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request.go
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request.go
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package typhon
import (
"context"
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"net/http"
"strings"
legacyproto "github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/monzo/terrors"
"google.golang.org/protobuf/proto"
)
// A Request is Typhon's wrapper around http.Request, used by both clients and servers.
//
// Note that Typhon makes no guarantees that a Request is safe to access or mutate concurrently. If a single Request
// object is to be used by multiple goroutines concurrently, callers must make sure to properly synchronise accesses.
type Request struct {
http.Request
context.Context
err error // Any error from request construction; read by ErrorFilter
hijacker http.Hijacker
server *Server
}
// unwrappedContext returns the most "unwrapped" Context possible for that in the request.
// This is useful as it's very often the case that Typhon users will use a parent request
// as a parent for a child request. The context library knows how to unwrap its own
// types to most efficiently perform certain operations (eg. cancellation chaining), but
// it can't do that with Typhon-wrapped contexts.
func (r *Request) unwrappedContext() context.Context {
switch c := r.Context.(type) {
case Request:
return c.unwrappedContext()
case *Request:
return c.unwrappedContext()
default:
return c
}
}
// Encode maps to to EncodeAsJSON
func (r *Request) Encode(v interface{}) {
r.EncodeAsJSON(v)
}
// EncodeAsJSON serialises the passed object as JSON into the body (and sets appropriate headers).
func (r *Request) EncodeAsJSON(v interface{}) {
// If we were given an io.ReadCloser or an io.Reader (that is not also a json.Marshaler), use it directly
switch v := v.(type) {
case json.Marshaler:
case io.ReadCloser:
r.Body = v
r.ContentLength = -1
return
case io.Reader:
r.Body = ioutil.NopCloser(v)
r.ContentLength = -1
return
}
if err := json.NewEncoder(r).Encode(v); err != nil {
r.err = terrors.Wrap(err, nil)
return
}
r.Header.Set("Content-Type", "application/json")
}
// EncodeAsProtobuf serialises the passed object as protobuf into the body (and sets appropriate headers).
func (r *Request) EncodeAsProtobuf(m proto.Message) {
out, err := proto.Marshal(m)
if err != nil {
r.err = terrors.Wrap(err, nil)
return
}
n, err := r.Write(out)
if err != nil {
r.err = terrors.Wrap(err, nil)
return
}
r.Header.Set("Content-Type", "application/protobuf")
r.ContentLength = int64(n)
}
// Decode de-serialises the body into the passed object.
func (r Request) Decode(v interface{}) error {
b, err := r.BodyBytes(true)
if err != nil {
return terrors.WrapWithCode(err, nil, terrors.ErrBadRequest)
}
switch r.Header.Get("Content-Type") {
// application/x-protobuf is the "canonical" use, application/protobuf is defined in an expired IETF draft.
// See: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-rfernando-protocol-buffers-00#section-3.2
// See: https://github.com/google/protorpc/blob/eb03145/python/protorpc/protobuf.py#L49-L51
case "application/octet-stream", "application/x-google-protobuf", "application/protobuf", "application/x-protobuf":
switch m := v.(type) {
case proto.Message:
err = proto.Unmarshal(b, m)
case legacyproto.Message:
err = legacyproto.Unmarshal(b, m)
default:
return terrors.InternalService("invalid_type", "could not decode proto message", nil)
}
// As older versions of typhon used json, we don't use protojson here as they are mutually exclusive standards with
// major differences in how they handle some types (such as Enums)
default:
err = json.Unmarshal(b, v)
}
return terrors.WrapWithCode(err, nil, terrors.ErrBadRequest)
}
// Write writes the passed bytes to the request's body.
func (r *Request) Write(b []byte) (n int, err error) {
switch rc := r.Body.(type) {
// In the "normal" case, the response body will be a buffer, to which we can write
case io.Writer:
n, err = rc.Write(b)
if err != nil {
return n, err
}
// If a caller manually sets Response.Body, then we may not be able to write to it. In that case, we need to be
// cleverer.
