// Copyright (c) 2006-2009 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#ifndef NET_HTTP_HTTP_UTIL_H_
#define NET_HTTP_HTTP_UTIL_H_
#include <vector>
#include "base/string_tokenizer.h"
#include "googleurl/src/gurl.h"
#include "net/http/http_byte_range.h"
// This is a macro to support extending this string literal at compile time.
// Please excuse me polluting your global namespace!
#define HTTP_LWS " \t"
namespace net {
class HttpUtil {
public:
// Returns the absolute path of the URL, to be used for the http request.
// The absolute path starts with a '/' and may contain a query.
static std::string PathForRequest(const GURL& url);
// Returns the absolute URL, to be used for the http request. This url is
// made up of the protocol, host, [port], path, [query]. Everything else
// is stripped (username, password, reference).
static std::string SpecForRequest(const GURL& url);
// Locates the next occurance of delimiter in line, skipping over quoted
// strings (e.g., commas will not be treated as delimiters if they appear
// within a quoted string). Returns the offset of the found delimiter or
// line.size() if no delimiter was found.
static size_t FindDelimiter(const std::string& line,
size_t search_start,
char delimiter);
// Parses the value of a Content-Type header. The resulting mime_type and
// charset values are normalized to lowercase. The mime_type and charset
// output values are only modified if the content_type_str contains a mime
// type and charset value, respectively.
static void ParseContentType(const std::string& content_type_str,
std::string* mime_type,
std::string* charset,
bool *had_charset);
// Scans the headers and look for the first "Range" header in |headers|,
// if "Range" exists and the first one of it is well formatted then returns
// true, |ranges| will contain a list of valid ranges. If return
// value is false then values in |ranges| should not be used. The format of
// "Range" header is defined in RFC 2616 Section 14.35.1.
// http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.35.1
static bool ParseRanges(const std::string& headers,
std::vector<HttpByteRange>* ranges);
// Scans the '\r\n'-delimited headers for the given header name. Returns
// true if a match is found. Input is assumed to be well-formed.
// TODO(darin): kill this
static bool HasHeader(const std::string& headers, const char* name);
// Strips all header lines from |headers| whose name matches
// |headers_to_remove|. |headers_to_remove| is a list of null-terminated
// lower-case header names, with array length |headers_to_remove_len|.
// Returns the stripped header lines list, separated by "\r\n".
static std::string StripHeaders(const std::string& headers,
const char* const headers_to_remove[],
size_t headers_to_remove_len);
// Multiple occurances of some headers cannot be coalesced into a comma-
// separated list since their values are (or contain) unquoted HTTP-date
// values, which may contain a comma (see RFC 2616 section 3.3.1).
static bool IsNonCoalescingHeader(std::string::const_iterator name_begin,
std::string::const_iterator name_end);
static bool IsNonCoalescingHeader(const std::string& name) {
return IsNonCoalescingHeader(name.begin(), name.end());
}
// Return true if the character is HTTP "linear white space" (SP | HT).
// This definition corresponds with the HTTP_LWS macro, and does not match
// newlines.
static bool IsLWS(char c);
// Trim HTTP_LWS chars from the beginning and end of the string.
static void TrimLWS(std::string::const_iterator* begin,
std::string::const_iterator* end);
// Whether the character is the start of a quotation mark.
static bool IsQuote(char c);
// RFC 2616 Sec 2.2:
// quoted-string = ( <"> *(qdtext | quoted-pair ) <"> )
// Unquote() strips the surrounding quotemarks off a string, and unescapes
// any quoted-pair to obtain the value contained by the quoted-string.
// If the input is not quoted, then it works like the identity function.
static std::string Unquote(std::string::const_iterator begin,
std::string::const_iterator end);
// Same as above.
static std::string Unquote(const std::string& str);
// The reverse of Unquote() -- escapes and surrounds with "
static std::string Quote(const std::string& str);
// Returns the start of the status line, or -1 if no status line was found.
// This allows for 4 bytes of junk to precede the status line (which is what
// mozilla does too).
static int LocateStartOfStatusLine(const char* buf, int buf_len);
// Returns index beyond the end-of-headers marker or -1 if not found. RFC
// 2616 defines the end-of-headers marker as a double CRLF; however, some
// servers only send back LFs (e.g., Unix-based CGI scripts written using the
// ASIS Apache module). This function therefore accepts the pattern LF[CR]LF
// as end-of-headers (just like Mozilla).
