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Revision: 1.57
Committed: Mon Sep 6 06:31:32 2010 UTC (13 years, 8 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-1_46
Changes since 1.56: +174 -177 lines
Log Message:
1.46

File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 AnyEvent::HTTP - simple but non-blocking HTTP/HTTPS client
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use AnyEvent::HTTP;
8
9 http_get "http://www.nethype.de/", sub { print $_[1] };
10
11 # ... do something else here
12
13 =head1 DESCRIPTION
14
15 This module is an L<AnyEvent> user, you need to make sure that you use and
16 run a supported event loop.
17
18 This module implements a simple, stateless and non-blocking HTTP
19 client. It supports GET, POST and other request methods, cookies and more,
20 all on a very low level. It can follow redirects supports proxies and
21 automatically limits the number of connections to the values specified in
22 the RFC.
23
24 It should generally be a "good client" that is enough for most HTTP
25 tasks. Simple tasks should be simple, but complex tasks should still be
26 possible as the user retains control over request and response headers.
27
28 The caller is responsible for authentication management, cookies (if
29 the simplistic implementation in this module doesn't suffice), referer
30 and other high-level protocol details for which this module offers only
31 limited support.
32
33 =head2 METHODS
34
35 =over 4
36
37 =cut
38
39 package AnyEvent::HTTP;
40
41 use strict;
42 no warnings;
43
44 use Errno ();
45
46 use AnyEvent 5.0 ();
47 use AnyEvent::Util ();
48 use AnyEvent::Socket ();
49 use AnyEvent::Handle ();
50
51 use base Exporter::;
52
53 our $VERSION = '1.46';
54
55 our @EXPORT = qw(http_get http_post http_head http_request);
56
57 our $USERAGENT = "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION; +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)";
58 our $MAX_RECURSE = 10;
59 our $MAX_PERSISTENT = 8;
60 our $PERSISTENT_TIMEOUT = 2;
61 our $TIMEOUT = 300;
62
63 # changing these is evil
64 our $MAX_PERSISTENT_PER_HOST = 0;
65 our $MAX_PER_HOST = 4;
66
67 our $PROXY;
68 our $ACTIVE = 0;
69
70 my %KA_COUNT; # number of open keep-alive connections per host
71 my %CO_SLOT; # number of open connections, and wait queue, per host
72
73 =item http_get $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
74
75 Executes an HTTP-GET request. See the http_request function for details on
76 additional parameters and the return value.
77
78 =item http_head $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
79
80 Executes an HTTP-HEAD request. See the http_request function for details
81 on additional parameters and the return value.
82
83 =item http_post $url, $body, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
84
85 Executes an HTTP-POST request with a request body of C<$body>. See the
86 http_request function for details on additional parameters and the return
87 value.
88
89 =item http_request $method => $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
90
91 Executes a HTTP request of type C<$method> (e.g. C<GET>, C<POST>). The URL
92 must be an absolute http or https URL.
93
94 When called in void context, nothing is returned. In other contexts,
95 C<http_request> returns a "cancellation guard" - you have to keep the
96 object at least alive until the callback get called. If the object gets
97 destroyed before the callbakc is called, the request will be cancelled.
98
99 The callback will be called with the response body data as first argument
100 (or C<undef> if an error occured), and a hash-ref with response headers as
101 second argument.
102
103 All the headers in that hash are lowercased. In addition to the response
104 headers, the "pseudo-headers" (uppercase to avoid clashing with possible
105 response headers) C<HTTPVersion>, C<Status> and C<Reason> contain the
106 three parts of the HTTP Status-Line of the same name.
107
108 The pseudo-header C<URL> contains the actual URL (which can differ from
109 the requested URL when following redirects - for example, you might get
110 an error that your URL scheme is not supported even though your URL is a
111 valid http URL because it redirected to an ftp URL, in which case you can
112 look at the URL pseudo header).
113
114 The pseudo-header C<Redirect> only exists when the request was a result
115 of an internal redirect. In that case it is an array reference with
116 the C<($data, $headers)> from the redirect response. Note that this
117 response could in turn be the result of a redirect itself, and C<<
118 $headers->{Redirect}[1]{Redirect} >> will then contain the original
119 response, and so on.
