from __future__ import annotations import io import re import typing as t import warnings from functools import partial from functools import update_wrapper from itertools import chain from ._internal import _make_encode_wrapper from ._internal import _to_bytes from ._internal import _to_str from .exceptions import ClientDisconnected from .exceptions import RequestEntityTooLarge from .sansio import utils as _sansio_utils from .sansio.utils import host_is_trusted # noqa: F401 # Imported as part of API if t.TYPE_CHECKING: from _typeshed.wsgi import WSGIApplication from _typeshed.wsgi import WSGIEnvironment def responder(f: t.Callable[..., WSGIApplication]) -> WSGIApplication: """Marks a function as responder. Decorate a function with it and it will automatically call the return value as WSGI application. Example:: @responder def application(environ, start_response): return Response('Hello World!') """ return update_wrapper(lambda *a: f(*a)(*a[-2:]), f) def get_current_url( environ: WSGIEnvironment, root_only: bool = False, strip_querystring: bool = False, host_only: bool = False, trusted_hosts: t.Iterable[str] | None = None, ) -> str: """Recreate the URL for a request from the parts in a WSGI environment. The URL is an IRI, not a URI, so it may contain Unicode characters. Use :func:`~werkzeug.urls.iri_to_uri` to convert it to ASCII. :param environ: The WSGI environment to get the URL parts from. :param root_only: Only build the root path, don't include the remaining path or query string. :param strip_querystring: Don't include the query string. :param host_only: Only build the scheme and host. :param trusted_hosts: A list of trusted host names to validate the host against. """ parts = { "scheme": environ["wsgi.url_scheme"], "host": get_host(environ, trusted_hosts), } if not host_only: parts["root_path"] = environ.get("SCRIPT_NAME", "") if not root_only: parts["path"] = environ.get("PATH_INFO", "") if not strip_querystring: parts["query_string"] = environ.get("QUERY_STRING", "").encode("latin1") return _sansio_utils.get_current_url(**parts) def _get_server( environ: WSGIEnvironment, ) -> tuple[str, int | None] | None: name = environ.get("SERVER_NAME") if name is None: return None try: port: int | None = int(environ.get("SERVER_PORT", None)) except (TypeError, ValueError): # unix socket port = None return name, port def get_host( environ: WSGIEnvironment, trusted_hosts: t.Iterable[str] | None = None ) -> str: """Return the host for the given WSGI environment. The ``Host`` header is preferred, then ``SERVER_NAME`` if it's not set. The returned host will only contain the port if it is different than the standard port for the protocol. Optionally, verify that the host is trusted using :func:`host_is_trusted` and raise a :exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.SecurityError` if it is not. :param environ: A WSGI environment dict. :param trusted_hosts: A list of trusted host names. :return: Host, with port if necessary. :raise ~werkzeug.exceptions.SecurityError: If the host is not trusted. """ return _sansio_utils.get_host( environ["wsgi.url_scheme"], environ.get("HTTP_HOST"), _get_server(environ), trusted_hosts, ) def get_content_length(environ: WSGIEnvironment) -> int | None: """Return the ``Content-Length`` header value as an int. If the header is not given or the ``Transfer-Encoding`` header is ``chunked``, ``None`` is returned to indicate a streaming request. If the value is not an integer, or negative, 0 is returned. :param environ: The WSGI environ to get the content length from. .. versionadded:: 0.9 """ return _sansio_utils.get_content_length( http_content_length=environ.get("CONTENT_LENGTH"), http_transfer_encoding=environ.get("HTTP_TRANSFER_ENCODING"), ) def get_input_stream( environ: WSGIEnvironment, safe_fallback: bool = True, max_content_length: int | None = None, ) -> t.IO[bytes]: """Return the WSGI input stream, wrapped so that it may be read safely without going past the ``Content-Length`` header value or ``max_content_length``. If ``Content-Length`` exceeds ``max_content_length``, a :exc:`RequestEntityTooLarge`` ``413 Content Too Large`` error is raised. If the WSGI server sets ``environ["wsgi.input_terminated"]``, it indicates that the server handles terminating the stream, so it is safe to read directly. For example, a server that knows how to handle chunked requests safely would set this. If ``max_content_length`` is set, it can be enforced on streams if ``wsgi.input_terminated`` is set. Otherwise, an empty stream is returned unless the user explicitly disables this safe fallback. If the limit is reached before the underlying stream is exhausted (such as a file that is too large, or an infinite stream), the remaining contents of the stream cannot be read safely. Depending on how the server handles this, clients may show a "connection reset" failure instead of seeing the 413 response. :param environ: The WSGI environ containing the stream. :param safe_fallback: Return an empty stream when ``Content-Length`` is not set. Disabling this allows infinite streams, which can be a denial-of-service risk. :param max_content_length: The maximum length that content-length or streaming requests may not exceed. .. versionchanged:: 2.3.2 ``max_content_length`` is only applied to streaming requests if the server sets ``wsgi.input_terminated``. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Check ``max_content_length`` and raise an error if it is exceeded. .. versionadded:: 0.9 """ stream = t.cast(t.IO[bytes], environ["wsgi.input"]) content_length = get_content_length(environ) if content_length is not None and max_content_length is not None: if content_length > max_content_length: raise RequestEntityTooLarge() # A WSGI server can set this to indicate that it terminates the input stream. In # that case the stream is safe without wrapping, or can enforce a max length. if "wsgi.input_terminated" in environ: if max_content_length is not None: # If this is moved above, it can cause the stream to hang if a read attempt # is made when the client sends no data. For example, the development server # does not handle buffering except for chunked encoding. return t.cast( t.IO[bytes], LimitedStream(stream, max_content_length, is_max=True) ) return stream # No limit given, return an empty stream unless the user explicitly allows the # potentially infinite stream. An infinite stream is dangerous if it's not expected, # as it can tie up a worker indefinitely. if content_length is None: return io.BytesIO() if safe_fallback else stream return t.cast(t.IO[bytes], LimitedStream(stream, content_length)) def get_path_info( environ: WSGIEnvironment, charset: t.Any = ..., errors: str | None = None, ) -> str: """Return ``PATH_INFO`` from the WSGI environment. :param environ: WSGI environment to get the path from. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 The ``charset`` and ``errors`` parameters are deprecated and will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0. .. versionadded:: 0.9 """ if charset is not ...: warnings.warn( "The 'charset' parameter is deprecated and will be removed" " in Werkzeug 3.0.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2, ) if charset is None: charset = "utf-8" else: charset = "utf-8" if errors is not None: warnings.warn( "The 'errors' parameter is deprecated and will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2, ) else: errors = "replace" path = environ.get("PATH_INFO", "").encode("latin1") return path.decode(charset, errors) # type: ignore[no-any-return] class ClosingIterator: """The WSGI specification requires that all middlewares and gateways respect the `close` callback of the iterable returned by the application. Because it is useful to add another close action to a returned iterable and adding a custom iterable is a boring task this class can be used for that:: return ClosingIterator(app(environ, start_response), [cleanup_session, cleanup_locals]) If there is just one close function it can be passed instead of the list. A closing iterator is not needed if the application uses response objects and finishes the processing if the response is started:: try: return response(environ, start_response) finally: cleanup_session() cleanup_locals() """ def __init__( self, iterable: t.Iterable[bytes], callbacks: None | (t.Callable[[], None] | t.Iterable[t.Callable[[], None]]) = None, ) -> None: iterator = iter(iterable) self._next = t.cast(t.Callable[[], bytes], partial(next, iterator)) if callbacks is None: callbacks = [] elif callable(callbacks): callbacks = [callbacks] else: callbacks = list(callbacks) iterable_close = getattr(iterable, "close", None) if iterable_close: callbacks.insert(0, iterable_close) self._callbacks = callbacks def __iter__(self) -> ClosingIterator: return self def __next__(self) -> bytes: return self._next() def close(self) -> None: for callback in self._callbacks: callback() def wrap_file( environ: WSGIEnvironment, file: t.IO[bytes], buffer_size: int = 8192 ) -> t.Iterable[bytes]: """Wraps a file. This uses the WSGI server's file wrapper if available or otherwise the generic :class:`FileWrapper`. .. versionadded:: 0.5 If the file wrapper from the WSGI server is used it's important to not iterate over it from inside the application but to pass it through unchanged. If you want to pass out a file wrapper inside a response object you have to set :attr:`Response.direct_passthrough` to `True`. More information about file wrappers are available in :pep:`333`. :param file: a :class:`file`-like object with a :meth:`~file.read` method. :param buffer_size: number of bytes for one iteration. """ return environ.get("wsgi.file_wrapper", FileWrapper)( # type: ignore file, buffer_size ) class FileWrapper: """This class can be used to convert a :class:`file`-like object into an iterable. It yields `buffer_size` blocks until the file is fully read. You should not use this class directly but rather use the :func:`wrap_file` function that uses the WSGI server's file wrapper support if it's available. .. versionadded:: 0.5 If you're using this object together with a :class:`Response` you have to use the `direct_passthrough` mode. :param file: a :class:`file`-like object with a :meth:`~file.read` method. :param buffer_size: number of bytes for one iteration. """ def __init__(self, file: t.IO[bytes], buffer_size: int = 8192) -> None: self.file = file self.buffer_size = buffer_size def close(self) -> None: if hasattr(self.file, "close"): self.file.close() def seekable(self) -> bool: if hasattr(self.file, "seekable"): return self.file.seekable() if hasattr(self.file, "seek"): return True return False def seek(self, *args: t.Any) -> None: if hasattr(self.file, "seek"): self.file.seek(*args) def tell(self) -> int | None: if hasattr(self.file, "tell"): return self.file.tell() return None def __iter__(self) -> FileWrapper: return self def __next__(self) -> bytes: data = self.file.read(self.buffer_size) if data: return data raise StopIteration() class _RangeWrapper: # private for now, but should we make it public in the future ? """This class can be used to convert an iterable object into an iterable that will only yield a piece of the underlying content. It yields blocks until the underlying stream range is fully read. The yielded blocks will have a size that can't exceed the original iterator defined block size, but that can be smaller. If you're using this object together with a :class:`Response` you have to use the `direct_passthrough` mode. :param iterable: an iterable object with a :meth:`__next__` method. :param start_byte: byte from which read will start. :param byte_range: how many bytes to read. """ def __init__( self, iterable: t.Iterable[bytes] | t.IO[bytes], start_byte: int = 0, byte_range: int | None = None, ): self.iterable = iter(iterable) self.byte_range = byte_range self.start_byte = start_byte self.end_byte = None if byte_range is not None: self.end_byte = start_byte + byte_range self.read_length = 0 self.seekable = hasattr(iterable, "seekable") and iterable.seekable() self.end_reached = False def __iter__(self) -> _RangeWrapper: return self def _next_chunk(self) -> bytes: try: chunk = next(self.iterable) self.read_length += len(chunk) return chunk except StopIteration: self.end_reached = True raise def _first_iteration(self) -> tuple[bytes | None, int]: chunk = None if self.seekable: self.iterable.seek(self.start_byte) # type: ignore self.read_length = self.iterable.tell() # type: ignore contextual_read_length = self.read_length else: while self.read_length <= self.start_byte: chunk = self._next_chunk() if chunk is not None: chunk = chunk[self.start_byte - self.read_length :] contextual_read_length = self.start_byte return chunk, contextual_read_length def _next(self) -> bytes: if self.end_reached: raise StopIteration() chunk = None contextual_read_length = self.read_length if self.read_length == 0: chunk, contextual_read_length = self._first_iteration() if chunk is None: chunk = self._next_chunk() if self.end_byte is not None and self.read_length >= self.end_byte: self.end_reached = True return chunk[: self.end_byte - contextual_read_length] return chunk def __next__(self) -> bytes: chunk = self._next() if chunk: return chunk self.end_reached = True raise StopIteration() def close(self) -> None: if hasattr(self.iterable, "close"): self.iterable.close() def _make_chunk_iter( stream: t.Iterable[bytes] | t.IO[bytes], limit: int | None, buffer_size: int, ) -> t.Iterator[bytes]: """Helper for the line and chunk iter functions.""" warnings.warn( "'_make_chunk_iter' is deprecated and will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2, ) if isinstance(stream, (bytes, bytearray, str)): raise TypeError( "Passed a string or byte object instead of true iterator or stream." ) if not hasattr(stream, "read"): for item in stream: if item: yield item return stream = t.cast(t.IO[bytes], stream) if not isinstance(stream, LimitedStream) and limit is not None: stream = t.cast(t.IO[bytes], LimitedStream(stream, limit)) _read = stream.read while True: item = _read(buffer_size) if not item: break yield item def make_line_iter( stream: t.Iterable[bytes] | t.IO[bytes], limit: int | None = None, buffer_size: int = 10 * 1024, cap_at_buffer: bool = False, ) -> t.Iterator[bytes]: """Safely iterates line-based over an input stream. If the input stream is not a :class:`LimitedStream` the `limit` parameter is mandatory. This uses the stream's :meth:`~file.read` method internally as opposite to the :meth:`~file.readline` method