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Revision 1.66 by root, Fri Dec 31 06:18:30 2010 UTC vs.
Revision 1.140 by root, Wed Mar 6 19:29:18 2024 UTC

4 4
5=head1 SYNOPSIS 5=head1 SYNOPSIS
6 6
7 use AnyEvent::HTTP; 7 use AnyEvent::HTTP;
8 8
9 http_get "http://www.nethype.de/", sub { print $_[1] }; 9 http_get "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
10 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
11 print "$hdr->{URL} Status: $hdr->{Status}\n";
12 print $body;
13 };
10 14
11 # ... do something else here 15 # ... do something else here
12 16
13=head1 DESCRIPTION 17=head1 DESCRIPTION
14 18
15This module is an L<AnyEvent> user, you need to make sure that you use and 19This module is an L<AnyEvent> user, you need to make sure that you use and
16run a supported event loop. 20run a supported event loop.
17 21
18This module implements a simple, stateless and non-blocking HTTP 22This module implements a simple, stateless and non-blocking HTTP
19client. It supports GET, POST and other request methods, cookies and more, 23client. It supports GET, POST and other request methods, cookies and more,
20all on a very low level. It can follow redirects supports proxies and 24all on a very low level. It can follow redirects, supports proxies, and
21automatically limits the number of connections to the values specified in 25automatically limits the number of connections to the values specified in
22the RFC. 26the RFC.
23 27
24It should generally be a "good client" that is enough for most HTTP 28It should generally be a "good client" that is enough for most HTTP
25tasks. Simple tasks should be simple, but complex tasks should still be 29tasks. Simple tasks should be simple, but complex tasks should still be
36 40
37=cut 41=cut
38 42
39package AnyEvent::HTTP; 43package AnyEvent::HTTP;
40 44
41use strict; 45use common::sense;
42no warnings;
43 46
44use Errno (); 47use Errno ();
45 48
46use AnyEvent 5.0 (); 49use AnyEvent 5.0 ();
47use AnyEvent::Util (); 50use AnyEvent::Util ();
48use AnyEvent::Handle (); 51use AnyEvent::Handle ();
49 52
50use base Exporter::; 53use base Exporter::;
51 54
52our $VERSION = '1.5'; 55our $VERSION = 2.25;
53 56
54our @EXPORT = qw(http_get http_post http_head http_request); 57our @EXPORT = qw(http_get http_post http_head http_request);
55 58
56our $USERAGENT = "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION; +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)"; 59our $USERAGENT = "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION; +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)";
57our $MAX_RECURSE = 10; 60our $MAX_RECURSE = 10;
58our $MAX_PERSISTENT = 8;
59our $PERSISTENT_TIMEOUT = 2; 61our $PERSISTENT_TIMEOUT = 3;
60our $TIMEOUT = 300; 62our $TIMEOUT = 300;
61 63our $MAX_PER_HOST = 4; # changing this is evil
62# changing these is evil
63our $MAX_PERSISTENT_PER_HOST = 0;
64our $MAX_PER_HOST = 4;
65 64
66our $PROXY; 65our $PROXY;
67our $ACTIVE = 0; 66our $ACTIVE = 0;
68 67
69my %KA_COUNT; # number of open keep-alive connections per host 68my %KA_CACHE; # indexed by uhost currently, points to [$handle...] array
70my %CO_SLOT; # number of open connections, and wait queue, per host 69my %CO_SLOT; # number of open connections, and wait queue, per host
71 70
72=item http_get $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers) 71=item http_get $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
73 72
74Executes an HTTP-GET request. See the http_request function for details on 73Executes an HTTP-GET request. See the http_request function for details on
94C<http_request> returns a "cancellation guard" - you have to keep the 93C<http_request> returns a "cancellation guard" - you have to keep the
95object at least alive until the callback get called. If the object gets 94object at least alive until the callback get called. If the object gets
96destroyed before the callback is called, the request will be cancelled. 95destroyed before the callback is called, the request will be cancelled.
97 96
98The callback will be called with the response body data as first argument 97The callback will be called with the response body data as first argument
99(or C<undef> if an error occured), and a hash-ref with response headers as 98(or C<undef> if an error occurred), and a hash-ref with response headers
100second argument. 99(and trailers) as second argument.
101 100
102All the headers in that hash are lowercased. In addition to the response 101All the headers in that hash are lowercased. In addition to the response
103headers, the "pseudo-headers" (uppercase to avoid clashing with possible 102headers, the "pseudo-headers" (uppercase to avoid clashing with possible
104response headers) C<HTTPVersion>, C<Status> and C<Reason> contain the 103response headers) C<HTTPVersion>, C<Status> and C<Reason> contain the
105three parts of the HTTP Status-Line of the same name. If an error occurs 104three parts of the HTTP Status-Line of the same name. If an error occurs
122 121
123If the server sends a header multiple times, then their contents will be 122If the server sends a header multiple times, then their contents will be
124joined together with a comma (C<,>), as per the HTTP spec. 123joined together with a comma (C<,>), as per the HTTP spec.
125 124
126If an internal error occurs, such as not being able to resolve a hostname, 125If an internal error occurs, such as not being able to resolve a hostname,
127then C<$data> will be C<undef>, C<< $headers->{Status} >> will be C<59x> 126then C<$data> will be C<undef>, C<< $headers->{Status} >> will be
128(usually C<599>) and the C<Reason> pseudo-header will contain an error 127C<590>-C<599> and the C<Reason> pseudo-header will contain an error
129message. 128message. Currently the following status codes are used:
129
130=over 4
131
132=item 595 - errors during connection establishment, proxy handshake.
133
134=item 596 - errors during TLS negotiation, request sending and header processing.
135
136=item 597 - errors during body receiving or processing.
137
138=item 598 - user aborted request via C<on_header> or C<on_body>.
139
140=item 599 - other, usually nonretryable, errors (garbled URL etc.).
141
142=back
130 143
131A typical callback might look like this: 144A typical callback might look like this:
132 145
133 sub { 146 sub {
134 my ($body, $hdr) = @_; 147 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
145 158
146=over 4 159=over 4
147 160
148=item recurse => $count (default: $MAX_RECURSE) 161=item recurse => $count (default: $MAX_RECURSE)
149 162
150Whether to recurse requests or not, e.g. on redirects, authentication 163Whether to recurse requests or not, e.g. on redirects, authentication and
151retries and so on, and how often to do so. 164other retries and so on, and how often to do so.
165
166Only redirects to http and https URLs are supported. While most common
167redirection forms are handled entirely within this module, some require
168the use of the optional L<URI> module. If it is required but missing, then
169the request will fail with an error.
152 170
153=item headers => hashref 171=item headers => hashref
154 172
155The request headers to use. Currently, C<http_request> may provide its 173The request headers to use. Currently, C<http_request> may provide its own
156own C<Host:>, C<Content-Length:>, C<Connection:> and C<Cookie:> headers 174C<Host:>, C<Content-Length:>, C<Connection:> and C<Cookie:> headers and
157and will provide defaults for C<User-Agent:> and C<Referer:> (this can be 175will provide defaults at least for C<TE:>, C<Referer:> and C<User-Agent:>
158suppressed by using C<undef> for these headers in which case they won't be 176(this can be suppressed by using C<undef> for these headers in which case
159sent at all). 177they won't be sent at all).
178
179You really should provide your own C<User-Agent:> header value that is
180appropriate for your program - I wouldn't be surprised if the default
181AnyEvent string gets blocked by webservers sooner or later.
182
183Also, make sure that your headers names and values do not contain any
184embedded newlines.
160 185
161=item timeout => $seconds 186=item timeout => $seconds
162 187
163The time-out to use for various stages - each connect attempt will reset 188The time-out to use for various stages - each connect attempt will reset
164the timeout, as will read or write activity, i.e. this is not an overall 189the timeout, as will read or write activity, i.e. this is not an overall
166 191
167Default timeout is 5 minutes. 192Default timeout is 5 minutes.
168 193
169=item proxy => [$host, $port[, $scheme]] or undef 194=item proxy => [$host, $port[, $scheme]] or undef
170 195
171Use the given http proxy for all requests. If not specified, then the 196Use the given http proxy for all requests, or no proxy if C<undef> is
172default proxy (as specified by C<$ENV{http_proxy}>) is used. 197used.
173 198
174C<$scheme> must be either missing, C<http> for HTTP or C<https> for 199C<$scheme> must be either missing or must be C<http> for HTTP.
175HTTPS. 200
201If not specified, then the default proxy is used (see
202C<AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy>).
203
204Currently, if your proxy requires authorization, you have to specify an
205appropriate "Proxy-Authorization" header in every request.
206
207Note that this module will prefer an existing persistent connection,
208even if that connection was made using another proxy. If you need to
209ensure that a new connection is made in this case, you can either force
210C<persistent> to false or e.g. use the proxy address in your C<sessionid>.
176 211
177=item body => $string 212=item body => $string
178 213
179The request body, usually empty. Will be-sent as-is (future versions of 214The request body, usually empty. Will be sent as-is (future versions of
180this module might offer more options). 215this module might offer more options).
