| import base64 |
| import codecs |
| import mimetypes |
| import os |
| import re |
| from collections.abc import Collection |
| from collections.abc import MutableSet |
| from copy import deepcopy |
| from io import BytesIO |
| from itertools import repeat |
| from os import fspath |
|
|
| from . import exceptions |
| from ._internal import _missing |
|
|
|
|
| def is_immutable(self): |
| raise TypeError(f"{type(self).__name__!r} objects are immutable") |
|
|
|
|
| def iter_multi_items(mapping): |
| """Iterates over the items of a mapping yielding keys and values |
| without dropping any from more complex structures. |
| """ |
| if isinstance(mapping, MultiDict): |
| yield from mapping.items(multi=True) |
| elif isinstance(mapping, dict): |
| for key, value in mapping.items(): |
| if isinstance(value, (tuple, list)): |
| for v in value: |
| yield key, v |
| else: |
| yield key, value |
| else: |
| yield from mapping |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableListMixin: |
| """Makes a :class:`list` immutable. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| :private: |
| """ |
|
|
| _hash_cache = None |
|
|
| def __hash__(self): |
| if self._hash_cache is not None: |
| return self._hash_cache |
| rv = self._hash_cache = hash(tuple(self)) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): |
| return type(self), (list(self),) |
|
|
| def __delitem__(self, key): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def __iadd__(self, other): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def __imul__(self, other): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def append(self, item): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def remove(self, item): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def extend(self, iterable): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def insert(self, pos, value): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def pop(self, index=-1): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def reverse(self): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def sort(self, key=None, reverse=False): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableList(ImmutableListMixin, list): |
| """An immutable :class:`list`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| :private: |
| """ |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}({list.__repr__(self)})" |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableDictMixin: |
| """Makes a :class:`dict` immutable. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| :private: |
| """ |
|
|
| _hash_cache = None |
|
|
| @classmethod |
| def fromkeys(cls, keys, value=None): |
| instance = super().__new__(cls) |
| instance.__init__(zip(keys, repeat(value))) |
| return instance |
|
|
| def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): |
| return type(self), (dict(self),) |
|
|
| def _iter_hashitems(self): |
| return self.items() |
|
|
| def __hash__(self): |
| if self._hash_cache is not None: |
| return self._hash_cache |
| rv = self._hash_cache = hash(frozenset(self._iter_hashitems())) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def setdefault(self, key, default=None): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def update(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def pop(self, key, default=None): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def popitem(self): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def __delitem__(self, key): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def clear(self): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableMultiDictMixin(ImmutableDictMixin): |
| """Makes a :class:`MultiDict` immutable. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| :private: |
| """ |
|
|
| def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): |
| return type(self), (list(self.items(multi=True)),) |
|
|
| def _iter_hashitems(self): |
| return self.items(multi=True) |
|
|
| def add(self, key, value): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def popitemlist(self): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def poplist(self, key): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def setlist(self, key, new_list): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def setlistdefault(self, key, default_list=None): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
|
|
| def _calls_update(name): |
| def oncall(self, *args, **kw): |
| rv = getattr(super(UpdateDictMixin, self), name)(*args, **kw) |
|
|
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| return rv |
|
|
| oncall.__name__ = name |
| return oncall |
|
|
|
|
| class UpdateDictMixin(dict): |
| """Makes dicts call `self.on_update` on modifications. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| :private: |
| """ |
|
|
| on_update = None |
|
|
| def setdefault(self, key, default=None): |
| modified = key not in self |
| rv = super().setdefault(key, default) |
| if modified and self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def pop(self, key, default=_missing): |
| modified = key in self |
| if default is _missing: |
| rv = super().pop(key) |
| else: |
| rv = super().pop(key, default) |
| if modified and self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
| return rv |
|
|
| __setitem__ = _calls_update("__setitem__") |
| __delitem__ = _calls_update("__delitem__") |
| clear = _calls_update("clear") |
| popitem = _calls_update("popitem") |
| update = _calls_update("update") |
|
|
|
|
| class TypeConversionDict(dict): |
| """Works like a regular dict but the :meth:`get` method can perform |
| type conversions. :class:`MultiDict` and :class:`CombinedMultiDict` |
| are subclasses of this class and provide the same feature. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| """ |
|
|
| def get(self, key, default=None, type=None): |
| """Return the default value if the requested data doesn't exist. |
| If `type` is provided and is a callable it should convert the value, |
| return it or raise a :exc:`ValueError` if that is not possible. In |
| this case the function will return the default as if the value was not |
| found: |
| |
| >>> d = TypeConversionDict(foo='42', bar='blub') |
| >>> d.get('foo', type=int) |
| 42 |
| >>> d.get('bar', -1, type=int) |
| -1 |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :param default: The default value to be returned if the key can't |
| be looked up. If not further specified `None` is |
| returned. |
| :param type: A callable that is used to cast the value in the |
| :class:`MultiDict`. If a :exc:`ValueError` is raised |
| by this callable the default value is returned. |
| """ |
| try: |
| rv = self[key] |
| except KeyError: |
| return default |
| if type is not None: |
| try: |
| rv = type(rv) |
| except ValueError: |
| rv = default |
| return rv |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableTypeConversionDict(ImmutableDictMixin, TypeConversionDict): |
| """Works like a :class:`TypeConversionDict` but does not support |
| modifications. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| """ |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| """Return a shallow mutable copy of this object. Keep in mind that |
| the standard library's :func:`copy` function is a no-op for this class |
| like for any other python immutable type (eg: :class:`tuple`). |
| """ |
| return TypeConversionDict(self) |
|
|
| def __copy__(self): |
| return self |
|
|
|
|
| class MultiDict(TypeConversionDict): |
| """A :class:`MultiDict` is a dictionary subclass customized to deal with |
| multiple values for the same key which is for example used by the parsing |
| functions in the wrappers. This is necessary because some HTML form |
| elements pass multiple values for the same key. |
| |
| :class:`MultiDict` implements all standard dictionary methods. |
| Internally, it saves all values for a key as a list, but the standard dict |
| access methods will only return the first value for a key. If you want to |
| gain access to the other values, too, you have to use the `list` methods as |
| explained below. |
| |
| Basic Usage: |
| |
| >>> d = MultiDict([('a', 'b'), ('a', 'c')]) |
| >>> d |
| MultiDict([('a', 'b'), ('a', 'c')]) |
| >>> d['a'] |
| 'b' |
| >>> d.getlist('a') |
| ['b', 'c'] |
| >>> 'a' in d |
| True |
| |
| It behaves like a normal dict thus all dict functions will only return the |
