads to terminate..." and then nothing.
self.log('Bus EXITED')
except:
# This method is often called asynchronously (whether thread,
# signal handler, console handler, or atexit handler), so we
# can't just let exceptions propagate out unhandled.
# Assume it's been logged and just die.
os._exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE
if exitstate == states.STARTING:
# exit() was called before start() finished, possibly due to
# Ctrl-C because a start listener got stuck. In this case,
# we could get stuck in a loop where Ctrl-C never exits the
# process, so we just call os.exit here.
os._exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE
def restart(self):
"""Restart the process (may close connections).
This method does not restart the process from the calling thread;
instead, it stops the bus and asks the main thread to call execv.
"""
self.execv = True
self.exit()
def graceful(self):
"""Advise all services to reload."""
self.log('Bus graceful')
self.publish('graceful')
def block(self, interval=0.1):
"""Wait for the EXITING state, KeyboardInterrupt or SystemExit.
This function is intended to be called only by the main thread.
After waiting for the EXITING state, it also waits for all threads
to terminate, and then calls os.execv if self.execv is True. This
design allows another thread to call bus.restart, yet have the main
thread perform the actual execv call (required on some platforms).
"""
try:
self.wait(states.EXITING, interval=interval, channel='main')
except (KeyboardInterrupt, IOError):
# The time.sleep call might raise
# "IOError: [Errno 4] Interrupted function call" on KBInt.
self.log('Keyboard Interrupt: shutting down bus')
self.exit()
except SystemExit:
self.log('SystemExit raised: shutting down bus')
self.exit()
raise
# Waiting for ALL child threads to finish is necessary on OS X.
# See https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/581.
# It's also good to let them all shut down before allowing
# the main thread to call atexit handlers.
# See https://bitbucket.org/cherrypy/cherrypy/issue/751.
self.log("Waiting for child threads to terminate...")
for t in threading.enumerate():
# Validate the we're not trying to join the MainThread
# that will cause a deadlock and the case exist when
# implemented as a windows service and in any other case
# that another thread executes cherrypy.engine.exit()
if (
t != threading.currentThread() and
t.isAlive() and
not isinstance(t, threading._MainThread)
):
# Note that any dummy (external) threads are always daemonic.
if hasattr(threading.Thread, "daemon"):
# Python 2.6+
d = t.daemon
else:
d = t.isDaemon()
if not d:
self.log("Waiting for thread %s." % t.getName())
t.join()
if self.execv:
self._do_execv()
def wait(self, state, interval=0.1, channel=None):
"""Poll for the given state(s) at intervals; publish to channel."""
if isinstance(state, (tuple, list)):
states = state
else:
states = [state]
def _wait():
while self.state not in states:
time.sleep(interval)
self.publish(channel)
# From http://psyco.sourceforge.net/psycoguide/bugs.html:
# "The compiled machine code does not include the regular polling
# done by Python, meaning that a KeyboardInterrupt will not be
# detected before execution comes back to the regular Python
# interpreter. Your program cannot be interrupted if caught
# into an infinite Psyco-compiled loop."
try:
sys.modules['psyco'].cannotcompile(_wait)
except (KeyError, AttributeError):
pass
_wait()
def _do_execv(self):
"""Re-execute the current process.
This must be called from the main thread, because certain platforms
(OS X) don't allow execv to be called in a child thread very well.
"""
args = sys.argv[:]
self.log('Re-spawning %s' % ' '.join(args))
if sys.platform[:4] == 'java':
from _systemrestart import SystemRestart
raise SystemRestart
else:
args.insert(0, sys.executable)
if sys.platform == 'win32':
args = ['"%s"' % arg for arg in args]
os.chdir(_startup_cwd)
if self.max_cloexec_files:
self._set_cloexec()
os.execv(sys.executable, args)
def _set_cloexec(self):
"""Set the CLOEXEC flag on all open files (except stdin/out/err).
If self.max_cloexec_files is an integer (the default), then on
platforms which support it, it represents the max open files setting
for the operating system. This function will be called just before
the process is restarted via os.execv() to prevent open files
from persisting into the new process.
Set self.max_cloexec_files to 0 to disable this behavior.
"""
for fd in range(3, self.max_cloexec_files): # skip stdin/out/err
try:
flags = fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_GETFD)
except IOError:
continue
fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_SETFD, flags | fcntl.FD_CLOEXEC)
def stop(self):
"""Stop all services."""
self.state = states.STOPPING
self.log('Bus STOPPING')
self.publish('stop')
self.state = states.STOPPED
self.log('Bus STOPPED')
def start_with_callback(self, func, args=None, kwargs=None):
"""Start 'func' in a new thread T, then start self (and return T)."""
if args is None:
args = ()
if kwargs is None:
kwargs = {}
args = (func,) + args
def _callback(func, *a, **kw):
self.wait(states.STARTED)
func(*a, **kw)
t = threading.Thread(target=_callback, args=args, kwargs=kwargs)
t.setName('Bus Callback ' + t.getName())
t.start()
self.start()
return t
def log(self, msg="", level=20, traceback=False):
"""Log the given message. Append the last traceback if requested."""
if traceback:
msg += "\n" + "".join(_traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info()))
self.publish('log', msg, level)
bus = Bus()