that is unsafe and can only be used in violation of the WSGI specification. The same problem applies to the `__iter__` function of the input stream which calls :meth:`~file.readline` without arguments. If you need line-by-line processing it's strongly recommended to iterate over the input stream using this helper function. .. deprecated:: 2.3 Will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0. .. versionadded:: 0.11 added support for the `cap_at_buffer` parameter. .. versionadded:: 0.9 added support for iterators as input stream. .. versionchanged:: 0.8 This function now ensures that the limit was reached. :param stream: the stream or iterate to iterate over. :param limit: the limit in bytes for the stream. (Usually content length. Not necessary if the `stream` is a :class:`LimitedStream`. :param buffer_size: The optional buffer size. :param cap_at_buffer: if this is set chunks are split if they are longer than the buffer size. Internally this is implemented that the buffer size might be exhausted by a factor of two however. """ warnings.warn( "'make_line_iter' is deprecated and will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2, ) _iter = _make_chunk_iter(stream, limit, buffer_size) first_item = next(_iter, "") if not first_item: return s = _make_encode_wrapper(first_item) empty = t.cast(bytes, s("")) cr = t.cast(bytes, s("\r")) lf = t.cast(bytes, s("\n")) crlf = t.cast(bytes, s("\r\n")) _iter = t.cast(t.Iterator[bytes], chain((first_item,), _iter)) def _iter_basic_lines() -> t.Iterator[bytes]: _join = empty.join buffer: list[bytes] = [] while True: new_data = next(_iter, "") if not new_data: break new_buf: list[bytes] = [] buf_size = 0 for item in t.cast( t.Iterator[bytes], chain(buffer, new_data.splitlines(True)) ): new_buf.append(item) buf_size += len(item) if item and item[-1:] in crlf: yield _join(new_buf) new_buf = [] elif cap_at_buffer and buf_size >= buffer_size: rv = _join(new_buf) while len(rv) >= buffer_size: yield rv[:buffer_size] rv = rv[buffer_size:] new_buf = [rv] buffer = new_buf if buffer: yield _join(buffer) # This hackery is necessary to merge 'foo\r' and '\n' into one item # of 'foo\r\n' if we were unlucky and we hit a chunk boundary. previous = empty for item in _iter_basic_lines(): if item == lf and previous[-1:] == cr: previous += item item = empty if previous: yield previous previous = item if previous: yield previous def make_chunk_iter( stream: t.Iterable[bytes] | t.IO[bytes], separator: bytes, limit: int | None = None, buffer_size: int = 10 * 1024, cap_at_buffer: bool = False, ) -> t.Iterator[bytes]: """Works like :func:`make_line_iter` but accepts a separator which divides chunks. If you want newline based processing you should use :func:`make_line_iter` instead as it supports arbitrary newline markers. .. deprecated:: 2.3 Will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0. .. versionchanged:: 0.11 added support for the `cap_at_buffer` parameter. .. versionchanged:: 0.9 added support for iterators as input stream. .. versionadded:: 0.8 :param stream: the stream or iterate to iterate over. :param separator: the separator that divides chunks. :param limit: the limit in bytes for the stream. (Usually content length. Not necessary if the `stream` is otherwise already limited). :param buffer_size: The optional buffer size. :param cap_at_buffer: if this is set chunks are split if they are longer than the buffer size. Internally this is implemented that the buffer size might be exhausted by a factor of two however. """ warnings.warn( "'make_chunk_iter' is deprecated and will be removed in Werkzeug 3.0.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2, ) _iter = _make_chunk_iter(stream, limit, buffer_size) first_item = next(_iter, b"") if not first_item: return _iter = t.cast(t.Iterator[bytes], chain((first_item,), _iter)) if isinstance(first_item, str): separator = _to_str(separator) _split = re.compile(f"({re.escape(separator)})").split _join = "".join else: separator = _to_bytes(separator) _split = re.compile(b"(" + re.escape(separator) + b")").split _join = b"".join buffer: list[bytes] = [] while True: new_data = next(_iter, b"") if not new_data: break chunks = _split(new_data) new_buf: list[bytes] = [] buf_size = 0 for item in chain(buffer, chunks): if item == separator: yield _join(new_buf) new_buf = [] buf_size = 0 else: buf_size += len(item) new_buf.append(item) if cap_at_buffer and buf_size >= buffer_size: rv = _join(new_buf) while len(rv) >= buffer_size: yield rv[:buffer_size] rv = rv[buffer_size:] new_buf = [rv] buf_size = len(rv) buffer = new_buf if buffer: yield _join(buffer) class LimitedStream(io.RawIOBase): """Wrap a stream so that it doesn't read more than a given limit. This is used to limit ``wsgi.input`` to the ``Content-Length`` header value or :attr:`.Request.max_content_length`. When