# frozen_string_literal: false # # = net/http.rb # # Copyright (c) 1999-2007 Yukihiro Matsumoto # Copyright (c) 1999-2007 Minero Aoki # Copyright (c) 2001 GOTOU Yuuzou # # Written and maintained by Minero Aoki . # HTTPS support added by GOTOU Yuuzou . # # This file is derived from "http-access.rb". # # Documented by Minero Aoki; converted to RDoc by William Webber. # # This program is free software. You can re-distribute and/or # modify this program under the same terms of ruby itself --- # Ruby Distribution License or GNU General Public License. # # See Net::HTTP for an overview and examples. # require 'net/protocol' require 'uri' require 'resolv' autoload :OpenSSL, 'openssl' module Net #:nodoc: # :stopdoc: class HTTPBadResponse < StandardError; end class HTTPHeaderSyntaxError < StandardError; end # :startdoc: # \Class \Net::HTTP provides a rich library that implements the client # in a client-server model that uses the \HTTP request-response protocol. # For information about \HTTP, see: # # - {Hypertext Transfer Protocol}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol]. # - {Technical overview}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol#Technical_overview]. # # == Strategies # # - If you will make only a few GET requests, # consider using {OpenURI}[rdoc-ref:OpenURI]. # - If you will make only a few requests of all kinds, # consider using the various singleton convenience methods in this class. # Each of the following methods automatically starts and finishes # a {session}[rdoc-ref:Net::HTTP@Sessions] that sends a single request: # # # Return string response body. # Net::HTTP.get(hostname, path, port = 80) # Net::HTTP.get(uri, headers = {}, port = 80) # # # Write string response body to $stdout. # Net::HTTP.get_print(hostname, path_or_uri, port = 80) # Net::HTTP.get_print(uri, headers = {}, port = 80) # # # Return response as Net::HTTPResponse object. # Net::HTTP.get_response(hostname, path_or_uri, port = 80) # Net::HTTP.get_response(uri, headers = {}, port = 80) # Net::HTTP.post(uri, data, headers = {}) # Net::HTTP.post_form(uri, params) # # - If performance is important, consider using sessions, which lower request overhead. # This {session}[rdoc-ref:Net::HTTP@Sessions] has multiple requests for # {HTTP methods}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol#Request_methods] # and {WebDAV methods}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebDAV#Implementation]: # # Net::HTTP.start(hostname) do |http| # # Session started automatically before block execution. # http.get(path_or_uri, headers = {}) # http.head(path_or_uri, headers = {}) # http.post(path_or_uri, body, headers = {}) # Can also have a block. # http.put(path_or_uri, body, headers = {}) # http.delete(path_or_uri, headers = {Depth: 'Infinity'}) # http.options(path_or_uri, headers = {}) # http.trace(path_or_uri, headers = {}) # http.patch(path_or_uri, body, headers = {}) # Can also have a block. # http.copy(path_or_uri, headers = {}) # http.lock(path_or_uri, body, headers = {}) # http.mkcol(path_or_uri, body = nil, headers = {}) # http.move(path_or_uri, headers = {}) # http.propfind(path_or_uri, body = nil, headers = {'Depth' => '0'}) # http.proppatch(path_or_uri, body, headers = {}) # http.unlock(path_or_uri, body, headers = {}) # # Session finished automatically at block exit. # end # # The methods cited above are convenience methods that, via their few arguments, # allow minimal control over the requests. # For greater control, consider using {request objects}[rdoc-ref:Net::HTTPRequest]. # # == About the Examples # # :include: doc/net-http/examples.rdoc # # == URIs # # On the internet, a URI # ({Universal Resource Identifier}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Identifier]) # is a string that identifies a particular resource. # It consists of some or all of: scheme, hostname, path, query, and fragment; # see {URI syntax}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Identifier#Syntax]. # # A Ruby {URI::Generic}[rdoc-ref:URI::Generic] object # represents an internet URI. # It provides, among others, methods # +scheme+, +hostname+, +path+, +query+, and +fragment+. # # === Schemes # # An internet \URI has # a {scheme}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_URI_schemes]. # # The two schemes supported in \Net::HTTP are 'https' and 'http': # # uri.scheme # => "https" # URI('http://example.com').scheme # => "http" # # === Hostnames # # A hostname identifies a server (host) to which requests may be sent: # # hostname = uri.hostname # => "jsonplaceholder.typicode.com" # Net::HTTP.start(hostname) do |http| # # Some HTTP stuff. # end # # === Paths # # A host-specific path identifies a resource on the host: # # _uri = uri.dup # _uri.path = '/todos/1' # hostname = _uri.hostname # path = _uri.path # Net::HTTP.get(hostname, path) # # === Queries # # A host-specific query adds name/value pairs to the URI: # # _uri = uri.dup # params = {userId: 1, completed: false} # _uri.query = URI.encode_www_form(params) # _uri # => # # Net::HTTP.get(_uri) # # === Fragments # # A {URI fragment}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URI_fragment] has no effect # in \Net::HTTP; # the same data is returned, regardless of whether a fragment is included. # # == Request Headers # # Request headers may be used to pass additional information to the host, # similar to arguments passed in a method call; # each header is a name/value pair. # # Each of the \Net::HTTP methods that sends a request to the host # has optional argument +headers+, # where the headers are expressed as a hash of field-name/value pairs: # # headers = {Accept: 'application/json', Connection: 'Keep-Alive'} # Net::HTTP.get(uri, headers) # # See lists of both standard request fields and common request fields at # {Request Fields}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_header_fields#Request_fields]. # A host may also accept other custom fields. # # == Sessions # # A _session_ is a connection between a server (host) and a client that: # # - Is begun by instance method Net::HTTP#start. # - May contain any number of requests. # - Is ended by instance method Net::HTTP#finish. # # See example sessions at {Strategies}[rdoc-ref:Net::HTTP@Strategies]. # # === Session Using \Net::HTTP.start # # If you have many requests to make to a single host (and port), # consider using singleton method Net::HTTP.start with a block; # the method handles the session automatically by: # # - Calling #start before block execution. # - Executing the block. # - Calling #finish after block execution. # # In the block, you can use these instance methods, # each of which that sends a single request: # # - {HTTP methods}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol#Request_methods]: # # - #get, #request_get: GET. # - #head, #request_head: HEAD. # - #post, #request_post: