/* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ /* * http_request.c: functions to get and process requests * * Rob McCool 3/21/93 * * Thoroughly revamped by rst for Apache. NB this file reads * best from the bottom up. * */ #include "apr_strings.h" #include "apr_file_io.h" #include "apr_fnmatch.h" #define APR_WANT_STRFUNC #include "apr_want.h" #define CORE_PRIVATE #include "ap_config.h" #include "httpd.h" #include "http_config.h" #include "http_request.h" #include "http_core.h" #include "http_protocol.h" #include "http_log.h" #include "http_main.h" #include "util_filter.h" #include "util_charset.h" #include "scoreboard.h" #include "mod_core.h" #if APR_HAVE_STDARG_H #include <stdarg.h> #endif /***************************************************************** * * Mainline request processing... */ /* XXX A cleaner and faster way to do this might be to pass the request_rec * down the filter chain as a parameter. It would need to change for * subrequest vs. main request filters; perhaps the subrequest filter could * make the switch. */ static void update_r_in_filters(ap_filter_t *f, request_rec *from, request_rec *to) { while (f) { if (f->r == from) { f->r = to; } f = f->next; } } AP_DECLARE(void) ap_die(int type, request_rec *r) { int error_index = ap_index_of_response(type); char *custom_response = ap_response_code_string(r, error_index); int recursive_error = 0; request_rec *r_1st_err = r; if (type == AP_FILTER_ERROR) { return; } if (type == DONE) { ap_finalize_request_protocol(r); return; } /* * The following takes care of Apache redirects to custom response URLs * Note that if we are already dealing with the response to some other * error condition, we just report on the original error, and give up on * any attempt to handle the other thing "intelligently"... */ if (r->status != HTTP_OK) { recursive_error = type; while (r_1st_err->prev && (r_1st_err->prev->status != HTTP_OK)) r_1st_err = r_1st_err->prev; /* Get back to original error */ if (r_1st_err != r) { /* The recursive error was caused by an ErrorDocument specifying * an internal redirect to a bad URI. ap_internal_redirect has * changed the filter chains to point to the ErrorDocument's * request_rec. Back out those changes so we can safely use the * original failing request_rec to send the canned error message. * * ap_send_error_response gets rid of existing resource filters * on the output side, so we can skip those. */ update_r_in_filters(r_1st_err->proto_output_filters, r, r_1st_err); update_r_in_filters(r_1st_err->input_filters, r, r_1st_err); } custom_response = NULL; /* Do NOT retry the custom thing! */ } r->status = type; /* * This test is done here so that none of the auth modules needs to know * about proxy authentication. They treat it like normal auth, and then * we tweak the status. */ if (HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED == r->status && PROXYREQ_PROXY == r->proxyreq) { r->status = HTTP_PROXY_AUTHENTICATION_REQUIRED; } /* If we don't want to keep the connection, make sure we mark that the * connection is not eligible for keepalive. If we want to keep the * connection, be sure that the request body (if any) has been read. */ if (ap_status_drops_connection(r->status)) { r->connection->keepalive = AP_CONN_CLOSE; } /* * Two types of custom redirects --- plain text, and URLs. Plain text has * a leading '"', so the URL code, here, is triggered on its absence */ if (custom_response && custom_response[0] != '"') { if (ap_is_url(custom_response)) { /* * The URL isn't local, so lets drop through the rest of this * apache code, and continue with the usual REDIRECT handler. * But note that the client will ultimately see the wrong * status... */ r->status = HTTP_MOVED_TEMPORARILY; apr_table_setn(r->headers_out, "Location", custom_response); } else if (custom_response[0] == '/') { const char *error_notes; r->no_local_copy = 1; /* Do NOT send HTTP_NOT_MODIFIED for * error documents! */ /* * This redirect needs to be a GET no matter what the original * method was. */ apr_table_setn(r->subprocess_env, "REQUEST_METHOD", r->method); /* * Provide a special method for modules to communicate * more informative (than the plain canned) messages to us. * Propagate them to ErrorDocuments via the ERROR_NOTES variable: */ if ((error_notes = apr_table_get(r->notes, "error-notes")) != NULL) { apr_table_setn(r->subprocess_env, "ERROR_NOTES", error_notes); } r->method = apr_pstrdup(r->pool, "GET"); r->method_number = M_GET; ap_internal_redirect(custom_response, r); return; } else { /* * Dumb user has given us a bad url to redirect to --- fake up * dying with a recursive server error... */ recursive_error = HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR; ap_log_rerror(APLOG_MARK, APLOG_ERR, 0, r, "Invalid error redirection directive: %s", custom_response); } } ap_send_error_response(r_1st_err, recursive_error); } static void check_pipeline_flush(request_rec *r) { apr_bucket *e; apr_bucket_brigade *bb; conn_rec *c = r->connection; /* ### if would be nice if we could PEEK without a brigade. that would ### allow us to defer creation of the brigade to when