// The parameter |i| is the offset within |buf| to begin searching from.
static int LocateEndOfHeaders(const char* buf, int buf_len, int i = 0);
// Assemble "raw headers" in the format required by HttpResponseHeaders.
// This involves normalizing line terminators, converting [CR]LF to \0 and
// handling HTTP line continuations (i.e., lines starting with LWS are
// continuations of the previous line). |buf_len| indicates the position of
// the end-of-headers marker as defined by LocateEndOfHeaders.
static std::string AssembleRawHeaders(const char* buf, int buf_len);
// Given a comma separated ordered list of language codes, return
// the list with a qvalue appended to each language.
// The way qvalues are assigned is rather simple. The qvalue
// starts with 1.0 and is decremented by 0.2 for each successive entry
// in the list until it reaches 0.2. All the entries after that are
// assigned the same qvalue of 0.2. Also, note that the 1st language
// will not have a qvalue added because the absence of a qvalue implicitly
// means q=1.0.
//
// When making a http request, this should be used to determine what
// to put in Accept-Language header. If a comma separated list of language
// codes *without* qvalue is sent, web servers regard all
// of them as having q=1.0 and pick one of them even though it may not
// be at the beginning of the list (see http://crbug.com/5899).
static std::string GenerateAcceptLanguageHeader(
const std::string& raw_language_list);
// Given a charset, return the list with a qvalue. If charset is utf-8,
// it will return 'utf-8,*;q=0.5'. Otherwise (e.g. 'euc-jp'), it'll return
// 'euc-jp,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.3'.
static std::string GenerateAcceptCharsetHeader(const std::string& charset);
// Helper. If |*headers| already contains |header_name| do nothing,
// otherwise add <header_name> ": " <header_value> to the end of the list.
static void AppendHeaderIfMissing(const char* header_name,
const std::string& header_value,
std::string* headers);
// Used to iterate over the name/value pairs of HTTP headers. To iterate
// over the values in a multi-value header, use ValuesIterator.
// See AssembleRawHeaders for joining line continuations (this iterator
// does not expect any).
class HeadersIterator {
public:
HeadersIterator(std::string::const_iterator headers_begin,
std::string::const_iterator headers_end,
const std::string& line_delimiter);
// Advances the iterator to the next header, if any. Returns true if there
// is a next header. Use name* and values* methods to access the resultant
// header name and values.
bool GetNext();
// Iterates through the list of headers, starting with the current position
// and looks for the specified header. Note that the name _must_ be
// lower cased.
// If the header was found, the return value will be true and the current
// position points to the header. If the return value is false, the
// current position will be at the end of the headers.
bool AdvanceTo(const char* lowercase_name);
void Reset() {
lines_.Reset();
}
std::string::const_iterator name_begin() const {
return name_begin_;
}
std::string::const_iterator name_end() const {
return name_end_;
}
std::string name() const {
return std::string(name_begin_, name_end_);
}
std::string::const_iterator values_begin() const {
return values_begin_;
}
std::string::const_iterator values_end() const {
return values_end_;
}
std::string values() const {
return std::string(values_begin_, values_end_);
}
private:
StringTokenizer lines_;
std::string::const_iterator name_begin_;
std::string::const_iterator name_end_;
std::string::const_iterator values_begin_;
std::string::const_iterator values_end_;
};
// Used to iterate over deliminated values in a HTTP header. HTTP LWS is
// automatically trimmed from the resulting values.
//
// When using this class to iterate over response header values, beware that
// for some headers (e.g., Last-Modified), commas are not used as delimiters.
// This iterator should be avoided for headers like that which are considered
// non-coalescing (see IsNonCoalescingHeader).
//
// This iterator is careful to skip over delimiters found inside an HTTP
// quoted string.
//
class ValuesIterator {
public:
ValuesIterator(std::string::const_iterator values_begin,
std::string::const_iterator values_end,
char delimiter);
// Advances the iterator to the next value, if any. Returns true if there
// is a next value. Use value* methods to access the resultant value.
bool GetNext();
std::string::const_iterator value_begin() const {
return value_begin_;
}
std::string::const_iterator value_end() const {
return value_end_;
}
std::string value() const {
return std::string(value_begin_, value_end_);
}
private:
StringTokenizer values_;
std::string::const_iterator value_begin_;
std::string::const_iterator value_end_;
};
};
} // namespace net
#endif // NET_HTTP_HTTP_UTIL_H_