POST. # - #delete: DELETE. # - #options: OPTIONS. # - #trace: TRACE. # - #patch: PATCH. # # - {WebDAV methods}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebDAV#Implementation]: # # - #copy: COPY. # - #lock: LOCK. # - #mkcol: MKCOL. # - #move: MOVE. # - #propfind: PROPFIND. # - #proppatch: PROPPATCH. # - #unlock: UNLOCK. # # === Session Using \Net::HTTP.start and \Net::HTTP.finish # # You can manage a session manually using methods #start and #finish: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.start # http.get('/todos/1') # http.get('/todos/2') # http.delete('/posts/1') # http.finish # Needed to free resources. # # === Single-Request Session # # Certain convenience methods automatically handle a session by: # # - Creating an \HTTP object # - Starting a session. # - Sending a single request. # - Finishing the session. # - Destroying the object. # # Such methods that send GET requests: # # - ::get: Returns the string response body. # - ::get_print: Writes the string response body to $stdout. # - ::get_response: Returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # Such methods that send POST requests: # # - ::post: Posts data to the host. # - ::post_form: Posts form data to the host. # # == \HTTP Requests and Responses # # Many of the methods above are convenience methods, # each of which sends a request and returns a string # without directly using \Net::HTTPRequest and \Net::HTTPResponse objects. # # You can, however, directly create a request object, send the request, # and retrieve the response object; see: # # - Net::HTTPRequest. # - Net::HTTPResponse. # # == Following Redirection # # Each Net::HTTPResponse object belongs to a class for its response code. # # For example, all 2XX responses are instances of a Net::HTTPSuccess # subclass, a 3XX response is an instance of a Net::HTTPRedirection # subclass and a 200 response is an instance of the Net::HTTPOK class. For # details of response classes, see the section "HTTP Response Classes" # below. # # Using a case statement you can handle various types of responses properly: # # def fetch(uri_str, limit = 10) # # You should choose a better exception. # raise ArgumentError, 'too many HTTP redirects' if limit == 0 # # response = Net::HTTP.get_response(URI(uri_str)) # # case response # when Net::HTTPSuccess then # response # when Net::HTTPRedirection then # location = response['location'] # warn "redirected to #{location}" # fetch(location, limit - 1) # else # response.value # end # end # # print fetch('http://www.ruby-lang.org') # # == Basic Authentication # # Basic authentication is performed according to # [RFC2617](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2617.txt). # # uri = URI('http://example.com/index.html?key=value') # # req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri) # req.basic_auth 'user', 'pass' # # res = Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) {|http| # http.request(req) # } # puts res.body # # == Streaming Response Bodies # # By default Net::HTTP reads an entire response into memory. If you are # handling large files or wish to implement a progress bar you can instead # stream the body directly to an IO. # # uri = URI('http://example.com/large_file') # # Net::HTTP.start(uri.host, uri.port) do |http| # request = Net::HTTP::Get.new uri # # http.request request do |response| # open 'large_file', 'w' do |io| # response.read_body do |chunk| # io.write chunk # end # end # end # end # # == HTTPS # # HTTPS is enabled for an HTTP connection by Net::HTTP#use_ssl=. # # uri = URI('https://secure.example.com/some_path?query=string') # # Net::HTTP.start(uri.host, uri.port, :use_ssl => true) do |http| # request = Net::HTTP::Get.new uri # response = http.request request # Net::HTTPResponse object # end # # Or if you simply want to make a GET request, you may pass in an URI # object that has an HTTPS URL. Net::HTTP automatically turns on TLS # verification if the URI object has a 'https' URI scheme. # # uri = URI('https://example.com/') # Net::HTTP.get(uri) # => String # # In previous versions of Ruby you would need to require 'net/https' to use # HTTPS. This is no longer true. # # == Proxies # # Net::HTTP will automatically create a proxy from the +http_proxy+ # environment variable if it is present. To disable use of +http_proxy+, # pass +nil+ for the proxy address. # # You may also create a custom proxy: # # proxy_addr = 'your.proxy.host' # proxy_port = 8080 # # Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, proxy_addr, proxy_port).start { |http| # # always proxy via your.proxy.addr:8080 # } # # See Net::HTTP.new for further details and examples such as proxies that # require a username and password. # # == Compression # # Net::HTTP automatically adds Accept-Encoding for compression of response # bodies and automatically decompresses gzip and deflate responses unless a # Range header was sent. # # Compression can be disabled through the Accept-Encoding: identity header. # class HTTP < Protocol # :stopdoc: VERSION = "0.3.2" Revision = %q$Revision$.split[1] HTTPVersion = '1.1' begin require 'zlib' HAVE_ZLIB=true rescue LoadError HAVE_ZLIB=false end # :startdoc: # Returns +true+; retained for compatibility. def HTTP.version_1_2 true end # Returns +true+; retained for compatibility. def HTTP.version_1_2? true end # Returns +false+; retained for compatibility. def HTTP.version_1_1? #:nodoc: false end class << HTTP alias is_version_1_1? version_1_1? #:nodoc: alias is_version_1_2? version_1_2? #:nodoc: end # :call-seq: # Net::HTTP.get_print(hostname, path, port = 80) -> nil # Net::HTTP:get_print(uri, headers = {}, port = uri.port) -> nil # # Like Net::HTTP.get, but writes the returned body to $stdout; # returns +nil+. def HTTP.get_print(uri_or_host, path_or_headers = nil, port = nil) get_response(uri_or_host, path_or_headers, port) {|res| res.read_body do |chunk| $stdout.print chunk end } nil end # :call-seq: # Net::HTTP.get(hostname, path, port = 80) -> body # Net::HTTP:get(uri, headers = {}, port = uri.port) -> body # # Sends a GET request and returns the \HTTP response body as a string. # # With string arguments +hostname+ and +path+: # # hostname = 'jsonplaceholder.typicode.com' # path = '/todos/1' # puts Net::HTTP.get(hostname, path) # # Output: # # { # "userId": 1, # "id": 1, # "title": "delectus aut autem", # "completed": false # } # # With URI object +uri+ and optional hash argument +headers+: # # uri = URI('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1') # headers = {'Content-type' => 'application/json; charset=UTF-8'} # Net::HTTP.get(uri, headers) # # Related: # # - Net::HTTP::Get: request class for \HTTP method +GET+. # - Net::HTTP#get: convenience method for \HTTP method +GET+. # def HTTP.get(uri_or_host, path_or_headers = nil, port = nil) get_response(uri_or_host, path_or_headers, port).body end # :call-seq: # Net::HTTP.get_response(hostname, path, port = 80) -> http_response # Net::HTTP:get_response(uri, headers = {}, port = uri.port) -> http_response # # Like Net::HTTP.get, but returns a Net::HTTPResponse object # instead of the body string. def HTTP.get_response(uri_or_host, path_or_headers = nil, port = nil, &block) if path_or_headers && !path_or_headers.is_a?