we actually ### need to send a FLUSH. */ bb = apr_brigade_create(r->pool, c->bucket_alloc); /* Flush the filter contents if: * * 1) the connection will be closed * 2) there isn't a request ready to be read */ /* ### shouldn't this read from the connection input filters? */ /* ### is zero correct? that means "read one line" */ if (r->connection->keepalive != AP_CONN_CLOSE) { if (ap_get_brigade(r->input_filters, bb, AP_MODE_EATCRLF, APR_NONBLOCK_READ, 0) != APR_SUCCESS) { c->data_in_input_filters = 0; /* we got APR_EOF or an error */ } else { c->data_in_input_filters = 1; return; /* don't flush */ } } e = apr_bucket_flush_create(c->bucket_alloc); /* We just send directly to the connection based filters. At * this point, we know that we have seen all of the data * (request finalization sent an EOS bucket, which empties all * of the request filters). We just want to flush the buckets * if something hasn't been sent to the network yet. */ APR_BRIGADE_INSERT_HEAD(bb, e); ap_pass_brigade(r->connection->output_filters, bb); } void ap_process_request(request_rec *r) { int access_status; /* Give quick handlers a shot at serving the request on the fast * path, bypassing all of the other Apache hooks. * * This hook was added to enable serving files out of a URI keyed * content cache ( e.g., Mike Abbott's Quick Shortcut Cache, * described here: http://oss.sgi.com/projects/apache/mod_q.c.html ) * * It may have other uses as well, such as routing requests directly to * content handlers that have the ability to grok HTTP and do their * own access checking, etc (e.g. servlet engines). * * Use this hook with extreme care and only if you know what you are * doing. */ if (ap_extended_status) ap_time_process_request(r->connection->sbh, START_PREQUEST); access_status = ap_run_quick_handler(r, 0); /* Not a look-up request */ if (access_status == DECLINED) { access_status = ap_process_request_internal(r); if (access_status == OK) { access_status = ap_invoke_handler(r); } } if (access_status == DONE) { /* e.g., something not in storage like TRACE */ access_status = OK; } if (access_status == OK) { ap_finalize_request_protocol(r); } else { r->status = HTTP_OK; ap_die(access_status, r); } /* * We want to flush the last packet if this isn't a pipelining connection * *before* we start into logging. Suppose that the logging causes a DNS * lookup to occur, which may have a high latency. If we hold off on * this packet, then it'll appear like the link is stalled when really * it's the application that's stalled. */ check_pipeline_flush(r); ap_update_child_status(r->connection->sbh, SERVER_BUSY_LOG, r); ap_run_log_transaction(r); if (ap_extended_status) ap_time_process_request(r->connection->sbh, STOP_PREQUEST); } static apr_table_t *rename_original_env(apr_pool_t *p, apr_table_t *t) { const apr_array_header_t *env_arr = apr_table_elts(t); const apr_table_entry_t *elts = (const apr_table_entry_t *) env_arr->elts; apr_table_t *new = apr_table_make(p, env_arr->nalloc); int i; for (i = 0; i < env_arr->nelts; ++i) { if (!elts[i].key) continue; apr_table_setn(new, apr_pstrcat(p, "REDIRECT_", elts[i].key, NULL), elts[i].val); } return new; } static request_rec *internal_internal_redirect(const char *new_uri, request_rec *r) { int access_status; request_rec *new; if (ap_is_recursion_limit_exceeded(r)) { ap_die(HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR, r); return NULL; } new = (request_rec *) apr_pcalloc(r->pool, sizeof(request_rec)); new->connection = r->connection; new->server = r->server; new->pool = r->pool; /* * A whole lot of this really ought to be shared with http_protocol.c... * another missing cleanup. It's particularly inappropriate to be * setting header_only, etc., here. */ new->method = r->method; new->method_number = r->method_number; new->allowed_methods = ap_make_method_list(new->pool, 2); ap_parse_uri(new, new_uri); new->request_config = ap_create_request_config(r->pool); new->per_dir_config = r->server->lookup_defaults; new->prev = r; r->next = new; /* Must have prev and next pointers set before calling create_request * hook. */ ap_run_create_request(new); /* Inherit the rest of the protocol info... */ new->the_request = r->the_request; new->allowed = r->allowed; new->status = r->status; new->assbackwards = r->assbackwards; new->header_only = r->header_only; new->protocol = r->protocol; new->proto_num = r->proto_num; new->hostname = r->hostname; new->request_time = r->request_time; new->main = r->main; new->headers_in = r->headers_in; new->headers_out = apr_table_make(r->pool, 12); new->err_headers_out = r->err_headers_out; new->subprocess_env = rename_original_env(r->pool, r->subprocess_env); new->notes = apr_table_make(r->pool, 5); new->allowed_methods = ap_make_method_list(new->pool, 2); new->htaccess = r->htaccess; new->no_cache = r->no_cache; new->expecting_100 = r->expecting_100; new->no_local_copy = r->no_local_copy; new->read_length = r->read_length; /* We can only read it once */ new->vlist_validator = r->vlist_validator; new->proto_output_filters = r->proto_output_filters; new->proto_input_filters = r->proto_input_filters; new->output_filters = new->proto_output_filters; new->input_filters = new->proto_input_filters; if (new->main) { /* Add back the subrequest filter, which we lost when * we set output_filters to include only the protocol * output filters from the original request. */ ap_add_output_filter_handle(ap_subreq_core_filter_handle, NULL, new, new->connection); } update_r_in_filters(new->input_filters, r, new); update_r_in_filters(new->output_filters, r, new); apr_table_setn(new->subprocess_env, "REDIRECT_STATUS", apr_itoa(r->pool, r->status)); /* * XXX: hmm. This is because mod_setenvif and mod_unique_id really need * to do their thing on internal redirects as well. Perhaps this is a * misnamed function. */ if ((access_status = ap_run_post_read_request(new))) { ap_die(access_status, new); return NULL; } return new; } /* XXX: Is this function is so bogus and fragile that we deep-6 it? */ AP_DECLARE(void) ap_internal_fast_redirect(request_rec *rr, request_rec *r) { /* We need to tell POOL_DEBUG that we're guaranteeing that rr->pool * will exist as long as r->pool. Otherwise we run into troubles because * some values in this request will be allocated in r->pool, and others in * rr->pool. */ apr_pool_join(r->pool, rr->pool); r->proxyreq = rr->proxyreq; r->no_cache = (r->no_cache && rr->no_cache); r->no_local_copy = (r->no_local_copy && rr->no_local_copy); r->mtime = rr->mtime; r->uri = rr->uri; r->filename = rr->filename; r->canonical_filename = rr->canonical_filename; r->path_info = rr->path_info; r->args = rr->args; r->finfo = rr->finfo; r->handler = rr->handler; ap_set_content_type(r, rr->content_type); r->content_encoding = rr->content_encoding; r->content_languages = rr->content_languages; r->per_dir_config = rr->per_dir_config; /* copy output headers from subrequest, but leave negotiation headers */ r->notes = apr_table_overlay(r->pool, rr->notes, r->notes); r->headers_out = apr_table_overlay(r->pool, rr->headers_out, r->headers_out); r->err_headers_out = apr_table_overlay(r->pool, rr->err_headers_out, r->err_headers_out); r->subprocess_env = apr_table_overlay(r->pool, rr->subprocess_env, r->subprocess_env); r->output_filters = rr->output_filters; r->input_filters = rr->input_filters; if (r->main) { ap_add_output_filter_handle(ap_subreq_core_filter_handle, NULL, r, r->connection); } else if (r->output_filters->frec == ap_subreq_core_filter_handle) { ap_remove_output_filter(r->output_filters); r->output_filters = r->output_filters->next; } /* If any filters pointed at the now-defunct rr, we must point them * at our "new" instance of r. In particular, some of rr's structures * will now be bogus (say rr->headers_out). If a filter tried to modify * their f->r structure when it is pointing to rr, the real request_rec * will not get updated. Fix that here. */ update_r_in_filters(r->input_filters, rr, r); update_r_in_filters(r->output_filters, rr, r); } AP_DECLARE(void) ap_internal_redirect(const char *new_uri, request_rec *r) { request_rec *new = internal_internal_redirect(new_uri, r); int access_status; /* ap_die was already called, if an error occured */ if (!new) { return; } access_status = ap_run_quick_handler(new, 0); /* Not a look-up request */ if (access_status == DECLINED) { access_status = ap_process_request_internal(new); if (access_status == OK) { access_status = ap_invoke_handler(new); } } if (access_status == OK) { ap_finalize_request_protocol(new); } else { ap_die(access_status, new); } } /* This function is designed for things like actions or CGI scripts, when * using AddHandler, and you want to preserve the content type across * an internal redirect. */ AP_DECLARE(void) ap_internal_redirect_handler(const char *new_uri, request_rec *r) { int access_status; request_rec *new = internal_internal_redirect(new_uri, r); /* ap_die was already called, if an error occured */ if (!new) { return; } if (r->handler) ap_set_content_type(new, r->content_type); access_status = ap_process_request_internal(new); if (access_status == OK) { if ((access_status = ap_invoke_handler(new)) != 0) { ap_die(access_status, new); return; } ap_finalize_request_protocol(new); } else { ap_die(access_status, new); } } AP_DECLARE(void) ap_allow_methods(request_rec *r, int reset, ...) { const char *method; va_list methods; /* * Get rid of any current settings if requested; not just the * well-known methods but any extensions as well. */ if (reset) { ap_clear_method_list(r->allowed_methods); } va_start(methods, reset); while ((method = va_arg(methods, const char *)) != NULL) { ap_method_list_add(r->allowed_methods, method); } va_end(methods); } AP_DECLARE(void) ap_allow_standard_methods(request_rec *r, int reset, ...) { int method; va_list methods; apr_int64_t mask; /* * Get rid of any current settings if requested; not just the * well-known methods but any extensions as well. */ if (reset) { ap_clear_method_list(r->allowed_methods); } mask = 0; va_start(methods, reset); while ((method = va_arg(methods, int)) != -1) { mask |= (AP_METHOD_BIT << method); } va_end(methods); r->allowed_methods->method_mask |= mask; }
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