@ -1,61 +0,0 @@
"""<MyProject>, a CherryPy application.
Use this as a base for creating new CherryPy applications. When you want
to make a new app, copy and paste this folder to some other location
(maybe site-packages) and rename it to the name of your project,
then tweak as desired.
Even before any tweaking, this should serve a few demonstration pages.
Change to this directory and run:
../cherryd -c site.conf
"""
import cherrypy
from cherrypy import tools, url
import os
local_dir = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), os.path.dirname(__file__))
class Root:
_cp_config = {'tools.log_tracebacks.on': True,
}
def index(self):
return """<html>
<body>Try some <a href='%s?a=7'>other</a> path,
or a <a href='%s?n=14'>default</a> path.<br />
Or, just look at the pretty picture:<br />
<img src='%s' />
</body></html>""" % (url("other"), url("else"),
url("files/made_with_cherrypy_small.png"))
index.exposed = True
def default(self, *args, **kwargs):
return "args: %s kwargs: %s" % (args, kwargs)
default.exposed = True
def other(self, a=2, b='bananas', c=None):
cherrypy.response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/plain'
if c is None:
return "Have %d %s." % (int(a), b)
else:
return "Have %d %s, %s." % (int(a), b, c)
other.exposed = True
files = cherrypy.tools.staticdir.handler(
section="/files",
dir=os.path.join(local_dir, "static"),
# Ignore .php files, etc.
match=r'\.(css|gif|html?|ico|jpe?g|js|png|swf|xml)$',
)
root = Root()
# Uncomment the following to use your own favicon instead of CP's default.
#favicon_path = os.path.join(local_dir, "favicon.ico")
#root.favicon_ico = tools.staticfile.handler(filename=favicon_path)

@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
[/]
log.error_file: "error.log"
log.access_file: "access.log"

@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
[global]
# Uncomment this when you're done developing
#environment: "production"
server.socket_host: "0.0.0.0"
server.socket_port: 8088
# Uncomment the following lines to run on HTTPS at the same time
#server.2.socket_host: "0.0.0.0"
#server.2.socket_port: 8433
#server.2.ssl_certificate: '../test/test.pem'
#server.2.ssl_private_key: '../test/test.pem'
tree.myapp: cherrypy.Application(scaffold.root, "/", "example.conf")

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@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
__all__ = ['HTTPRequest', 'HTTPConnection', 'HTTPServer',
'SizeCheckWrapper', 'KnownLengthRFile', 'ChunkedRFile',
'MaxSizeExceeded', 'NoSSLError', 'FatalSSLAlert',
'WorkerThread', 'ThreadPool', 'SSLAdapter',
'CherryPyWSGIServer',
'Gateway', 'WSGIGateway', 'WSGIGateway_10', 'WSGIGateway_u0',
'WSGIPathInfoDispatcher', 'get_ssl_adapter_class']
import sys
if sys.version_info < (3, 0):
from wsgiserver2 import *
else:
# Le sigh. Boo for backward-incompatible syntax.
exec('from .wsgiserver3 import *')

