| // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. | |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style | |
| // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. | |
| // HTTP Request reading and parsing. | |
| package http | |
| import ( | |
| "bufio" | |
| "bytes" | |
| "context" | |
| "crypto/tls" | |
| "encoding/base64" | |
| "errors" | |
| "fmt" | |
| "io" | |
| "maps" | |
| "mime" | |
| "mime/multipart" | |
| "net/http/httptrace" | |
| "net/http/internal/ascii" | |
| "net/textproto" | |
| "net/url" | |
| urlpkg "net/url" | |
| "strconv" | |
| "strings" | |
| "sync" | |
| _ "unsafe" // for linkname | |
| "golang.org/x/net/http/httpguts" | |
| "golang.org/x/net/idna" | |
| ) | |
| const ( | |
| defaultMaxMemory = 32 << 20 // 32 MB | |
| ) | |
| // ErrMissingFile is returned by FormFile when the provided file field name | |
| // is either not present in the request or not a file field. | |
| var ErrMissingFile = errors.New("http: no such file") | |
| // ProtocolError represents an HTTP protocol error. | |
| // | |
| // Deprecated: Not all errors in the http package related to protocol errors | |
| // are of type ProtocolError. | |
| type ProtocolError struct { | |
| ErrorString string | |
| } | |
| func (pe *ProtocolError) Error() string { return pe.ErrorString } | |
| // Is lets http.ErrNotSupported match errors.ErrUnsupported. | |
| func (pe *ProtocolError) Is(err error) bool { | |
| return pe == ErrNotSupported && err == errors.ErrUnsupported | |
| } | |
| var ( | |
| // ErrNotSupported indicates that a feature is not supported. | |
| // | |
| // It is returned by ResponseController methods to indicate that | |
| // the handler does not support the method, and by the Push method | |
| // of Pusher implementations to indicate that HTTP/2 Push support | |
| // is not available. | |
| ErrNotSupported = &ProtocolError{"feature not supported"} | |
| // Deprecated: ErrUnexpectedTrailer is no longer returned by | |
| // anything in the net/http package. Callers should not | |
| // compare errors against this variable. | |
| ErrUnexpectedTrailer = &ProtocolError{"trailer header without chunked transfer encoding"} | |
| // ErrMissingBoundary is returned by Request.MultipartReader when the | |
| // request's Content-Type does not include a "boundary" parameter. | |
| ErrMissingBoundary = &ProtocolError{"no multipart boundary param in Content-Type"} | |
| // ErrNotMultipart is returned by Request.MultipartReader when the | |
| // request's Content-Type is not multipart/form-data. | |
| ErrNotMultipart = &ProtocolError{"request Content-Type isn't multipart/form-data"} | |
| // Deprecated: ErrHeaderTooLong is no longer returned by | |
| // anything in the net/http package. Callers should not | |
| // compare errors against this variable. | |
| ErrHeaderTooLong = &ProtocolError{"header too long"} | |
| // Deprecated: ErrShortBody is no longer returned by | |
| // anything in the net/http package. Callers should not | |
| // compare errors against this variable. | |
| ErrShortBody = &ProtocolError{"entity body too short"} | |
| // Deprecated: ErrMissingContentLength is no longer returned by | |
| // anything in the net/http package. Callers should not | |
| // compare errors against this variable. | |
| ErrMissingContentLength = &ProtocolError{"missing ContentLength in HEAD response"} | |
| ) | |
| func badStringError(what, val string) error { return fmt.Errorf("%s %q", what, val) } | |
| // Headers that Request.Write handles itself and should be skipped. | |
| var reqWriteExcludeHeader = map[string]bool{ | |
| "Host": true, // not in Header map anyway | |
| "User-Agent": true, | |
| "Content-Length": true, | |
| "Transfer-Encoding": true, | |
| "Trailer": true, | |
| } | |
| // A Request represents an HTTP request received by a server | |
| // or to be sent by a client. | |
| // | |
| // The field semantics differ slightly between client and server | |
| // usage. In addition to the notes on the fields below, see the | |
| // documentation for [Request.Write] and [RoundTripper]. | |
| type Request struct { | |
| // Method specifies the HTTP method (GET, POST, PUT, etc.). | |
| // For client requests, an empty string means GET. | |
| Method string | |
| // URL specifies either the URI being requested (for server | |
| // requests) or the URL to access (for client requests). | |
| // | |
| // For server requests, the URL is parsed from the URI | |
| // supplied on the Request-Line as stored in RequestURI. For | |
| // most requests, fields other than Path and RawQuery will be | |
| // empty. (See RFC 7230, Section 5.3) | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, the URL's Host specifies the server to | |
| // connect to, while the Request's Host field optionally | |
| // specifies the Host header value to send in the HTTP | |
| // request. | |
| URL *url.URL | |
| // The protocol version for incoming server requests. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, these fields are ignored. The HTTP | |
| // client code always uses either HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/2. | |
| // See the docs on Transport for details. | |
| Proto string // "HTTP/1.0" | |
| ProtoMajor int // 1 | |
| ProtoMinor int // 0 | |
| // Header contains the request header fields either received | |
| // by the server or to be sent by the client. | |
| // | |
| // If a server received a request with header lines, | |
| // | |
| // Host: example.com | |
| // accept-encoding: gzip, deflate | |
| // Accept-Language: en-us | |
| // fOO: Bar | |
| // foo: two | |
| // | |
| // then | |
| // | |
| // Header = map[string][]string{ | |
| // "Accept-Encoding": {"gzip, deflate"}, | |
| // "Accept-Language": {"en-us"}, | |
| // "Foo": {"Bar", "two"}, | |
| // } | |
| // | |
| // For incoming requests, the Host header is promoted to the | |
| // Request.Host field and removed from the Header map. | |
| // | |
| // HTTP defines that header names are case-insensitive. The | |
| // request parser implements this by using CanonicalHeaderKey, | |
| // making the first character and any characters following a | |
| // hyphen uppercase and the rest lowercase. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, certain headers such as Content-Length | |
| // and Connection are automatically written when needed and | |
| // values in Header may be ignored. See the documentation | |
| // for the Request.Write method. | |
| Header Header | |
| // Body is the request's body. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, a nil body means the request has no | |
| // body, such as a GET request. The HTTP Client's Transport | |
| // is responsible for calling the Close method. | |
| // | |
| // For server requests, the Request Body is always non-nil | |
| // but will return EOF immediately when no body is present. | |
| // The Server will close the request body. The ServeHTTP | |
| // Handler does not need to. | |
| // | |
| // Body must allow Read to be called concurrently with Close. | |
| // In particular, calling Close should unblock a Read waiting | |
| // for input. | |
| Body io.ReadCloser | |
| // GetBody defines an optional func to return a new copy of | |
