caddy/caddyhttp/httpserver/context.go
Matthew Holt e3f2d96a5e
httpserver: Flags to customize HTTP and HTTPS ports (incl. for ACME)
This commit removes _almost_ all instances of hard-coded ports 80 and
443 strings, and now allows the user to define what the HTTP and HTTPS
ports are by the -http-port and -https-ports flags.

(One instance of "80" is still hard-coded in tls.go because it cannot
import httpserver to get access to the HTTP port variable. I don't
suspect this will be a problem in practice, but one workaround would be
to define an exported variable in the caddytls package and let the
httpserver package set it as well as its own HTTPPort variable.)

The port numbers required by the ACME challenges HTTP-01 and TLS-SNI-01
are hard-coded into the spec as ports 80 and 443 for good reasons,
but the big question is whether they necessarily need to be the HTTP
and HTTPS ports. Although the answer is probably no, they chose those
ports for convenience and widest compatibility/deployability. So this
commit also assumes that the "HTTP port" is necessarily the same port
on which to serve the HTTP-01 challenge, and the "HTTPS port" is
necessarily the same one on which to serve the TLS-SNI-01 challenge. In
other words, changing the HTTP and HTTPS ports also changes the ports
the challenges will be served on.

If you change the HTTP and HTTPS ports, you are responsible for
configuring your system to forward ports 80 and 443 properly.