120
121 If the server sends a header multiple times, then their contents will be
122 joined together with a comma (C<,>), as per the HTTP spec.
123
124 If an internal error occurs, such as not being able to resolve a hostname,
125 then C<$data> will be C<undef>, C<< $headers->{Status} >> will be C<59x>
126 (usually C<599>) and the C<Reason> pseudo-header will contain an error
127 message.
128
129 A typical callback might look like this:
130
131 sub {
132 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
133
134 if ($hdr->{Status} =~ /^2/) {
135 ... everything should be ok
136 } else {
137 print "error, $hdr->{Status} $hdr->{Reason}\n";
138 }
139 }
140
141 Additional parameters are key-value pairs, and are fully optional. They
142 include:
143
144 =over 4
145
146 =item recurse => $count (default: $MAX_RECURSE)
147
148 Whether to recurse requests or not, e.g. on redirects, authentication
149 retries and so on, and how often to do so.
150
151 =item headers => hashref
152
153 The request headers to use. Currently, C<http_request> may provide its
154 own C<Host:>, C<Content-Length:>, C<Connection:> and C<Cookie:> headers
155 and will provide defaults for C<User-Agent:> and C<Referer:> (this can be
156 suppressed by using C<undef> for these headers in which case they won't be
157 sent at all).
158
159 =item timeout => $seconds
160
161 The time-out to use for various stages - each connect attempt will reset
162 the timeout, as will read or write activity, i.e. this is not an overall
163 timeout.
164
165 Default timeout is 5 minutes.
166
167 =item proxy => [$host, $port[, $scheme]] or undef
168
169 Use the given http proxy for all requests. If not specified, then the
170 default proxy (as specified by C<$ENV{http_proxy}>) is used.
171
172 C<$scheme> must be either missing, C<http> for HTTP or C<https> for
173 HTTPS.
174
175 =item body => $string
176
177 The request body, usually empty. Will be-sent as-is (future versions of
178 this module might offer more options).
179
180 =item cookie_jar => $hash_ref
181
182 Passing this parameter enables (simplified) cookie-processing, loosely
183 based on the original netscape specification.
184
185 The C<$hash_ref> must be an (initially empty) hash reference which will
186 get updated automatically. It is possible to save the cookie_jar to
187 persistent storage with something like JSON or Storable, but this is not
188 recommended, as expiry times are currently being ignored.
189
190 Note that this cookie implementation is not of very high quality, nor
191 meant to be complete. If you want complete cookie management you have to
192 do that on your own. C<cookie_jar> is meant as a quick fix to get some
193 cookie-using sites working. Cookies are a privacy disaster, do not use
194 them unless required to.
195
196 =item tls_ctx => $scheme | $tls_ctx
197
198 Specifies the AnyEvent::TLS context to be used for https connections. This
199 parameter follows the same rules as the C<tls_ctx> parameter to
200 L<AnyEvent::Handle>, but additionally, the two strings C<low> or
201 C<high> can be specified, which give you a predefined low-security (no
202 verification, highest compatibility) and high-security (CA and common-name
203 verification) TLS context.
204
205 The default for this option is C<low>, which could be interpreted as "give
206 me the page, no matter what".
207
208 =item on_prepare => $callback->($fh)
209
210 In rare cases you need to "tune" the socket before it is used to
211 connect (for exmaple, to bind it on a given IP address). This parameter
212 overrides the prepare callback passed to C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect>
213 and behaves exactly the same way (e.g. it has to provide a
214 timeout). See the description for the C<$prepare_cb> argument of
215 C<AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect> for details.
216
217 =item on_header => $callback->($headers)
218
219 When specified, this callback will be called with the header hash as soon
220 as headers have been successfully received from the remote server (not on
221 locally-generated errors).
222
223 It has to return either true (in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will continue),
224 or false, in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will cancel the download (and call
225 the finish callback with an error code of C<598>).
226
227 This callback is useful, among other things, to quickly reject unwanted
228 content, which, if it is supposed to be rare, can be faster than first
229 doing a C<HEAD> request.