| // Body. It is used for client requests when a redirect requires | |
| // reading the body more than once. Use of GetBody still | |
| // requires setting Body. | |
| // | |
| // For server requests, it is unused. | |
| GetBody func() (io.ReadCloser, error) | |
| // ContentLength records the length of the associated content. | |
| // The value -1 indicates that the length is unknown. | |
| // Values >= 0 indicate that the given number of bytes may | |
| // be read from Body. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, a value of 0 with a non-nil Body is | |
| // also treated as unknown. | |
| ContentLength int64 | |
| // TransferEncoding lists the transfer encodings from outermost to | |
| // innermost. An empty list denotes the "identity" encoding. | |
| // TransferEncoding can usually be ignored; chunked encoding is | |
| // automatically added and removed as necessary when sending and | |
| // receiving requests. | |
| TransferEncoding []string | |
| // Close indicates whether to close the connection after | |
| // replying to this request (for servers) or after sending this | |
| // request and reading its response (for clients). | |
| // | |
| // For server requests, the HTTP server handles this automatically | |
| // and this field is not needed by Handlers. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, setting this field prevents re-use of | |
| // TCP connections between requests to the same hosts, as if | |
| // Transport.DisableKeepAlives were set. | |
| Close bool | |
| // For server requests, Host specifies the host on which the | |
| // URL is sought. For HTTP/1 (per RFC 7230, section 5.4), this | |
| // is either the value of the "Host" header or the host name | |
| // given in the URL itself. For HTTP/2, it is the value of the | |
| // ":authority" pseudo-header field. | |
| // It may be of the form "host:port". For international domain | |
| // names, Host may be in Punycode or Unicode form. Use | |
| // golang.org/x/net/idna to convert it to either format if | |
| // needed. | |
| // To prevent DNS rebinding attacks, server Handlers should | |
| // validate that the Host header has a value for which the | |
| // Handler considers itself authoritative. The included | |
| // ServeMux supports patterns registered to particular host | |
| // names and thus protects its registered Handlers. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, Host optionally overrides the Host | |
| // header to send. If empty, the Request.Write method uses | |
| // the value of URL.Host. Host may contain an international | |
| // domain name. | |
| Host string | |
| // Form contains the parsed form data, including both the URL | |
| // field's query parameters and the PATCH, POST, or PUT form data. | |
| // This field is only available after ParseForm is called. | |
| // The HTTP client ignores Form and uses Body instead. | |
| Form url.Values | |
| // PostForm contains the parsed form data from PATCH, POST | |
| // or PUT body parameters. | |
| // | |
| // This field is only available after ParseForm is called. | |
| // The HTTP client ignores PostForm and uses Body instead. | |
| PostForm url.Values | |
| // MultipartForm is the parsed multipart form, including file uploads. | |
| // This field is only available after ParseMultipartForm is called. | |
| // The HTTP client ignores MultipartForm and uses Body instead. | |
| MultipartForm *multipart.Form | |
| // Trailer specifies additional headers that are sent after the request | |
| // body. | |
| // | |
| // For server requests, the Trailer map initially contains only the | |
| // trailer keys, with nil values. (The client declares which trailers it | |
| // will later send.) While the handler is reading from Body, it must | |
| // not reference Trailer. After reading from Body returns EOF, Trailer | |
| // can be read again and will contain non-nil values, if they were sent | |
| // by the client. | |
| // | |
| // For client requests, Trailer must be initialized to a map containing | |
| // the trailer keys to later send. The values may be nil or their final | |
| // values. The ContentLength must be 0 or -1, to send a chunked request. | |
| // After the HTTP request is sent the map values can be updated while | |
| // the request body is read. Once the body returns EOF, the caller must | |
| // not mutate Trailer. | |
| // | |
| // Few HTTP clients, servers, or proxies support HTTP trailers. | |
| Trailer Header | |
| // RemoteAddr allows HTTP servers and other software to record | |
| // the network address that sent the request, usually for | |
| // logging. This field is not filled in by ReadRequest and | |
| // has no defined format. The HTTP server in this package | |
| // sets RemoteAddr to an "IP:port" address before invoking a | |
| // handler. | |
| // This field is ignored by the HTTP client. | |
| RemoteAddr string | |
| // RequestURI is the unmodified request-target of the | |
| // Request-Line (RFC 7230, Section 3.1.1) as sent by the client | |
| // to a server. Usually the URL field should be used instead. | |
| // It is an error to set this field in an HTTP client request. | |
| RequestURI string | |
| // TLS allows HTTP servers and other software to record | |
| // information about the TLS connection on which the request | |
| // was received. This field is not filled in by ReadRequest. | |
| // The HTTP server in this package sets the field for | |
| // TLS-enabled connections before invoking a handler; | |
| // otherwise it leaves the field nil. | |
| // This field is ignored by the HTTP client. | |
| TLS *tls.ConnectionState | |
| // Cancel is an optional channel whose closure indicates that the client | |
| // request should be regarded as canceled. Not all implementations of | |
| // RoundTripper may support Cancel. | |
| // | |
| // For server requests, this field is not applicable. | |
| // | |
| // Deprecated: Set the Request's context with NewRequestWithContext | |
| // instead. If a Request's Cancel field and context are both | |
| // set, it is undefined whether Cancel is respected. | |
| Cancel <-chan struct{} | |
| // Response is the redirect response which caused this request | |
| // to be created. This field is only populated during client | |
| // redirects. | |
| Response *Response | |
| // Pattern is the [ServeMux] pattern that matched the request. | |
| // It is empty if the request was not matched against a pattern. | |
| Pattern string | |
| // ctx is either the client or server context. It should only | |
| // be modified via copying the whole Request using Clone or WithContext. | |
| // It is unexported to prevent people from using Context wrong | |
| // and mutating the contexts held by callers of the same request. | |
| ctx context.Context | |
| // The following fields are for requests matched by ServeMux. | |
| pat *pattern // the pattern that matched | |
| matches []string // values for the matching wildcards in pat | |
| otherValues map[string]string // for calls to SetPathValue that don't match a wildcard | |
| } | |
| // Context returns the request's context. To change the context, use | |
| // [Request.Clone] or [Request.WithContext]. | |
| // | |
| // The returned context is always non-nil; it defaults to the | |