| first value when multiple values for one key are found. |
| |
| From Werkzeug 0.3 onwards, the `KeyError` raised by this class is also a |
| subclass of the :exc:`~exceptions.BadRequest` HTTP exception and will |
| render a page for a ``400 BAD REQUEST`` if caught in a catch-all for HTTP |
| exceptions. |
| |
| A :class:`MultiDict` can be constructed from an iterable of |
| ``(key, value)`` tuples, a dict, a :class:`MultiDict` or from Werkzeug 0.2 |
| onwards some keyword parameters. |
| |
| :param mapping: the initial value for the :class:`MultiDict`. Either a |
| regular dict, an iterable of ``(key, value)`` tuples |
| or `None`. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, mapping=None): |
| if isinstance(mapping, MultiDict): |
| dict.__init__(self, ((k, l[:]) for k, l in mapping.lists())) |
| elif isinstance(mapping, dict): |
| tmp = {} |
| for key, value in mapping.items(): |
| if isinstance(value, (tuple, list)): |
| if len(value) == 0: |
| continue |
| value = list(value) |
| else: |
| value = [value] |
| tmp[key] = value |
| dict.__init__(self, tmp) |
| else: |
| tmp = {} |
| for key, value in mapping or (): |
| tmp.setdefault(key, []).append(value) |
| dict.__init__(self, tmp) |
|
|
| def __getstate__(self): |
| return dict(self.lists()) |
|
|
| def __setstate__(self, value): |
| dict.clear(self) |
| dict.update(self, value) |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| |
| |
| |
| return dict.__iter__(self) |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, key): |
| """Return the first data value for this key; |
| raises KeyError if not found. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :raise KeyError: if the key does not exist. |
| """ |
|
|
| if key in self: |
| lst = dict.__getitem__(self, key) |
| if len(lst) > 0: |
| return lst[0] |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): |
| """Like :meth:`add` but removes an existing key first. |
| |
| :param key: the key for the value. |
| :param value: the value to set. |
| """ |
| dict.__setitem__(self, key, [value]) |
|
|
| def add(self, key, value): |
| """Adds a new value for the key. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
| |
| :param key: the key for the value. |
| :param value: the value to add. |
| """ |
| dict.setdefault(self, key, []).append(value) |
|
|
| def getlist(self, key, type=None): |
| """Return the list of items for a given key. If that key is not in the |
| `MultiDict`, the return value will be an empty list. Just like `get`, |
| `getlist` accepts a `type` parameter. All items will be converted |
| with the callable defined there. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :param type: A callable that is used to cast the value in the |
| :class:`MultiDict`. If a :exc:`ValueError` is raised |
| by this callable the value will be removed from the list. |
| :return: a :class:`list` of all the values for the key. |
| """ |
| try: |
| rv = dict.__getitem__(self, key) |
| except KeyError: |
| return [] |
| if type is None: |
| return list(rv) |
| result = [] |
| for item in rv: |
| try: |
| result.append(type(item)) |
| except ValueError: |
| pass |
| return result |
|
|
| def setlist(self, key, new_list): |
| """Remove the old values for a key and add new ones. Note that the list |
| you pass the values in will be shallow-copied before it is inserted in |
| the dictionary. |
| |
| >>> d = MultiDict() |
| >>> d.setlist('foo', ['1', '2']) |
| >>> d['foo'] |
| '1' |
| >>> d.getlist('foo') |
| ['1', '2'] |
| |
| :param key: The key for which the values are set. |
| :param new_list: An iterable with the new values for the key. Old values |
| are removed first. |
| """ |
| dict.__setitem__(self, key, list(new_list)) |
|
|
| def setdefault(self, key, default=None): |
| """Returns the value for the key if it is in the dict, otherwise it |
| returns `default` and sets that value for `key`. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :param default: The default value to be returned if the key is not |
| in the dict. If not further specified it's `None`. |
| """ |
| if key not in self: |
| self[key] = default |
| else: |
| default = self[key] |
| return default |
|
|
| def setlistdefault(self, key, default_list=None): |
| """Like `setdefault` but sets multiple values. The list returned |
| is not a copy, but the list that is actually used internally. This |
| means that you can put new values into the dict by appending items |
| to the list: |
| |
| >>> d = MultiDict({"foo": 1}) |
| >>> d.setlistdefault("foo").extend([2, 3]) |
| >>> d.getlist("foo") |
| [1, 2, 3] |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :param default_list: An iterable of default values. It is either copied |
| (in case it was a list) or converted into a list |
| before returned. |
| :return: a :class:`list` |
| """ |
| if key not in self: |
| default_list = list(default_list or ()) |
| dict.__setitem__(self, key, default_list) |
| else: |
| default_list = dict.__getitem__(self, key) |
| return default_list |
|
|
| def items(self, multi=False): |
| """Return an iterator of ``(key, value)`` pairs. |
| |
| :param multi: If set to `True` the iterator returned will have a pair |
| for each value of each key. Otherwise it will only |
| contain pairs for the first value of each key. |
| """ |
| for key, values in dict.items(self): |
| if multi: |
| for value in values: |
| yield key, value |
| else: |
| yield key, values[0] |
|
|
| def lists(self): |
| """Return a iterator of ``(key, values)`` pairs, where values is the list |
| of all values associated with the key.""" |
| for key, values in dict.items(self): |
| yield key, list(values) |
|
|
| def values(self): |
| """Returns an iterator of the first value on every key's value list.""" |
| for values in dict.values(self): |
| yield values[0] |
|
|
| def listvalues(self): |
| """Return an iterator of all values associated with a key. Zipping |
| :meth:`keys` and this is the same as calling :meth:`lists`: |
| |
| >>> d = MultiDict({"foo": [1, 2, 3]}) |
| >>> zip(d.keys(), d.listvalues()) == d.lists() |
| True |
| """ |
| return dict.values(self) |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| """Return a shallow copy of this object.""" |
| return self.__class__(self) |
|
|
| def deepcopy(self, memo=None): |
| """Return a deep copy of this object.""" |
| return self.__class__(deepcopy(self.to_dict(flat=False), memo)) |
|
|
| def to_dict(self, flat=True): |
| """Return the contents as regular dict. If `flat` is `True` the |
| returned dict will only have the first item present, if `flat` is |
| `False` all values will be returned as lists. |
| |
| :param flat: If set to `False` the dict returned will have lists |
| with all the values in it. Otherwise it will only |
| contain the first value for each key. |
| :return: a :class:`dict` |
| """ |
| if flat: |
| return dict(self.items()) |
| return dict(self.lists()) |
|
|
| def update(self, mapping): |
| """update() extends rather than replaces existing key lists: |
| |
| >>> a = MultiDict({'x': 1}) |
| >>> b = MultiDict({'x': 2, 'y': 3}) |
| >>> a.update(b) |
| >>> a |
| MultiDict([('y', 3), ('x', 1), ('x', 2)]) |
| |
| If the value list for a key in ``other_dict`` is empty, no new values |
| will be added to the dict and the key will not be created: |
| |
| >>> x = {'empty_list': []} |
| >>> y = MultiDict() |
| >>> y.update(x) |
| >>> y |
| MultiDict([]) |
| """ |
| for key, value in iter_multi_items(mapping): |
| MultiDict.add(self, key, value) |
|
|
| def pop(self, key, default=_missing): |
| """Pop the first item for a list on the dict. Afterwards the |
| key is removed from the dict, so additional values are discarded: |
| |
| >>> d = MultiDict({"foo": [1, 2, 3]}) |
| >>> d.pop("foo") |
| 1 |
| >>> "foo" in d |
| False |
| |
| :param key: the key to pop. |
| :param default: if provided the value to return if the key was |
| not in the dictionary. |
| """ |
| try: |
| lst = dict.pop(self, key) |
|
|
| if len(lst) == 0: |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) |
|
|
| return lst[0] |
| except KeyError: |
| if default is not _missing: |
| return default |
|
|
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) from None |
|
|
| def popitem(self): |
| """Pop an item from the dict.""" |
| try: |
| item = dict.popitem(self) |
|
|
| if len(item[1]) == 0: |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(item[0]) |
