caddy/modules/caddyhttp/responsewriter.go
Francis Lavoie cd486c25d1
caddyhttp: Make use of http.ResponseController (#5654)
* caddyhttp: Make use of http.ResponseController

Also syncs the reverseproxy implementation with stdlib's which now uses ResponseController as well 2449bbb5e6

* Enable full-duplex for HTTP/1.1

* Appease linter

* Add warning for builds with Go 1.20, so it's less surprising to users

* Improved godoc for EnableFullDuplex, copied text from stdlib

* Only wrap in encode if not already wrapped
2023-08-02 20:03:26 +00:00

292 lines
9.0 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 Matthew Holt and The Caddy Authors
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package caddyhttp
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io"
"net"
"net/http"
)
// ResponseWriterWrapper wraps an underlying ResponseWriter and
// promotes its Pusher method as well. To use this type, embed
// a pointer to it within your own struct type that implements
// the http.ResponseWriter interface, then call methods on the
// embedded value.
type ResponseWriterWrapper struct {
http.ResponseWriter
}
// Push implements http.Pusher. It simply calls the underlying
// ResponseWriter's Push method if there is one, or returns
// ErrNotImplemented otherwise.
func (rww *ResponseWriterWrapper) Push(target string, opts *http.PushOptions) error {
if pusher, ok := rww.ResponseWriter.(http.Pusher); ok {
return pusher.Push(target, opts)
}
return ErrNotImplemented
}
// ReadFrom implements io.ReaderFrom. It simply calls io.Copy,
// which uses io.ReaderFrom if available.
func (rww *ResponseWriterWrapper) ReadFrom(r io.Reader) (n int64, err error) {
return io.Copy(rww.ResponseWriter, r)
}
// Unwrap returns the underlying ResponseWriter, necessary for
// http.ResponseController to work correctly.
func (rww *ResponseWriterWrapper) Unwrap() http.ResponseWriter {
return rww.ResponseWriter
}
// ErrNotImplemented is returned when an underlying
// ResponseWriter does not implement the required method.
var ErrNotImplemented = fmt.Errorf("method not implemented")
type responseRecorder struct {
*ResponseWriterWrapper
statusCode int
buf *bytes.Buffer
shouldBuffer ShouldBufferFunc
size int
wroteHeader bool
stream bool
}
// NewResponseRecorder returns a new ResponseRecorder that can be
// used instead of a standard http.ResponseWriter. The recorder is
// useful for middlewares which need to buffer a response and
// potentially process its entire body before actually writing the
// response to the underlying writer. Of course, buffering the entire
// body has a memory overhead, but sometimes there is no way to avoid
// buffering the whole response, hence the existence of this type.
// Still, if at all practical, handlers should strive to stream
// responses by wrapping Write and WriteHeader methods instead of
// buffering whole response bodies.
//
// Buffering is actually optional. The shouldBuffer function will
// be called just before the headers are written. If it returns
// true, the headers and body will be buffered by this recorder
// and not written to the underlying writer; if false, the headers
// will be written immediately and the body will be streamed out
// directly to the underlying writer. If shouldBuffer is nil,
// the response will never be buffered and will always be streamed
// directly to the writer.
//
// You can know if shouldBuffer returned true by calling Buffered().
//
// The provided buffer buf should be obtained from a pool for best
// performance (see the sync.Pool type).
//
// Proper usage of a recorder looks like this:
//
// rec := caddyhttp.NewResponseRecorder(w, buf, shouldBuffer)
// err := next.ServeHTTP(rec, req)
// if err != nil {
// return err
// }
// if !rec.Buffered() {
// return nil
// }
// // process the buffered response here
//
// The header map is not buffered; i.e. the ResponseRecorder's Header()
// method returns the same header map of the underlying ResponseWriter.
// This is a crucial design decision to allow HTTP trailers to be
// flushed properly (https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/3236).
//
// Once you are ready to write the response, there are two ways you can
// do it. The easier way is to have the recorder do it:
//
// rec.WriteResponse()
//
// This writes the recorded response headers as well as the buffered body.
// Or, you may wish to do it yourself, especially if you manipulated the
// buffered body. First you will need to write the headers with the
// recorded status code, then write the body (this example writes the
// recorder's body buffer, but you might have your own body to write