| // background context. | |
| // | |
| // For outgoing client requests, the context controls cancellation. | |
| // | |
| // For incoming server requests, the context is canceled when the | |
| // client's connection closes, the request is canceled (with HTTP/2), | |
| // or when the ServeHTTP method returns. | |
| func (r *Request) Context() context.Context { | |
| if r.ctx != nil { | |
| return r.ctx | |
| } | |
| return context.Background() | |
| } | |
| // WithContext returns a shallow copy of r with its context changed | |
| // to ctx. The provided ctx must be non-nil. | |
| // | |
| // For outgoing client request, the context controls the entire | |
| // lifetime of a request and its response: obtaining a connection, | |
| // sending the request, and reading the response headers and body. | |
| // | |
| // To create a new request with a context, use [NewRequestWithContext]. | |
| // To make a deep copy of a request with a new context, use [Request.Clone]. | |
| func (r *Request) WithContext(ctx context.Context) *Request { | |
| if ctx == nil { | |
| panic("nil context") | |
| } | |
| r2 := new(Request) | |
| *r2 = *r | |
| r2.ctx = ctx | |
| return r2 | |
| } | |
| // Clone returns a deep copy of r with its context changed to ctx. | |
| // The provided ctx must be non-nil. | |
| // | |
| // Clone only makes a shallow copy of the Body field. | |
| // | |
| // For an outgoing client request, the context controls the entire | |
| // lifetime of a request and its response: obtaining a connection, | |
| // sending the request, and reading the response headers and body. | |
| func (r *Request) Clone(ctx context.Context) *Request { | |
| if ctx == nil { | |
| panic("nil context") | |
| } | |
| r2 := new(Request) | |
| *r2 = *r | |
| r2.ctx = ctx | |
| r2.URL = cloneURL(r.URL) | |
| r2.Header = r.Header.Clone() | |
| r2.Trailer = r.Trailer.Clone() | |
| if s := r.TransferEncoding; s != nil { | |
| s2 := make([]string, len(s)) | |
| copy(s2, s) | |
| r2.TransferEncoding = s2 | |
| } | |
| r2.Form = cloneURLValues(r.Form) | |
| r2.PostForm = cloneURLValues(r.PostForm) | |
| r2.MultipartForm = cloneMultipartForm(r.MultipartForm) | |
| // Copy matches and otherValues. See issue 61410. | |
| if s := r.matches; s != nil { | |
| s2 := make([]string, len(s)) | |
| copy(s2, s) | |
| r2.matches = s2 | |
| } | |
| r2.otherValues = maps.Clone(r.otherValues) | |
| return r2 | |
| } | |
| // ProtoAtLeast reports whether the HTTP protocol used | |
| // in the request is at least major.minor. | |
| func (r *Request) ProtoAtLeast(major, minor int) bool { | |
| return r.ProtoMajor > major || | |
| r.ProtoMajor == major && r.ProtoMinor >= minor | |
| } | |
| // UserAgent returns the client's User-Agent, if sent in the request. | |
| func (r *Request) UserAgent() string { | |
| return r.Header.Get("User-Agent") | |
| } | |
| // Cookies parses and returns the HTTP cookies sent with the request. | |
| func (r *Request) Cookies() []*Cookie { | |
| return readCookies(r.Header, "") | |
| } | |
| // CookiesNamed parses and returns the named HTTP cookies sent with the request | |
| // or an empty slice if none matched. | |
| func (r *Request) CookiesNamed(name string) []*Cookie { | |
| if name == "" { | |
| return []*Cookie{} | |
| } | |
| return readCookies(r.Header, name) | |
| } | |
| // ErrNoCookie is returned by Request's Cookie method when a cookie is not found. | |
| var ErrNoCookie = errors.New("http: named cookie not present") | |
| // Cookie returns the named cookie provided in the request or | |
| // [ErrNoCookie] if not found. | |
| // If multiple cookies match the given name, only one cookie will | |
| // be returned. | |
| func (r *Request) Cookie(name string) (*Cookie, error) { | |
| if name == "" { | |
| return nil, ErrNoCookie | |
| } | |
| for _, c := range readCookies(r.Header, name) { | |
| return c, nil | |
| } | |
| return nil, ErrNoCookie | |
| } | |
| // AddCookie adds a cookie to the request. Per RFC 6265 section 5.4, | |
| // AddCookie does not attach more than one [Cookie] header field. That | |
| // means all cookies, if any, are written into the same line, | |
| // separated by semicolon. | |
| // AddCookie only sanitizes c's name and value, and does not sanitize | |
| // a Cookie header already present in the request. | |
| func (r *Request) AddCookie(c *Cookie) { | |
| s := fmt.Sprintf("%s=%s", sanitizeCookieName(c.Name), sanitizeCookieValue(c.Value, c.Quoted)) | |
| if c := r.Header.Get("Cookie"); c != "" { | |
| r.Header.Set("Cookie", c+"; "+s) | |
| } else { | |
| r.Header.Set("Cookie", s) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // Referer returns the referring URL, if sent in the request. | |
| // | |
| // Referer is misspelled as in the request itself, a mistake from the | |
| // earliest days of HTTP. This value can also be fetched from the | |
| // [Header] map as Header["Referer"]; the benefit of making it available | |
| // as a method is that the compiler can diagnose programs that use the | |
| // alternate (correct English) spelling req.Referrer() but cannot | |
| // diagnose programs that use Header["Referrer"]. | |
| func (r *Request) Referer() string { | |
| return r.Header.Get("Referer") | |
| } | |
| // multipartByReader is a sentinel value. | |
| // Its presence in Request.MultipartForm indicates that parsing of the request | |
| // body has been handed off to a MultipartReader instead of ParseMultipartForm. | |
| var multipartByReader = &multipart.Form{ | |
| Value: make(map[string][]string), | |
| File: make(map[string][]*multipart.FileHeader), | |
| } | |
| // MultipartReader returns a MIME multipart reader if this is a | |
| // multipart/form-data or a multipart/mixed POST request, else returns nil and an error. | |
| // Use this function instead of [Request.ParseMultipartForm] to | |
| // process the request body as a stream. | |
| func (r *Request) MultipartReader() (*multipart.Reader, error) { | |
| if r.MultipartForm == multipartByReader { | |
| return nil, errors.New("http: MultipartReader called twice") | |
| } | |
| if r.MultipartForm != nil { | |
| return nil, errors.New("http: multipart handled by ParseMultipartForm") | |
| } | |
| r.MultipartForm = multipartByReader | |
| return r.multipartReader(true) | |
| } | |
| func (r *Request) multipartReader(allowMixed bool) (*multipart.Reader, error) { | |
| v := r.Header.Get("Content-Type") | |
| if v == "" { | |
| return nil, ErrNotMultipart | |
| } | |
| if r.Body == nil { | |
| return nil, errors.New("missing form body") | |
| } | |
| d, params, err := mime.ParseMediaType(v) | |
| if err != nil || !(d == "multipart/form-data" || allowMixed && d == "multipart/mixed") { | |
| return nil, ErrNotMultipart | |
| } | |
| boundary, ok := params["boundary"] | |
| if !ok { | |
| return nil, ErrMissingBoundary | |
| } | |
| return multipart.NewReader(r.Body, boundary), nil | |
| } | |
| // isH2Upgrade reports whether r represents the http2 "client preface" | |
| // magic string. | |
| func (r *Request) isH2Upgrade() bool { | |
| return r.Method == "PRI" && len(r.Header) == 0 && r.URL.Path == "*" && r.Proto == "HTTP/2.0" | |
| } | |
| // Return value if nonempty, def otherwise. | |