|
|
| return (item[0], item[1][0]) |
| except KeyError as e: |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(e.args[0]) from None |
|
|
| def poplist(self, key): |
| """Pop the list for a key from the dict. If the key is not in the dict |
| an empty list is returned. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| If the key does no longer exist a list is returned instead of |
| raising an error. |
| """ |
| return dict.pop(self, key, []) |
|
|
| def popitemlist(self): |
| """Pop a ``(key, list)`` tuple from the dict.""" |
| try: |
| return dict.popitem(self) |
| except KeyError as e: |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(e.args[0]) from None |
|
|
| def __copy__(self): |
| return self.copy() |
|
|
| def __deepcopy__(self, memo): |
| return self.deepcopy(memo=memo) |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}({list(self.items(multi=True))!r})" |
|
|
|
|
| class _omd_bucket: |
| """Wraps values in the :class:`OrderedMultiDict`. This makes it |
| possible to keep an order over multiple different keys. It requires |
| a lot of extra memory and slows down access a lot, but makes it |
| possible to access elements in O(1) and iterate in O(n). |
| """ |
|
|
| __slots__ = ("prev", "key", "value", "next") |
|
|
| def __init__(self, omd, key, value): |
| self.prev = omd._last_bucket |
| self.key = key |
| self.value = value |
| self.next = None |
|
|
| if omd._first_bucket is None: |
| omd._first_bucket = self |
| if omd._last_bucket is not None: |
| omd._last_bucket.next = self |
| omd._last_bucket = self |
|
|
| def unlink(self, omd): |
| if self.prev: |
| self.prev.next = self.next |
| if self.next: |
| self.next.prev = self.prev |
| if omd._first_bucket is self: |
| omd._first_bucket = self.next |
| if omd._last_bucket is self: |
| omd._last_bucket = self.prev |
|
|
|
|
| class OrderedMultiDict(MultiDict): |
| """Works like a regular :class:`MultiDict` but preserves the |
| order of the fields. To convert the ordered multi dict into a |
| list you can use the :meth:`items` method and pass it ``multi=True``. |
| |
| In general an :class:`OrderedMultiDict` is an order of magnitude |
| slower than a :class:`MultiDict`. |
| |
| .. admonition:: note |
| |
| Due to a limitation in Python you cannot convert an ordered |
| multi dict into a regular dict by using ``dict(multidict)``. |
| Instead you have to use the :meth:`to_dict` method, otherwise |
| the internal bucket objects are exposed. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, mapping=None): |
| dict.__init__(self) |
| self._first_bucket = self._last_bucket = None |
| if mapping is not None: |
| OrderedMultiDict.update(self, mapping) |
|
|
| def __eq__(self, other): |
| if not isinstance(other, MultiDict): |
| return NotImplemented |
| if isinstance(other, OrderedMultiDict): |
| iter1 = iter(self.items(multi=True)) |
| iter2 = iter(other.items(multi=True)) |
| try: |
| for k1, v1 in iter1: |
| k2, v2 = next(iter2) |
| if k1 != k2 or v1 != v2: |
| return False |
| except StopIteration: |
| return False |
| try: |
| next(iter2) |
| except StopIteration: |
| return True |
| return False |
| if len(self) != len(other): |
| return False |
| for key, values in self.lists(): |
| if other.getlist(key) != values: |
| return False |
| return True |
|
|
| __hash__ = None |
|
|
| def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): |
| return type(self), (list(self.items(multi=True)),) |
|
|
| def __getstate__(self): |
| return list(self.items(multi=True)) |
|
|
| def __setstate__(self, values): |
| dict.clear(self) |
| for key, value in values: |
| self.add(key, value) |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, key): |
| if key in self: |
| return dict.__getitem__(self, key)[0].value |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): |
| self.poplist(key) |
| self.add(key, value) |
|
|
| def __delitem__(self, key): |
| self.pop(key) |
|
|
| def keys(self): |
| return (key for key, value in self.items()) |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| return iter(self.keys()) |
|
|
| def values(self): |
| return (value for key, value in self.items()) |
|
|
| def items(self, multi=False): |
| ptr = self._first_bucket |
| if multi: |
| while ptr is not None: |
| yield ptr.key, ptr.value |
| ptr = ptr.next |
| else: |
| returned_keys = set() |
| while ptr is not None: |
| if ptr.key not in returned_keys: |
| returned_keys.add(ptr.key) |
| yield ptr.key, ptr.value |
| ptr = ptr.next |
|
|
| def lists(self): |
| returned_keys = set() |
| ptr = self._first_bucket |
| while ptr is not None: |
| if ptr.key not in returned_keys: |
| yield ptr.key, self.getlist(ptr.key) |
| returned_keys.add(ptr.key) |
| ptr = ptr.next |
|
|
| def listvalues(self): |
| for _key, values in self.lists(): |
| yield values |
|
|
| def add(self, key, value): |
| dict.setdefault(self, key, []).append(_omd_bucket(self, key, value)) |
|
|
| def getlist(self, key, type=None): |
| try: |
| rv = dict.__getitem__(self, key) |
| except KeyError: |
| return [] |
| if type is None: |
| return [x.value for x in rv] |
| result = [] |
| for item in rv: |
| try: |
| result.append(type(item.value)) |
| except ValueError: |
| pass |
| return result |
|
|
| def setlist(self, key, new_list): |
| self.poplist(key) |
| for value in new_list: |
| self.add(key, value) |
|
|
| def setlistdefault(self, key, default_list=None): |
| raise TypeError("setlistdefault is unsupported for ordered multi dicts") |
|
|
| def update(self, mapping): |
| for key, value in iter_multi_items(mapping): |
| OrderedMultiDict.add(self, key, value) |
|
|
| def poplist(self, key): |
| buckets = dict.pop(self, key, ()) |
| for bucket in buckets: |
| bucket.unlink(self) |
| return [x.value for x in buckets] |
|
|
| def pop(self, key, default=_missing): |
| try: |
| buckets = dict.pop(self, key) |
| except KeyError: |
| if default is not _missing: |
| return default |
|
|
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) from None |
|
|
| for bucket in buckets: |
| bucket.unlink(self) |
|
|
| return buckets[0].value |
|
|
| def popitem(self): |
| try: |
| key, buckets = dict.popitem(self) |
| except KeyError as e: |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(e.args[0]) from None |
|
|
| for bucket in buckets: |
| bucket.unlink(self) |
|
|
| return key, buckets[0].value |
|
|
| def popitemlist(self): |
| try: |
| key, buckets = dict.popitem(self) |
| except KeyError as e: |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(e.args[0]) from None |
|
|
| for bucket in buckets: |
| bucket.unlink(self) |
|
|
| return key, [x.value for x in buckets] |
|
|
|
|
| def _options_header_vkw(value, kw): |
| return http.dump_options_header( |
| value, {k.replace("_", "-"): v for k, v in kw.items()} |
| ) |
|
|
|
|
| def _unicodify_header_value(value): |
| if isinstance(value, bytes): |
| value = value.decode("latin-1") |
| if not isinstance(value, str): |
| value = str(value) |
| return value |
|
|
|
|
| class Headers: |
| """An object that stores some headers. It has a dict-like interface, |
| but is ordered, can store the same key multiple times, and iterating |
| yields ``(key, value)`` pairs instead of only keys. |
| |
| This data structure is useful if you want a nicer way to handle WSGI |
| headers which are stored as tuples in a list. |
| |
| From Werkzeug 0.3 onwards, the :exc:`KeyError` raised by this class is |
| also a subclass of the :class:`~exceptions.BadRequest` HTTP exception |
| and will render a page for a ``400 BAD REQUEST`` if caught in a |
| catch-all for HTTP exceptions. |
| |
| Headers is mostly compatible with the Python :class:`wsgiref.headers.Headers` |
| class, with the exception of `__getitem__`. :mod:`wsgiref` will return |
| `None` for ``headers['missing']``, whereas :class:`Headers` will raise |
| a :class:`KeyError`. |
| |
| To create a new ``Headers`` object, pass it a list, dict, or |
| other ``Headers`` object with default values. These values are |
| validated the same way values added later are. |
| |
| :param defaults: The list of default values for the :class:`Headers`. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 |
| Default values are validated the same as values added later. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.9 |
| This data structure now stores unicode values similar to how the |