230
231 Example: cancel the request unless the content-type is "text/html".
232
233 on_header => sub {
234 $_[0]{"content-type"} =~ /^text\/html\s*(?:;|$)/
235 },
236
237 =item on_body => $callback->($partial_body, $headers)
238
239 When specified, all body data will be passed to this callback instead of
240 to the completion callback. The completion callback will get the empty
241 string instead of the body data.
242
243 It has to return either true (in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will continue),
244 or false, in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will cancel the download (and call
245 the completion callback with an error code of C<598>).
246
247 This callback is useful when the data is too large to be held in memory
248 (so the callback writes it to a file) or when only some information should
249 be extracted, or when the body should be processed incrementally.
250
251 It is usually preferred over doing your own body handling via
252 C<want_body_handle>, but in case of streaming APIs, where HTTP is
253 only used to create a connection, C<want_body_handle> is the better
254 alternative, as it allows you to install your own event handler, reducing
255 resource usage.
256
257 =item want_body_handle => $enable
258
259 When enabled (default is disabled), the behaviour of AnyEvent::HTTP
260 changes considerably: after parsing the headers, and instead of
261 downloading the body (if any), the completion callback will be
262 called. Instead of the C<$body> argument containing the body data, the
263 callback will receive the L<AnyEvent::Handle> object associated with the
264 connection. In error cases, C<undef> will be passed. When there is no body
265 (e.g. status C<304>), the empty string will be passed.
266
267 The handle object might or might not be in TLS mode, might be connected to
268 a proxy, be a persistent connection etc., and configured in unspecified
269 ways. The user is responsible for this handle (it will not be used by this
270 module anymore).
271
272 This is useful with some push-type services, where, after the initial
273 headers, an interactive protocol is used (typical example would be the
274 push-style twitter API which starts a JSON/XML stream).
275
276 If you think you need this, first have a look at C<on_body>, to see if
277 that doesn't solve your problem in a better way.
278
279 =back
280
281 Example: make a simple HTTP GET request for http://www.nethype.de/
282
283 http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
284 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
285 print "$body\n";
286 };
287
288 Example: make a HTTP HEAD request on https://www.google.com/, use a
289 timeout of 30 seconds.
290
291 http_request
292 GET => "https://www.google.com",
293 timeout => 30,
294 sub {
295 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
296 use Data::Dumper;
297 print Dumper $hdr;
298 }
299 ;
300
301 Example: make another simple HTTP GET request, but immediately try to
302 cancel it.
303
304 my $request = http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
305 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
306 print "$body\n";
307 };
308
309 undef $request;
310
311 =cut
312
313 sub _slot_schedule;
314 sub _slot_schedule($) {
315 my $host = shift;
316
317 while ($CO_SLOT{$host}[0] < $MAX_PER_HOST) {
318 if (my $cb = shift @{ $CO_SLOT{$host}[1] }) {