| func valueOrDefault(value, def string) string { | |
| if value != "" { | |
| return value | |
| } | |
| return def | |
| } | |
| // NOTE: This is not intended to reflect the actual Go version being used. | |
| // It was changed at the time of Go 1.1 release because the former User-Agent | |
| // had ended up blocked by some intrusion detection systems. | |
| // See https://codereview.appspot.com/7532043. | |
| const defaultUserAgent = "Go-http-client/1.1" | |
| // Write writes an HTTP/1.1 request, which is the header and body, in wire format. | |
| // This method consults the following fields of the request: | |
| // | |
| // Host | |
| // URL | |
| // Method (defaults to "GET") | |
| // Header | |
| // ContentLength | |
| // TransferEncoding | |
| // Body | |
| // | |
| // If Body is present, Content-Length is <= 0 and [Request.TransferEncoding] | |
| // hasn't been set to "identity", Write adds "Transfer-Encoding: | |
| // chunked" to the header. Body is closed after it is sent. | |
| func (r *Request) Write(w io.Writer) error { | |
| return r.write(w, false, nil, nil) | |
| } | |
| // WriteProxy is like [Request.Write] but writes the request in the form | |
| // expected by an HTTP proxy. In particular, [Request.WriteProxy] writes the | |
| // initial Request-URI line of the request with an absolute URI, per | |
| // section 5.3 of RFC 7230, including the scheme and host. | |
| // In either case, WriteProxy also writes a Host header, using | |
| // either r.Host or r.URL.Host. | |
| func (r *Request) WriteProxy(w io.Writer) error { | |
| return r.write(w, true, nil, nil) | |
| } | |
| // errMissingHost is returned by Write when there is no Host or URL present in | |
| // the Request. | |
| var errMissingHost = errors.New("http: Request.Write on Request with no Host or URL set") | |
| // extraHeaders may be nil | |
| // waitForContinue may be nil | |
| // always closes body | |
| func (r *Request) write(w io.Writer, usingProxy bool, extraHeaders Header, waitForContinue func() bool) (err error) { | |
| trace := httptrace.ContextClientTrace(r.Context()) | |
| if trace != nil && trace.WroteRequest != nil { | |
| defer func() { | |
| trace.WroteRequest(httptrace.WroteRequestInfo{ | |
| Err: err, | |
| }) | |
| }() | |
| } | |
| closed := false | |
| defer func() { | |
| if closed { | |
| return | |
| } | |
| if closeErr := r.closeBody(); closeErr != nil && err == nil { | |
| err = closeErr | |
| } | |
| }() | |
| // Find the target host. Prefer the Host: header, but if that | |
| // is not given, use the host from the request URL. | |
| // | |
| // Clean the host, in case it arrives with unexpected stuff in it. | |
| host := r.Host | |
| if host == "" { | |
| if r.URL == nil { | |
| return errMissingHost | |
| } | |
| host = r.URL.Host | |
| } | |
| host, err = httpguts.PunycodeHostPort(host) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| // Validate that the Host header is a valid header in general, | |
| // but don't validate the host itself. This is sufficient to avoid | |
| // header or request smuggling via the Host field. | |
| // The server can (and will, if it's a net/http server) reject | |
| // the request if it doesn't consider the host valid. | |
| if !httpguts.ValidHostHeader(host) { | |
| // Historically, we would truncate the Host header after '/' or ' '. | |
| // Some users have relied on this truncation to convert a network | |
| // address such as Unix domain socket path into a valid, ignored | |
| // Host header (see https://go.dev/issue/61431). | |
| // | |
| // We don't preserve the truncation, because sending an altered | |
| // header field opens a smuggling vector. Instead, zero out the | |
| // Host header entirely if it isn't valid. (An empty Host is valid; | |
| // see RFC 9112 Section 3.2.) | |
| // | |
| // Return an error if we're sending to a proxy, since the proxy | |
| // probably can't do anything useful with an empty Host header. | |
| if !usingProxy { | |
| host = "" | |
| } else { | |
| return errors.New("http: invalid Host header") | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // According to RFC 6874, an HTTP client, proxy, or other | |
| // intermediary must remove any IPv6 zone identifier attached | |
| // to an outgoing URI. | |
| host = removeZone(host) | |
| ruri := r.URL.RequestURI() | |
| if usingProxy && r.URL.Scheme != "" && r.URL.Opaque == "" { | |
| ruri = r.URL.Scheme + "://" + host + ruri | |
| } else if r.Method == "CONNECT" && r.URL.Path == "" { | |
| // CONNECT requests normally give just the host and port, not a full URL. | |
| ruri = host | |
| if r.URL.Opaque != "" { | |
| ruri = r.URL.Opaque | |
| } | |
| } | |
| if stringContainsCTLByte(ruri) { | |
| return errors.New("net/http: can't write control character in Request.URL") | |
| } | |
| // TODO: validate r.Method too? At least it's less likely to | |
| // come from an attacker (more likely to be a constant in | |
| // code). | |
| // Wrap the writer in a bufio Writer if it's not already buffered. | |
| // Don't always call NewWriter, as that forces a bytes.Buffer | |
| // and other small bufio Writers to have a minimum 4k buffer | |
| // size. | |
| var bw *bufio.Writer | |
| if _, ok := w.(io.ByteWriter); !ok { | |
| bw = bufio.NewWriter(w) | |
| w = bw | |
| } | |
| _, err = fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s %s HTTP/1.1\r\n", valueOrDefault(r.Method, "GET"), ruri) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| // Header lines | |
| _, err = fmt.Fprintf(w, "Host: %s\r\n", host) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| if trace != nil && trace.WroteHeaderField != nil { | |
| trace.WroteHeaderField("Host", []string{host}) | |
| } | |
| // Use the defaultUserAgent unless the Header contains one, which | |
| // may be blank to not send the header. | |
| userAgent := defaultUserAgent | |
| if r.Header.has("User-Agent") { | |
| userAgent = r.Header.Get("User-Agent") | |
| } | |
| if userAgent != "" { | |
| userAgent = headerNewlineToSpace.Replace(userAgent) | |
| userAgent = textproto.TrimString(userAgent) | |
| _, err = fmt.Fprintf(w, "User-Agent: %s\r\n", userAgent) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| if trace != nil && trace.WroteHeaderField != nil { | |
| trace.WroteHeaderField("User-Agent", []string{userAgent}) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // Process Body,ContentLength,Close,Trailer | |
| tw, err := newTransferWriter(r) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| err = tw.writeHeader(w, trace) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| err = r.Header.writeSubset(w, reqWriteExcludeHeader, trace) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| if extraHeaders != nil { | |
| err = extraHeaders.write(w, trace) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| } | |
| _, err = io.WriteString(w, "\r\n") | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| if trace != nil && trace.WroteHeaders != nil { | |
| trace.WroteHeaders() | |
| } | |
| // Flush and wait for 100-continue if expected. | |
| if waitForContinue != nil { | |
| if bw, ok := w.(*bufio.Writer); ok { | |
| err = bw.Flush() | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| } | |
| if trace != nil && trace.Wait100Continue != nil { | |