| multi dicts do it. The main difference is that bytes can be set as |
| well which will automatically be latin1 decoded. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.9 |
| The :meth:`linked` function was removed without replacement as it |
| was an API that does not support the changes to the encoding model. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, defaults=None): |
| self._list = [] |
| if defaults is not None: |
| self.extend(defaults) |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, key, _get_mode=False): |
| if not _get_mode: |
| if isinstance(key, int): |
| return self._list[key] |
| elif isinstance(key, slice): |
| return self.__class__(self._list[key]) |
| if not isinstance(key, str): |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) |
| ikey = key.lower() |
| for k, v in self._list: |
| if k.lower() == ikey: |
| return v |
| |
| |
| |
| if _get_mode: |
| raise KeyError() |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) |
|
|
| def __eq__(self, other): |
| def lowered(item): |
| return (item[0].lower(),) + item[1:] |
|
|
| return other.__class__ is self.__class__ and set( |
| map(lowered, other._list) |
| ) == set(map(lowered, self._list)) |
|
|
| __hash__ = None |
|
|
| def get(self, key, default=None, type=None, as_bytes=False): |
| """Return the default value if the requested data doesn't exist. |
| If `type` is provided and is a callable it should convert the value, |
| return it or raise a :exc:`ValueError` if that is not possible. In |
| this case the function will return the default as if the value was not |
| found: |
| |
| >>> d = Headers([('Content-Length', '42')]) |
| >>> d.get('Content-Length', type=int) |
| 42 |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| Added support for `as_bytes`. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :param default: The default value to be returned if the key can't |
| be looked up. If not further specified `None` is |
| returned. |
| :param type: A callable that is used to cast the value in the |
| :class:`Headers`. If a :exc:`ValueError` is raised |
| by this callable the default value is returned. |
| :param as_bytes: return bytes instead of strings. |
| """ |
| try: |
| rv = self.__getitem__(key, _get_mode=True) |
| except KeyError: |
| return default |
| if as_bytes: |
| rv = rv.encode("latin1") |
| if type is None: |
| return rv |
| try: |
| return type(rv) |
| except ValueError: |
| return default |
|
|
| def getlist(self, key, type=None, as_bytes=False): |
| """Return the list of items for a given key. If that key is not in the |
| :class:`Headers`, the return value will be an empty list. Just like |
| :meth:`get`, :meth:`getlist` accepts a `type` parameter. All items will |
| be converted with the callable defined there. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.9 |
| Added support for `as_bytes`. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| :param type: A callable that is used to cast the value in the |
| :class:`Headers`. If a :exc:`ValueError` is raised |
| by this callable the value will be removed from the list. |
| :return: a :class:`list` of all the values for the key. |
| :param as_bytes: return bytes instead of strings. |
| """ |
| ikey = key.lower() |
| result = [] |
| for k, v in self: |
| if k.lower() == ikey: |
| if as_bytes: |
| v = v.encode("latin1") |
| if type is not None: |
| try: |
| v = type(v) |
| except ValueError: |
| continue |
| result.append(v) |
| return result |
|
|
| def get_all(self, name): |
| """Return a list of all the values for the named field. |
| |
| This method is compatible with the :mod:`wsgiref` |
| :meth:`~wsgiref.headers.Headers.get_all` method. |
| """ |
| return self.getlist(name) |
|
|
| def items(self, lower=False): |
| for key, value in self: |
| if lower: |
| key = key.lower() |
| yield key, value |
|
|
| def keys(self, lower=False): |
| for key, _ in self.items(lower): |
| yield key |
|
|
| def values(self): |
| for _, value in self.items(): |
| yield value |
|
|
| def extend(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Extend headers in this object with items from another object |
| containing header items as well as keyword arguments. |
| |
| To replace existing keys instead of extending, use |
| :meth:`update` instead. |
| |
| If provided, the first argument can be another :class:`Headers` |
| object, a :class:`MultiDict`, :class:`dict`, or iterable of |
| pairs. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| Support :class:`MultiDict`. Allow passing ``kwargs``. |
| """ |
| if len(args) > 1: |
| raise TypeError(f"update expected at most 1 arguments, got {len(args)}") |
|
|
| if args: |
| for key, value in iter_multi_items(args[0]): |
| self.add(key, value) |
|
|
| for key, value in iter_multi_items(kwargs): |
| self.add(key, value) |
|
|
| def __delitem__(self, key, _index_operation=True): |
| if _index_operation and isinstance(key, (int, slice)): |
| del self._list[key] |
| return |
| key = key.lower() |
| new = [] |
| for k, v in self._list: |
| if k.lower() != key: |
| new.append((k, v)) |
| self._list[:] = new |
|
|
| def remove(self, key): |
| """Remove a key. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be removed. |
| """ |
| return self.__delitem__(key, _index_operation=False) |
|
|
| def pop(self, key=None, default=_missing): |
| """Removes and returns a key or index. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be popped. If this is an integer the item at |
| that position is removed, if it's a string the value for |
| that key is. If the key is omitted or `None` the last |
| item is removed. |
| :return: an item. |
| """ |
| if key is None: |
| return self._list.pop() |
| if isinstance(key, int): |
| return self._list.pop(key) |
| try: |
| rv = self[key] |
| self.remove(key) |
| except KeyError: |
| if default is not _missing: |
| return default |
| raise |
| return rv |
|
|
| def popitem(self): |
| """Removes a key or index and returns a (key, value) item.""" |
| return self.pop() |
|
|
| def __contains__(self, key): |
| """Check if a key is present.""" |
| try: |
| self.__getitem__(key, _get_mode=True) |
| except KeyError: |
| return False |
| return True |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| """Yield ``(key, value)`` tuples.""" |
| return iter(self._list) |
|
|
| def __len__(self): |
| return len(self._list) |
|
|
| def add(self, _key, _value, **kw): |
| """Add a new header tuple to the list. |
| |
| Keyword arguments can specify additional parameters for the header |
| value, with underscores converted to dashes:: |
| |
| >>> d = Headers() |
| >>> d.add('Content-Type', 'text/plain') |
| >>> d.add('Content-Disposition', 'attachment', filename='foo.png') |
| |
| The keyword argument dumping uses :func:`dump_options_header` |
| behind the scenes. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.4.1 |
| keyword arguments were added for :mod:`wsgiref` compatibility. |
| """ |
| if kw: |
| _value = _options_header_vkw(_value, kw) |
| _key = _unicodify_header_value(_key) |
| _value = _unicodify_header_value(_value) |
| self._validate_value(_value) |
| self._list.append((_key, _value)) |
|
|
| def _validate_value(self, value): |
| if not isinstance(value, str): |
| raise TypeError("Value should be a string.") |
| if "\n" in value or "\r" in value: |
| raise ValueError( |
| "Detected newline in header value. This is " |
| "a potential security problem" |
| ) |
|
|
| def add_header(self, _key, _value, **_kw): |
| """Add a new header tuple to the list. |
| |
| An alias for :meth:`add` for compatibility with the :mod:`wsgiref` |
| :meth:`~wsgiref.headers.Headers.add_header` method. |
| """ |
| self.add(_key, _value, **_kw) |
|
|
| def clear(self): |
| """Clears all headers.""" |
| del self._list[:] |
|
|
| def set(self, _key, _value, **kw): |
| """Remove all header tuples for `key` and add a new one. The newly |
| added key either appears at the end of the list if there was no |
| entry or replaces the first one. |
| |
| Keyword arguments can specify additional parameters for the header |
| value, with underscores converted to dashes. See :meth:`add` for |
| more information. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.6.1 |
| :meth:`set` now accepts the same arguments as :meth:`add`. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be inserted. |
| :param value: The value to be inserted. |
| """ |
| if kw: |