319 # somebody wants that slot
320 ++$CO_SLOT{$host}[0];
321 ++$ACTIVE;
322
323 $cb->(AnyEvent::Util::guard {
324 --$ACTIVE;
325 --$CO_SLOT{$host}[0];
326 _slot_schedule $host;
327 });
328 } else {
329 # nobody wants the slot, maybe we can forget about it
330 delete $CO_SLOT{$host} unless $CO_SLOT{$host}[0];
331 last;
332 }
333 }
334 }
335
336 # wait for a free slot on host, call callback
337 sub _get_slot($$) {
338 push @{ $CO_SLOT{$_[0]}[1] }, $_[1];
339
340 _slot_schedule $_[0];
341 }
342
343 our $qr_nlnl = qr{(?<![^\012])\015?\012};
344
345 our $TLS_CTX_LOW = { cache => 1, sslv2 => 1 };
346 our $TLS_CTX_HIGH = { cache => 1, verify => 1, verify_peername => "https" };
347
348 sub http_request($$@) {
349 my $cb = pop;
350 my ($method, $url, %arg) = @_;
351
352 my %hdr;
353
354 $arg{tls_ctx} = $TLS_CTX_LOW if $arg{tls_ctx} eq "low" || !exists $arg{tls_ctx};
355 $arg{tls_ctx} = $TLS_CTX_HIGH if $arg{tls_ctx} eq "high";
356
357 $method = uc $method;
358
359 if (my $hdr = $arg{headers}) {
360 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$hdr) {
361 $hdr{lc $k} = $v;
362 }
363 }
364
365 # pseudo headers for all subsequent responses
366 my @pseudo = (URL => $url);
367 push @pseudo, Redirect => delete $arg{Redirect} if exists $arg{Redirect};
368
369 my $recurse = exists $arg{recurse} ? delete $arg{recurse} : $MAX_RECURSE;
370
371 return $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Too many redirections", @pseudo })
372 if $recurse < 0;
373
374 my $proxy = $arg{proxy} || $PROXY;
375 my $timeout = $arg{timeout} || $TIMEOUT;
376
377 my ($uscheme, $uauthority, $upath, $query, $fragment) =
378 $url =~ m|(?:([^:/?#]+):)?(?://([^/?#]*))?([^?#]*)(?:(\?[^#]*))?(?:#(.*))?|;
379
380 $uscheme = lc $uscheme;
381
382 my $uport = $uscheme eq "http" ? 80
383 : $uscheme eq "https" ? 443
384 : return $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Only http and https URL schemes supported", @pseudo });
385
386 $uauthority =~ /^(?: .*\@ )? ([^\@:]+) (?: : (\d+) )?$/x
387 or return $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Unparsable URL", @pseudo });
388
389 my $uhost = $1;
390 $uport = $2 if defined $2;
391
392 $hdr{host} = defined $2 ? "$uhost:$2" : "$uhost"
393 unless exists $hdr{host};
394
395 $uhost =~ s/^\[(.*)\]$/$1/;
396 $upath .= $query if length $query;
397
398 $upath =~ s%^/?%/%;
399
400 # cookie processing
401 if (my $jar = $arg{cookie_jar}) {
402 %$jar = () if $jar->{version} != 1;
403
404 my @cookie;
405
406 while (my ($chost, $v) = each %$jar) {
407 if ($chost =~ /^\./) {
408 next unless $chost eq substr $uhost, -length $chost;
409 } elsif ($chost =~ /\./) {
410 next unless $chost eq $uhost;
411 } else {
412 next;
413 }
414
415 while (my ($cpath, $v) = each %$v) {
416 next unless $cpath eq substr $upath, 0, length $cpath;
417
418 while (my ($k, $v) = each %$v) {
419 next if $uscheme ne "https" && exists $v->{secure};
420 my $value = $v->{value};
421 $value =~ s/([\\"])/\\$1/g;
422 push @cookie, "$k=\"$value\"";
423 }
424 }
425 }
426
427 $hdr{cookie} = join "; ", @cookie
428 if @cookie;
429 }
430
431 my ($rhost, $rport, $rscheme, $rpath); # request host, port, path
432
433 if ($proxy) {
434 ($rpath, $rhost, $rport, $rscheme) = ($url, @$proxy);
435
436 $rscheme = "http" unless defined $rscheme;
437
438 # don't support https requests over https-proxy transport,
439 # can't be done with tls as spec'ed, unless you double-encrypt.