| trace.Wait100Continue() | |
| } | |
| if !waitForContinue() { | |
| closed = true | |
| r.closeBody() | |
| return nil | |
| } | |
| } | |
| if bw, ok := w.(*bufio.Writer); ok && tw.FlushHeaders { | |
| if err := bw.Flush(); err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // Write body and trailer | |
| closed = true | |
| err = tw.writeBody(w) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| if tw.bodyReadError == err { | |
| err = requestBodyReadError{err} | |
| } | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| if bw != nil { | |
| return bw.Flush() | |
| } | |
| return nil | |
| } | |
| // requestBodyReadError wraps an error from (*Request).write to indicate | |
| // that the error came from a Read call on the Request.Body. | |
| // This error type should not escape the net/http package to users. | |
| type requestBodyReadError struct{ error } | |
| func idnaASCII(v string) (string, error) { | |
| // TODO: Consider removing this check after verifying performance is okay. | |
| // Right now punycode verification, length checks, context checks, and the | |
| // permissible character tests are all omitted. It also prevents the ToASCII | |
| // call from salvaging an invalid IDN, when possible. As a result it may be | |
| // possible to have two IDNs that appear identical to the user where the | |
| // ASCII-only version causes an error downstream whereas the non-ASCII | |
| // version does not. | |
| // Note that for correct ASCII IDNs ToASCII will only do considerably more | |
| // work, but it will not cause an allocation. | |
| if ascii.Is(v) { | |
| return v, nil | |
| } | |
| return idna.Lookup.ToASCII(v) | |
| } | |
| // removeZone removes IPv6 zone identifier from host. | |
| // E.g., "[fe80::1%en0]:8080" to "[fe80::1]:8080" | |
| func removeZone(host string) string { | |
| if !strings.HasPrefix(host, "[") { | |
| return host | |
| } | |
| i := strings.LastIndex(host, "]") | |
| if i < 0 { | |
| return host | |
| } | |
| j := strings.LastIndex(host[:i], "%") | |
| if j < 0 { | |
| return host | |
| } | |
| return host[:j] + host[i:] | |
| } | |
| // ParseHTTPVersion parses an HTTP version string according to RFC 7230, section 2.6. | |
| // "HTTP/1.0" returns (1, 0, true). Note that strings without | |
| // a minor version, such as "HTTP/2", are not valid. | |
| func ParseHTTPVersion(vers string) (major, minor int, ok bool) { | |
| switch vers { | |
| case "HTTP/1.1": | |
| return 1, 1, true | |
| case "HTTP/1.0": | |
| return 1, 0, true | |
| } | |
| if !strings.HasPrefix(vers, "HTTP/") { | |
| return 0, 0, false | |
| } | |
| if len(vers) != len("HTTP/X.Y") { | |
| return 0, 0, false | |
| } | |
| if vers[6] != '.' { | |
| return 0, 0, false | |
| } | |
| maj, err := strconv.ParseUint(vers[5:6], 10, 0) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return 0, 0, false | |
| } | |
| min, err := strconv.ParseUint(vers[7:8], 10, 0) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return 0, 0, false | |
| } | |
| return int(maj), int(min), true | |
| } | |
| func validMethod(method string) bool { | |
| /* | |
| Method = "OPTIONS" ; Section 9.2 | |
| | "GET" ; Section 9.3 | |
| | "HEAD" ; Section 9.4 | |
| | "POST" ; Section 9.5 | |
| | "PUT" ; Section 9.6 | |
| | "DELETE" ; Section 9.7 | |
| | "TRACE" ; Section 9.8 | |
| | "CONNECT" ; Section 9.9 | |
| | extension-method | |
| extension-method = token | |
| token = 1*<any CHAR except CTLs or separators> | |
| */ | |
| return isToken(method) | |
| } | |
| // NewRequest wraps [NewRequestWithContext] using [context.Background]. | |
| func NewRequest(method, url string, body io.Reader) (*Request, error) { | |
| return NewRequestWithContext(context.Background(), method, url, body) | |
| } | |
| // NewRequestWithContext returns a new [Request] given a method, URL, and | |
| // optional body. | |
| // | |
| // If the provided body is also an [io.Closer], the returned | |
| // [Request.Body] is set to body and will be closed (possibly | |
| // asynchronously) by the Client methods Do, Post, and PostForm, | |
| // and [Transport.RoundTrip]. | |
| // | |
| // NewRequestWithContext returns a Request suitable for use with | |
| // [Client.Do] or [Transport.RoundTrip]. To create a request for use with | |
| // testing a Server Handler, either use the [net/http/httptest.NewRequest] function, | |
| // use [ReadRequest], or manually update the Request fields. | |
| // For an outgoing client request, the context | |
| // controls the entire lifetime of a request and its response: | |
| // obtaining a connection, sending the request, and reading the | |
| // response headers and body. See the [Request] type's documentation for | |
| // the difference between inbound and outbound request fields. | |
| // | |
| // If body is of type [*bytes.Buffer], [*bytes.Reader], or | |
| // [*strings.Reader], the returned request's ContentLength is set to its | |
| // exact value (instead of -1), GetBody is populated (so 307 and 308 | |
| // redirects can replay the body), and Body is set to [NoBody] if the | |
| // ContentLength is 0. | |
| func NewRequestWithContext(ctx context.Context, method, url string, body io.Reader) (*Request, error) { | |
| if method == "" { | |
| // We document that "" means "GET" for Request.Method, and people have | |
| // relied on that from NewRequest, so keep that working. | |
| // We still enforce validMethod for non-empty methods. | |
| method = "GET" | |
| } | |
| if !validMethod(method) { | |
| return nil, fmt.Errorf("net/http: invalid method %q", method) | |
| } | |
| if ctx == nil { | |
| return nil, errors.New("net/http: nil Context") | |
| } | |
| u, err := urlpkg.Parse(url) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return nil, err | |
| } | |
| rc, ok := body.(io.ReadCloser) | |
| if !ok && body != nil { | |
| rc = io.NopCloser(body) | |
| } | |
| // The host's colon:port should be normalized. See Issue 14836. | |
| u.Host = removeEmptyPort(u.Host) | |
| req := &Request{ | |
| ctx: ctx, | |
| Method: method, | |
| URL: u, | |
| Proto: "HTTP/1.1", | |
| ProtoMajor: 1, | |
| ProtoMinor: 1, | |
| Header: make(Header), | |
| Body: rc, | |
| Host: u.Host, | |
| } | |
| if body != nil { | |
| switch v := body.(type) { | |
| case *bytes.Buffer: | |
| req.ContentLength = int64(v.Len()) | |
| buf := v.Bytes() | |
| req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) { | |
| r := bytes.NewReader(buf) | |
| return io.NopCloser(r), nil | |
| } | |
| case *bytes.Reader: | |
| req.ContentLength = int64(v.Len()) | |
| snapshot := *v | |
| req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) { | |
| r := snapshot | |
| return io.NopCloser(&r), nil | |
| } | |
| case *strings.Reader: | |
| req.ContentLength = int64(v.Len()) | |
| snapshot := *v | |
| req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) { | |
| r := snapshot | |
| return io.NopCloser(&r), nil | |
| } | |
| default: | |
| // This is where we'd set it to -1 (at least | |
| // if body != NoBody) to mean unknown, but | |
| // that broke people during the Go 1.8 testing | |
| // period. People depend on it being 0 I | |
| // guess. Maybe retry later. See Issue 18117. | |
| } | |
| // For client requests, Request.ContentLength of 0 | |