181 216
182=item cookie_jar => $hash_ref 217=item cookie_jar => $hash_ref
183 218
184Passing this parameter enables (simplified) cookie-processing, loosely 219Passing this parameter enables (simplified) cookie-processing, loosely
185based on the original netscape specification. 220based on the original netscape specification.
186 221
187The C<$hash_ref> must be an (initially empty) hash reference which will 222The C<$hash_ref> must be an (initially empty) hash reference which
188get updated automatically. It is possible to save the cookie_jar to 223will get updated automatically. It is possible to save the cookie jar
189persistent storage with something like JSON or Storable, but this is not 224to persistent storage with something like JSON or Storable - see the
190recommended, as expiry times are currently being ignored. 225C<AnyEvent::HTTP::cookie_jar_expire> function if you wish to remove
226expired or session-only cookies, and also for documentation on the format
227of the cookie jar.
191 228
192Note that this cookie implementation is not of very high quality, nor 229Note that this cookie implementation is not meant to be complete. If
193meant to be complete. If you want complete cookie management you have to 230you want complete cookie management you have to do that on your
194do that on your own. C<cookie_jar> is meant as a quick fix to get some 231own. C<cookie_jar> is meant as a quick fix to get most cookie-using sites
195cookie-using sites working. Cookies are a privacy disaster, do not use 232working. Cookies are a privacy disaster, do not use them unless required
196them unless required to. 233to.
234
235When cookie processing is enabled, the C<Cookie:> and C<Set-Cookie:>
236headers will be set and handled by this module, otherwise they will be
237left untouched.
197 238
198=item tls_ctx => $scheme | $tls_ctx 239=item tls_ctx => $scheme | $tls_ctx
199 240
200Specifies the AnyEvent::TLS context to be used for https connections. This 241Specifies the AnyEvent::TLS context to be used for https connections. This
201parameter follows the same rules as the C<tls_ctx> parameter to 242parameter follows the same rules as the C<tls_ctx> parameter to
205verification) TLS context. 246verification) TLS context.
206 247
207The default for this option is C<low>, which could be interpreted as "give 248The default for this option is C<low>, which could be interpreted as "give
208me the page, no matter what". 249me the page, no matter what".
209 250
251See also the C<sessionid> parameter.
252
253=item sessionid => $string
254
255The module might reuse connections to the same host internally (regardless
256of other settings, such as C<tcp_connect> or C<proxy>). Sometimes (e.g.
257when using TLS or a specfic proxy), you do not want to reuse connections
258from other sessions. This can be achieved by setting this parameter to
259some unique ID (such as the address of an object storing your state data
260or the TLS context, or the proxy IP) - only connections using the same
261unique ID will be reused.
262
210=item on_prepare => $callback->($fh) 263=item on_prepare => $callback->($fh)
211 264
212In rare cases you need to "tune" the socket before it is used to 265In rare cases you need to "tune" the socket before it is used to
213connect (for exmaple, to bind it on a given IP address). This parameter 266connect (for example, to bind it on a given IP address). This parameter
214overrides the prepare callback passed to C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect> 267overrides the prepare callback passed to C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect>
215and behaves exactly the same way (e.g. it has to provide a 268and behaves exactly the same way (e.g. it has to provide a
216timeout). See the description for the C<$prepare_cb> argument of 269timeout). See the description for the C<$prepare_cb> argument of
217C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect> for details. 270C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect> for details.
218 271
222establishes connections. Normally it uses L<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect> 275establishes connections. Normally it uses L<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect>
223to do this, but you can provide your own C<tcp_connect> function - 276to do this, but you can provide your own C<tcp_connect> function -
224obviously, it has to follow the same calling conventions, except that it 277obviously, it has to follow the same calling conventions, except that it
225may always return a connection guard object. 278may always return a connection guard object.
226 279
280The connections made by this hook will be treated as equivalent to
281connections made the built-in way, specifically, they will be put into
282and taken from the persistent connection cache. If your C<$tcp_connect>
283function is incompatible with this kind of re-use, consider switching off
284C<persistent> connections and/or providing a C<sessionid> identifier.
285
227There are probably lots of weird uses for this function, starting from 286There are probably lots of weird uses for this function, starting from
228tracing the hosts C<http_request> actually tries to connect, to (inexact 287tracing the hosts C<http_request> actually tries to connect, to (inexact
229but fast) host => IP address caching or even socks protocol support. 288but fast) host => IP address caching or even socks protocol support.
230 289
231=item on_header => $callback->($headers) 290=item on_header => $callback->($headers)
240 299
241This callback is useful, among other things, to quickly reject unwanted 300This callback is useful, among other things, to quickly reject unwanted
242content, which, if it is supposed to be rare, can be faster than first 301content, which, if it is supposed to be rare, can be faster than first
243doing a C<HEAD> request. 302doing a C<HEAD> request.
244 303
304The downside is that cancelling the request makes it impossible to re-use
305the connection. Also, the C<on_header> callback will not receive any
306trailer (headers sent after the response body).
307
245Example: cancel the request unless the content-type is "text/html". 308Example: cancel the request unless the content-type is "text/html".
246 309
247 on_header => sub { 310 on_header => sub {
248 $_[0]{"content-type"} =~ /^text\/html\s*(?:;|$)/ 311 $_[0]{"content-type"} =~ /^text\/html\s*(?:;|$)/
249 }, 312 },
255string instead of the body data. 318string instead of the body data.
256 319
257It has to return either true (in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will continue), 320It has to return either true (in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will continue),
258or false, in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will cancel the download (and call 321or false, in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will cancel the download (and call
259the completion callback with an error code of C<598>). 322the completion callback with an error code of C<598>).
323
324The downside to cancelling the request is that it makes it impossible to
325re-use the connection.
260 326
261This callback is useful when the data is too large to be held in memory 327This callback is useful when the data is too large to be held in memory
262(so the callback writes it to a file) or when only some information should 328(so the callback writes it to a file) or when only some information should
263be extracted, or when the body should be processed incrementally. 329be extracted, or when the body should be processed incrementally.
264 330
276called. Instead of the C<$body> argument containing the body data, the 342called. Instead of the C<$body> argument containing the body data, the
277callback will receive the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object associated with the 343callback will receive the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object associated with the
278connection. In error cases, C<undef> will be passed. When there is no body 344connection. In error cases, C<undef> will be passed. When there is no body
279(e.g. status C<304>), the empty string will be passed. 345(e.g. status C<304>), the empty string will be passed.
280 346
281The handle object might or might not be in TLS mode, might be connected to 347The handle object might or might not be in TLS mode, might be connected
282a proxy, be a persistent connection etc., and configured in unspecified 348to a proxy, be a persistent connection, use chunked transfer encoding
283ways. The user is responsible for this handle (it will not be used by this 349etc., and configured in unspecified ways. The user is responsible for this
284module anymore). 350handle (it will not be used by this module anymore).
285 351
286This is useful with some push-type services, where, after the initial 352This is useful with some push-type services, where, after the initial
287headers, an interactive protocol is used (typical example would be the 353headers, an interactive protocol is used (typical example would be the
288push-style twitter API which starts a JSON/XML stream). 354push-style twitter API which starts a JSON/XML stream).
289 355
290If you think you need this, first have a look at C<on_body>, to see if 356If you think you need this, first have a look at C<on_body>, to see if
291that doesn't solve your problem in a better way. 357that doesn't solve your problem in a better way.
292 358
359=item persistent => $boolean
360
361Try to create/reuse a persistent connection. When this flag is set
362(default: true for idempotent requests, false for all others), then
363C<http_request> tries to re-use an existing (previously-created)
364persistent connection to same host (i.e. identical URL scheme, hostname,
365port and sessionid) and, failing that, tries to create a new one.
366
367Requests failing in certain ways will be automatically retried once, which
368is dangerous for non-idempotent requests, which is why it defaults to off
369for them. The reason for this is because the bozos who designed HTTP/1.1
370made it impossible to distinguish between a fatal error and a normal
371connection timeout, so you never know whether there was a problem with
372your request or not.
373
374When reusing an existent connection, many parameters (such as TLS context)
375will be ignored. See the C<sessionid> parameter for a workaround.
376
377=item keepalive => $boolean
378
379Only used when C<persistent> is also true. This parameter decides whether
380C<http_request> tries to handshake a HTTP/1.0-style keep-alive connection
381(as opposed to only a HTTP/1.1 persistent connection).
382
383The default is true, except when using a proxy, in which case it defaults
384to false, as HTTP/1.0 proxies cannot support this in a meaningful way.
385
386=item handle_params => { key => value ... }
387
388The key-value pairs in this hash will be passed to any L<AnyEvent::Handle>
389constructor that is called - not all requests will create a handle, and
390sometimes more than one is created, so this parameter is only good for
391setting hints.
392
393Example: set the maximum read size to 4096, to potentially conserve memory
394at the cost of speed.
395
396 handle_params => {
397 max_read_size => 4096,
398 },
399
293=back 400=back
294 401
295Example: make a simple HTTP GET request for http://www.nethype.de/ 402Example: do a simple HTTP GET request for http://www.nethype.de/ and print
403the response body.