// instead):
//
// w.WriteHeader(rec.Status())
// io.Copy(w, rec.Buffer())
//
// As a special case, 1xx responses are not buffered nor recorded
// because they are not the final response; they are passed through
// directly to the underlying ResponseWriter.
func NewResponseRecorder(w http.ResponseWriter, buf *bytes.Buffer, shouldBuffer ShouldBufferFunc) ResponseRecorder {
return &responseRecorder{
ResponseWriterWrapper: &ResponseWriterWrapper{ResponseWriter: w},
buf: buf,
shouldBuffer: shouldBuffer,
}
}
// WriteHeader writes the headers with statusCode to the wrapped
// ResponseWriter unless the response is to be buffered instead.
// 1xx responses are never buffered.
func (rr *responseRecorder) WriteHeader(statusCode int) {
if rr.wroteHeader {
return
}
// save statusCode always, in case HTTP middleware upgrades websocket
// connections by manually setting headers and writing status 101
rr.statusCode = statusCode
// 1xx responses aren't final; just informational
if statusCode < 100 || statusCode > 199 {
rr.wroteHeader = true
// decide whether we should buffer the response
if rr.shouldBuffer == nil {
rr.stream = true
} else {
rr.stream = !rr.shouldBuffer(rr.statusCode, rr.ResponseWriterWrapper.Header())
}
}
// if informational or not buffered, immediately write header
if rr.stream || (100 <= statusCode && statusCode <= 199) {
rr.ResponseWriterWrapper.WriteHeader(statusCode)
}
}
func (rr *responseRecorder) Write(data []byte) (int, error) {
rr.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
var n int
var err error
if rr.stream {
n, err = rr.ResponseWriterWrapper.Write(data)
} else {
n, err = rr.buf.Write(data)
}
rr.size += n
return n, err
}
func (rr *responseRecorder) ReadFrom(r io.Reader) (int64, error) {
rr.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
var n int64
var err error
if rr.stream {
n, err = rr.ResponseWriterWrapper.ReadFrom(r)
} else {
n, err = rr.buf.ReadFrom(r)
}
rr.size += int(n)
return n, err
}
// Status returns the status code that was written, if any.
func (rr *responseRecorder) Status() int {
return rr.statusCode
}
// Size returns the number of bytes written,
// not including the response headers.
func (rr *responseRecorder) Size() int {
return rr.size
}
// Buffer returns the body buffer that rr was created with.
// You should still have your original pointer, though.
func (rr *responseRecorder) Buffer() *bytes.Buffer {
return rr.buf
}
// Buffered returns whether rr has decided to buffer the response.
func (rr *responseRecorder) Buffered() bool {
return !rr.stream
}
func (rr *responseRecorder) WriteResponse() error {
if rr.stream {
return nil
}
if rr.statusCode == 0 {
// could happen if no handlers actually wrote anything,
// and this prevents a panic; status must be > 0
rr.statusCode = http.StatusOK
}
rr.ResponseWriterWrapper.WriteHeader(rr.statusCode)
_, err := io.Copy(rr.ResponseWriterWrapper, rr.buf)
return err
}
func (rr *responseRecorder) Hijack() (net.Conn, *bufio.ReadWriter, error) {
//nolint:bodyclose
conn, brw, err := http.NewResponseController(rr.ResponseWriterWrapper).Hijack()
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
// Per http documentation, returned bufio.Writer is empty, but bufio.Read maybe not
conn = &hijackedConn{conn, rr}
brw.Writer.Reset(conn)
return conn, brw, nil
}
// used to track the size of hijacked response writers
type hijackedConn struct {
net.Conn
rr *responseRecorder
}
func (hc *hijackedConn) Write(p []byte) (int, error) {
n, err := hc.Conn.Write(p)
hc.rr.size += n
return n, err
}
func (hc *hijackedConn) ReadFrom(r io.Reader) (int64, error) {
n, err := io.Copy(hc.Conn, r)
hc.rr.size += int(n)
return n, err
}
// ResponseRecorder is a http.ResponseWriter that records
// responses instead of writing them to the client. See
// docs for NewResponseRecorder for proper usage.
type ResponseRecorder interface {
http.ResponseWriter
Status() int
Buffer() *bytes.Buffer
Buffered() bool
Size() int
WriteResponse() error
}
// ShouldBufferFunc is a function that returns true if the
// response should be buffered, given the pending HTTP status
// code and response headers.
type ShouldBufferFunc func(status int, header http.Header) bool
// Interface guards
var (
_ http.ResponseWriter = (*ResponseWriterWrapper)(nil)
_ ResponseRecorder = (*responseRecorder)(nil)
// Implementing ReaderFrom can be such a significant
// optimization that it should probably be required!
// see PR #5022 (25%-50% speedup)
_ io.ReaderFrom = (*ResponseWriterWrapper)(nil)
_ io.ReaderFrom = (*responseRecorder)(nil)
_ io.ReaderFrom = (*hijackedConn)(nil)
)