| // means either actually 0, or unknown. The only way | |
| // to explicitly say that the ContentLength is zero is | |
| // to set the Body to nil. But turns out too much code | |
| // depends on NewRequest returning a non-nil Body, | |
| // so we use a well-known ReadCloser variable instead | |
| // and have the http package also treat that sentinel | |
| // variable to mean explicitly zero. | |
| if req.GetBody != nil && req.ContentLength == 0 { | |
| req.Body = NoBody | |
| req.GetBody = func() (io.ReadCloser, error) { return NoBody, nil } | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return req, nil | |
| } | |
| // BasicAuth returns the username and password provided in the request's | |
| // Authorization header, if the request uses HTTP Basic Authentication. | |
| // See RFC 2617, Section 2. | |
| func (r *Request) BasicAuth() (username, password string, ok bool) { | |
| auth := r.Header.Get("Authorization") | |
| if auth == "" { | |
| return "", "", false | |
| } | |
| return parseBasicAuth(auth) | |
| } | |
| // parseBasicAuth parses an HTTP Basic Authentication string. | |
| // "Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ==" returns ("Aladdin", "open sesame", true). | |
| // | |
| // parseBasicAuth should be an internal detail, | |
| // but widely used packages access it using linkname. | |
| // Notable members of the hall of shame include: | |
| // - github.com/sagernet/sing | |
| // | |
| // Do not remove or change the type signature. | |
| // See go.dev/issue/67401. | |
| // | |
| //go:linkname parseBasicAuth | |
| func parseBasicAuth(auth string) (username, password string, ok bool) { | |
| const prefix = "Basic " | |
| // Case insensitive prefix match. See Issue 22736. | |
| if len(auth) < len(prefix) || !ascii.EqualFold(auth[:len(prefix)], prefix) { | |
| return "", "", false | |
| } | |
| c, err := base64.StdEncoding.DecodeString(auth[len(prefix):]) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return "", "", false | |
| } | |
| cs := string(c) | |
| username, password, ok = strings.Cut(cs, ":") | |
| if !ok { | |
| return "", "", false | |
| } | |
| return username, password, true | |
| } | |
| // SetBasicAuth sets the request's Authorization header to use HTTP | |
| // Basic Authentication with the provided username and password. | |
| // | |
| // With HTTP Basic Authentication the provided username and password | |
| // are not encrypted. It should generally only be used in an HTTPS | |
| // request. | |
| // | |
| // The username may not contain a colon. Some protocols may impose | |
| // additional requirements on pre-escaping the username and | |
| // password. For instance, when used with OAuth2, both arguments must | |
| // be URL encoded first with [url.QueryEscape]. | |
| func (r *Request) SetBasicAuth(username, password string) { | |
| r.Header.Set("Authorization", "Basic "+basicAuth(username, password)) | |
| } | |
| // parseRequestLine parses "GET /foo HTTP/1.1" into its three parts. | |
| func parseRequestLine(line string) (method, requestURI, proto string, ok bool) { | |
| method, rest, ok1 := strings.Cut(line, " ") | |
| requestURI, proto, ok2 := strings.Cut(rest, " ") | |
| if !ok1 || !ok2 { | |
| return "", "", "", false | |
| } | |
| return method, requestURI, proto, true | |
| } | |
| var textprotoReaderPool sync.Pool | |
| func newTextprotoReader(br *bufio.Reader) *textproto.Reader { | |
| if v := textprotoReaderPool.Get(); v != nil { | |
| tr := v.(*textproto.Reader) | |
| tr.R = br | |
| return tr | |
| } | |
| return textproto.NewReader(br) | |
| } | |
| func putTextprotoReader(r *textproto.Reader) { | |
| r.R = nil | |
| textprotoReaderPool.Put(r) | |
| } | |
| // ReadRequest reads and parses an incoming request from b. | |
| // | |
| // ReadRequest is a low-level function and should only be used for | |
| // specialized applications; most code should use the [Server] to read | |
| // requests and handle them via the [Handler] interface. ReadRequest | |
| // only supports HTTP/1.x requests. For HTTP/2, use golang.org/x/net/http2. | |
| func ReadRequest(b *bufio.Reader) (*Request, error) { | |
| req, err := readRequest(b) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return nil, err | |
| } | |
| delete(req.Header, "Host") | |
| return req, nil | |
| } | |
| // readRequest should be an internal detail, | |
| // but widely used packages access it using linkname. | |
| // Notable members of the hall of shame include: | |
| // - github.com/sagernet/sing | |
| // - github.com/v2fly/v2ray-core/v4 | |
| // - github.com/v2fly/v2ray-core/v5 | |
| // | |
| // Do not remove or change the type signature. | |
| // See go.dev/issue/67401. | |
| // | |
| //go:linkname readRequest | |
| func readRequest(b *bufio.Reader) (req *Request, err error) { | |
| tp := newTextprotoReader(b) | |
| defer putTextprotoReader(tp) | |
| req = new(Request) | |
| // First line: GET /index.html HTTP/1.0 | |
| var s string | |
| if s, err = tp.ReadLine(); err != nil { | |
| return nil, err | |
| } | |
| defer func() { | |
| if err == io.EOF { | |
| err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF | |
| } | |
| }() | |
| var ok bool | |
| req.Method, req.RequestURI, req.Proto, ok = parseRequestLine(s) | |
| if !ok { | |
| return nil, badStringError("malformed HTTP request", s) | |
| } | |
| if !validMethod(req.Method) { | |
| return nil, badStringError("invalid method", req.Method) | |
| } | |
| rawurl := req.RequestURI | |
| if req.ProtoMajor, req.ProtoMinor, ok = ParseHTTPVersion(req.Proto); !ok { | |
| return nil, badStringError("malformed HTTP version", req.Proto) | |
| } | |
| // CONNECT requests are used two different ways, and neither uses a full URL: | |
| // The standard use is to tunnel HTTPS through an HTTP proxy. | |
| // It looks like "CONNECT www.google.com:443 HTTP/1.1", and the parameter is | |
| // just the authority section of a URL. This information should go in req.URL.Host. | |
| // | |
| // The net/rpc package also uses CONNECT, but there the parameter is a path | |
| // that starts with a slash. It can be parsed with the regular URL parser, | |
| // and the path will end up in req.URL.Path, where it needs to be in order for | |
| // RPC to work. | |
| justAuthority := req.Method == "CONNECT" && !strings.HasPrefix(rawurl, "/") | |
| if justAuthority { | |
| rawurl = "http://" + rawurl | |
| } | |
| if req.URL, err = url.ParseRequestURI(rawurl); err != nil { | |
| return nil, err | |
| } | |
| if justAuthority { | |
| // Strip the bogus "http://" back off. | |
| req.URL.Scheme = "" | |
| } | |
| // Subsequent lines: Key: value. | |
| mimeHeader, err := tp.ReadMIMEHeader() | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return nil, err | |
| } | |
| req.Header = Header(mimeHeader) | |
| if len(req.Header["Host"]) > 1 { | |
| return nil, fmt.Errorf("too many Host headers") | |
| } | |
| // RFC 7230, section 5.3: Must treat | |
| // GET /index.html HTTP/1.1 | |
| // Host: www.google.com | |
| // and | |
| // GET http://www.google.com/index.html HTTP/1.1 | |
| // Host: doesntmatter | |
| // the same. In the second case, any Host line is ignored. | |
| req.Host = req.URL.Host | |
| if req.Host == "" { | |