296 404
297 http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub { 405 http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
298 my ($body, $hdr) = @_; 406 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
299 print "$body\n"; 407 print "$body\n";
300 }; 408 };
301 409
302Example: make a HTTP HEAD request on https://www.google.com/, use a 410Example: do a HTTP HEAD request on https://www.google.com/, use a
303timeout of 30 seconds. 411timeout of 30 seconds.
304 412
305 http_request 413 http_request
306 GET => "https://www.google.com", 414 HEAD => "https://www.google.com",
415 headers => { "user-agent" => "MySearchClient 1.0" },
307 timeout => 30, 416 timeout => 30,
308 sub { 417 sub {
309 my ($body, $hdr) = @_; 418 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
310 use Data::Dumper; 419 use Data::Dumper;
311 print Dumper $hdr; 420 print Dumper $hdr;
312 } 421 }
313 ; 422 ;
314 423
315Example: make another simple HTTP GET request, but immediately try to 424Example: do another simple HTTP GET request, but immediately try to
316cancel it. 425cancel it.
317 426
318 my $request = http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub { 427 my $request = http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
319 my ($body, $hdr) = @_; 428 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
320 print "$body\n"; 429 print "$body\n";
321 }; 430 };
322 431
323 undef $request; 432 undef $request;
324 433
325=cut 434=cut
435
436#############################################################################
437# wait queue/slots
326 438
327sub _slot_schedule; 439sub _slot_schedule;
328sub _slot_schedule($) { 440sub _slot_schedule($) {
329 my $host = shift; 441 my $host = shift;
330 442
352 push @{ $CO_SLOT{$_[0]}[1] }, $_[1]; 464 push @{ $CO_SLOT{$_[0]}[1] }, $_[1];
353 465
354 _slot_schedule $_[0]; 466 _slot_schedule $_[0];
355} 467}
356 468
469#############################################################################
470# cookie handling
471
472# expire cookies
473sub cookie_jar_expire($;$) {
474 my ($jar, $session_end) = @_;
475
476 %$jar = () if $jar->{version} != 2;
477
478 my $anow = AE::now;
479
480 while (my ($chost, $paths) = each %$jar) {
481 next unless ref $paths;
482
483 while (my ($cpath, $cookies) = each %$paths) {
484 while (my ($cookie, $kv) = each %$cookies) {
485 if (exists $kv->{_expires}) {
486 delete $cookies->{$cookie}
487 if $anow > $kv->{_expires};
488 } elsif ($session_end) {
489 delete $cookies->{$cookie};
490 }
491 }
492
493 delete $paths->{$cpath}
494 unless %$cookies;
495 }
496
497 delete $jar->{$chost}
498 unless %$paths;
499 }
500}
501
502# extract cookies from jar
503sub cookie_jar_extract($$$$) {
504 my ($jar, $scheme, $host, $path) = @_;
505
506 %$jar = () if $jar->{version} != 2;
507
508 $host = AnyEvent::Util::idn_to_ascii $host
509 if $host =~ /[^\x00-\x7f]/;
510
511 my @cookies;
512
513 while (my ($chost, $paths) = each %$jar) {
514 next unless ref $paths;
515
516 # exact match or suffix including . match
517 $chost eq $host or ".$chost" eq substr $host, -1 - length $chost
518 or next;
519
520 while (my ($cpath, $cookies) = each %$paths) {
521 next unless $cpath eq substr $path, 0, length $cpath;
522
523 while (my ($cookie, $kv) = each %$cookies) {
524 next if $scheme ne "https" && exists $kv->{secure};
525
526 if (exists $kv->{_expires} and AE::now > $kv->{_expires}) {
527 delete $cookies->{$cookie};
528 next;
529 }
530
531 my $value = $kv->{value};
532
533 if ($value =~ /[=;,[:space:]]/) {
534 $value =~ s/([\\"])/\\$1/g;
535 $value = "\"$value\"";
536 }
537
538 push @cookies, "$cookie=$value";
539 }
540 }
541 }
542
543 \@cookies
544}
545
546# parse set_cookie header into jar
547sub cookie_jar_set_cookie($$$$) {
548 my ($jar, $set_cookie, $host, $date) = @_;
549
550 %$jar = () if $jar->{version} != 2;
551
552 my $anow = int AE::now;
553 my $snow; # server-now
554
555 for ($set_cookie) {
556 # parse NAME=VALUE
557 my @kv;
558
559 # expires is not http-compliant in the original cookie-spec,
560 # we support the official date format and some extensions
561 while (
562 m{
563 \G\s*
564 (?:
565 expires \s*=\s* ([A-Z][a-z][a-z]+,\ [^,;]+)
566 | ([^=;,[:space:]]+) (?: \s*=\s* (?: "((?:[^\\"]+|\\.)*)" | ([^;,[:space:]]*) ) )?
567 )
568 }gcxsi
569 ) {
570 my $name = $2;
571 my $value = $4;
572
573 if (defined $1) {
574 # expires
575 $name = "expires";
576 $value = $1;
577 } elsif (defined $3) {
578 # quoted
579 $value = $3;
580 $value =~ s/\\(.)/$1/gs;
581 }
582
583 push @kv, @kv ? lc $name : $name, $value;
584
585 last unless /\G\s*;/gc;
586 }
587
588 last unless @kv;
589
590 my $name = shift @kv;
591 my %kv = (value => shift @kv, @kv);
592
593 if (exists $kv{"max-age"}) {
594 $kv{_expires} = $anow + delete $kv{"max-age"};
595 } elsif (exists $kv{expires}) {
596 $snow ||= parse_date ($date) || $anow;
597 $kv{_expires} = $anow + (parse_date (delete $kv{expires}) - $snow);
598 } else {
599 delete $kv{_expires};
600 }
601
602 my $cdom;
603 my $cpath = (delete $kv{path}) || "/";
604
605 if (exists $kv{domain}) {
606 $cdom = $kv{domain};
607
608 $cdom =~ s/^\.?/./; # make sure it starts with a "."
609
610 next if $cdom =~ /\.$/;
611
612 # this is not rfc-like and not netscape-like. go figure.
613 my $ndots = $cdom =~ y/.//;
614 next if $ndots < ($cdom =~ /\.[^.][^.]\.[^.][^.]$/ ? 3 : 2);
615
616 $cdom = substr $cdom, 1; # remove initial .
617 } else {
618 $cdom = $host;
619 }
620
621 # store it
622 $jar->{version} = 2;
623 $jar->{lc $cdom}{$cpath}{$name} = \%kv;
624
625 redo if /\G\s*,/gc;
626 }
627}
628
629#############################################################################
630# keepalive/persistent connection cache
631
632# fetch a connection from the keepalive cache
633sub ka_fetch($) {
634 my $ka_key = shift;
635
636 my $hdl = pop @{ $KA_CACHE{$ka_key} }; # currently we reuse the MOST RECENTLY USED connection
637 delete $KA_CACHE{$ka_key}
638 unless @{ $KA_CACHE{$ka_key} };
639
640 $hdl
641}
642
643sub ka_store($$) {
644 my ($ka_key, $hdl) = @_;
645
646 my $kaa = $KA_CACHE{$ka_key} ||= [];
647
648 my $destroy = sub {
649 my @ka = grep $_ != $hdl, @{ $KA_CACHE{$ka_key} };
650
651 $hdl->destroy;
652
653 @ka
654 ? $KA_CACHE{$ka_key} = \@ka
655 : delete $KA_CACHE{$ka_key};
656 };
657
658 # on error etc., destroy
659 $hdl->on_error ($destroy);
660 $hdl->on_eof ($destroy);
661 $hdl->on_read ($destroy);
662 $hdl->timeout ($PERSISTENT_TIMEOUT);
663
664 push @$kaa, $hdl;
665 shift @$kaa while @$kaa > $MAX_PER_HOST;
666}
667
668#############################################################################
669# utilities
670
357# continue to parse $_ for headers and place them into the arg 671# continue to parse $_ for headers and place them into the arg
358sub parse_hdr() { 672sub _parse_hdr() {
359 my %hdr; 673 my %hdr;
360 674
361 # things seen, not parsed: 675 # things seen, not parsed:
362 # p3pP="NON CUR OTPi OUR NOR UNI" 676 # p3pP="NON CUR OTPi OUR NOR UNI"
363 677
377 for values %hdr; 691 for values %hdr;
378 692
379 \%hdr 693 \%hdr
380} 694}
381 695
696#############################################################################
697# http_get
698
382our $qr_nlnl = qr{(?<![^\012])\015?\012}; 699our $qr_nlnl = qr{(?<![^\012])\015?\012};
383 700
384our $TLS_CTX_LOW = { cache => 1, sslv2 => 1 }; 701our $TLS_CTX_LOW = { cache => 1, sslv2 => 1 };
385our $TLS_CTX_HIGH = { cache => 1, verify => 1, verify_peername => "https" }; 702our $TLS_CTX_HIGH = { cache => 1, verify => 1, verify_peername => "https" };
703
704# maybe it should just become a normal object :/
705