(Hash) host = uri_or_host path = path_or_headers new(host, port || HTTP.default_port).start {|http| return http.request_get(path, &block) } else uri = uri_or_host headers = path_or_headers start(uri.hostname, uri.port, :use_ssl => uri.scheme == 'https') {|http| return http.request_get(uri, headers, &block) } end end # Posts data to a host; returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # Argument +url+ must be a URL; # argument +data+ must be a string: # # _uri = uri.dup # _uri.path = '/posts' # data = '{"title": "foo", "body": "bar", "userId": 1}' # headers = {'content-type': 'application/json'} # res = Net::HTTP.post(_uri, data, headers) # => # # puts res.body # # Output: # # { # "title": "foo", # "body": "bar", # "userId": 1, # "id": 101 # } # # Related: # # - Net::HTTP::Post: request class for \HTTP method +POST+. # - Net::HTTP#post: convenience method for \HTTP method +POST+. # def HTTP.post(url, data, header = nil) start(url.hostname, url.port, :use_ssl => url.scheme == 'https' ) {|http| http.post(url, data, header) } end # Posts data to a host; returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # Argument +url+ must be a URI; # argument +data+ must be a hash: # # _uri = uri.dup # _uri.path = '/posts' # data = {title: 'foo', body: 'bar', userId: 1} # res = Net::HTTP.post_form(_uri, data) # => # # puts res.body # # Output: # # { # "title": "foo", # "body": "bar", # "userId": "1", # "id": 101 # } # def HTTP.post_form(url, params) req = Post.new(url) req.form_data = params req.basic_auth url.user, url.password if url.user start(url.hostname, url.port, :use_ssl => url.scheme == 'https' ) {|http| http.request(req) } end # # HTTP session management # # Returns intger +80+, the default port to use for HTTP requests: # # Net::HTTP.default_port # => 80 # def HTTP.default_port http_default_port() end # Returns integer +80+, the default port to use for HTTP requests: # # Net::HTTP.http_default_port # => 80 # def HTTP.http_default_port 80 end # Returns integer +443+, the default port to use for HTTPS requests: # # Net::HTTP.https_default_port # => 443 # def HTTP.https_default_port 443 end def HTTP.socket_type #:nodoc: obsolete BufferedIO end # :call-seq: # HTTP.start(address, port = nil, p_addr = :ENV, p_port = nil, p_user = nil, p_pass = nil, opts) -> http # HTTP.start(address, port = nil, p_addr = :ENV, p_port = nil, p_user = nil, p_pass = nil, opts) {|http| ... } -> object # # Creates a new \Net::HTTP object, +http+, via \Net::HTTP.new: # # Net::HTTP.new(address, port, p_addr, p_port, p_user, p_pass) # # - For arguments +hostname+ through +p_pass+, see Net::HTTP.new. # - For argument +opts+, see below. # # Note: If +port+ is +nil+ and opts[:use_ssl] is a truthy value, # the value passed to +new+ is Net::HTTP.https_default_port, not +port+. # # With no block given: # # - Calls http.start with no block (see #start), # which opens a TCP connection and \HTTP session. # - Returns +http+. # - The caller should call #finish to close the session: # # http = Net::HTTP.start(hostname) # http.started? # => true # http.finish # http.started? # => false # # With a block given: # # - Calls http.start with the block (see #start), which: # # - Opens a TCP connection and \HTTP session. # - Calls the block, # which may make any number of requests to the host. # - Closes the \HTTP session and TCP connection on block exit. # - Returns the block's value +object+. # # - Returns +object+. # # Example: # # hostname = 'jsonplaceholder.typicode.com' # Net::HTTP.start(hostname) do |http| # puts http.get('/todos/1').body # puts http.get('/todos/2').body # end # # Output: # # { # "userId": 1, # "id": 1, # "title": "delectus aut autem", # "completed": false # } # { # "userId": 1, # "id": 2, # "title": "quis ut nam facilis et officia qui", # "completed": false # } # # If the last argument given is a hash, it is the +opts+ hash, # where each key is a method or accessor to be called, # and its value is the value to be set. # # The keys may include: # # - #ca_file # - #ca_path # - #cert # - #cert_store # - #ciphers # - #close_on_empty_response # - +ipaddr+ (calls #ipaddr=) # - #keep_alive_timeout # - #key # - #open_timeout # - #read_timeout # - #ssl_timeout # - #ssl_version # - +use_ssl+ (calls #use_ssl=) # - #verify_callback # - #verify_depth # - #verify_mode # - #write_timeout # def HTTP.start(address, *arg, &block) # :yield: +http+ arg.pop if opt = Hash.try_convert(arg[-1]) port, p_addr, p_port, p_user, p_pass = *arg p_addr = :ENV if arg.size < 2 port = https_default_port if !port && opt && opt[:use_ssl] http = new(address, port, p_addr, p_port, p_user, p_pass) http.ipaddr = opt[:ipaddr] if opt && opt[:ipaddr] if opt if opt[:use_ssl] opt = {verify_mode: OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER}.update(opt) end http.methods.grep(/\A(\w+)=\z/) do |meth| key = $1.to_sym opt.key?(key) or next http.__send__(meth, opt[key]) end end http.start(&block) end class << HTTP alias newobj new # :nodoc: end # Returns a new Net::HTTP object +http+ # (but does not open a TCP connection or HTTP session). # # No Proxy # # With only string argument +hostname+ given # (and ENV['http_proxy'] undefined or +nil+), # the returned +http+: # # - Has the given address. # - Has the default port number, Net::HTTP.default_port (80). # - Has no proxy. # # Example: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # # => # # http.address # => "jsonplaceholder.typicode.com" # http.port # => 80 # http.proxy? # => false # # With integer argument +port+ also given, # the returned +http+ has the given port: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname, 8000) # # => # # http.port # => 8000 # # Proxy Using Argument +p_addr+ as a \String # # When argument +p_addr+ is a string hostname, # the returned +http+ has a proxy: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname, nil, 'proxy.example') # # => # # http.proxy? # => true # http.proxy_address # => "proxy.example" # # These use default values. # http.proxy_port # => 80 # http.proxy_user # => nil # http.proxy_pass # => nil # # The port, username, and password for the proxy may also be given: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname, nil, 'proxy.example', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass') # # => # # http.proxy? # => true # http.proxy_address # => "proxy.example" # http.proxy_port # => 8000 # http.proxy_user # => "pname" # http.proxy_pass # => "ppass" # # Proxy Using