| req.Host = req.Header.get("Host") | |
| } | |
| fixPragmaCacheControl(req.Header) | |
| req.Close = shouldClose(req.ProtoMajor, req.ProtoMinor, req.Header, false) | |
| err = readTransfer(req, b) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return nil, err | |
| } | |
| if req.isH2Upgrade() { | |
| // Because it's neither chunked, nor declared: | |
| req.ContentLength = -1 | |
| // We want to give handlers a chance to hijack the | |
| // connection, but we need to prevent the Server from | |
| // dealing with the connection further if it's not | |
| // hijacked. Set Close to ensure that: | |
| req.Close = true | |
| } | |
| return req, nil | |
| } | |
| // MaxBytesReader is similar to [io.LimitReader] but is intended for | |
| // limiting the size of incoming request bodies. In contrast to | |
| // io.LimitReader, MaxBytesReader's result is a ReadCloser, returns a | |
| // non-nil error of type [*MaxBytesError] for a Read beyond the limit, | |
| // and closes the underlying reader when its Close method is called. | |
| // | |
| // MaxBytesReader prevents clients from accidentally or maliciously | |
| // sending a large request and wasting server resources. If possible, | |
| // it tells the [ResponseWriter] to close the connection after the limit | |
| // has been reached. | |
| func MaxBytesReader(w ResponseWriter, r io.ReadCloser, n int64) io.ReadCloser { | |
| if n < 0 { // Treat negative limits as equivalent to 0. | |
| n = 0 | |
| } | |
| return &maxBytesReader{w: w, r: r, i: n, n: n} | |
| } | |
| // MaxBytesError is returned by [MaxBytesReader] when its read limit is exceeded. | |
| type MaxBytesError struct { | |
| Limit int64 | |
| } | |
| func (e *MaxBytesError) Error() string { | |
| // Due to Hyrum's law, this text cannot be changed. | |
| return "http: request body too large" | |
| } | |
| type maxBytesReader struct { | |
| w ResponseWriter | |
| r io.ReadCloser // underlying reader | |
| i int64 // max bytes initially, for MaxBytesError | |
| n int64 // max bytes remaining | |
| err error // sticky error | |
| } | |
| func (l *maxBytesReader) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) { | |
| if l.err != nil { | |
| return 0, l.err | |
| } | |
| if len(p) == 0 { | |
| return 0, nil | |
| } | |
| // If they asked for a 32KB byte read but only 5 bytes are | |
| // remaining, no need to read 32KB. 6 bytes will answer the | |
| // question of the whether we hit the limit or go past it. | |
| // 0 < len(p) < 2^63 | |
| if int64(len(p))-1 > l.n { | |
| p = p[:l.n+1] | |
| } | |
| n, err = l.r.Read(p) | |
| if int64(n) <= l.n { | |
| l.n -= int64(n) | |
| l.err = err | |
| return n, err | |
| } | |
| n = int(l.n) | |
| l.n = 0 | |
| // The server code and client code both use | |
| // maxBytesReader. This "requestTooLarge" check is | |
| // only used by the server code. To prevent binaries | |
| // which only using the HTTP Client code (such as | |
| // cmd/go) from also linking in the HTTP server, don't | |
| // use a static type assertion to the server | |
| // "*response" type. Check this interface instead: | |
| type requestTooLarger interface { | |
| requestTooLarge() | |
| } | |
| if res, ok := l.w.(requestTooLarger); ok { | |
| res.requestTooLarge() | |
| } | |
| l.err = &MaxBytesError{l.i} | |
| return n, l.err | |
| } | |
| func (l *maxBytesReader) Close() error { | |
| return l.r.Close() | |
| } | |
| func copyValues(dst, src url.Values) { | |
| for k, vs := range src { | |
| dst[k] = append(dst[k], vs...) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| func parsePostForm(r *Request) (vs url.Values, err error) { | |
| if r.Body == nil { | |
| err = errors.New("missing form body") | |
| return | |
| } | |
| ct := r.Header.Get("Content-Type") | |
| // RFC 7231, section 3.1.1.5 - empty type | |
| // MAY be treated as application/octet-stream | |
| if ct == "" { | |
| ct = "application/octet-stream" | |
| } | |
| ct, _, err = mime.ParseMediaType(ct) | |
| switch { | |
| case ct == "application/x-www-form-urlencoded": | |
| var reader io.Reader = r.Body | |
| maxFormSize := int64(1<<63 - 1) | |
| if _, ok := r.Body.(*maxBytesReader); !ok { | |
| maxFormSize = int64(10 << 20) // 10 MB is a lot of text. | |
| reader = io.LimitReader(r.Body, maxFormSize+1) | |
| } | |
| b, e := io.ReadAll(reader) | |
| if e != nil { | |
| if err == nil { | |
| err = e | |
| } | |
| break | |
| } | |
| if int64(len(b)) > maxFormSize { | |
| err = errors.New("http: POST too large") | |
| return | |
| } | |
| vs, e = url.ParseQuery(string(b)) | |
| if err == nil { | |
| err = e | |
| } | |
| case ct == "multipart/form-data": | |
| // handled by ParseMultipartForm (which is calling us, or should be) | |
| // TODO(bradfitz): there are too many possible | |
| // orders to call too many functions here. | |
| // Clean this up and write more tests. | |
| // request_test.go contains the start of this, | |
| // in TestParseMultipartFormOrder and others. | |
| } | |
| return | |
| } | |
| // ParseForm populates r.Form and r.PostForm. | |
| // | |
| // For all requests, ParseForm parses the raw query from the URL and updates | |
| // r.Form. | |
| // | |
| // For POST, PUT, and PATCH requests, it also reads the request body, parses it | |
| // as a form and puts the results into both r.PostForm and r.Form. Request body | |
| // parameters take precedence over URL query string values in r.Form. | |
| // | |
| // If the request Body's size has not already been limited by [MaxBytesReader], | |
| // the size is capped at 10MB. | |
| // | |
| // For other HTTP methods, or when the Content-Type is not | |
| // application/x-www-form-urlencoded, the request Body is not read, and | |
| // r.PostForm is initialized to a non-nil, empty value. | |
| // | |
| // [Request.ParseMultipartForm] calls ParseForm automatically. | |
| // ParseForm is idempotent. | |
| func (r *Request) ParseForm() error { | |
| var err error | |
| if r.PostForm == nil { | |
| if r.Method == "POST" || r.Method == "PUT" || r.Method == "PATCH" { | |
| r.PostForm, err = parsePostForm(r) | |
| } | |
| if r.PostForm == nil { | |
| r.PostForm = make(url.Values) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| if r.Form == nil { | |
| if len(r.PostForm) > 0 { | |
| r.Form = make(url.Values) | |
| copyValues(r.Form, r.PostForm) | |
| } | |
| var newValues url.Values | |
| if r.URL != nil { | |
| var e error | |
| newValues, e = url.ParseQuery(r.URL.RawQuery) | |
| if err == nil { | |
| err = e | |
| } | |
| } | |
| if newValues == nil { | |
| newValues = make(url.Values) | |
| } | |
| if r.Form == nil { | |
| r.Form = newValues | |
| } else { | |
| copyValues(r.Form, newValues) | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| // ParseMultipartForm parses a request body as multipart/form-data. | |
| // The whole request body is parsed and up to a total of maxMemory bytes of | |
| // its file parts are stored in memory, with the remainder stored on | |
| // disk in temporary files. | |
| // ParseMultipartForm calls [Request.ParseForm] if necessary. | |
| // If ParseForm returns an error, ParseMultipartForm returns it but also | |
| // continues parsing the request body. | |
| // After one call to ParseMultipartForm, subsequent calls have no effect. | |