Closes #918 and closes #1293. Also related: #468.
2017-03-06 18:18:49 -07:00

334 lines
8.7 KiB
Go

package httpserver
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"net"
"net/http"
"net/url"
"path"
"strings"
"text/template"
"time"
"os"
"github.com/mholt/caddy"
"github.com/russross/blackfriday"
)
// This file contains the context and functions available for
// use in the templates.
// Context is the context with which Caddy templates are executed.
type Context struct {
Root http.FileSystem
Req *http.Request
URL *url.URL
Args []interface{} // defined by arguments to .Include
}
// Include returns the contents of filename relative to the site root.
func (c Context) Include(filename string, args ...interface{}) (string, error) {
c.Args = args
return ContextInclude(filename, c, c.Root)
}
// Now returns the current timestamp in the specified format.
func (c Context) Now(format string) string {
return time.Now().Format(format)
}
// NowDate returns the current date/time that can be used
// in other time functions.
func (c Context) NowDate() time.Time {
return time.Now()
}
// Cookie gets the value of a cookie with name name.
func (c Context) Cookie(name string) string {
cookies := c.Req.Cookies()
for _, cookie := range cookies {
if cookie.Name == name {
return cookie.Value
}
}
return ""
}
// Header gets the value of a request header with field name.
func (c Context) Header(name string) string {
return c.Req.Header.Get(name)
}
// Env gets a map of the environment variables.
func (c Context) Env() map[string]string {
osEnv := os.Environ()
envVars := make(map[string]string, len(osEnv))
for _, env := range osEnv {
data := strings.SplitN(env, "=", 2)
if len(data) == 2 && len(data[0]) > 0 {
envVars[data[0]] = data[1]
}
}
return envVars
}
// IP gets the (remote) IP address of the client making the request.
func (c Context) IP() string {
ip, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(c.Req.RemoteAddr)
if err != nil {
return c.Req.RemoteAddr
}
return ip
}
// URI returns the raw, unprocessed request URI (including query
// string and hash) obtained directly from the Request-Line of
// the HTTP request.
func (c Context) URI() string {
return c.Req.RequestURI
}
// Host returns the hostname portion of the Host header
// from the HTTP request.
func (c Context) Host() (string, error) {
host, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(c.Req.Host)
if err != nil {
if !strings.Contains(c.Req.Host, ":") {
// common with sites served on the default port 80
return c.Req.Host, nil
}
return "", err
}
return host, nil
}
// Port returns the port portion of the Host header if specified.
func (c Context) Port() (string, error) {
_, port, err := net.SplitHostPort(c.Req.Host)
if err != nil {
if !strings.Contains(c.Req.Host, ":") {
// common with sites served on the default port 80
return HTTPPort, nil
}
return "", err
}
return port, nil
}
// Method returns the method (GET, POST, etc.) of the request.
func (c Context) Method() string {
return c.Req.Method
}
// PathMatches returns true if the path portion of the request
// URL matches pattern.
func (c Context) PathMatches(pattern string) bool {
return Path(c.Req.URL.Path).Matches(pattern)
}
// Truncate truncates the input string to the given length.
// If length is negative, it returns that many characters
// starting from the end of the string. If the absolute value
// of length is greater than len(input), the whole input is
// returned.
func (c Context) Truncate(input string, length int) string {
if length < 0 && len(input)+length > 0 {
return input[len(input)+length:]
}
if length >= 0 && len(input) > length {
return input[:length]
}
return input
}
// StripHTML returns s without HTML tags. It is fairly naive
// but works with most valid HTML inputs.
func (c Context) StripHTML(s string) string {
var buf bytes.Buffer
var inTag, inQuotes bool
var tagStart int
for i, ch := range s {
if inTag {
if ch == '>' && !inQuotes {
inTag = false
} else if ch == '<' && !inQuotes {
// false start
buf.WriteString(s[tagStart:i])
tagStart = i
} else if ch == '"' {
inQuotes = !inQuotes
}
continue
}
if ch == '<' {
inTag = true
tagStart = i
continue
}
buf.WriteRune(ch)
}
if inTag {
// false start
buf.WriteString(s[tagStart:])
}
return buf.String()
}
// Ext returns the suffix beginning at the final dot in the final
// slash-separated element of the pathStr (or in other words, the
// file extension).
func (c Context) Ext(pathStr string) string {
return path.Ext(pathStr)
}
// StripExt returns the input string without the extension,
// which is the suffix starting with the final '.' character
// but not before the final path separator ('/') character.
// If there is no extension, the whole input is returned.
func (c Context) StripExt(path string) string {
for i := len(path) - 1; i >= 0 && path[i] != '/'; i-- {
if path[i] == '.' {
return path[:i]
}
}
return path
}
// Replace replaces instances of find in input with replacement.
func (c Context) Replace(input, find, replacement string) string {
return strings.Replace(input, find, replacement, -1)
}
// Markdown returns the HTML contents of the markdown contained in filename
// (relative to the site root).
func (c Context) Markdown(filename string) (string, error) {
body, err := c.Include(filename)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
renderer := blackfriday.HtmlRenderer(0, "", "")
extns := 0
extns |= blackfriday.EXTENSION_TABLES
extns |= blackfriday.EXTENSION_FENCED_CODE
extns |= blackfriday.EXTENSION_STRIKETHROUGH
extns |= blackfriday.EXTENSION_DEFINITION_LISTS
markdown := blackfriday.Markdown([]byte(body), renderer, extns)
return string(markdown), nil
}
// ContextInclude opens filename using fs and executes a template with the context ctx.
// This does the same thing that Context.Include() does, but with the ability to provide
// your own context so that the included files can have access to additional fields your
// type may provide. You can embed Context in your type, then override its Include method
// to call this function with ctx being the instance of your type, and fs being Context.Root.
func ContextInclude(filename string, ctx interface{}, fs http.FileSystem) (string, error) {
file, err := fs.Open(filename)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
defer file.Close()
body, err := ioutil.ReadAll(file)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
tpl, err := template.New(filename).Parse(string(body))
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
var buf bytes.Buffer
err = tpl.Execute(&buf, ctx)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
return buf.String(), nil
}
// ToLower will convert the given string to lower case.
func (c Context) ToLower(s string) string {
return strings.ToLower(s)
}
// ToUpper will convert the given string to upper case.
func (c Context) ToUpper(s string) string {
return strings.ToUpper(s)
}
// Split is a pass-through to strings.Split. It will split the first argument at each instance of the separator and return a slice of strings.
func (c Context) Split(s string, sep string) []string {
return strings.Split(s, sep)
}
// Join is a pass-through to strings.Join. It will join the first argument slice with the separator in the second argument and return the result.
func (c Context) Join(a []string, sep string) string {
return strings.Join(a, sep)
}
// Slice will convert the given arguments into a slice.
func (c Context) Slice(elems ...interface{}) []interface{} {
return elems
}
// Map will convert the arguments into a map. It expects alternating string keys and values. This is useful for building more complicated data structures
// if you are using subtemplates or things like that.
func (c Context) Map(values ...interface{}) (map[string]interface{}, error) {
if len(values)%2 != 0 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Map expects an even number of arguments")
}
dict := make(map[string]interface{}, len(values)/2)
for i := 0; i < len(values); i += 2 {
key, ok := values[i].(string)
if !ok {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Map keys must be strings")
}
dict[key] = values[i+1]
}
return dict, nil
}
// Files reads and returns a slice of names from the given directory
// relative to the root of Context c.
func (c Context) Files(name string) ([]string, error) {
dir, err := c.Root.Open(path.Clean(name))
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
defer dir.Close()
stat, err := dir.Stat()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if !stat.IsDir() {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("%v is not a directory", name)
}
dirInfo, err := dir.Readdir(0)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
names := make([]string, len(dirInfo))
for i, fileInfo := range dirInfo {
names[i] = fileInfo.Name()
}
return names, nil
}
// IsMITM returns true if it seems likely that the TLS connection
// is being intercepted.
func (c Context) IsMITM() bool {
if val, ok := c.Req.Context().Value(caddy.CtxKey("mitm")).(bool); ok {
return val
}
return false
}