440 $rscheme = "http" if $uscheme eq "https" && $rscheme eq "https";
441 } else {
442 ($rhost, $rport, $rscheme, $rpath) = ($uhost, $uport, $uscheme, $upath);
443 }
444
445 # leave out fragment and query string, just a heuristic
446 $hdr{referer} ||= "$uscheme://$uauthority$upath" unless exists $hdr{referer};
447 $hdr{"user-agent"} ||= $USERAGENT unless exists $hdr{"user-agent"};
448
449 $hdr{"content-length"} = length $arg{body}
450 if length $arg{body} || $method ne "GET";
451
452 my %state = (connect_guard => 1);
453
454 _get_slot $uhost, sub {
455 $state{slot_guard} = shift;
456
457 return unless $state{connect_guard};
458
459 $state{connect_guard} = AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect $rhost, $rport, sub {
460 $state{fh} = shift
461 or do {
462 my $err = "$!";
463 %state = ();
464 return $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => $err, @pseudo });
465 };
466
467 pop; # free memory, save a tree
468
469 return unless delete $state{connect_guard};
470
471 # get handle
472 $state{handle} = new AnyEvent::Handle
473 fh => $state{fh},
474 peername => $rhost,
475 tls_ctx => $arg{tls_ctx},
476 # these need to be reconfigured on keepalive handles
477 timeout => $timeout,
478 on_error => sub {
479 %state = ();
480 $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => $_[2], @pseudo });
481 },
482 on_eof => sub {
483 %state = ();
484 $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Unexpected end-of-file", @pseudo });
485 },
486 ;
487
488 # limit the number of persistent connections
489 # keepalive not yet supported
490 # if ($KA_COUNT{$_[1]} < $MAX_PERSISTENT_PER_HOST) {
491 # ++$KA_COUNT{$_[1]};
492 # $state{handle}{ka_count_guard} = AnyEvent::Util::guard {
493 # --$KA_COUNT{$_[1]}
494 # };
495 # $hdr{connection} = "keep-alive";
496 # } else {
497 delete $hdr{connection};
498 # }
499
500 $state{handle}->starttls ("connect") if $rscheme eq "https";
501
502 # handle actual, non-tunneled, request
503 my $handle_actual_request = sub {
504 $state{handle}->starttls ("connect") if $uscheme eq "https" && !exists $state{handle}{tls};
505
506 # send request
507 $state{handle}->push_write (
508 "$method $rpath HTTP/1.0\015\012"
509 . (join "", map "\u$_: $hdr{$_}\015\012", grep defined $hdr{$_}, keys %hdr)
510 . "\015\012"
511 . (delete $arg{body})
512 );
513
514 # return if error occured during push_write()
515 return unless %state;
516
517 %hdr = (); # reduce memory usage, save a kitten, also make it possible to re-use
518
519 # status line and headers
520 $state{handle}->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
521 for ("$_[1]") {
522 y/\015//d; # weed out any \015, as they show up in the weirdest of places.
523
524 /^HTTP\/([0-9\.]+) \s+ ([0-9]{3}) (?: \s+ ([^\015\012]*) )? \015?\012/igxc
525 or return (%state = (), $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Invalid server response", @pseudo }));
526
527 push @pseudo,
528 HTTPVersion => $1,
529 Status => $2,
530 Reason => $3,
531 ;
532
533 # things seen, not parsed:
534 # p3pP="NON CUR OTPi OUR NOR UNI"
535
536 $hdr{lc $1} .= ",$2"
537 while /\G
538 ([^:\000-\037]*):
539 [\011\040]*
540 ((?: [^\012]+ | \012[\011\040] )*)
541 \012
542 /gxc;
543
544 /\G$/
545 or return (%state = (), $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Garbled response headers", @pseudo }));
546 }
547
548 # remove the "," prefix we added to all headers above
549 substr $_, 0, 1, ""
550 for values %hdr;
551
552 # patch in all pseudo headers
553 %hdr = (%hdr, @pseudo);
554
555 # redirect handling
556 # microsoft and other shitheads don't give a shit for following standards,
557 # try to support some common forms of broken Location headers.
558 if ($hdr{location} !~ /^(?: $ | [^:\/?\#]+ : )/x) {
559 $hdr{location} =~ s/^\.\/+//;
560
561 my $url = "$rscheme://$uhost:$uport";
562
563 unless ($hdr{location} =~ s/^\///) {
564 $url .= $upath;
565 $url =~ s/\/[^\/]*$//;
566 }
567
568 $hdr{location} = "$url/$hdr{location}";
569 }
570
571 my $redirect;
572
573 if ($recurse) {
574 my $status = $hdr{Status};
575
576 # industry standard is to redirect POST as GET for
577 # 301, 302 and 303, in contrast to http/1.0 and 1.1.
578 # also, the UA should ask the user for 301 and 307 and POST,
579 # industry standard seems to be to simply follow.
580 # we go with the industry standard.