ENV['http_proxy'] # # When environment variable 'http_proxy' # is set to a \URI string, # the returned +http+ will have that URI as its proxy; # note that the \URI string must have a protocol # such as 'http' or 'https': # # ENV['http_proxy'] = 'http://example.com' # # => "http://example.com" # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # # => # # http.proxy? # => true # http.address # => "jsonplaceholder.typicode.com" # http.proxy_address # => "example.com" # # The \URI string may include proxy username, password, and port number: # # ENV['http_proxy'] = 'http://pname:ppass@example.com:8000' # # => "http://pname:ppass@example.com:8000" # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # # => # # http.proxy_port # => 8000 # http.proxy_user # => "pname" # http.proxy_pass # => "ppass" # # Argument +p_no_proxy+ # # You can use argument +p_no_proxy+ to reject certain proxies: # # - Reject a certain address: # # http = Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, 'proxy.example', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass', 'proxy.example') # http.proxy_address # => nil # # - Reject certain domains or subdomains: # # http = Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, 'my.proxy.example', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass', 'proxy.example') # http.proxy_address # => nil # # - Reject certain addresses and port combinations: # # http = Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, 'proxy.example', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass', 'proxy.example:1234') # http.proxy_address # => "proxy.example" # # http = Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, 'proxy.example', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass', 'proxy.example:8000') # http.proxy_address # => nil # # - Reject a list of the types above delimited using a comma: # # http = Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, 'proxy.example', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass', 'my.proxy,proxy.example:8000') # http.proxy_address # => nil # # http = Net::HTTP.new('example.com', nil, 'my.proxy', 8000, 'pname', 'ppass', 'my.proxy,proxy.example:8000') # http.proxy_address # => nil # def HTTP.new(address, port = nil, p_addr = :ENV, p_port = nil, p_user = nil, p_pass = nil, p_no_proxy = nil) http = super address, port if proxy_class? then # from Net::HTTP::Proxy() http.proxy_from_env = @proxy_from_env http.proxy_address = @proxy_address http.proxy_port = @proxy_port http.proxy_user = @proxy_user http.proxy_pass = @proxy_pass elsif p_addr == :ENV then http.proxy_from_env = true else if p_addr && p_no_proxy && !URI::Generic.use_proxy?(p_addr, p_addr, p_port, p_no_proxy) p_addr = nil p_port = nil end http.proxy_address = p_addr http.proxy_port = p_port || default_port http.proxy_user = p_user http.proxy_pass = p_pass end http end # Creates a new Net::HTTP object for the specified server address, # without opening the TCP connection or initializing the HTTP session. # The +address+ should be a DNS hostname or IP address. def initialize(address, port = nil) @address = address @port = (port || HTTP.default_port) @ipaddr = nil @local_host = nil @local_port = nil @curr_http_version = HTTPVersion @keep_alive_timeout = 2 @last_communicated = nil @close_on_empty_response = false @socket = nil @started = false @open_timeout = 60 @read_timeout = 60 @write_timeout = 60 @continue_timeout = nil @max_retries = 1 @debug_output = nil @response_body_encoding = false @ignore_eof = true @proxy_from_env = false @proxy_uri = nil @proxy_address = nil @proxy_port = nil @proxy_user = nil @proxy_pass = nil @use_ssl = false @ssl_context = nil @ssl_session = nil @sspi_enabled = false SSL_IVNAMES.each do |ivname| instance_variable_set ivname, nil end end # Returns a string representation of +self+: # # Net::HTTP.new(hostname).inspect # # => "#" # def inspect "#<#{self.class} #{@address}:#{@port} open=#{started?}>" end # *WARNING* This method opens a serious security hole. # Never use this method in production code. # # Sets the output stream for debugging: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # File.open('t.tmp', 'w') do |file| # http.set_debug_output(file) # http.start # http.get('/nosuch/1') # http.finish # end # puts File.read('t.tmp') # # Output: # # opening connection to jsonplaceholder.typicode.com:80... # opened # <- "GET /nosuch/1 HTTP/1.1\r\nAccept-Encoding: gzip;q=1.0,deflate;q=0.6,identity;q=0.3\r\nAccept: */*\r\nUser-Agent: Ruby\r\nHost: jsonplaceholder.typicode.com\r\n\r\n" # -> "HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found\r\n" # -> "Date: Mon, 12 Dec 2022 21:14:11 GMT\r\n" # -> "Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8\r\n" # -> "Content-Length: 2\r\n" # -> "Connection: keep-alive\r\n" # -> "X-Powered-By: Express\r\n" # -> "X-Ratelimit-Limit: 1000\r\n" # -> "X-Ratelimit-Remaining: 999\r\n" # -> "X-Ratelimit-Reset: 1670879660\r\n" # -> "Vary: Origin, Accept-Encoding\r\n" # -> "Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true\r\n" # -> "Cache-Control: max-age=43200\r\n" # -> "Pragma: no-cache\r\n" # -> "Expires: -1\r\n" # -> "X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff\r\n" # -> "Etag: W/\"2-vyGp6PvFo4RvsFtPoIWeCReyIC8\"\r\n" # -> "Via: 1.1 vegur\r\n" # -> "CF-Cache-Status: MISS\r\n" # -> "Server-Timing: cf-q-config;dur=1.3000000762986e-05\r\n" # -> "Report-To: {\"endpoints\":[{\"url\":\"https:\\/\\/a.nel.cloudflare.com\\/report\\/v3?s=yOr40jo%2BwS1KHzhTlVpl54beJ5Wx2FcG4gGV0XVrh3X9OlR5q4drUn2dkt5DGO4GDcE%2BVXT7CNgJvGs%2BZleIyMu8CLieFiDIvOviOY3EhHg94m0ZNZgrEdpKD0S85S507l1vsEwEHkoTm%2Ff19SiO\"}],\"group\":\"cf-nel\",\"max_age\":604800}\r\n" # -> "NEL: {\"success_fraction\":0,\"report_to\":\"cf-nel\",\"max_age\":604800}\r\n" # -> "Server: cloudflare\r\n" # -> "CF-RAY: 778977dc484ce591-DFW\r\n" # -> "alt-svc: h3=\":443\"; ma=86400, h3-29=\":443\"; ma=86400\r\n" # -> "\r\n" # reading 2 bytes... # -> "{}" # read 2 bytes # Conn keep-alive # def set_debug_output(output) warn 'Net::HTTP#set_debug_output called after HTTP started', uplevel: 1 if started? @debug_output = output end # The DNS host name or IP address to connect to. attr_reader :address # The port number to connect to. attr_reader :port # The local host used to establish the connection. attr_accessor :local_host # The local port used to establish the connection. attr_accessor :local_port # The encoding to use for the response body. If Encoding, uses the # specified encoding. If other true value, tries to detect the response # body encoding. attr_reader :response_body_encoding # Sets the encoding to be used for the response body; # returns the encoding. # # The given +value+ may be: # # - An Encoding object. # - The name of an encoding. # - An alias for an encoding name. # # See {Encoding}[rdoc-ref:Encoding]. # # Examples: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.response_body_encoding = Encoding::US_ASCII # => # # http.response_body_encoding = 'US-ASCII' # => "US-ASCII" # http.response_body_encoding = 'ASCII' # => "ASCII" # def response_body_encoding=(value) value = Encoding.find(value) if value.is_a?