attempting to read after the limit has been reached, :meth:`on_exhausted` is called. When the limit is a maximum, this raises :exc:`.RequestEntityTooLarge`. If reading from the stream returns zero bytes or raises an error, :meth:`on_disconnect` is called, which raises :exc:`.ClientDisconnected`. When the limit is a maximum and zero bytes were read, no error is raised, since it may be the end of the stream. If the limit is reached before the underlying stream is exhausted (such as a file that is too large, or an infinite stream), the remaining contents of the stream cannot be read safely. Depending on how the server handles this, clients may show a "connection reset" failure instead of seeing the 413 response. :param stream: The stream to read from. Must be a readable binary IO object. :param limit: The limit in bytes to not read past. Should be either the ``Content-Length`` header value or ``request.max_content_length``. :param is_max: Whether the given ``limit`` is ``request.max_content_length`` instead of the ``Content-Length`` header value. This changes how exhausted and disconnect events are handled. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Handle ``max_content_length`` differently than ``Content-Length``. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Implements ``io.RawIOBase`` rather than ``io.IOBase``. """ def __init__(self, stream: t.IO[bytes], limit: int, is_max: bool = False) -> None: self._stream = stream self._pos = 0 self.limit = limit self._limit_is_max = is_max @property def is_exhausted(self) -> bool: """Whether the current stream position has reached the limit.""" return self._pos >= self.limit def on_exhausted(self) -> None: """Called when attempting to read after the limit has been reached. The default behavior is to do nothing, unless the limit is a maximum, in which case it raises :exc:`.RequestEntityTooLarge`. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Raises ``RequestEntityTooLarge`` if the limit is a maximum. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Any return value is ignored. """ if self._limit_is_max: raise RequestEntityTooLarge() def on_disconnect(self, error: Exception | None = None) -> None: """Called when an attempted read receives zero bytes before the limit was reached. This indicates that the client disconnected before sending the full request body. The default behavior is to raise :exc:`.ClientDisconnected`, unless the limit is a maximum and no error was raised. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Added the ``error`` parameter. Do nothing if the limit is a maximum and no error was raised. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Any return value is ignored. """ if not self._limit_is_max or error is not None: raise ClientDisconnected() # If the limit is a maximum, then we may have read zero bytes because the # streaming body is complete. There's no way to distinguish that from the # client disconnecting early. def exhaust(self) -> bytes: """Exhaust the stream by reading until the limit is reached or the client disconnects, returning the remaining data. .. versionchanged:: 2.3 Return the remaining data. .. versionchanged:: 2.2.3 Handle case where wrapped stream returns fewer bytes than requested. """ if not self.is_exhausted: return self.readall() return b"" def readinto(self, b: bytearray) -> int | None: # type: ignore[override] size = len(b) remaining = self.limit - self._pos if remaining <= 0: self.on_exhausted() return 0 if hasattr(self._stream, "readinto"): # Use stream.readinto if it's available. if size <= remaining: # The size fits in the remaining limit, use the buffer directly. try: out_size: int | None = self._stream.readinto(b) except (OSError, ValueError) as e: self.on_disconnect(error=e) return 0 else: # Use a temp buffer with the remaining limit as the size. temp_b = bytearray(remaining) try: out_size = self._stream.readinto(temp_b) except (OSError, ValueError) as e: self.on_disconnect(error=e) return 0 if out_size: b[:out_size] = temp_b else: # WSGI requires that stream.read is available. try: data = self._stream.read(min(size, remaining)) except (OSError, ValueError) as e: self.on_disconnect(error=e) return 0 out_size = len(data) b[:out_size] = data if not out_size: # Read zero bytes from the stream. self.on_disconnect() return 0 self._pos += out_size return out_size def readall(self) -> bytes: if self.is_exhausted: self.on_exhausted() return b"" out = bytearray() # The parent implementation uses "while True", which results in an extra read. while not self.is_exhausted: data = self.read(1024 * 64) # Stream may return empty before a max limit is reached. if not data: break out.extend(data) return bytes(out) def tell(self) -> int: """Return the current stream position. .. versionadded:: 0.9 """ return self._pos def readable(self) -> bool: return True