706sub _destroy_state(\%) {
707 my ($state) = @_;
708
709 $state->{handle}->destroy if $state->{handle};
710 %$state = ();
711}
712
713sub _error(\%$$) {
714 my ($state, $cb, $hdr) = @_;
715
716 &_destroy_state ($state);
717
718 $cb->(undef, $hdr);
719 ()
720}
721
722our %IDEMPOTENT = (
723 DELETE => 1,
724 GET => 1,
725 QUERY => 1,
726 HEAD => 1,
727 OPTIONS => 1,
728 PUT => 1,
729 TRACE => 1,
730
731 ACL => 1,
732 "BASELINE-CONTROL" => 1,
733 BIND => 1,
734 CHECKIN => 1,
735 CHECKOUT => 1,
736 COPY => 1,
737 LABEL => 1,
738 LINK => 1,
739 MERGE => 1,
740 MKACTIVITY => 1,
741 MKCALENDAR => 1,
742 MKCOL => 1,
743 MKREDIRECTREF => 1,
744 MKWORKSPACE => 1,
745 MOVE => 1,
746 ORDERPATCH => 1,
747 PRI => 1,
748 PROPFIND => 1,
749 PROPPATCH => 1,
750 REBIND => 1,
751 REPORT => 1,
752 SEARCH => 1,
753 UNBIND => 1,
754 UNCHECKOUT => 1,
755 UNLINK => 1,
756 UNLOCK => 1,
757 UPDATE => 1,
758 UPDATEREDIRECTREF => 1,
759 "VERSION-CONTROL" => 1,
760);
386 761
387sub http_request($$@) { 762sub http_request($$@) {
388 my $cb = pop; 763 my $cb = pop;
389 my ($method, $url, %arg) = @_; 764 my ($method, $url, %arg) = @_;
390 765
408 my $recurse = exists $arg{recurse} ? delete $arg{recurse} : $MAX_RECURSE; 783 my $recurse = exists $arg{recurse} ? delete $arg{recurse} : $MAX_RECURSE;
409 784
410 return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Too many redirections" }) 785 return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Too many redirections" })
411 if $recurse < 0; 786 if $recurse < 0;
412 787
413 my $proxy = $arg{proxy} || $PROXY; 788 my $proxy = exists $arg{proxy} ? $arg{proxy} : $PROXY;
414 my $timeout = $arg{timeout} || $TIMEOUT; 789 my $timeout = $arg{timeout} || $TIMEOUT;
415 790
416 my ($uscheme, $uauthority, $upath, $query, $fragment) = 791 my ($uscheme, $uauthority, $upath, $query, undef) = # ignore fragment
417 $url =~ m|(?:([^:/?#]+):)?(?://([^/?#]*))?([^?#]*)(?:(\?[^#]*))?(?:#(.*))?|; 792 $url =~ m|^([^:]+):(?://([^/?#]*))?([^?#]*)(?:(\?[^#]*))?(?:#(.*))?$|;
418 793
419 $uscheme = lc $uscheme; 794 $uscheme = lc $uscheme;
420 795
421 my $uport = $uscheme eq "http" ? 80 796 my $uport = $uscheme eq "http" ? 80
422 : $uscheme eq "https" ? 443 797 : $uscheme eq "https" ? 443
423 : return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Only http and https URL schemes supported" }); 798 : return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Only http and https URL schemes supported" });
424 799
425 $uauthority =~ /^(?: .*\@ )? ([^\@:]+) (?: : (\d+) )?$/x 800 $uauthority =~ /^(?: .*\@ )? ([^\@]+?) (?: : (\d+) )?$/x
426 or return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Unparsable URL" }); 801 or return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Unparsable URL" });
427 802
428 my $uhost = $1; 803 my $uhost = lc $1;
429 $uport = $2 if defined $2; 804 $uport = $2 if defined $2;
430 805
431 $hdr{host} = defined $2 ? "$uhost:$2" : "$uhost" 806 $hdr{host} = defined $2 ? "$uhost:$2" : "$uhost"
432 unless exists $hdr{host}; 807 unless exists $hdr{host};
433 808
436 811
437 $upath =~ s%^/?%/%; 812 $upath =~ s%^/?%/%;
438 813
439 # cookie processing 814 # cookie processing
440 if (my $jar = $arg{cookie_jar}) { 815 if (my $jar = $arg{cookie_jar}) {
441 %$jar = () if $jar->{version} != 1; 816 my $cookies = cookie_jar_extract $jar, $uscheme, $uhost, $upath;
442 817
443 my @cookie;
444
445 while (my ($chost, $v) = each %$jar) {
446 if ($chost =~ /^\./) {
447 next unless $chost eq substr $uhost, -length $chost;
448 } elsif ($chost =~ /\./) {
449 next unless $chost eq $uhost;
450 } else {
451 next;
452 }
453
454 while (my ($cpath, $v) = each %$v) {
455 next unless $cpath eq substr $upath, 0, length $cpath;
456
457 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$v) {
458 next if $uscheme ne "https" && exists $v->{secure};
459 my $value = $v->{value};
460 $value =~ s/([\\"])/\\$1/g;
461 push @cookie, "$k=\"$value\"";
462 }
463 }
464 }
465
466 $hdr{cookie} = join "; ", @cookie 818 $hdr{cookie} = join "; ", @$cookies
467 if @cookie; 819 if @$cookies;
468 } 820 }
469 821
470 my ($rhost, $rport, $rscheme, $rpath); # request host, port, path 822 my ($rhost, $rport, $rscheme, $rpath); # request host, port, path
471 823
472 if ($proxy) { 824 if ($proxy) {
475 $rscheme = "http" unless defined $rscheme; 827 $rscheme = "http" unless defined $rscheme;
476 828
477 # don't support https requests over https-proxy transport, 829 # don't support https requests over https-proxy transport,
478 # can't be done with tls as spec'ed, unless you double-encrypt. 830 # can't be done with tls as spec'ed, unless you double-encrypt.
479 $rscheme = "http" if $uscheme eq "https" && $rscheme eq "https"; 831 $rscheme = "http" if $uscheme eq "https" && $rscheme eq "https";
832
833 $rhost = lc $rhost;
834 $rscheme = lc $rscheme;
480 } else { 835 } else {
481 ($rhost, $rport, $rscheme, $rpath) = ($uhost, $uport, $uscheme, $upath); 836 ($rhost, $rport, $rscheme, $rpath) = ($uhost, $uport, $uscheme, $upath);
482 } 837 }
483 838
484 # leave out fragment and query string, just a heuristic 839 # leave out fragment and query string, just a heuristic
486 $hdr{"user-agent"} = $USERAGENT unless exists $hdr{"user-agent"}; 841 $hdr{"user-agent"} = $USERAGENT unless exists $hdr{"user-agent"};
487 842
488 $hdr{"content-length"} = length $arg{body} 843 $hdr{"content-length"} = length $arg{body}
489 if length $arg{body} || $method ne "GET"; 844 if length $arg{body} || $method ne "GET";
490 845
491 $hdr{connection} = "close TE"; 846 my $idempotent = $IDEMPOTENT{$method};
847
848 # default value for keepalive is true iff the request is for an idempotent method
849 my $persistent = exists $arg{persistent} ? !!$arg{persistent} : $idempotent;
850 my $keepalive = exists $arg{keepalive} ? !!$arg{keepalive} : !$proxy;
851 my $was_persistent; # true if this is actually a recycled connection
852
853 # the key to use in the keepalive cache
854 my $ka_key = "$uscheme\x00$uhost\x00$uport\x00$arg{sessionid}";
855
856 $hdr{connection} = ($persistent ? $keepalive ? "keep-alive, " : "" : "close, ") . "Te"; #1.1
492 $hdr{te} = "trailers" unless exists $hdr{te}; 857 $hdr{te} = "trailers" unless exists $hdr{te}; #1.1
493 858
494 my %state = (connect_guard => 1); 859 my %state = (connect_guard => 1);
860
861 my $ae_error = 595; # connecting
862
863 # handle actual, non-tunneled, request
864 my $handle_actual_request = sub {
865 $ae_error = 596; # request phase
866
867 my $hdl = $state{handle};
868
869 $hdl->starttls ("connect") if $uscheme eq "https" && !exists $hdl->{tls};
870
871 # send request
872 $hdl->push_write (
873 "$method $rpath HTTP/1.1\015\012"
874 . (join "", map "\u$_: $hdr{$_}\015\012", grep defined $hdr{$_}, keys %hdr)
875 . "\015\012"
876 . $arg{body}
877 );
878
879 # return if error occurred during push_write()
880 return unless %state;
881
882 # reduce memory usage, save a kitten, also re-use it for the response headers.
883 %hdr = ();
884
885 # status line and headers
886 $state{read_response} = sub {
887 return unless %state;
888
889 for ("$_[1]") {
890 y/\015//d; # weed out any \015, as they show up in the weirdest of places.
891
892 /^HTTP\/0*([0-9\.]+) \s+ ([0-9]{3}) (?: \s+ ([^\012]*) )? \012/gxci
893 or return _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Invalid server response" };
894
895 # 100 Continue handling
896 # should not happen as we don't send expect: 100-continue,
897 # but we handle it just in case.
898 # since we send the request body regardless, if we get an error
899 # we are out of-sync, which we currently do NOT handle correctly.