@ -1,92 +0,0 @@
"""A library for integrating Python's builtin ``ssl`` library with CherryPy.
The ssl module must be importable for SSL functionality.
To use this module, set ``CherryPyWSGIServer.ssl_adapter`` to an instance of
``BuiltinSSLAdapter``.
"""
try:
import ssl
except ImportError:
ssl = None
try:
from _pyio import DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE
except ImportError:
try:
from io import DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE
except ImportError:
DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE = -1
import sys
from cherrypy import wsgiserver
class BuiltinSSLAdapter(wsgiserver.SSLAdapter):
"""A wrapper for integrating Python's builtin ssl module with CherryPy."""
certificate = None
"""The filename of the server SSL certificate."""
private_key = None
"""The filename of the server's private key file."""
def __init__(self, certificate, private_key, certificate_chain=None):
if ssl is None:
raise ImportError("You must install the ssl module to use HTTPS.")
self.certificate = certificate
self.private_key = private_key
self.certificate_chain = certificate_chain
def bind(self, sock):
"""Wrap and return the given socket."""
return sock
def wrap(self, sock):
"""Wrap and return the given socket, plus WSGI environ entries."""
try:
s = ssl.wrap_socket(sock, do_handshake_on_connect=True,
server_side=True, certfile=self.certificate,
keyfile=self.private_key,
ssl_version=ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
except ssl.SSLError:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
if e.errno == ssl.SSL_ERROR_EOF:
# This is almost certainly due to the cherrypy engine
# 'pinging' the socket to assert it's connectable;
# the 'ping' isn't SSL.
return None, {}
elif e.errno == ssl.SSL_ERROR_SSL:
if e.args[1].endswith('http request'):
# The client is speaking HTTP to an HTTPS server.
raise wsgiserver.NoSSLError
elif e.args[1].endswith('unknown protocol'):
# The client is speaking some non-HTTP protocol.
# Drop the conn.
return None, {}
raise
return s, self.get_environ(s)
# TODO: fill this out more with mod ssl env
def get_environ(self, sock):
"""Create WSGI environ entries to be merged into each request."""
cipher = sock.cipher()
ssl_environ = {
"wsgi.url_scheme": "https",
"HTTPS": "on",
'SSL_PROTOCOL': cipher[1],
'SSL_CIPHER': cipher[0]
# SSL_VERSION_INTERFACE string The mod_ssl program version
# SSL_VERSION_LIBRARY string The OpenSSL program version
}
return ssl_environ
if sys.version_info >= (3, 0):
def makefile(self, sock, mode='r', bufsize=DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE):
return wsgiserver.CP_makefile(sock, mode, bufsize)
else:
def makefile(self, sock, mode='r', bufsize=DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE):
return wsgiserver.CP_fileobject(sock, mode, bufsize)