581 if ($status == 301 or $status == 302 or $status == 303) {
582 # HTTP/1.1 is unclear on how to mutate the method
583 $method = "GET" unless $method eq "HEAD";
584 $redirect = 1;
585 } elsif ($status == 307) {
586 $redirect = 1;
587 }
588 }
589
590 my $finish = sub {
591 $state{handle}->destroy if $state{handle};
592 %state = ();
593
594 # set-cookie processing
595 if ($arg{cookie_jar}) {
596 for ($_[1]{"set-cookie"}) {
597 # parse NAME=VALUE
598 my @kv;
599
600 while (/\G\s* ([^=;,[:space:]]+) \s*=\s* (?: "((?:[^\\"]+|\\.)*)" | ([^=;,[:space:]]*) )/gcxs) {
601 my $name = $1;
602 my $value = $3;
603
604 unless ($value) {
605 $value = $2;
606 $value =~ s/\\(.)/$1/gs;
607 }
608
609 push @kv, $name => $value;
610
611 last unless /\G\s*;/gc;
612 }
613
614 last unless @kv;
615
616 my $name = shift @kv;
617 my %kv = (value => shift @kv, @kv);
618
619 my $cdom;
620 my $cpath = (delete $kv{path}) || "/";
621
622 if (exists $kv{domain}) {
623 $cdom = delete $kv{domain};
624
625 $cdom =~ s/^\.?/./; # make sure it starts with a "."
626
627 next if $cdom =~ /\.$/;
628
629 # this is not rfc-like and not netscape-like. go figure.
630 my $ndots = $cdom =~ y/.//;
631 next if $ndots < ($cdom =~ /\.[^.][^.]\.[^.][^.]$/ ? 3 : 2);
632 } else {
633 $cdom = $uhost;
634 }
635
636 # store it
637 $arg{cookie_jar}{version} = 1;
638 $arg{cookie_jar}{$cdom}{$cpath}{$name} = \%kv;
639
640 redo if /\G\s*,/gc;
641 }
642 }
643
644 if ($redirect && exists $hdr{location}) {
645 # we ignore any errors, as it is very common to receive
646 # Content-Length != 0 but no actual body
647 # we also access %hdr, as $_[1] might be an erro
648 http_request (
649 $method => $hdr{location},
650 %arg,
651 recurse => $recurse - 1,
652 Redirect => \@_,
653 $cb);
654 } else {
655 $cb->($_[0], $_[1]);
656 }
657 };
658
659 my $len = $hdr{"content-length"};
660
661 if (!$redirect && $arg{on_header} && !$arg{on_header}(\%hdr)) {
662 $finish->(undef, { Status => 598, Reason => "Request cancelled by on_header", @pseudo });
663 } elsif (
664 $hdr{Status} =~ /^(?:1..|[23]04)$/
665 or $method eq "HEAD"
666 or (defined $len && !$len)
667 ) {
668 # no body
669 $finish->("", \%hdr);
670 } else {
671 # body handling, four different code paths
672 # for want_body_handle, on_body (2x), normal (2x)
673 # we might read too much here, but it does not matter yet (no pers. connections)
674 if (!$redirect && $arg{want_body_handle}) {
675 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
676 $_[0]->on_error (undef);
677 $_[0]->on_read (undef);
678
679 $finish->(delete $state{handle}, \%hdr);
680
681 } elsif ($arg{on_body}) {
682 $_[0]->on_error (sub { $finish->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => $_[2], @pseudo }) });
683 if ($len) {
684 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
685 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
686 $len -= length $_[0]{rbuf};
687
688 $arg{on_body}(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
689 or $finish->(undef, { Status => 598, Reason => "Request cancelled by on_body", @pseudo });
690
691 $len > 0
692 or $finish->("", \%hdr);
693 });
694 } else {
695 $_[0]->on_eof (sub {
696 $finish->("", \%hdr);
697 });
698 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
699 $arg{on_body}(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
700 or $finish->(undef, { Status => 598, Reason => "Request cancelled by on_body", @pseudo });
701 });
702 }
703 } else {
704 $_[0]->on_eof (undef);
705
706 if ($len) {
707 $_[0]->on_error (sub { $finish->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => $_[2], @pseudo }) });
708 $_[0]->on_read (sub {
709 $finish->((substr delete $_[0]{rbuf}, 0, $len, ""), \%hdr)
710 if $len <= length $_[0]{rbuf};
711 });
712 } else {
713 $_[0]->on_error (sub {
714 ($! == Errno::EPIPE || !$!)