900 return $state{handle}->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, $state{read_response})
901 if $2 eq 100;
902
903 push @pseudo,
904 HTTPVersion => $1,
905 Status => $2,
906 Reason => $3,
907 ;
908
909 my $hdr = _parse_hdr
910 or return _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Garbled response headers" };
911
912 %hdr = (%$hdr, @pseudo);
913 }
914
915 # redirect handling
916 # relative uri handling forced by microsoft and other shitheads.
917 # we give our best and fall back to URI if available.
918 if (exists $hdr{location}) {
919 my $loc = $hdr{location};
920
921 if ($loc =~ m%^//%) { # //
922 $loc = "$uscheme:$loc";
923
924 } elsif ($loc eq "") {
925 $loc = $url;
926
927 } elsif ($loc !~ /^(?: $ | [^:\/?\#]+ : )/x) { # anything "simple"
928 $loc =~ s/^\.\/+//;
929
930 if ($loc !~ m%^[.?#]%) {
931 my $prefix = "$uscheme://$uauthority";
932
933 unless ($loc =~ s/^\///) {
934 $prefix .= $upath;
935 $prefix =~ s/\/[^\/]*$//;
936 }
937
938 $loc = "$prefix/$loc";
939
940 } elsif (eval { require URI }) { # uri
941 $loc = URI->new_abs ($loc, $url)->as_string;
942
943 } else {
944 return _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Cannot parse Location (URI module missing)" };
945 #$hdr{Status} = 599;
946 #$hdr{Reason} = "Unparsable Redirect (URI module missing)";
947 #$recurse = 0;
948 }
949 }
950
951 $hdr{location} = $loc;
952 }
953
954 my $redirect;
955
956 if ($recurse) {
957 my $status = $hdr{Status};
958
959 # industry standard is to redirect POST as GET for
960 # 301, 302 and 303, in contrast to HTTP/1.0 and 1.1.
961 # also, the UA should ask the user for 301 and 307 and POST,
962 # industry standard seems to be to simply follow.
963 # we go with the industry standard. 308 is defined
964 # by rfc7538
965 if ($status == 301 or $status == 302 or $status == 303) {
966 $redirect = 1;
967 # HTTP/1.1 is unclear on how to mutate the method
968 unless ($method eq "HEAD") {
969 $method = "GET";
970 delete $arg{body};
971 }
972 } elsif ($status == 307 or $status == 308) {
973 $redirect = 1;
974 }
975 }
976
977 my $finish = sub { # ($data, $err_status, $err_reason[, $persistent])
978 if ($state{handle}) {
979 # handle keepalive
980 if (
981 $persistent
982 && $_[3]
983 && ($hdr{HTTPVersion} < 1.1
984 ? $hdr{connection} =~ /\bkeep-?alive\b/i
985 : $hdr{connection} !~ /\bclose\b/i)
986 ) {
987 ka_store $ka_key, delete $state{handle};
988 } else {
989 # no keepalive, destroy the handle
990 $state{handle}->destroy;
991 }
992 }
993
994 %state = ();
995
996 if (defined $_[1]) {
997 $hdr{OrigStatus} = $hdr{Status}; $hdr{Status} = $_[1];
998 $hdr{OrigReason} = $hdr{Reason}; $hdr{Reason} = $_[2];
999 }
1000
1001 # set-cookie processing
1002 if ($arg{cookie_jar}) {
1003 cookie_jar_set_cookie $arg{cookie_jar}, $hdr{"set-cookie"}, $uhost, $hdr{date};
1004 }
1005
1006 if ($redirect && exists $hdr{location}) {
1007 # we ignore any errors, as it is very common to receive
1008 # Content-Length != 0 but no actual body
1009 # we also access %hdr, as $_[1] might be an erro
1010 $state{recurse} =
1011 http_request (
1012 $method => $hdr{location},
1013 %arg,
1014 recurse => $recurse - 1,
1015 Redirect => [$_[0], \%hdr],
1016 sub {
1017 %state = ();
1018 &$cb
1019 },
1020 );
1021 } else {
1022 $cb->($_[0], \%hdr);
1023 }
1024 };
1025
1026 $ae_error = 597; # body phase
1027
1028 my $chunked = $hdr{"transfer-encoding"} =~ /\bchunked\b/i; # not quite correct...
1029
1030 my $len = $chunked ? undef : $hdr{"content-length"};
1031
1032 # body handling, many different code paths
1033 # - no body expected
1034 # - want_body_handle
1035 # - te chunked
1036 # - 2x length known (with or without on_body)
1037 # - 2x length not known (with or without on_body)
1038 if (!$redirect && $arg{on_header} && !$arg{on_header}(\%hdr)) {
1039 $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_header");
1040 } elsif (
1041 $hdr{Status} =~ /^(?:1..|204|205|304)$/
1042 or $method eq "HEAD"
1043 or (defined $len && $len == 0) # == 0, not !, because "0 " is true
1044 ) {
1045 # no body
1046 $finish->("", undef, undef, 1);
1047
1048 } elsif (!$redirect && $arg{want_body_handle}) {
1049 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
1050 $_[0]->on_error (undef);
1051 $_[0]->on_read (undef);
1052
1053 $finish->(delete $state{handle});
1054
1055 } elsif ($chunked) {
1056 my $cl = 0;
1057 my $body = "";
1058 my $on_body = (!$redirect && $arg{on_body}) || sub { $body .= shift; 1 };
1059
1060 $state{read_chunk} = sub {
1061 $_[1] =~ /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)/
1062 or return $finish->(undef, $ae_error => "Garbled chunked transfer encoding");
1063
1064 my $len = hex $1;
1065
1066 if ($len) {
1067 $cl += $len;
1068
1069 $_[0]->push_read (chunk => $len, sub {
1070 $on_body->($_[1], \%hdr)
1071 or return $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_body");
1072
1073 $_[0]->push_read (line => sub {
1074 length $_[1]
1075 and return $finish->(undef, $ae_error => "Garbled chunked transfer encoding");
1076 $_[0]->push_read (line => $state{read_chunk});
1077 });
1078 });
1079 } else {
1080 $hdr{"content-length"} ||= $cl;
1081
1082 $_[0]->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
1083 if (length $_[1]) {
1084 for ("$_[1]") {
1085 y/\015//d; # weed out any \015, as they show up in the weirdest of places.
1086
1087 my $hdr = _parse_hdr
1088 or return $finish->(undef, $ae_error => "Garbled response trailers");
1089
1090 %hdr = (%hdr, %$hdr);
1091 }
1092 }
1093
1094 $finish->($body, undef, undef, 1);
1095 });
1096 }
1097 };
1098
1099 $_[0]->push_read (line => $state{read_chunk});
1100
1101 } elsif (!$redirect && $arg{on_body}) {
1102 if (defined $len) {
1103 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
1104 $len -= length $_[0]{rbuf};
1105
1106 $arg{on_body}(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
1107 or return $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_body");
1108
1109 $len > 0
1110 or $finish->("", undef, undef, 1);
1111 });
1112 } else {
1113 $_[0]->on_eof (sub {
1114 $finish->("");
1115 });
1116 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
1117 $arg{on_body}(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
1118 or $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_body");
1119 });
1120 }
1121 } else {
1122 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
1123
1124 if (defined $len) {
1125 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
1126 $finish->((substr delete $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $len, ""), undef, undef, 1)
1127 if $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf};
1128 });
1129 } else {
1130 $_[0]->on_error (sub {
1131 ($! == Errno::EPIPE || !$!)
1132 ? $finish->(delete $_[0]{rbuf})
1133 : $finish->(undef, $ae_error => $_[2]);
1134 });
1135 $_[0]->on_read (sub { });
1136 }
1137 }
1138 };
1139
1140 # if keepalive is enabled, then the server closing the connection
1141 # before a response can happen legally - we retry on idempotent methods.
1142 if ($was_persistent && $idempotent) {
1143 my $old_eof = $hdl->{on_eof};
1144 $hdl->{on_eof} = sub {
1145 _destroy_state %state;
1146
1147 %state = ();
1148 $state{recurse} =
1149 http_request (
1150 $method => $url,
1151 %arg,
1152 recurse => $recurse - 1,
1153 persistent => 0,
1154 sub {
1155 %state = ();
1156 &$cb
1157 }
1158 );
1159 };
1160 $hdl->on_read (sub {
1161 return unless %state;
1162
1163 # as soon as we receive something, a connection close
1164 # once more becomes a hard error
1165 $hdl->{on_eof} = $old_eof;
1166 $hdl->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, $state{read_response});
1167 });
1168 } else {
1169 $hdl->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, $state{read_response});
1170 }
1171 };
1172
1173 my $prepare_handle = sub {
1174 my ($hdl) = $state{handle};
1175
1176 $hdl->on_error (sub {
1177 _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => $ae_error, Reason => $_[2] };
1178 });
1179 $hdl->on_eof (sub {
1180 _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => $ae_error, Reason => "Unexpected end-of-file" };
1181 });
1182 $hdl->timeout_reset;
1183 $hdl->timeout ($timeout);
1184 };
1185
1186 # connected to proxy (or origin server)
1187 my $connect_cb = sub {
1188 my $fh = shift
1189 or return _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => $ae_error, Reason => "$!" };
1190
1191 return unless delete $state{connect_guard};
1192
1193 # get handle
1194 $state{handle} = new AnyEvent::Handle
1195 %{ $arg{handle_params} },
1196 fh => $fh,
1197 peername => $uhost,
1198 tls_ctx => $arg{tls_ctx},
1199 ;
1200
1201 $prepare_handle->();
1202
1203 #$state{handle}->starttls ("connect") if $rscheme eq "https";
1204
1205 # now handle proxy-CONNECT method
1206 if ($proxy && $uscheme eq "https") {
1207 # oh dear, we have to wrap it into a connect request
1208
1209 my $auth = exists $hdr{"proxy-authorization"}
1210 ? "proxy-authorization: " . (delete $hdr{"proxy-authorization"}) . "\015\012"
1211 : "";
1212
1213 # maybe re-use $uauthority with patched port?