@ -1,253 +0,0 @@
"""A library for integrating pyOpenSSL with CherryPy.
The OpenSSL module must be importable for SSL functionality.
You can obtain it from `here <https://launchpad.net/pyopenssl>`_.
To use this module, set CherryPyWSGIServer.ssl_adapter to an instance of
SSLAdapter. There are two ways to use SSL:
Method One
----------
* ``ssl_adapter.context``: an instance of SSL.Context.
If this is not None, it is assumed to be an SSL.Context instance,
and will be passed to SSL.Connection on bind(). The developer is
responsible for forming a valid Context object. This approach is
to be preferred for more flexibility, e.g. if the cert and key are
streams instead of files, or need decryption, or SSL.SSLv3_METHOD
is desired instead of the default SSL.SSLv23_METHOD, etc. Consult
the pyOpenSSL documentation for complete options.
Method Two (shortcut)
---------------------
* ``ssl_adapter.certificate``: the filename of the server SSL certificate.
* ``ssl_adapter.private_key``: the filename of the server's private key file.
Both are None by default. If ssl_adapter.context is None, but .private_key
and .certificate are both given and valid, they will be read, and the
context will be automatically created from them.
"""
import socket
import threading
import time
from cherrypy import wsgiserver
try:
from OpenSSL import SSL
from OpenSSL import crypto
except ImportError:
SSL = None
class SSL_fileobject(wsgiserver.CP_fileobject):
"""SSL file object attached to a socket object."""
ssl_timeout = 3
ssl_retry = .01
def _safe_call(self, is_reader, call, *args, **kwargs):
"""Wrap the given call with SSL error-trapping.
is_reader: if False EOF errors will be raised. If True, EOF errors
will return "" (to emulate normal sockets).
"""
start = time.time()
while True:
try:
return call(*args, **kwargs)
except SSL.WantReadError:
# Sleep and try again. This is dangerous, because it means
# the rest of the stack has no way of differentiating
# between a "new handshake" error and "client dropped".
# Note this isn't an endless loop: there's a timeout below.
time.sleep(self.ssl_retry)
except SSL.WantWriteError:
time.sleep(self.ssl_retry)
except SSL.SysCallError as e:
if is_reader and e.args == (-1, 'Unexpected EOF'):
return ""
errnum = e.args[0]
if is_reader and errnum in wsgiserver.socket_errors_to_ignore:
return ""
raise socket.error(errnum)
except SSL.Error as e:
if is_reader and e.args == (-1, 'Unexpected EOF'):
return ""
thirdarg = None
try:
thirdarg = e.args[0][0][2]
except IndexError:
pass
if thirdarg == 'http request':
# The client is talking HTTP to an HTTPS server.
raise wsgiserver.NoSSLError()
raise wsgiserver.FatalSSLAlert(*e.args)
except:
raise
if time.time() - start > self.ssl_timeout:
raise socket.timeout("timed out")
def recv(self, size):
return self._safe_call(True, super(SSL_fileobject, self).recv, size)
def sendall(self, *args, **kwargs):
return self._safe_call(False, super(SSL_fileobject, self).sendall,
*args, **kwargs)
def send(self, *args, **kwargs):
return self._safe_call(False, super(SSL_fileobject, self).send,
*args, **kwargs)
class SSLConnection:
"""A thread-safe wrapper for an SSL.Connection.
``*args``: the arguments to create the wrapped ``SSL.Connection(*args)``.
"""
def __init__(self, *args):
self._ssl_conn = SSL.Connection(*args)
self._lock = threading.RLock()
for f in ('get_context', 'pending', 'send', 'write', 'recv', 'read',
'renegotiate', 'bind', 'listen', 'connect', 'accept',
'setblocking', 'fileno', 'close', 'get_cipher_list',
'getpeername', 'getsockname', 'getsockopt', 'setsockopt',
'makefile', 'get_app_data', 'set_app_data', 'state_string',
'sock_shutdown', 'get_peer_certificate', 'want_read',
'want_write', 'set_connect_state', 'set_accept_state',
'connect_ex', 'sendall', 'settimeout', 'gettimeout'):
exec("""def %s(self, *args):
self._lock.acquire()
try:
return self._ssl_conn.%s(*args)
finally:
self._lock.release()
""" % (f, f))
def shutdown(self, *args):
self._lock.acquire()
try:
# pyOpenSSL.socket.shutdown takes no args
return self._ssl_conn.shutdown()
finally:
self._lock.release()
class pyOpenSSLAdapter(wsgiserver.SSLAdapter):
"""A wrapper for integrating pyOpenSSL with CherryPy."""
context = None
"""An instance of SSL.Context."""
certificate = None
"""The filename of the server SSL certificate."""
private_key = None
"""The filename of the server's private key file."""
certificate_chain = None
"""Optional. The filename of CA's intermediate certificate bundle.
This is needed for cheaper "chained root" SSL certificates, and should be
left as None if not required."""
def __init__(self, certificate, private_key, certificate_chain=None):
if SSL is None:
raise ImportError("You must install pyOpenSSL to use HTTPS.")
self.context = None
self.certificate = certificate
self.private_key = private_key
self.certificate_chain = certificate_chain
self._environ = None
def bind(self, sock):
"""Wrap and return the given socket."""
if self.context is None:
self.context = self.get_context()
conn = SSLConnection(self.context, sock)
self._environ = self.get_environ()
return conn
def wrap(self, sock):
"""Wrap and return the given socket, plus WSGI environ entries."""
return sock, self._environ.copy()
def get_context(self):
"""Return an SSL.Context from self attributes."""
# See http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/442473
c = SSL.Context(SSL.SSLv23_METHOD)
c.use_privatekey_file(self.private_key)
if self.certificate_chain:
c.load_verify_locations(self.certificate_chain)
c.use_certificate_file(self.certificate)
return c
def get_environ(self):
"""Return WSGI environ entries to be merged into each request."""
ssl_environ = {
"HTTPS": "on",
# pyOpenSSL doesn't provide access to any of these AFAICT
# 'SSL_PROTOCOL': 'SSLv2',
# SSL_CIPHER string The cipher specification name
# SSL_VERSION_INTERFACE string The mod_ssl program version
# SSL_VERSION_LIBRARY string The OpenSSL program version
}
if self.certificate:
# Server certificate attributes
cert = open(self.certificate, 'rb').read()
cert = crypto.load_certificate(crypto.FILETYPE_PEM, cert)
ssl_environ.update({
'SSL_SERVER_M_VERSION': cert.get_version(),
'SSL_SERVER_M_SERIAL': cert.get_serial_number(),
# 'SSL_SERVER_V_START':
# Validity of server's certificate (start time),
# 'SSL_SERVER_V_END':
# Validity of server's certificate (end time),
})
for prefix, dn in [("I", cert.get_issuer()),
("S", cert.get_subject())]:
# X509Name objects don't seem to have a way to get the
# complete DN string. Use str() and slice it instead,
# because str(dn) == "<X509Name object '/C=US/ST=...'>"
dnstr = str(dn)[18:-2]
wsgikey = 'SSL_SERVER_%s_DN' % prefix
ssl_environ[wsgikey] = dnstr
# The DN should be of the form: /k1=v1/k2=v2, but we must allow
# for any value to contain slashes itself (in a URL).
while dnstr:
pos = dnstr.rfind("=")
dnstr, value = dnstr[:pos], dnstr[pos + 1:]
pos = dnstr.rfind("/")
dnstr, key = dnstr[:pos], dnstr[pos + 1:]
if key and value:
wsgikey = 'SSL_SERVER_%s_DN_%s' % (prefix, key)
ssl_environ[wsgikey] = value
return ssl_environ
def makefile(self, sock, mode='r', bufsize=-1):
if SSL and isinstance(sock, SSL.Connection):
timeout = sock.gettimeout()
f = SSL_fileobject(sock, mode, bufsize)
f.ssl_timeout = timeout
return f
else:
return wsgiserver.CP_fileobject(sock, mode, bufsize)