(String) @response_body_encoding = value end attr_writer :proxy_from_env attr_writer :proxy_address attr_writer :proxy_port attr_writer :proxy_user attr_writer :proxy_pass # Returns the IP address for the connection. # # If the session has not been started, # returns the value set by #ipaddr=, # or +nil+ if it has not been set: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.ipaddr # => nil # http.ipaddr = '172.67.155.76' # http.ipaddr # => "172.67.155.76" # # If the session has been started, # returns the IP address from the socket: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.start # http.ipaddr # => "172.67.155.76" # http.finish # def ipaddr started? ? @socket.io.peeraddr[3] : @ipaddr end # Sets the IP address for the connection: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.ipaddr # => nil # http.ipaddr = '172.67.155.76' # http.ipaddr # => "172.67.155.76" # # The IP address may not be set if the session has been started. def ipaddr=(addr) raise IOError, "ipaddr value changed, but session already started" if started? @ipaddr = addr end # Number of seconds to wait for the connection to open. Any number # may be used, including Floats for fractional seconds. If the HTTP # object cannot open a connection in this many seconds, it raises a # Net::OpenTimeout exception. The default value is 60 seconds. attr_accessor :open_timeout # Number of seconds to wait for one block to be read (via one read(2) # call). Any number may be used, including Floats for fractional # seconds. If the HTTP object cannot read data in this many seconds, # it raises a Net::ReadTimeout exception. The default value is 60 seconds. attr_reader :read_timeout # Number of seconds to wait for one block to be written (via one write(2) # call). Any number may be used, including Floats for fractional # seconds. If the HTTP object cannot write data in this many seconds, # it raises a Net::WriteTimeout exception. The default value is 60 seconds. # Net::WriteTimeout is not raised on Windows. attr_reader :write_timeout # Sets the maximum number of times to retry an idempotent request in case of # Net::ReadTimeout, IOError, EOFError, Errno::ECONNRESET, # Errno::ECONNABORTED, Errno::EPIPE, OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError, # Timeout::Error. # The initial value is 1. # # Argument +retries+ must be a non-negative numeric value: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.max_retries = 2 # => 2 # http.max_retries # => 2 # def max_retries=(retries) retries = retries.to_int if retries < 0 raise ArgumentError, 'max_retries should be non-negative integer number' end @max_retries = retries end attr_reader :max_retries # Sets the read timeout, in seconds, for +self+ to integer +sec+; # the initial value is 60. # # Argument +sec+ must be a non-negative numeric value: # # http = Net::HTTP.new(hostname) # http.read_timeout # => 60 # http.get('/todos/1') # => # # http.read_timeout = 0 # http.get('/todos/1') # Raises Net::ReadTimeout. # def read_timeout=(sec) @socket.read_timeout = sec if @socket @read_timeout = sec end # Sets the write timeout, in seconds, for +self+ to integer +sec+; # the initial value is 60. # # Argument +sec+ must be a non-negative numeric value. # def write_timeout=(sec) @socket.write_timeout = sec if @socket @write_timeout = sec end # Seconds to wait for 100 Continue response. If the HTTP object does not # receive a response in this many seconds it sends the request body. The # default value is +nil+. attr_reader :continue_timeout # Setter for the continue_timeout attribute. def continue_timeout=(sec) @socket.continue_timeout = sec if @socket @continue_timeout = sec end # Seconds to reuse the connection of the previous request. # If the idle time is less than this Keep-Alive Timeout, # Net::HTTP reuses the TCP/IP socket used by the previous communication. # The default value is 2 seconds. attr_accessor :keep_alive_timeout # Whether to ignore EOF when reading response bodies with defined # Content-Length headers. For backwards compatibility, the default is true. attr_accessor :ignore_eof # Returns true if the HTTP session has been started. def started? @started end alias active? started? #:nodoc: obsolete attr_accessor :close_on_empty_response # Returns true if SSL/TLS is being used with HTTP. def use_ssl? @use_ssl end # Turn on/off SSL. # This flag must be set before starting session. # If you change use_ssl value after session started, # a Net::HTTP object raises IOError. def use_ssl=(flag) flag = flag ? true : false if started? and @use_ssl != flag raise IOError, "use_ssl value changed, but session already started" end @use_ssl = flag end SSL_IVNAMES = [ :@ca_file, :@ca_path, :@cert, :@cert_store, :@ciphers, :@extra_chain_cert, :@key, :@ssl_timeout, :@ssl_version, :@min_version, :@max_version, :@verify_callback, :@verify_depth, :@verify_mode, :@verify_hostname, ] SSL_ATTRIBUTES = [ :ca_file, :ca_path, :cert, :cert_store, :ciphers, :extra_chain_cert, :key, :ssl_timeout, :ssl_version, :min_version, :max_version, :verify_callback, :verify_depth, :verify_mode, :verify_hostname, ] # Sets path of a CA certification file in PEM format. # # The file can contain several CA certificates. attr_accessor :ca_file # Sets path of a CA certification directory containing certifications in # PEM format. attr_accessor :ca_path # Sets an OpenSSL::X509::Certificate object as client certificate. # (This method is appeared in Michal Rokos's OpenSSL extension). attr_accessor :cert # Sets the X509::Store to verify peer certificate. attr_accessor :cert_store # Sets the available ciphers. See OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#ciphers= attr_accessor :ciphers # Sets the extra X509 certificates to be added to the certificate chain. # See OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#extra_chain_cert= attr_accessor :extra_chain_cert # Sets an OpenSSL::PKey::RSA or OpenSSL::PKey::DSA object. # (This method is appeared in Michal Rokos's OpenSSL extension.) attr_accessor :key # Sets the SSL timeout seconds. attr_accessor :ssl_timeout # Sets the SSL version. See OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#ssl_version= attr_accessor :ssl_version # Sets the minimum SSL version. See OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#min_version= attr_accessor :min_version # Sets the maximum SSL version. See OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#max_version= attr_accessor :max_version # Sets the verify callback for the server certification verification. attr_accessor :verify_callback # Sets the maximum depth