1214 $state{handle}->push_write ("CONNECT $uhost:$uport HTTP/1.0\015\012$auth\015\012");
1215 $state{handle}->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
1216 $_[1] =~ /^HTTP\/([0-9\.]+) \s+ ([0-9]{3}) (?: \s+ ([^\015\012]*) )?/ix
1217 or return _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Invalid proxy connect response ($_[1])" };
1218
1219 if ($2 == 200) {
1220 $rpath = $upath;
1221 $handle_actual_request->();
1222 } else {
1223 _error %state, $cb, { @pseudo, Status => $2, Reason => $3 };
1224 }
1225 });
1226 } else {
1227 delete $hdr{"proxy-authorization"} unless $proxy;
1228
1229 $handle_actual_request->();
1230 }
1231 };
495 1232
496 _get_slot $uhost, sub { 1233 _get_slot $uhost, sub {
497 $state{slot_guard} = shift; 1234 $state{slot_guard} = shift;
498 1235
499 return unless $state{connect_guard}; 1236 return unless $state{connect_guard};
500 1237
501 my $connect_cb = sub { 1238 # try to use an existing keepalive connection, but only if we, ourselves, plan
502 $state{fh} = shift 1239 # on a keepalive request (in theory, this should be a separate config option).
503 or do { 1240 if ($persistent && $KA_CACHE{$ka_key}) {
504 my $err = "$!"; 1241 $was_persistent = 1;
505 %state = ();
506 return $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => $err });
507 };
508 1242
509 pop; # free memory, save a tree 1243 $state{handle} = ka_fetch $ka_key;
510 1244# $state{handle}->destroyed
511 return unless delete $state{connect_guard}; 1245# and die "AnyEvent::HTTP: unexpectedly got a destructed handle (1), please report.";#d#
512 1246 $prepare_handle->();
513 # get handle 1247# $state{handle}->destroyed
514 $state{handle} = new AnyEvent::Handle 1248# and die "AnyEvent::HTTP: unexpectedly got a destructed handle (2), please report.";#d#
515 fh => $state{fh},
516 peername => $rhost,
517 tls_ctx => $arg{tls_ctx},
518 # these need to be reconfigured on keepalive handles
519 timeout => $timeout,
520 on_error => sub {
521 %state = ();
522 $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => $_[2] });
523 },
524 on_eof => sub {
525 %state = ();
526 $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Unexpected end-of-file" });
527 },
528 ;
529
530 # limit the number of persistent connections
531 # keepalive not yet supported
532# if ($KA_COUNT{$_[1]} < $MAX_PERSISTENT_PER_HOST) {
533# ++$KA_COUNT{$_[1]};
534# $state{handle}{ka_count_guard} = AnyEvent::Util::guard {
535# --$KA_COUNT{$_[1]}
536# };
537# $hdr{connection} = "keep-alive";
538# } else {
539# delete $hdr{connection};
540# }
541
542 $state{handle}->starttls ("connect") if $rscheme eq "https";
543
544 # handle actual, non-tunneled, request
545 my $handle_actual_request = sub {
546 $state{handle}->starttls ("connect") if $uscheme eq "https" && !exists $state{handle}{tls};
547
548 # send request
549 $state{handle}->push_write (
550 "$method $rpath HTTP/1.1\015\012"
551 . (join "", map "\u$_: $hdr{$_}\015\012", grep defined $hdr{$_}, keys %hdr)
552 . "\015\012"
553 . (delete $arg{body})
554 );
555
556 # return if error occured during push_write()
557 return unless %state;
558
559 %hdr = (); # reduce memory usage, save a kitten, also make it possible to re-use
560
561 # status line and headers
562 $state{handle}->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
563 my $keepalive = pop;
564
565 for ("$_[1]") {
566 y/\015//d; # weed out any \015, as they show up in the weirdest of places.
567
568 /^HTTP\/([0-9\.]+) \s+ ([0-9]{3}) (?: \s+ ([^\012]*) )? \012/igxc
569 or return (%state = (), $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Invalid server response" }));
570
571 push @pseudo,
572 HTTPVersion => $1,
573 Status => $2,
574 Reason => $3,
575 ;
576
577 my $hdr = parse_hdr
578 or return (%state = (), $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Garbled response headers" }));
579
580 %hdr = (%$hdr, @pseudo);
581 }
582
583 # redirect handling
584 # microsoft and other shitheads don't give a shit for following standards,
585 # try to support some common forms of broken Location headers.
586 if ($hdr{location} !~ /^(?: $ | [^:\/?\#]+ : )/x) {
587 $hdr{location} =~ s/^\.\/+//;
588
589 my $url = "$rscheme://$uhost:$uport";
590
591 unless ($hdr{location} =~ s/^\///) {
592 $url .= $upath;
593 $url =~ s/\/[^\/]*$//;
594 }
595
596 $hdr{location} = "$url/$hdr{location}";
597 }
598
599 my $redirect;
600
601 if ($recurse) {
602 my $status = $hdr{Status};
603
604 # industry standard is to redirect POST as GET for
605 # 301, 302 and 303, in contrast to http/1.0 and 1.1.
606 # also, the UA should ask the user for 301 and 307 and POST,
607 # industry standard seems to be to simply follow.
608 # we go with the industry standard.
609 if ($status == 301 or $status == 302 or $status == 303) {
610 # HTTP/1.1 is unclear on how to mutate the method
611 $method = "GET" unless $method eq "HEAD";
612 $redirect = 1;
613 } elsif ($status == 307) {
614 $redirect = 1;
615 }
616 }
617
618 my $finish = sub { # ($data, $err_status, $err_reason[, $keepalive])
619 $state{handle}->destroy if $state{handle};
620 %state = ();
621
622 if (defined $_[1]) {
623 $hdr{OrigStatus} = $hdr{Status}; $hdr{Status} = $_[1];
624 $hdr{OrigReason} = $hdr{Reason}; $hdr{Reason} = $_[2];
625 }
626
627 # set-cookie processing
628 if ($arg{cookie_jar}) {
629 for ($hdr{"set-cookie"}) {
630 # parse NAME=VALUE
631 my @kv;
632
633 while (/\G\s* ([^=;,[:space:]]+) \s*=\s* (?: "((?:[^\\"]+|\\.)*)" | ([^=;,[:space:]]*) )/gcxs) {
634 my $name = $1;
635 my $value = $3;
636
637 unless ($value) {
638 $value = $2;
639 $value =~ s/\\(.)/$1/gs;
640 }
641
642 push @kv, $name => $value;
643
644 last unless /\G\s*;/gc;
645 }
646
647 last unless @kv;
648
649 my $name = shift @kv;
650 my %kv = (value => shift @kv, @kv);
651
652 my $cdom;
653 my $cpath = (delete $kv{path}) || "/";
654
655 if (exists $kv{domain}) {
656 $cdom = delete $kv{domain};
657
658 $cdom =~ s/^\.?/./; # make sure it starts with a "."
659
660 next if $cdom =~ /\.$/;
661
662 # this is not rfc-like and not netscape-like. go figure.
663 my $ndots = $cdom =~ y/.//;
664 next if $ndots < ($cdom =~ /\.[^.][^.]\.[^.][^.]$/ ? 3 : 2);
665 } else {
666 $cdom = $uhost;
667 }
668
669 # store it
670 $arg{cookie_jar}{version} = 1;
671 $arg{cookie_jar}{$cdom}{$cpath}{$name} = \%kv;
672
673 redo if /\G\s*,/gc;
674 }
675 }
676
677 if ($redirect && exists $hdr{location}) {
678 # we ignore any errors, as it is very common to receive
679 # Content-Length != 0 but no actual body
680 # we also access %hdr, as $_[1] might be an erro
681 http_request (
682 $method => $hdr{location},
683 %arg,
684 recurse => $recurse - 1,
685 Redirect => [$_[0], \%hdr],
686 $cb);
687 } else {
688 $cb->($_[0], \%hdr);
689 }
690 };
691
692 my $len = $hdr{"content-length"};
693
694 if (!$redirect && $arg{on_header} && !$arg{on_header}(\%hdr)) {
695 $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_header");
696 } elsif (
697 $hdr{Status} =~ /^(?:1..|204|205|304)$/
698 or $method eq "HEAD"
699 or (defined $len && !$len)
700 ) {
701 # no body
702 $finish->("", undef, undef, 1);
703 } else {
704 # body handling, many different code paths
705 # - no body expected
706 # - want_body_handle
707 # - te chunked
708 # - 2x length known (with or without on_body)
709 # - 2x length not known (with or without on_body)
710 if (!$redirect && $arg{want_body_handle}) {
711 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
712 $_[0]->on_error (undef);
713 $_[0]->on_read (undef);
714
715 $finish->(delete $state{handle});
716
717 } elsif ($hdr{"transfer-encoding"} =~ /chunked/) {
718 my $body = undef;
719 my $on_body = $arg{on_body} || sub { $body .= shift; 1 };
720
721 $_[0]->on_error (sub { $finish->(undef, 599 => $_[2]) });
722
723 my $read_chunk; $read_chunk = sub {
724 warn $_[1];#d#
725 $_[1] =~ /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)/
726 or $finish->(undef, 599 => "Garbled chunked transfer encoding");
727
728 my $len = hex $1;
729
730 if ($len) {
731 $_[0]->push_read (chunk => hex $1, sub {
732 $on_body->($_[1], \%hdr)
733 or return $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_body");
734
735 $_[0]->push_read (line => sub {
736 length $_[1]
737 and return $finish->(undef, 599 => "Garbled chunked transfer encoding");
738 $_[0]->push_read (line => $read_chunk);
739 });
740 });
741 } else {
742 $_[0]->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
743 if (length $_[1]) {
744 for ("$_[1]") {
745 y/\015//d; # weed out any \015, as they show up in the weirdest of places.