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

@ -1552,7 +1552,13 @@ class _file(_error):
try:
self.F_CONF.truncate(0)
self.F_CONF.seek(0)
self.F_CONF.write(self.textConfig.encode("UTF-8"))
if isinstance(self.textConfig, str):
self.F_CONF.write(self.textConfig.encode("UTF-8"))
elif isinstance(self.textConfig, bytes):
self.F_CONF.write(self.textConfig)
else:
#TODO if after testing this doesn't pop up, replace elif above with else
raise Exception(f"self.textConfig is not str or bytes: type == {type(self.textConfig)}")
except IOError:
self.setError(_("unable to open the file:")
+ self.nameFileConfig)
@ -4012,7 +4018,7 @@ gettext -d cl_template "$*"
p.pipe.wait()
if p.success():
self.executedFiles.append((code, execPath))
errdata = p.readerr().rstrip()
errdata = p.readerr().rstrip().decode("UTF-8")
if errdata:
for line in errdata.split('\n'):
if line:
@ -4848,6 +4854,10 @@ gettext -d cl_template "$*"
# Записываем в переменную обрабатываемый файл
self.objVar.Set("cl_pass_file", os.path.basename(nameFileConfig))
self.headerParams = None
#debug these templates:
#2_ac_install_merge/xfce-base/thunar/uca.xml (ELEMENT goes in before header for some reason (check add comment))
filesApl = self.joinTemplate(path, nameFileConfig, optFile)
if self.headerParams:
if has_any(self.headerParams, HParams.ServiceControl):
@ -5988,7 +5998,7 @@ gettext -d cl_template "$*"
"""Проверяет файл на кодировку UTF-8"""
if os.path.isfile(fileName):
if data is None:
with open(os.path.abspath(fileName), 'r') as FD:
with open(os.path.abspath(fileName), 'rb') as FD:
data = FD.read(1) + FD.read()
try:
if(not isinstance(data, str)):
@ -6023,8 +6033,11 @@ gettext -d cl_template "$*"
templateFileType = "text"
else:
templateFileType = self.getTemplateType()
#nameFileConfig == "/3.6/2_ac_install_merge/net-misc/openssh/ssh/ssh_config"
#nameFileConfig == "/3.6/3_ac_install_live/1-merge/sys-apps/sysvinit/inittab"
if templateFileType == "bin" and isinstance(self.textTemplate, str):
#probably svg file
self.textTemplate = self.textTemplate.encode("UTF-8")
headerLine = self.getHeaderText(self.textTemplate, binary = templateFileType == "bin")
if headerLine:
envparam = "%s=" % HParams.Environ
@ -6464,12 +6477,16 @@ gettext -d cl_template "$*"
:param body:
:return:
"""
if len(execStr) == 0 and len(comment) == 0:
return body
if comment.startswith("<!--") and body.startswith('<?xml'):
header, body = body.partition("\n")[::2]
body = header + "\n" + comment + body
else:
body = comment + body
if execStr:
if isinstance(body, bytes):
execStr = execStr.encode("UTF-8")
return execStr + body
return body

@ -223,7 +223,7 @@ class process(StdoutableProcess):
try:
self.cacheerr = self.pipe.stderr.read()
except IOError:
self.cacheerr = ""
self.cacheerr = b""
return self.cacheerr
def readByLine(self):

@ -96,10 +96,10 @@ class VariableHrVirtual(ReadonlyVariable):
'Qumranet': 'qemu'}
re_virt_info = re.compile("|".join(virt_sys_dict.keys()))
devices = device.lspci(re_virt_info.search)
for device in devices.values():
name_res = re_virt_info.search(device['name'])
for d in devices.values():
name_res = re_virt_info.search(d['name'])
if not name_res:
name_res = re_virt_info.search(device['vendor'])
name_res = re_virt_info.search(d['vendor'])
if name_res:
return virt_sys_dict[name_res.group()]

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