| _value = _options_header_vkw(_value, kw) |
| _key = _unicodify_header_value(_key) |
| _value = _unicodify_header_value(_value) |
| self._validate_value(_value) |
| if not self._list: |
| self._list.append((_key, _value)) |
| return |
| listiter = iter(self._list) |
| ikey = _key.lower() |
| for idx, (old_key, _old_value) in enumerate(listiter): |
| if old_key.lower() == ikey: |
| |
| self._list[idx] = (_key, _value) |
| break |
| else: |
| self._list.append((_key, _value)) |
| return |
| self._list[idx + 1 :] = [t for t in listiter if t[0].lower() != ikey] |
|
|
| def setlist(self, key, values): |
| """Remove any existing values for a header and add new ones. |
| |
| :param key: The header key to set. |
| :param values: An iterable of values to set for the key. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
| """ |
| if values: |
| values_iter = iter(values) |
| self.set(key, next(values_iter)) |
|
|
| for value in values_iter: |
| self.add(key, value) |
| else: |
| self.remove(key) |
|
|
| def setdefault(self, key, default): |
| """Return the first value for the key if it is in the headers, |
| otherwise set the header to the value given by ``default`` and |
| return that. |
| |
| :param key: The header key to get. |
| :param default: The value to set for the key if it is not in the |
| headers. |
| """ |
| if key in self: |
| return self[key] |
|
|
| self.set(key, default) |
| return default |
|
|
| def setlistdefault(self, key, default): |
| """Return the list of values for the key if it is in the |
| headers, otherwise set the header to the list of values given |
| by ``default`` and return that. |
| |
| Unlike :meth:`MultiDict.setlistdefault`, modifying the returned |
| list will not affect the headers. |
| |
| :param key: The header key to get. |
| :param default: An iterable of values to set for the key if it |
| is not in the headers. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
| """ |
| if key not in self: |
| self.setlist(key, default) |
|
|
| return self.getlist(key) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): |
| """Like :meth:`set` but also supports index/slice based setting.""" |
| if isinstance(key, (slice, int)): |
| if isinstance(key, int): |
| value = [value] |
| value = [ |
| (_unicodify_header_value(k), _unicodify_header_value(v)) |
| for (k, v) in value |
| ] |
| for (_, v) in value: |
| self._validate_value(v) |
| if isinstance(key, int): |
| self._list[key] = value[0] |
| else: |
| self._list[key] = value |
| else: |
| self.set(key, value) |
|
|
| def update(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Replace headers in this object with items from another |
| headers object and keyword arguments. |
| |
| To extend existing keys instead of replacing, use :meth:`extend` |
| instead. |
| |
| If provided, the first argument can be another :class:`Headers` |
| object, a :class:`MultiDict`, :class:`dict`, or iterable of |
| pairs. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0 |
| """ |
| if len(args) > 1: |
| raise TypeError(f"update expected at most 1 arguments, got {len(args)}") |
|
|
| if args: |
| mapping = args[0] |
|
|
| if isinstance(mapping, (Headers, MultiDict)): |
| for key in mapping.keys(): |
| self.setlist(key, mapping.getlist(key)) |
| elif isinstance(mapping, dict): |
| for key, value in mapping.items(): |
| if isinstance(value, (list, tuple)): |
| self.setlist(key, value) |
| else: |
| self.set(key, value) |
| else: |
| for key, value in mapping: |
| self.set(key, value) |
|
|
| for key, value in kwargs.items(): |
| if isinstance(value, (list, tuple)): |
| self.setlist(key, value) |
| else: |
| self.set(key, value) |
|
|
| def to_wsgi_list(self): |
| """Convert the headers into a list suitable for WSGI. |
| |
| :return: list |
| """ |
| return list(self) |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| return self.__class__(self._list) |
|
|
| def __copy__(self): |
| return self.copy() |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| """Returns formatted headers suitable for HTTP transmission.""" |
| strs = [] |
| for key, value in self.to_wsgi_list(): |
| strs.append(f"{key}: {value}") |
| strs.append("\r\n") |
| return "\r\n".join(strs) |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}({list(self)!r})" |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableHeadersMixin: |
| """Makes a :class:`Headers` immutable. We do not mark them as |
| hashable though since the only usecase for this datastructure |
| in Werkzeug is a view on a mutable structure. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| |
| :private: |
| """ |
|
|
| def __delitem__(self, key, **kwargs): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def set(self, _key, _value, **kw): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def setlist(self, key, values): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def add(self, _key, _value, **kw): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def add_header(self, _key, _value, **_kw): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def remove(self, key): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def extend(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def update(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def insert(self, pos, value): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def pop(self, key=None, default=_missing): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def popitem(self): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def setdefault(self, key, default): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
| def setlistdefault(self, key, default): |
| is_immutable(self) |
|
|
|
|
| class EnvironHeaders(ImmutableHeadersMixin, Headers): |
| """Read only version of the headers from a WSGI environment. This |
| provides the same interface as `Headers` and is constructed from |
| a WSGI environment. |
| |
| From Werkzeug 0.3 onwards, the `KeyError` raised by this class is also a |
| subclass of the :exc:`~exceptions.BadRequest` HTTP exception and will |
| render a page for a ``400 BAD REQUEST`` if caught in a catch-all for |
| HTTP exceptions. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, environ): |
| self.environ = environ |
|
|
| def __eq__(self, other): |
| return self.environ is other.environ |
|
|
| __hash__ = None |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, key, _get_mode=False): |
| |
| |
| if not isinstance(key, str): |
| raise KeyError(key) |
| key = key.upper().replace("-", "_") |
| if key in ("CONTENT_TYPE", "CONTENT_LENGTH"): |
| return _unicodify_header_value(self.environ[key]) |
| return _unicodify_header_value(self.environ[f"HTTP_{key}"]) |
|
|
| def __len__(self): |
| |
| |
| return len(list(iter(self))) |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| for key, value in self.environ.items(): |
| if key.startswith("HTTP_") and key not in ( |
| "HTTP_CONTENT_TYPE", |
| "HTTP_CONTENT_LENGTH", |
| ): |
| yield ( |
| key[5:].replace("_", "-").title(), |
| _unicodify_header_value(value), |
| ) |
| elif key in ("CONTENT_TYPE", "CONTENT_LENGTH") and value: |
| yield (key.replace("_", "-").title(), _unicodify_header_value(value)) |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| raise TypeError(f"cannot create {type(self).__name__!r} copies") |
|
|
|
|
| class CombinedMultiDict(ImmutableMultiDictMixin, MultiDict): |
| """A read only :class:`MultiDict` that you can pass multiple :class:`MultiDict` |
| instances as sequence and it will combine the return values of all wrapped |
| dicts: |
| |
| >>> from werkzeug.datastructures import CombinedMultiDict, MultiDict |
| >>> post = MultiDict([('foo', 'bar')]) |
| >>> get = MultiDict([('blub', 'blah')]) |
| >>> combined = CombinedMultiDict([get, post]) |
| >>> combined['foo'] |
| 'bar' |
| >>> combined['blub'] |
| 'blah' |
| |
| This works for all read operations and will raise a `TypeError` for |
| methods that usually change data which isn't possible. |
| |
| From Werkzeug 0.3 onwards, the `KeyError` raised by this class is also a |
| subclass of the :exc:`~exceptions.BadRequest` HTTP exception and will |
| render a page for a ``400 BAD REQUEST`` if caught in a catch-all for HTTP |
| exceptions. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): |
| return type(self), (self.dicts,) |
|
|
| def __init__(self, dicts=None): |
| self.dicts = list(dicts) or [] |