for the certificate chain verification. attr_accessor :verify_depth # Sets the flags for server the certification verification at beginning of # SSL/TLS session. # # OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_NONE or OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER are acceptable. attr_accessor :verify_mode # Sets to check the server certificate is valid for the hostname. # See OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext#verify_hostname= attr_accessor :verify_hostname # Returns the X.509 certificates the server presented. def peer_cert if not use_ssl? or not @socket return nil end @socket.io.peer_cert end # Opens a TCP connection and HTTP session. # # When this method is called with a block, it passes the Net::HTTP # object to the block, and closes the TCP connection and HTTP session # after the block has been executed. # # When called with a block, it returns the return value of the # block; otherwise, it returns self. # def start # :yield: http raise IOError, 'HTTP session already opened' if @started if block_given? begin do_start return yield(self) ensure do_finish end end do_start self end def do_start connect @started = true end private :do_start def connect if use_ssl? # reference early to load OpenSSL before connecting, # as OpenSSL may take time to load. @ssl_context = OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext.new end if proxy? then conn_addr = proxy_address conn_port = proxy_port else conn_addr = conn_address conn_port = port end debug "opening connection to #{conn_addr}:#{conn_port}..." s = Timeout.timeout(@open_timeout, Net::OpenTimeout) { begin TCPSocket.open(conn_addr, conn_port, @local_host, @local_port) rescue => e raise e, "Failed to open TCP connection to " + "#{conn_addr}:#{conn_port} (#{e.message})" end } s.setsockopt(Socket::IPPROTO_TCP, Socket::TCP_NODELAY, 1) debug "opened" if use_ssl? if proxy? plain_sock = BufferedIO.new(s, read_timeout: @read_timeout, write_timeout: @write_timeout, continue_timeout: @continue_timeout, debug_output: @debug_output) buf = "CONNECT #{conn_address}:#{@port} HTTP/#{HTTPVersion}\r\n" buf << "Host: #{@address}:#{@port}\r\n" if proxy_user credential = ["#{proxy_user}:#{proxy_pass}"].pack('m0') buf << "Proxy-Authorization: Basic #{credential}\r\n" end buf << "\r\n" plain_sock.write(buf) HTTPResponse.read_new(plain_sock).value # assuming nothing left in buffers after successful CONNECT response end ssl_parameters = Hash.new iv_list = instance_variables SSL_IVNAMES.each_with_index do |ivname, i| if iv_list.include?(ivname) value = instance_variable_get(ivname) unless value.nil? ssl_parameters[SSL_ATTRIBUTES[i]] = value end end end @ssl_context.set_params(ssl_parameters) unless @ssl_context.session_cache_mode.nil? # a dummy method on JRuby @ssl_context.session_cache_mode = OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext::SESSION_CACHE_CLIENT | OpenSSL::SSL::SSLContext::SESSION_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_STORE end if @ssl_context.respond_to?(:session_new_cb) # not implemented under JRuby @ssl_context.session_new_cb = proc {|sock, sess| @ssl_session = sess } end # Still do the post_connection_check below even if connecting # to IP address verify_hostname = @ssl_context.verify_hostname # Server Name Indication (SNI) RFC 3546/6066 case @address when Resolv::IPv4::Regex, Resolv::IPv6::Regex # don't set SNI, as IP addresses in SNI is not valid # per RFC 6066, section 3. # Avoid openssl warning @ssl_context.verify_hostname = false else ssl_host_address = @address end debug "starting SSL for #{conn_addr}:#{conn_port}..." s = OpenSSL::SSL::SSLSocket.new(s, @ssl_context) s.sync_close = true s.hostname = ssl_host_address if s.respond_to?(:hostname=) && ssl_host_address if @ssl_session and Process.clock_gettime(Process::CLOCK_REALTIME) < @ssl_session.time.to_f + @ssl_session.timeout s.session = @ssl_session end ssl_socket_connect(s, @open_timeout) if (@ssl_context.verify_mode != OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_NONE) && verify_hostname s.post_connection_check(@address) end debug "SSL established, protocol: #{s.ssl_version}, cipher: #{s.cipher[0]}" end @socket = BufferedIO.new(s, read_timeout: @read_timeout, write_timeout: @write_timeout, continue_timeout: @continue_timeout, debug_output: @debug_output) @last_communicated = nil on_connect rescue => exception if s debug "Conn close because of connect error #{exception}" s.close end raise end private :connect def on_connect end private :on_connect # Finishes the HTTP session and closes the TCP connection. # Raises IOError if the session has not been started. def finish raise IOError, 'HTTP session not yet started' unless started? do_finish end def do_finish @started = false @socket.close if @socket @socket = nil end private :do_finish # # proxy # public # no proxy @is_proxy_class = false @proxy_from_env = false @proxy_addr = nil @proxy_port = nil @proxy_user = nil @proxy_pass = nil # Creates an HTTP proxy class which behaves like Net::HTTP, but # performs all access via the specified proxy. # # This class is obsolete. You may pass these same parameters directly to # Net::HTTP.new. See Net::HTTP.new for details of the arguments. def HTTP.Proxy(p_addr = :ENV, p_port = nil, p_user = nil, p_pass = nil) #:nodoc: return self unless p_addr Class.new(self) { @is_proxy_class = true if p_addr == :ENV then @proxy_from_env = true @proxy_address = nil @proxy_port = nil else @proxy_from_env = false @proxy_address = p_addr @proxy_port = p_port || default_port end @proxy_user = p_user @proxy_pass = p_pass } end class << HTTP # returns true if self is a class which was created by HTTP::Proxy. def proxy_class? defined?(@is_proxy_class) ? @is_proxy_class : false end # Address of proxy host. If Net::HTTP does not use a proxy, nil. attr_reader :proxy_address # Port number of proxy host. If Net::HTTP does not use a proxy, nil. attr_reader :proxy_port # User name for accessing proxy. If Net::HTTP does not use a proxy, nil. attr_reader :proxy_user # User password for accessing proxy. If Net::HTTP does not use a proxy, # nil. attr_reader :proxy_pass end # True if requests for this connection will be proxied def proxy? !!