746
747 my $hdr = parse_hdr
748 or return $finish->(undef, 599 => "Garbled response trailers");
749
750 %hdr = (%hdr, %$hdr);
751 }
752 }
753
754 $finish->($body, undef, undef, 1);
755 });
756 }
757 };
758
759 $_[0]->push_read (line => $read_chunk);
760
761 } elsif ($arg{on_body}) {
762 $_[0]->on_error (sub { $finish->(undef, 599 => $_[2]) });
763
764 if ($len) {
765 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
766 $len -= length $_[0]{rbuf};
767
768 $arg{on_body}(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
769 or return $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_body");
770
771 $len > 0
772 or $finish->("", undef, undef, 1);
773 });
774 } else {
775 $_[0]->on_eof (sub {
776 $finish->("");
777 });
778 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
779 $arg{on_body}(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
780 or $finish->(undef, 598 => "Request cancelled by on_body");
781 });
782 }
783 } else {
784 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
785
786 if ($len) {
787 $_[0]->on_error (sub { $finish->(undef, 599 => $_[2]) });
788 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
789 $finish->((substr delete $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $len, ""), undef, undef, 1)
790 if $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf};
791 });
792 } else {
793 $_[0]->on_error (sub {
794 ($! == Errno::EPIPE || !$!)
795 ? $finish->(delete $_[0]{rbuf})
796 : $finish->(undef, 599 => $_[2]);
797 });
798 $_[0]->on_read (sub { });
799 }
800 }
801 }
802 });
803 };
804
805 # now handle proxy-CONNECT method
806 if ($proxy && $uscheme eq "https") {
807 # oh dear, we have to wrap it into a connect request
808
809 # maybe re-use $uauthority with patched port?
810 $state{handle}->push_write ("CONNECT $uhost:$uport HTTP/1.0\015\012Host: $uhost\015\012\015\012");
811 $state{handle}->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
812 $_[1] =~ /^HTTP\/([0-9\.]+) \s+ ([0-9]{3}) (?: \s+ ([^\015\012]*) )?/ix
813 or return (%state = (), $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => 599, Reason => "Invalid proxy connect response ($_[1])" }));
814
815 if ($2 == 200) {
816 $rpath = $upath; 1249 $rpath = $upath;
817 &$handle_actual_request; 1250 $handle_actual_request->();
818 } else { 1251
819 %state = ();
820 $cb->(undef, { @pseudo, Status => $2, Reason => $3 });
821 }
822 });
823 } else { 1252 } else {
824 &$handle_actual_request;
825 }
826 };
827
828 my $tcp_connect = $arg{tcp_connect} 1253 my $tcp_connect = $arg{tcp_connect}
829 || do { require AnyEvent::Socket; \&AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect }; 1254 || do { require AnyEvent::Socket; \&AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect };
830 1255
831 $state{connect_guard} = $tcp_connect->($rhost, $rport, $connect_cb, $arg{on_prepare} || sub { $timeout }); 1256 $state{connect_guard} = $tcp_connect->($rhost, $rport, $connect_cb, $arg{on_prepare} || sub { $timeout });
832 1257 }
833 }; 1258 };
834 1259
835 defined wantarray && AnyEvent::Util::guard { %state = () } 1260 defined wantarray && AnyEvent::Util::guard { _destroy_state %state }
836} 1261}
837 1262
838sub http_get($@) { 1263sub http_get($@) {
839 unshift @_, "GET"; 1264 unshift @_, "GET";
840 &http_request 1265 &http_request
858AnyEvent::HTTP uses the AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect function for 1283AnyEvent::HTTP uses the AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect function for
859the actual connection, which in turn uses AnyEvent::DNS to resolve 1284the actual connection, which in turn uses AnyEvent::DNS to resolve
860hostnames. The latter is a simple stub resolver and does no caching 1285hostnames. The latter is a simple stub resolver and does no caching
861on its own. If you want DNS caching, you currently have to provide 1286on its own. If you want DNS caching, you currently have to provide
862your own default resolver (by storing a suitable resolver object in 1287your own default resolver (by storing a suitable resolver object in
863C<$AnyEvent::DNS::RESOLVER>). 1288C<$AnyEvent::DNS::RESOLVER>) or your own C<tcp_connect> callback.
864 1289
865=head2 GLOBAL FUNCTIONS AND VARIABLES 1290=head2 GLOBAL FUNCTIONS AND VARIABLES
866 1291
867=over 4 1292=over 4
868 1293
869=item AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy "proxy-url" 1294=item AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy "proxy-url"
870 1295
871Sets the default proxy server to use. The proxy-url must begin with a 1296Sets the default proxy server to use. The proxy-url must begin with a
872string of the form C<http://host:port> (optionally C<https:...>), croaks 1297string of the form C<http://host:port>, croaks otherwise.
873otherwise.
874 1298
875To clear an already-set proxy, use C<undef>. 1299To clear an already-set proxy, use C<undef>.
1300
1301When AnyEvent::HTTP is loaded for the first time it will query the
1302default proxy from the operating system, currently by looking at
1303C<$ENV{http_proxy>}.
1304
1305=item AnyEvent::HTTP::cookie_jar_expire $jar[, $session_end]
1306
1307Remove all cookies from the cookie jar that have been expired. If
1308C<$session_end> is given and true, then additionally remove all session
1309cookies.
1310
1311You should call this function (with a true C<$session_end>) before you
1312save cookies to disk, and you should call this function after loading them
1313again. If you have a long-running program you can additionally call this
1314function from time to time.
1315
1316A cookie jar is initially an empty hash-reference that is managed by this
1317module. Its format is subject to change, but currently it is as follows:
1318
1319The key C<version> has to contain C<2>, otherwise the hash gets
1320cleared. All other keys are hostnames or IP addresses pointing to
1321hash-references. The key for these inner hash references is the
1322server path for which this cookie is meant, and the values are again
1323hash-references. Each key of those hash-references is a cookie name, and
1324the value, you guessed it, is another hash-reference, this time with the
1325key-value pairs from the cookie, except for C<expires> and C<max-age>,
1326which have been replaced by a C<_expires> key that contains the cookie
1327expiry timestamp. Session cookies are indicated by not having an
1328C<_expires> key.
1329
1330Here is an example of a cookie jar with a single cookie, so you have a
1331chance of understanding the above paragraph:
1332
1333 {
1334 version => 2,
1335 "10.0.0.1" => {
1336 "/" => {
1337 "mythweb_id" => {
1338 _expires => 1293917923,
1339 value => "ooRung9dThee3ooyXooM1Ohm",
1340 },
1341 },
1342 },
1343 }
876 1344
877=item $date = AnyEvent::HTTP::format_date $timestamp 1345=item $date = AnyEvent::HTTP::format_date $timestamp
878 1346
879Takes a POSIX timestamp (seconds since the epoch) and formats it as a HTTP 1347Takes a POSIX timestamp (seconds since the epoch) and formats it as a HTTP
880Date (RFC 2616). 1348Date (RFC 2616).
881 1349
882=item $timestamp = AnyEvent::HTTP::parse_date $date 1350=item $timestamp = AnyEvent::HTTP::parse_date $date
883 1351
884Takes a HTTP Date (RFC 2616) and returns the corresponding POSIX 1352Takes a HTTP Date (RFC 2616) or a Cookie date (netscape cookie spec) or a
1353bunch of minor variations of those, and returns the corresponding POSIX
885timestamp, or C<undef> if the date cannot be parsed. 1354timestamp, or C<undef> if the date cannot be parsed.
886 1355
887=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_RECURSE 1356=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_RECURSE
888 1357
889The default value for the C<recurse> request parameter (default: C<10>). 1358The default value for the C<recurse> request parameter (default: C<10>).
1359
1360=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::TIMEOUT
1361
1362The default timeout for connection operations (default: C<300>).