|
|
| @classmethod |
| def fromkeys(cls, keys, value=None): |
| raise TypeError(f"cannot create {cls.__name__!r} instances by fromkeys") |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, key): |
| for d in self.dicts: |
| if key in d: |
| return d[key] |
| raise exceptions.BadRequestKeyError(key) |
|
|
| def get(self, key, default=None, type=None): |
| for d in self.dicts: |
| if key in d: |
| if type is not None: |
| try: |
| return type(d[key]) |
| except ValueError: |
| continue |
| return d[key] |
| return default |
|
|
| def getlist(self, key, type=None): |
| rv = [] |
| for d in self.dicts: |
| rv.extend(d.getlist(key, type)) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def _keys_impl(self): |
| """This function exists so __len__ can be implemented more efficiently, |
| saving one list creation from an iterator. |
| """ |
| rv = set() |
| rv.update(*self.dicts) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def keys(self): |
| return self._keys_impl() |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| return iter(self.keys()) |
|
|
| def items(self, multi=False): |
| found = set() |
| for d in self.dicts: |
| for key, value in d.items(multi): |
| if multi: |
| yield key, value |
| elif key not in found: |
| found.add(key) |
| yield key, value |
|
|
| def values(self): |
| for _key, value in self.items(): |
| yield value |
|
|
| def lists(self): |
| rv = {} |
| for d in self.dicts: |
| for key, values in d.lists(): |
| rv.setdefault(key, []).extend(values) |
| return list(rv.items()) |
|
|
| def listvalues(self): |
| return (x[1] for x in self.lists()) |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| """Return a shallow mutable copy of this object. |
| |
| This returns a :class:`MultiDict` representing the data at the |
| time of copying. The copy will no longer reflect changes to the |
| wrapped dicts. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.15 |
| Return a mutable :class:`MultiDict`. |
| """ |
| return MultiDict(self) |
|
|
| def to_dict(self, flat=True): |
| """Return the contents as regular dict. If `flat` is `True` the |
| returned dict will only have the first item present, if `flat` is |
| `False` all values will be returned as lists. |
| |
| :param flat: If set to `False` the dict returned will have lists |
| with all the values in it. Otherwise it will only |
| contain the first item for each key. |
| :return: a :class:`dict` |
| """ |
| if flat: |
| return dict(self.items()) |
|
|
| return dict(self.lists()) |
|
|
| def __len__(self): |
| return len(self._keys_impl()) |
|
|
| def __contains__(self, key): |
| for d in self.dicts: |
| if key in d: |
| return True |
| return False |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}({self.dicts!r})" |
|
|
|
|
| class FileMultiDict(MultiDict): |
| """A special :class:`MultiDict` that has convenience methods to add |
| files to it. This is used for :class:`EnvironBuilder` and generally |
| useful for unittesting. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| """ |
|
|
| def add_file(self, name, file, filename=None, content_type=None): |
| """Adds a new file to the dict. `file` can be a file name or |
| a :class:`file`-like or a :class:`FileStorage` object. |
| |
| :param name: the name of the field. |
| :param file: a filename or :class:`file`-like object |
| :param filename: an optional filename |
| :param content_type: an optional content type |
| """ |
| if isinstance(file, FileStorage): |
| value = file |
| else: |
| if isinstance(file, str): |
| if filename is None: |
| filename = file |
| file = open(file, "rb") |
| if filename and content_type is None: |
| content_type = ( |
| mimetypes.guess_type(filename)[0] or "application/octet-stream" |
| ) |
| value = FileStorage(file, filename, name, content_type) |
|
|
| self.add(name, value) |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableDict(ImmutableDictMixin, dict): |
| """An immutable :class:`dict`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| """ |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}({dict.__repr__(self)})" |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| """Return a shallow mutable copy of this object. Keep in mind that |
| the standard library's :func:`copy` function is a no-op for this class |
| like for any other python immutable type (eg: :class:`tuple`). |
| """ |
| return dict(self) |
|
|
| def __copy__(self): |
| return self |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableMultiDict(ImmutableMultiDictMixin, MultiDict): |
| """An immutable :class:`MultiDict`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| """ |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| """Return a shallow mutable copy of this object. Keep in mind that |
| the standard library's :func:`copy` function is a no-op for this class |
| like for any other python immutable type (eg: :class:`tuple`). |
| """ |
| return MultiDict(self) |
|
|
| def __copy__(self): |
| return self |
|
|
|
|
| class ImmutableOrderedMultiDict(ImmutableMultiDictMixin, OrderedMultiDict): |
| """An immutable :class:`OrderedMultiDict`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
| """ |
|
|
| def _iter_hashitems(self): |
| return enumerate(self.items(multi=True)) |
|
|
| def copy(self): |
| """Return a shallow mutable copy of this object. Keep in mind that |
| the standard library's :func:`copy` function is a no-op for this class |
| like for any other python immutable type (eg: :class:`tuple`). |
| """ |
| return OrderedMultiDict(self) |
|
|
| def __copy__(self): |
| return self |
|
|
|
|
| class Accept(ImmutableList): |
| """An :class:`Accept` object is just a list subclass for lists of |
| ``(value, quality)`` tuples. It is automatically sorted by specificity |
| and quality. |
| |
| All :class:`Accept` objects work similar to a list but provide extra |
| functionality for working with the data. Containment checks are |
| normalized to the rules of that header: |
| |
| >>> a = CharsetAccept([('ISO-8859-1', 1), ('utf-8', 0.7)]) |
| >>> a.best |
| 'ISO-8859-1' |
| >>> 'iso-8859-1' in a |
| True |
| >>> 'UTF8' in a |
| True |
| >>> 'utf7' in a |
| False |
| |
| To get the quality for an item you can use normal item lookup: |
| |
| >>> print a['utf-8'] |
| 0.7 |
| >>> a['utf7'] |
| 0 |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| :class:`Accept` objects are forced immutable now. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0.0 |
| :class:`Accept` internal values are no longer ordered |
| alphabetically for equal quality tags. Instead the initial |
| order is preserved. |
| |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, values=()): |
| if values is None: |
| list.__init__(self) |
| self.provided = False |
| elif isinstance(values, Accept): |
| self.provided = values.provided |
| list.__init__(self, values) |
| else: |
| self.provided = True |
| values = sorted( |
| values, key=lambda x: (self._specificity(x[0]), x[1]), reverse=True |
| ) |
| list.__init__(self, values) |
|
|
| def _specificity(self, value): |
| """Returns a tuple describing the value's specificity.""" |
| return (value != "*",) |
|
|
| def _value_matches(self, value, item): |
| """Check if a value matches a given accept item.""" |
| return item == "*" or item.lower() == value.lower() |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, key): |
| """Besides index lookup (getting item n) you can also pass it a string |
| to get the quality for the item. If the item is not in the list, the |
| returned quality is ``0``. |
| """ |
| if isinstance(key, str): |
| return self.quality(key) |
| return list.__getitem__(self, key) |
|
|
| def quality(self, key): |
| """Returns the quality of the key. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
| In previous versions you had to use the item-lookup syntax |
| (eg: ``obj[key]`` instead of ``obj.quality(key)``) |
| """ |
| for item, quality in self: |
| if self._value_matches(key, item): |
| return quality |
| return 0 |
|
|
| def __contains__(self, value): |
| for item, _quality in self: |
| if self._value_matches(value, item): |
| return True |
| return False |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| pairs_str = ", ".join(f"({x!r}, {y})" for x, y in self) |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}([{pairs_str}])" |
|
|
| def index(self, key): |