(@proxy_from_env ? proxy_uri : @proxy_address) end # True if the proxy for this connection is determined from the environment def proxy_from_env? @proxy_from_env end # The proxy URI determined from the environment for this connection. def proxy_uri # :nodoc: return if @proxy_uri == false @proxy_uri ||= URI::HTTP.new( "http".freeze, nil, address, port, nil, nil, nil, nil, nil ).find_proxy || false @proxy_uri || nil end # The address of the proxy server, if one is configured. def proxy_address if @proxy_from_env then proxy_uri&.hostname else @proxy_address end end # The port of the proxy server, if one is configured. def proxy_port if @proxy_from_env then proxy_uri&.port else @proxy_port end end # The username of the proxy server, if one is configured. def proxy_user if @proxy_from_env user = proxy_uri&.user unescape(user) if user else @proxy_user end end # The password of the proxy server, if one is configured. def proxy_pass if @proxy_from_env pass = proxy_uri&.password unescape(pass) if pass else @proxy_pass end end alias proxyaddr proxy_address #:nodoc: obsolete alias proxyport proxy_port #:nodoc: obsolete private def unescape(value) require 'cgi/util' CGI.unescape(value) end # without proxy, obsolete def conn_address # :nodoc: @ipaddr || address() end def conn_port # :nodoc: port() end def edit_path(path) if proxy? if path.start_with?("ftp://") || use_ssl? path else "http://#{addr_port}#{path}" end else path end end # # HTTP operations # public # Retrieves data from +path+ on the connected-to host which may be an # absolute path String or a URI to extract the path from. # # +initheader+ must be a Hash like { 'Accept' => '*/*', ... }, # and it defaults to an empty hash. # If +initheader+ doesn't have the key 'accept-encoding', then # a value of "gzip;q=1.0,deflate;q=0.6,identity;q=0.3" is used, # so that gzip compression is used in preference to deflate # compression, which is used in preference to no compression. # Ruby doesn't have libraries to support the compress (Lempel-Ziv) # compression, so that is not supported. The intent of this is # to reduce bandwidth by default. If this routine sets up # compression, then it does the decompression also, removing # the header as well to prevent confusion. Otherwise # it leaves the body as it found it. # # This method returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # If called with a block, yields each fragment of the # entity body in turn as a string as it is read from # the socket. Note that in this case, the returned response # object will *not* contain a (meaningful) body. # # +dest+ argument is obsolete. # It still works but you must not use it. # # This method never raises an exception. # # response = http.get('/index.html') # # # using block # File.open('result.txt', 'w') {|f| # http.get('/~foo/') do |str| # f.write str # end # } # def get(path, initheader = nil, dest = nil, &block) # :yield: +body_segment+ res = nil request(Get.new(path, initheader)) {|r| r.read_body dest, &block res = r } res end # Gets only the header from +path+ on the connected-to host. # +header+ is a Hash like { 'Accept' => '*/*', ... }. # # This method returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # This method never raises an exception. # # response = nil # Net::HTTP.start('some.www.server', 80) {|http| # response = http.head('/index.html') # } # p response['content-type'] # def head(path, initheader = nil) request(Head.new(path, initheader)) end # Posts +data+ (must be a String) to +path+. +header+ must be a Hash # like { 'Accept' => '*/*', ... }. # # This method returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # If called with a block, yields each fragment of the # entity body in turn as a string as it is read from # the socket. Note that in this case, the returned response # object will *not* contain a (meaningful) body. # # +dest+ argument is obsolete. # It still works but you must not use it. # # This method never raises exception. # # response = http.post('/cgi-bin/search.rb', 'query=foo') # # # using block # File.open('result.txt', 'w') {|f| # http.post('/cgi-bin/search.rb', 'query=foo') do |str| # f.write str # end # } # # You should set Content-Type: header field for POST. # If no Content-Type: field given, this method uses # "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" by default. # def post(path, data, initheader = nil, dest = nil, &block) # :yield: +body_segment+ send_entity(path, data, initheader, dest, Post, &block) end # Sends a PATCH request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def patch(path, data, initheader = nil, dest = nil, &block) # :yield: +body_segment+ send_entity(path, data, initheader, dest, Patch, &block) end def put(path, data, initheader = nil) #:nodoc: request(Put.new(path, initheader), data) end # Sends a PROPPATCH request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def proppatch(path, body, initheader = nil) request(Proppatch.new(path, initheader), body) end # Sends a LOCK request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def lock(path, body, initheader = nil) request(Lock.new(path, initheader), body) end # Sends a UNLOCK request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def unlock(path, body, initheader = nil) request(Unlock.new(path, initheader), body) end # Sends a OPTIONS request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def options(path, initheader = nil) request(Options.new(path, initheader)) end # Sends a PROPFIND request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def propfind(path, body = nil, initheader = {'Depth' => '0'}) request(Propfind.new(path, initheader), body) end # Sends a DELETE request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def delete(path, initheader = {'Depth' => 'Infinity'}) request(Delete.new(path, initheader)) end # Sends a MOVE request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def move(path, initheader = nil) request(Move.new(path, initheader)) end # Sends a COPY request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def copy(path, initheader = nil) request(Copy.new(path, initheader)) end # Sends a MKCOL request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def mkcol(path, body = nil, initheader = nil) request(Mkcol.new(path, initheader), body) end # Sends a TRACE request to the +path+ and gets a response, # as an HTTPResponse object. def trace(path, initheader = nil) request(Trace.new(path, initheader)) end # Sends a GET request to the +path+. # Returns the response as a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # When called with a block, passes an HTTPResponse object to the block. # The body of the response will not have been read yet; # the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body, # if desired. # # Returns the response. # # This method never raises Net::* exceptions. # # response = http.request_get('/index.html') # # The entity body is already read in this case. # p response['content-type'] # puts response.body # # # Using a block # http.request_get('/index.html') {|response| # p response['content-type'] # response.read_body do |str| # read body now # print str # end # } # def request_get(path, initheader = nil, &block) # :yield: +response+ request(Get.new(path, initheader), &block) end # Sends a HEAD request to the +path+ and returns the response # as a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # Returns the response. # # This method never raises Net::* exceptions. # # response = http.request_head('/index.html') # p