| func (r *Request) ParseMultipartForm(maxMemory int64) error { | |
| if r.MultipartForm == multipartByReader { | |
| return errors.New("http: multipart handled by MultipartReader") | |
| } | |
| var parseFormErr error | |
| if r.Form == nil { | |
| // Let errors in ParseForm fall through, and just | |
| // return it at the end. | |
| parseFormErr = r.ParseForm() | |
| } | |
| if r.MultipartForm != nil { | |
| return nil | |
| } | |
| mr, err := r.multipartReader(false) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| f, err := mr.ReadForm(maxMemory) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return err | |
| } | |
| if r.PostForm == nil { | |
| r.PostForm = make(url.Values) | |
| } | |
| for k, v := range f.Value { | |
| r.Form[k] = append(r.Form[k], v...) | |
| // r.PostForm should also be populated. See Issue 9305. | |
| r.PostForm[k] = append(r.PostForm[k], v...) | |
| } | |
| r.MultipartForm = f | |
| return parseFormErr | |
| } | |
| // FormValue returns the first value for the named component of the query. | |
| // The precedence order: | |
| // 1. application/x-www-form-urlencoded form body (POST, PUT, PATCH only) | |
| // 2. query parameters (always) | |
| // 3. multipart/form-data form body (always) | |
| // | |
| // FormValue calls [Request.ParseMultipartForm] and [Request.ParseForm] | |
| // if necessary and ignores any errors returned by these functions. | |
| // If key is not present, FormValue returns the empty string. | |
| // To access multiple values of the same key, call ParseForm and | |
| // then inspect [Request.Form] directly. | |
| func (r *Request) FormValue(key string) string { | |
| if r.Form == nil { | |
| r.ParseMultipartForm(defaultMaxMemory) | |
| } | |
| if vs := r.Form[key]; len(vs) > 0 { | |
| return vs[0] | |
| } | |
| return "" | |
| } | |
| // PostFormValue returns the first value for the named component of the POST, | |
| // PUT, or PATCH request body. URL query parameters are ignored. | |
| // PostFormValue calls [Request.ParseMultipartForm] and [Request.ParseForm] if necessary and ignores | |
| // any errors returned by these functions. | |
| // If key is not present, PostFormValue returns the empty string. | |
| func (r *Request) PostFormValue(key string) string { | |
| if r.PostForm == nil { | |
| r.ParseMultipartForm(defaultMaxMemory) | |
| } | |
| if vs := r.PostForm[key]; len(vs) > 0 { | |
| return vs[0] | |
| } | |
| return "" | |
| } | |
| // FormFile returns the first file for the provided form key. | |
| // FormFile calls [Request.ParseMultipartForm] and [Request.ParseForm] if necessary. | |
| func (r *Request) FormFile(key string) (multipart.File, *multipart.FileHeader, error) { | |
| if r.MultipartForm == multipartByReader { | |
| return nil, nil, errors.New("http: multipart handled by MultipartReader") | |
| } | |
| if r.MultipartForm == nil { | |
| err := r.ParseMultipartForm(defaultMaxMemory) | |
| if err != nil { | |
| return nil, nil, err | |
| } | |
| } | |
| if r.MultipartForm != nil && r.MultipartForm.File != nil { | |
| if fhs := r.MultipartForm.File[key]; len(fhs) > 0 { | |
| f, err := fhs[0].Open() | |
| return f, fhs[0], err | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return nil, nil, ErrMissingFile | |
| } | |
| // PathValue returns the value for the named path wildcard in the [ServeMux] pattern | |
| // that matched the request. | |
| // It returns the empty string if the request was not matched against a pattern | |
| // or there is no such wildcard in the pattern. | |
| func (r *Request) PathValue(name string) string { | |
| if i := r.patIndex(name); i >= 0 { | |
| return r.matches[i] | |
| } | |
| return r.otherValues[name] | |
| } | |
| // SetPathValue sets name to value, so that subsequent calls to r.PathValue(name) | |
| // return value. | |
| func (r *Request) SetPathValue(name, value string) { | |
| if i := r.patIndex(name); i >= 0 { | |
| r.matches[i] = value | |
| } else { | |
| if r.otherValues == nil { | |
| r.otherValues = map[string]string{} | |
| } | |
| r.otherValues[name] = value | |
| } | |
| } | |
| // patIndex returns the index of name in the list of named wildcards of the | |
| // request's pattern, or -1 if there is no such name. | |
| func (r *Request) patIndex(name string) int { | |
| // The linear search seems expensive compared to a map, but just creating the map | |
| // takes a lot of time, and most patterns will just have a couple of wildcards. | |
| if r.pat == nil { | |
| return -1 | |
| } | |
| i := 0 | |
| for _, seg := range r.pat.segments { | |
| if seg.wild && seg.s != "" { | |
| if name == seg.s { | |
| return i | |
| } | |
| i++ | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return -1 | |
| } | |
| func (r *Request) expectsContinue() bool { | |
| return hasToken(r.Header.get("Expect"), "100-continue") | |
| } | |
| func (r *Request) wantsHttp10KeepAlive() bool { | |
| if r.ProtoMajor != 1 || r.ProtoMinor != 0 { | |
| return false | |
| } | |
| return hasToken(r.Header.get("Connection"), "keep-alive") | |
| } | |
| func (r *Request) wantsClose() bool { | |
| if r.Close { | |
| return true | |
| } | |
| return hasToken(r.Header.get("Connection"), "close") | |
| } | |
| func (r *Request) closeBody() error { | |
| if r.Body == nil { | |
| return nil | |
| } | |
| return r.Body.Close() | |
| } | |
| func (r *Request) isReplayable() bool { | |
| if r.Body == nil || r.Body == NoBody || r.GetBody != nil { | |
| switch valueOrDefault(r.Method, "GET") { | |
| case "GET", "HEAD", "OPTIONS", "TRACE": | |
| return true | |
| } | |
| // The Idempotency-Key, while non-standard, is widely used to | |
| // mean a POST or other request is idempotent. See | |
| // https://golang.org/issue/19943#issuecomment-421092421 | |
| if r.Header.has("Idempotency-Key") || r.Header.has("X-Idempotency-Key") { | |
| return true | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return false | |
| } | |
| // outgoingLength reports the Content-Length of this outgoing (Client) request. | |
| // It maps 0 into -1 (unknown) when the Body is non-nil. | |
| func (r *Request) outgoingLength() int64 { | |
| if r.Body == nil || r.Body == NoBody { | |
| return 0 | |
| } | |
| if r.ContentLength != 0 { | |
| return r.ContentLength | |
| } | |
| return -1 | |
| } | |
| // requestMethodUsuallyLacksBody reports whether the given request | |
| // method is one that typically does not involve a request body. | |
| // This is used by the Transport (via | |
| // transferWriter.shouldSendChunkedRequestBody) to determine whether | |
| // we try to test-read a byte from a non-nil Request.Body when | |
| // Request.outgoingLength() returns -1. See the comments in | |
| // shouldSendChunkedRequestBody. | |
| func requestMethodUsuallyLacksBody(method string) bool { | |
| switch method { | |
| case "GET", "HEAD", "DELETE", "OPTIONS", "PROPFIND", "SEARCH": | |
| return true | |
| } | |
| return false | |
| } | |
| // requiresHTTP1 reports whether this request requires being sent on | |
| // an HTTP/1 connection. | |
| func (r *Request) requiresHTTP1() bool { | |
| return hasToken(r.Header.Get("Connection"), "upgrade") && | |
| ascii.EqualFold(r.Header.Get("Upgrade"), "websocket") | |
| } | |