| """Get the position of an entry or raise :exc:`ValueError`. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| This used to raise :exc:`IndexError`, which was inconsistent |
| with the list API. |
| """ |
| if isinstance(key, str): |
| for idx, (item, _quality) in enumerate(self): |
| if self._value_matches(key, item): |
| return idx |
| raise ValueError(key) |
| return list.index(self, key) |
|
|
| def find(self, key): |
| """Get the position of an entry or return -1. |
| |
| :param key: The key to be looked up. |
| """ |
| try: |
| return self.index(key) |
| except ValueError: |
| return -1 |
|
|
| def values(self): |
| """Iterate over all values.""" |
| for item in self: |
| yield item[0] |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert the header set into an HTTP header string.""" |
| result = [] |
| for value, quality in self: |
| if quality != 1: |
| value = f"{value};q={quality}" |
| result.append(value) |
| return ",".join(result) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def _best_single_match(self, match): |
| for client_item, quality in self: |
| if self._value_matches(match, client_item): |
| |
| return client_item, quality |
| return None |
|
|
| def best_match(self, matches, default=None): |
| """Returns the best match from a list of possible matches based |
| on the specificity and quality of the client. If two items have the |
| same quality and specificity, the one is returned that comes first. |
| |
| :param matches: a list of matches to check for |
| :param default: the value that is returned if none match |
| """ |
| result = default |
| best_quality = -1 |
| best_specificity = (-1,) |
| for server_item in matches: |
| match = self._best_single_match(server_item) |
| if not match: |
| continue |
| client_item, quality = match |
| specificity = self._specificity(client_item) |
| if quality <= 0 or quality < best_quality: |
| continue |
| |
| if quality > best_quality or specificity > best_specificity: |
| result = server_item |
| best_quality = quality |
| best_specificity = specificity |
| return result |
|
|
| @property |
| def best(self): |
| """The best match as value.""" |
| if self: |
| return self[0][0] |
|
|
|
|
| _mime_split_re = re.compile(r"/|(?:\s*;\s*)") |
|
|
|
|
| def _normalize_mime(value): |
| return _mime_split_re.split(value.lower()) |
|
|
|
|
| class MIMEAccept(Accept): |
| """Like :class:`Accept` but with special methods and behavior for |
| mimetypes. |
| """ |
|
|
| def _specificity(self, value): |
| return tuple(x != "*" for x in _mime_split_re.split(value)) |
|
|
| def _value_matches(self, value, item): |
| |
| if "/" not in item: |
| return False |
|
|
| |
| |
| if "/" not in value: |
| raise ValueError(f"invalid mimetype {value!r}") |
|
|
| |
| normalized_value = _normalize_mime(value) |
| value_type, value_subtype = normalized_value[:2] |
| value_params = sorted(normalized_value[2:]) |
|
|
| |
| if value_type == "*" and value_subtype != "*": |
| raise ValueError(f"invalid mimetype {value!r}") |
|
|
| |
| normalized_item = _normalize_mime(item) |
| item_type, item_subtype = normalized_item[:2] |
| item_params = sorted(normalized_item[2:]) |
|
|
| |
| if item_type == "*" and item_subtype != "*": |
| return False |
|
|
| return ( |
| (item_type == "*" and item_subtype == "*") |
| or (value_type == "*" and value_subtype == "*") |
| ) or ( |
| item_type == value_type |
| and ( |
| item_subtype == "*" |
| or value_subtype == "*" |
| or (item_subtype == value_subtype and item_params == value_params) |
| ) |
| ) |
|
|
| @property |
| def accept_html(self): |
| """True if this object accepts HTML.""" |
| return ( |
| "text/html" in self or "application/xhtml+xml" in self or self.accept_xhtml |
| ) |
|
|
| @property |
| def accept_xhtml(self): |
| """True if this object accepts XHTML.""" |
| return "application/xhtml+xml" in self or "application/xml" in self |
|
|
| @property |
| def accept_json(self): |
| """True if this object accepts JSON.""" |
| return "application/json" in self |
|
|
|
|
| _locale_delim_re = re.compile(r"[_-]") |
|
|
|
|
| def _normalize_lang(value): |
| """Process a language tag for matching.""" |
| return _locale_delim_re.split(value.lower()) |
|
|
|
|
| class LanguageAccept(Accept): |
| """Like :class:`Accept` but with normalization for language tags.""" |
|
|
| def _value_matches(self, value, item): |
| return item == "*" or _normalize_lang(value) == _normalize_lang(item) |
|
|
| def best_match(self, matches, default=None): |
| """Given a list of supported values, finds the best match from |
| the list of accepted values. |
| |
| Language tags are normalized for the purpose of matching, but |
| are returned unchanged. |
| |
| If no exact match is found, this will fall back to matching |
| the first subtag (primary language only), first with the |
| accepted values then with the match values. This partial is not |
| applied to any other language subtags. |
| |
| The default is returned if no exact or fallback match is found. |
| |
| :param matches: A list of supported languages to find a match. |
| :param default: The value that is returned if none match. |
| """ |
| |
| |
| result = super().best_match(matches) |
|
|
| if result is not None: |
| return result |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| fallback = Accept( |
| [(_locale_delim_re.split(item[0], 1)[0], item[1]) for item in self] |
| ) |
| result = fallback.best_match(matches) |
|
|
| if result is not None: |
| return result |
|
|
| |
| |
| fallback_matches = [_locale_delim_re.split(item, 1)[0] for item in matches] |
| result = super().best_match(fallback_matches) |
|
|
| |
| |
| if result is not None: |
| return next(item for item in matches if item.startswith(result)) |
|
|
| return default |
|
|
|
|
| class CharsetAccept(Accept): |
| """Like :class:`Accept` but with normalization for charsets.""" |
|
|
| def _value_matches(self, value, item): |
| def _normalize(name): |
| try: |
| return codecs.lookup(name).name |
| except LookupError: |
| return name.lower() |
|
|
| return item == "*" or _normalize(value) == _normalize(item) |
|
|
|
|
| def cache_control_property(key, empty, type): |
| """Return a new property object for a cache header. Useful if you |
| want to add support for a cache extension in a subclass. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.0 |
| Renamed from ``cache_property``. |
| """ |
| return property( |
| lambda x: x._get_cache_value(key, empty, type), |
| lambda x, v: x._set_cache_value(key, v, type), |
| lambda x: x._del_cache_value(key), |
| f"accessor for {key!r}", |
| ) |
|
|
|
|
| class _CacheControl(UpdateDictMixin, dict): |
| """Subclass of a dict that stores values for a Cache-Control header. It |
| has accessors for all the cache-control directives specified in RFC 2616. |
| The class does not differentiate between request and response directives. |
| |
| Because the cache-control directives in the HTTP header use dashes the |
| python descriptors use underscores for that. |
| |
| To get a header of the :class:`CacheControl` object again you can convert |
| the object into a string or call the :meth:`to_header` method. If you plan |
| to subclass it and add your own items have a look at the sourcecode for |
| that class. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 |
| Setting int properties such as ``max_age`` will convert the |
| value to an int. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.4 |
| |
| Setting `no_cache` or `private` to boolean `True` will set the implicit |
| none-value which is ``*``: |
| |
| >>> cc = ResponseCacheControl() |
| >>> cc.no_cache = True |
| >>> cc |
| <ResponseCacheControl 'no-cache'> |
| >>> cc.no_cache |
| '*' |
| >>> cc.no_cache = None |
| >>> cc |
| <ResponseCacheControl ''> |
| |
| In versions before 0.5 the behavior documented here affected the now |
| no longer existing `CacheControl` class. |
| """ |
|
|
| no_cache = cache_control_property("no-cache", "*", None) |
| no_store = cache_control_property("no-store", None, bool) |
| max_age = cache_control_property("max-age", -1, int) |
| no_transform = cache_control_property("no-transform", None, None) |
|
|
| def __init__(self, values=(), on_update=None): |
| dict.__init__(self, values or ()) |
| self.on_update = on_update |
| self.provided = values is not None |
|
|
| def _get_cache_value(self, key, empty, type): |
| """Used internally by the accessor properties.""" |