715 ? $finish->(delete $_[0]{rbuf}, \%hdr)
716 : $finish->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => $_[2], @pseudo });
717 });
718 $_[0]->on_read (sub { });
719 }
720 }
721 }
722 });
723 };
724
725 # now handle proxy-CONNECT method
726 if ($proxy && $uscheme eq "https") {
727 # oh dear, we have to wrap it into a connect request
728
729 # maybe re-use $uauthority with patched port?
730 $state{handle}->push_write ("CONNECT $uhost:$uport HTTP/1.0\015\012Host: $uhost\015\012\015\012");
731 $state{handle}->push_read (line => $qr_nlnl, sub {
732 $_[1] =~ /^HTTP\/([0-9\.]+) \s+ ([0-9]{3}) (?: \s+ ([^\015\012]*) )?/ix
733 or return (%state = (), $cb->(undef, { Status => 599, Reason => "Invalid proxy connect response ($_[1])", @pseudo }));
734
735 if ($2 == 200) {
736 $rpath = $upath;
737 &$handle_actual_request;
738 } else {
739 %state = ();
740 $cb->(undef, { Status => $2, Reason => $3, @pseudo });
741 }
742 });
743 } else {
744 &$handle_actual_request;
745 }
746
747 }, $arg{on_prepare} || sub { $timeout };
748 };
749
750 defined wantarray && AnyEvent::Util::guard { %state = () }
751 }
752
753 sub http_get($@) {
754 unshift @_, "GET";
755 &http_request
756 }
757
758 sub http_head($@) {
759 unshift @_, "HEAD";
760 &http_request
761 }
762
763 sub http_post($$@) {
764 my $url = shift;
765 unshift @_, "POST", $url, "body";
766 &http_request
767 }
768
769 =back
770
771 =head2 DNS CACHING
772
773 AnyEvent::HTTP uses the AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect function for
774 the actual connection, which in turn uses AnyEvent::DNS to resolve
775 hostnames. The latter is a simple stub resolver and does no caching
776 on its own. If you want DNS caching, you currently have to provide
777 your own default resolver (by storing a suitable resolver object in
778 C<$AnyEvent::DNS::RESOLVER>).
779
780 =head2 GLOBAL FUNCTIONS AND VARIABLES
781
782 =over 4
783
784 =item AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy "proxy-url"
785
786 Sets the default proxy server to use. The proxy-url must begin with a
787 string of the form C<http://host:port> (optionally C<https:...>), croaks
788 otherwise.
789
790 To clear an already-set proxy, use C<undef>.
791
792 =item $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_RECURSE
793
794 The default value for the C<recurse> request parameter (default: C<10>).
795
796 =item $AnyEvent::HTTP::USERAGENT
797
798 The default value for the C<User-Agent> header (the default is
799 C<Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION; +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)>).
800
801 =item $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_PER_HOST
802
803 The maximum number of concurrent connections to the same host (identified
804 by the hostname). If the limit is exceeded, then the additional requests
805 are queued until previous connections are closed.
806
807 The default value for this is C<4>, and it is highly advisable to not
808 increase it.
809
810 =item $AnyEvent::HTTP::ACTIVE
811
812 The number of active connections. This is not the number of currently
813 running requests, but the number of currently open and non-idle TCP
814 connections. This number of can be useful for load-leveling.
815
816 =back
817
818 =cut
819
820 sub set_proxy($) {
821 if (length $_[0]) {
822 $_[0] =~ m%^(https?):// ([^:/]+) (?: : (\d*) )?%ix
823 or Carp::croak "$_[0]: invalid proxy URL";
824 $PROXY = [$2, $3 || 3128, $1]
825 } else {
826 undef $PROXY;
827 }
828 }
829
830 # initialise proxy from environment
831 eval {
832 set_proxy $ENV{http_proxy};
833 };
834
835 =head1 SEE ALSO
836
837 L<AnyEvent>.
838
839 =head1 AUTHOR
840
841 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
842 http://home.schmorp.de/
843
844 With many thanks to Дмитрий Шалашов, who provided countless
845 testcases and bugreports.
846
847 =cut
848
849 1
850