response['content-type'] # def request_head(path, initheader = nil, &block) request(Head.new(path, initheader), &block) end # Sends a POST request to the +path+. # # Returns the response as a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # When called with a block, the block is passed an HTTPResponse # object. The body of that response will not have been read yet; # the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body, if desired. # # Returns the response. # # This method never raises Net::* exceptions. # # # example # response = http.request_post('/cgi-bin/nice.rb', 'datadatadata...') # p response.status # puts response.body # body is already read in this case # # # using block # http.request_post('/cgi-bin/nice.rb', 'datadatadata...') {|response| # p response.status # p response['content-type'] # response.read_body do |str| # read body now # print str # end # } # def request_post(path, data, initheader = nil, &block) # :yield: +response+ request Post.new(path, initheader), data, &block end def request_put(path, data, initheader = nil, &block) #:nodoc: request Put.new(path, initheader), data, &block end alias get2 request_get #:nodoc: obsolete alias head2 request_head #:nodoc: obsolete alias post2 request_post #:nodoc: obsolete alias put2 request_put #:nodoc: obsolete # Sends an HTTP request to the HTTP server. # Also sends a DATA string if +data+ is given. # # Returns a Net::HTTPResponse object. # # This method never raises Net::* exceptions. # # response = http.send_request('GET', '/index.html') # puts response.body # def send_request(name, path, data = nil, header = nil) has_response_body = name != 'HEAD' r = HTTPGenericRequest.new(name,(data ? true : false),has_response_body,path,header) request r, data end # Sends an HTTPRequest object +req+ to the HTTP server. # # If +req+ is a Net::HTTP::Post or Net::HTTP::Put request containing # data, the data is also sent. Providing data for a Net::HTTP::Head or # Net::HTTP::Get request results in an ArgumentError. # # Returns an HTTPResponse object. # # When called with a block, passes an HTTPResponse object to the block. # The body of the response will not have been read yet; # the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body, # if desired. # # This method never raises Net::* exceptions. # def request(req, body = nil, &block) # :yield: +response+ unless started? start { req['connection'] ||= 'close' return request(req, body, &block) } end if proxy_user() req.proxy_basic_auth proxy_user(), proxy_pass() unless use_ssl? end req.set_body_internal body res = transport_request(req, &block) if sspi_auth?(res) sspi_auth(req) res = transport_request(req, &block) end res end private # Executes a request which uses a representation # and returns its body. def send_entity(path, data, initheader, dest, type, &block) res = nil request(type.new(path, initheader), data) {|r| r.read_body dest, &block res = r } res end IDEMPOTENT_METHODS_ = %w/GET HEAD PUT DELETE OPTIONS TRACE/ # :nodoc: def transport_request(req) count = 0 begin begin_transport req res = catch(:response) { begin req.exec @socket, @curr_http_version, edit_path(req.path) rescue Errno::EPIPE # Failure when writing full request, but we can probably # still read the received response. end begin res = HTTPResponse.read_new(@socket) res.decode_content = req.decode_content res.body_encoding = @response_body_encoding res.ignore_eof = @ignore_eof end while res.kind_of?(HTTPInformation) res.uri = req.uri res } res.reading_body(@socket, req.response_body_permitted?) { yield res if block_given? } rescue Net::OpenTimeout raise rescue Net::ReadTimeout, IOError, EOFError, Errno::ECONNRESET, Errno::ECONNABORTED, Errno::EPIPE, Errno::ETIMEDOUT, # avoid a dependency on OpenSSL defined?(OpenSSL::SSL) ? OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError : IOError, Timeout::Error => exception if count < max_retries && IDEMPOTENT_METHODS_.include?(req.method) count += 1 @socket.close if @socket debug "Conn close because of error #{exception}, and retry" retry end debug "Conn close because of error #{exception}" @socket.close if @socket raise end end_transport req, res res rescue => exception debug "Conn close because of error #{exception}" @socket.close if @socket raise exception end def begin_transport(req) if @socket.closed? connect elsif @last_communicated if @last_communicated + @keep_alive_timeout < Process.clock_gettime(Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC) debug 'Conn close because of keep_alive_timeout' @socket.close connect elsif @socket.io.to_io.wait_readable(0) && @socket.eof? debug "Conn close because of EOF" @socket.close connect end end if not req.response_body_permitted? and @close_on_empty_response req['connection'] ||= 'close' end req.update_uri address, port, use_ssl? req['host'] ||= addr_port() end def end_transport(req, res) @curr_http_version = res.http_version @last_communicated = nil if @socket.closed? debug 'Conn socket closed' elsif not res.body and @close_on_empty_response debug 'Conn close' @socket.close elsif keep_alive?(req, res) debug 'Conn keep-alive' @last_communicated = Process.clock_gettime(Process::CLOCK_MONOTONIC) else debug 'Conn close' @socket.close end end def keep_alive?(req, res) return false if req.connection_close? if @curr_http_version <= '1.0' res.connection_keep_alive? else # HTTP/1.1 or later not res.connection_close? end end def sspi_auth?(res) return false unless @sspi_enabled if res.kind_of?(HTTPProxyAuthenticationRequired) and proxy? and res["Proxy-Authenticate"].include?("Negotiate") begin require 'win32/sspi' true rescue LoadError false end else false end end def sspi_auth(req) n = Win32::SSPI::NegotiateAuth.new req["Proxy-Authorization"] = "Negotiate #{n.get_initial_token}" # Some versions of ISA will close the connection if this isn't present. req["Connection"] = "Keep-Alive" req["Proxy-Connection"] = "Keep-Alive" res = transport_request(req) authphrase = res["Proxy-Authenticate"] or return res req["Proxy-Authorization"] = "Negotiate #{n.complete_authentication(authphrase)}" rescue => err raise HTTPAuthenticationError.new('HTTP authentication failed', err) end # # utils # private def addr_port addr = address addr = "[#{addr}]" if addr.include?(":") default_port = use_ssl? ? HTTP.https_default_port : HTTP.http_default_port default_port == port ? addr : "#{addr}:#{port}" end # Adds a message to debugging output def debug(msg) return unless @debug_output @debug_output << msg @debug_output << "\n" end alias_method :D, :debug end end require_relative 'http/exceptions' require_relative 'http/header' require_relative 'http/generic_request' require_relative 'http/request' require_relative 'http/requests' require_relative 'http/response' require_relative 'http/responses' require_relative 'http/proxy_delta' require_relative 'http/backward'