default:
buf := &bufCloser{}
if rc != nil {
if _, err := io.Copy(buf, rc); err != nil {
// This can be quite bad; we have consumed (and possibly lost) some of the original body
return 0, err
}
// rc will never again be accessible: once it's copied it must be closed
rc.Close()
}
r.Body = buf
n, err = buf.Write(b)
if err != nil {
return n, err
}
}
if r.ContentLength >= 0 {
r.ContentLength += int64(n)
// If this write pushed the content length above the chunking threshold,
// set to -1 (unknown) to trigger chunked encoding
if r.ContentLength >= chunkThreshold {
r.ContentLength = -1
}
}
return n, nil
}
// BodyBytes fully reads the request body and returns the bytes read.
//
// If consume is true, this is equivalent to ioutil.ReadAll; if false, the caller will observe the body to be in
// the same state that it was before (ie. any remaining unread body can be read again).
//
// Warning: if consume is false, you must ensure this is called on a pointer receiver (*Request) and not a
// Request value. This is because the Response.Body referenced by the caller needs to be mutated.
func (r *Request) BodyBytes(consume bool) ([]byte, error) {
if consume {
defer r.Body.Close()
return ioutil.ReadAll(r.Body)
}
switch rc := r.Body.(type) {
case *bufCloser:
return rc.Bytes(), nil
default:
buf := &bufCloser{}
r.Body = buf
rdr := io.TeeReader(rc, buf)
// rc will never again be accessible: once it's copied it must be closed
defer rc.Close()
return ioutil.ReadAll(rdr)
}
}
// Send round-trips the request via the default Client. It does not block, instead returning a ResponseFuture
// representing the asynchronous operation to produce the response. It is equivalent to:
//
// r.SendVia(Client)
func (r Request) Send() *ResponseFuture {
return Send(r)
}
// SendVia round-trips the request via the passed Service. It does not block, instead returning a ResponseFuture
// representing the asynchronous operation to produce the response.
func (r Request) SendVia(svc Service) *ResponseFuture {
return SendVia(r, svc)
}
// Response constructs a new Response to the request, and if non-nil, encodes the given body into it.
func (r Request) Response(body interface{}) Response {
rsp := NewResponse(r)
if body != nil {
rsp.Encode(body)
}
return rsp
}
// ResponseWithCode constructs a new Response with the given status code to the request, and if non-nil, encodes the
// given body into it.
func (r Request) ResponseWithCode(body interface{}, statusCode int) Response {
rsp := NewResponseWithCode(r, statusCode)
if body != nil {
rsp.Encode(body)
}
return rsp
}
// RequestPathPattern finds the router entry pattern that matches the request
func (r Request) RequestPathPattern() string {
return routerPathPatternForRequest(r)
}
// RequestMethod returns the HTTP method of the request
func (r Request) RequestMethod() string {
return r.Method
}
func (r Request) String() string {
if r.URL == nil {
return "Request(Unknown)"
}
return fmt.Sprintf("Request(%s %s://%s%s)", r.Method, r.URL.Scheme, r.Host, r.URL.Path)
}
// NewRequest constructs a new Request with the given parameters. If the body is non-nil, it'll get encoded as JSON
// unless you pass in a raw io.ReadCloser or io.Reader
func NewRequest(ctx context.Context, method, url string, body interface{}) Request {
if ctx == nil {
ctx = context.Background()
}
httpReq, err := http.NewRequest(method, url, nil)
req := Request{
Context: ctx,
err: err}
if httpReq != nil {
httpReq.ContentLength = 0
httpReq.Body = &bufCloser{}
req.Request = *httpReq
// Attach any metadata in the context to the request as headers.
meta := MetadataFromContext(ctx)
for k, v := range meta {
req.Header[strings.ToLower(k)] = v
}
}
if body != nil && err == nil {
req.EncodeAsJSON(body)
}
return req
}
// NewRawRequest constructs a new Request with the given parameters and raw body
func NewRawRequest(ctx context.Context, method, url string, body io.ReadCloser) Request {
// as an io.ReadCloser, the body won't be encoded as JSON
return NewRequest(ctx, method, url, body)
}