890 1363
891=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::USERAGENT 1364=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::USERAGENT
892 1365
893The default value for the C<User-Agent> header (the default is 1366The default value for the C<User-Agent> header (the default is
894C<Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION; +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)>). 1367C<Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION; +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)>).
895 1368
896=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_PER_HOST 1369=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_PER_HOST
897 1370
898The maximum number of concurrent connections to the same host (identified 1371The maximum number of concurrent connections to the same host (identified
899by the hostname). If the limit is exceeded, then the additional requests 1372by the hostname). If the limit is exceeded, then additional requests
900are queued until previous connections are closed. 1373are queued until previous connections are closed. Both persistent and
1374non-persistent connections are counted in this limit.
901 1375
902The default value for this is C<4>, and it is highly advisable to not 1376The default value for this is C<4>, and it is highly advisable to not
903increase it. 1377increase it much.
1378
1379For comparison: the RFC's recommend 4 non-persistent or 2 persistent
1380connections, older browsers used 2, newer ones (such as firefox 3)
1381typically use 6, and Opera uses 8 because like, they have the fastest
1382browser and give a shit for everybody else on the planet.
1383
1384=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::PERSISTENT_TIMEOUT
1385
1386The time after which idle persistent connections get closed by
1387AnyEvent::HTTP (default: C<3>).
904 1388
905=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::ACTIVE 1389=item $AnyEvent::HTTP::ACTIVE
906 1390
907The number of active connections. This is not the number of currently 1391The number of active connections. This is not the number of currently
908running requests, but the number of currently open and non-idle TCP 1392running requests, but the number of currently open and non-idle TCP
909connections. This number of can be useful for load-leveling. 1393connections. This number can be useful for load-leveling.
910 1394
911=back 1395=back
912 1396
913=cut 1397=cut
914 1398
929sub parse_date($) { 1413sub parse_date($) {
930 my ($date) = @_; 1414 my ($date) = @_;
931 1415
932 my ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S); 1416 my ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S);
933 1417
934 if ($date =~ /^[A-Z][a-z][a-z], ([0-9][0-9]) ([A-Z][a-z][a-z]) ([0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]) ([0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9]) GMT$/) { 1418 if ($date =~ /^[A-Z][a-z][a-z]+, ([0-9][0-9]?)[\- ]([A-Z][a-z][a-z])[\- ]([0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]) ([0-9][0-9]?):([0-9][0-9]?):([0-9][0-9]?) GMT$/) {
935 # RFC 822/1123, required by RFC 2616 1419 # RFC 822/1123, required by RFC 2616 (with " ")
1420 # cookie dates (with "-")
1421
936 ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S) = ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6); 1422 ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S) = ($1, $2, $3, $4, $5, $6);
937 1423
938 } elsif ($date =~ /^[A-Z][a-z]+, ([0-9][0-9])-([A-Z][a-z][a-z])-([0-9][0-9]) ([0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9]) GMT$/) { 1424 } elsif ($date =~ /^[A-Z][a-z][a-z]+, ([0-9][0-9]?)-([A-Z][a-z][a-z])-([0-9][0-9]) ([0-9][0-9]?):([0-9][0-9]?):([0-9][0-9]?) GMT$/) {
939 # RFC 850 1425 # RFC 850
940 ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S) = ($1, $2, $3 < 69 ? $3 + 2000 : $3 + 1900, $4, $5, $6); 1426 ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S) = ($1, $2, $3 < 69 ? $3 + 2000 : $3 + 1900, $4, $5, $6);
941 1427
942 } elsif ($date =~ /^[A-Z][a-z][a-z] ([A-Z][a-z][a-z]) ([0-9 ][0-9]) ([0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9]):([0-9][0-9]) ([0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9])$/) { 1428 } elsif ($date =~ /^[A-Z][a-z][a-z]+ ([A-Z][a-z][a-z]) ([0-9 ]?[0-9]) ([0-9][0-9]?):([0-9][0-9]?):([0-9][0-9]?) ([0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9])$/) {
943 # ISO C's asctime 1429 # ISO C's asctime
944 ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S) = ($2, $1, $6, $3, $4, $5); 1430 ($d, $m, $y, $H, $M, $S) = ($2, $1, $6, $3, $4, $5);
945 } 1431 }
946 # other formats fail in the loop below 1432 # other formats fail in the loop below
947 1433
948 for (0..11) { 1434 for (0..11) {
949 if ($m eq $month[$_]) { 1435 if ($m eq $month[$_]) {
950 require Time::Local; 1436 require Time::Local;
951 return Time::Local::timegm ($S, $M, $H, $d, $_, $y); 1437 return eval { Time::Local::timegm ($S, $M, $H, $d, $_, $y) };
952 } 1438 }
953 } 1439 }
954 1440
955 undef 1441 undef
956} 1442}
957 1443
958sub set_proxy($) { 1444sub set_proxy($) {
959 if (length $_[0]) { 1445 if (length $_[0]) {
960 $_[0] =~ m%^(https?):// ([^:/]+) (?: : (\d*) )?%ix 1446 $_[0] =~ m%^(http):// ([^:/]+) (?: : (\d*) )?%ix
961 or Carp::croak "$_[0]: invalid proxy URL"; 1447 or Carp::croak "$_[0]: invalid proxy URL";
962 $PROXY = [$2, $3 || 3128, $1] 1448 $PROXY = [$2, $3 || 3128, $1]
963 } else { 1449 } else {
964 undef $PROXY; 1450 undef $PROXY;
965 } 1451 }
968# initialise proxy from environment 1454# initialise proxy from environment
969eval { 1455eval {
970 set_proxy $ENV{http_proxy}; 1456 set_proxy $ENV{http_proxy};
971}; 1457};
972 1458
1459=head2 SHOWCASE
1460
1461This section contains some more elaborate "real-world" examples or code
1462snippets.
1463
1464=head2 HTTP/1.1 FILE DOWNLOAD
1465
1466Downloading files with HTTP can be quite tricky, especially when something
1467goes wrong and you want to resume.
1468
1469Here is a function that initiates and resumes a download. It uses the
1470last modified time to check for file content changes, and works with many
1471HTTP/1.0 servers as well, and usually falls back to a complete re-download
1472on older servers.
1473
1474It calls the completion callback with either C<undef>, which means a
1475nonretryable error occurred, C<0> when the download was partial and should
1476be retried, and C<1> if it was successful.
1477
1478 use AnyEvent::HTTP;
1479
1480 sub download($$$) {
1481 my ($url, $file, $cb) = @_;
1482
1483 open my $fh, "+<", $file
1484 or die "$file: $!";
1485
1486 my %hdr;
1487 my $ofs = 0;
1488
1489 if (stat $fh and -s _) {
1490 $ofs = -s _;
1491 warn "-s is ", $ofs;
1492 $hdr{"if-unmodified-since"} = AnyEvent::HTTP::format_date +(stat _)[9];
1493 $hdr{"range"} = "bytes=$ofs-";
1494 }
1495
1496 http_get $url,
1497 headers => \%hdr,
1498 on_header => sub {
1499 my ($hdr) = @_;
1500
1501 if ($hdr->{Status} == 200 && $ofs) {
1502 # resume failed
1503 truncate $fh, $ofs = 0;
1504 }
1505
1506 sysseek $fh, $ofs, 0;
1507
1508 1
1509 },
1510 on_body => sub {
1511 my ($data, $hdr) = @_;
1512
1513 if ($hdr->{Status} =~ /^2/) {
1514 length $data == syswrite $fh, $data
1515 or return; # abort on write errors
1516 }
1517
1518 1
1519 },
1520 sub {
1521 my (undef, $hdr) = @_;
1522
1523 my $status = $hdr->{Status};
1524
1525 if (my $time = AnyEvent::HTTP::parse_date $hdr->{"last-modified"}) {
1526 utime $time, $time, $fh;
1527 }
1528
1529 if ($status == 200 || $status == 206 || $status == 416) {
1530 # download ok || resume ok || file already fully downloaded
1531 $cb->(1, $hdr);
1532
1533 } elsif ($status == 412) {
1534 # file has changed while resuming, delete and retry
1535 unlink $file;
1536 $cb->(0, $hdr);
1537
1538 } elsif ($status == 500 or $status == 503 or $status =~ /^59/) {
1539 # retry later
1540 $cb->(0, $hdr);
1541
1542 } else {
1543 $cb->(undef, $hdr);
1544 }
1545 }
1546 ;
1547 }
1548
1549 download "http://server/somelargefile", "/tmp/somelargefile", sub {
1550 if ($_[0]) {
1551 print "OK!\n";
1552 } elsif (defined $_[0]) {
1553 print "please retry later\n";
1554 } else {
1555 print "ERROR\n";
1556 }
1557 };
1558
973=head2 SOCKS PROXIES 1559=head3 SOCKS PROXIES
974 1560
975Socks proxies are not directly supported by AnyEvent::HTTP. You can 1561Socks proxies are not directly supported by AnyEvent::HTTP. You can
976compile your perl to support socks, or use an external program such as 1562compile your perl to support socks, or use an external program such as
977F<socksify> (dante) or F<tsocks> to make your program use a socks proxy 1563F<socksify> (dante) or F<tsocks> to make your program use a socks proxy
978transparently. 1564transparently.

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