| if type is bool: |
| return key in self |
| if key in self: |
| value = self[key] |
| if value is None: |
| return empty |
| elif type is not None: |
| try: |
| value = type(value) |
| except ValueError: |
| pass |
| return value |
| return None |
|
|
| def _set_cache_value(self, key, value, type): |
| """Used internally by the accessor properties.""" |
| if type is bool: |
| if value: |
| self[key] = None |
| else: |
| self.pop(key, None) |
| else: |
| if value is None: |
| self.pop(key, None) |
| elif value is True: |
| self[key] = None |
| else: |
| if type is not None: |
| self[key] = type(value) |
| else: |
| self[key] = value |
|
|
| def _del_cache_value(self, key): |
| """Used internally by the accessor properties.""" |
| if key in self: |
| del self[key] |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert the stored values into a cache control header.""" |
| return http.dump_header(self) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| kv_str = " ".join(f"{k}={v!r}" for k, v in sorted(self.items())) |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {kv_str}>" |
|
|
| cache_property = staticmethod(cache_control_property) |
|
|
|
|
| class RequestCacheControl(ImmutableDictMixin, _CacheControl): |
| """A cache control for requests. This is immutable and gives access |
| to all the request-relevant cache control headers. |
| |
| To get a header of the :class:`RequestCacheControl` object again you can |
| convert the object into a string or call the :meth:`to_header` method. If |
| you plan to subclass it and add your own items have a look at the sourcecode |
| for that class. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 |
| Setting int properties such as ``max_age`` will convert the |
| value to an int. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| In previous versions a `CacheControl` class existed that was used |
| both for request and response. |
| """ |
|
|
| max_stale = cache_control_property("max-stale", "*", int) |
| min_fresh = cache_control_property("min-fresh", "*", int) |
| only_if_cached = cache_control_property("only-if-cached", None, bool) |
|
|
|
|
| class ResponseCacheControl(_CacheControl): |
| """A cache control for responses. Unlike :class:`RequestCacheControl` |
| this is mutable and gives access to response-relevant cache control |
| headers. |
| |
| To get a header of the :class:`ResponseCacheControl` object again you can |
| convert the object into a string or call the :meth:`to_header` method. If |
| you plan to subclass it and add your own items have a look at the sourcecode |
| for that class. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.1.1 |
| ``s_maxage`` converts the value to an int. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.1.0 |
| Setting int properties such as ``max_age`` will convert the |
| value to an int. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.5 |
| In previous versions a `CacheControl` class existed that was used |
| both for request and response. |
| """ |
|
|
| public = cache_control_property("public", None, bool) |
| private = cache_control_property("private", "*", None) |
| must_revalidate = cache_control_property("must-revalidate", None, bool) |
| proxy_revalidate = cache_control_property("proxy-revalidate", None, bool) |
| s_maxage = cache_control_property("s-maxage", None, int) |
| immutable = cache_control_property("immutable", None, bool) |
|
|
|
|
| def csp_property(key): |
| """Return a new property object for a content security policy header. |
| Useful if you want to add support for a csp extension in a |
| subclass. |
| """ |
| return property( |
| lambda x: x._get_value(key), |
| lambda x, v: x._set_value(key, v), |
| lambda x: x._del_value(key), |
| f"accessor for {key!r}", |
| ) |
|
|
|
|
| class ContentSecurityPolicy(UpdateDictMixin, dict): |
| """Subclass of a dict that stores values for a Content Security Policy |
| header. It has accessors for all the level 3 policies. |
| |
| Because the csp directives in the HTTP header use dashes the |
| python descriptors use underscores for that. |
| |
| To get a header of the :class:`ContentSecuirtyPolicy` object again |
| you can convert the object into a string or call the |
| :meth:`to_header` method. If you plan to subclass it and add your |
| own items have a look at the sourcecode for that class. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 1.0.0 |
| Support for Content Security Policy headers was added. |
| |
| """ |
|
|
| base_uri = csp_property("base-uri") |
| child_src = csp_property("child-src") |
| connect_src = csp_property("connect-src") |
| default_src = csp_property("default-src") |
| font_src = csp_property("font-src") |
| form_action = csp_property("form-action") |
| frame_ancestors = csp_property("frame-ancestors") |
| frame_src = csp_property("frame-src") |
| img_src = csp_property("img-src") |
| manifest_src = csp_property("manifest-src") |
| media_src = csp_property("media-src") |
| navigate_to = csp_property("navigate-to") |
| object_src = csp_property("object-src") |
| prefetch_src = csp_property("prefetch-src") |
| plugin_types = csp_property("plugin-types") |
| report_to = csp_property("report-to") |
| report_uri = csp_property("report-uri") |
| sandbox = csp_property("sandbox") |
| script_src = csp_property("script-src") |
| script_src_attr = csp_property("script-src-attr") |
| script_src_elem = csp_property("script-src-elem") |
| style_src = csp_property("style-src") |
| style_src_attr = csp_property("style-src-attr") |
| style_src_elem = csp_property("style-src-elem") |
| worker_src = csp_property("worker-src") |
|
|
| def __init__(self, values=(), on_update=None): |
| dict.__init__(self, values or ()) |
| self.on_update = on_update |
| self.provided = values is not None |
|
|
| def _get_value(self, key): |
| """Used internally by the accessor properties.""" |
| return self.get(key) |
|
|
| def _set_value(self, key, value): |
| """Used internally by the accessor properties.""" |
| if value is None: |
| self.pop(key, None) |
| else: |
| self[key] = value |
|
|
| def _del_value(self, key): |
| """Used internally by the accessor properties.""" |
| if key in self: |
| del self[key] |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert the stored values into a cache control header.""" |
| return http.dump_csp_header(self) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| kv_str = " ".join(f"{k}={v!r}" for k, v in sorted(self.items())) |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {kv_str}>" |
|
|
|
|
| class CallbackDict(UpdateDictMixin, dict): |
| """A dict that calls a function passed every time something is changed. |
| The function is passed the dict instance. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, initial=None, on_update=None): |
| dict.__init__(self, initial or ()) |
| self.on_update = on_update |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {dict.__repr__(self)}>" |
|
|
|
|
| class HeaderSet(MutableSet): |
| """Similar to the :class:`ETags` class this implements a set-like structure. |
| Unlike :class:`ETags` this is case insensitive and used for vary, allow, and |
| content-language headers. |
| |
| If not constructed using the :func:`parse_set_header` function the |
| instantiation works like this: |
| |
| >>> hs = HeaderSet(['foo', 'bar', 'baz']) |
| >>> hs |
| HeaderSet(['foo', 'bar', 'baz']) |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, headers=None, on_update=None): |
| self._headers = list(headers or ()) |
| self._set = {x.lower() for x in self._headers} |
| self.on_update = on_update |
|
|
| def add(self, header): |
| """Add a new header to the set.""" |
| self.update((header,)) |
|
|
| def remove(self, header): |
| """Remove a header from the set. This raises an :exc:`KeyError` if the |
| header is not in the set. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| In older versions a :exc:`IndexError` was raised instead of a |
| :exc:`KeyError` if the object was missing. |
| |
| :param header: the header to be removed. |
| """ |
| key = header.lower() |
| if key not in self._set: |
| raise KeyError(header) |
| self._set.remove(key) |
| for idx, key in enumerate(self._headers): |
| if key.lower() == header: |
| del self._headers[idx] |
| break |
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def update(self, iterable): |
| """Add all the headers from the iterable to the set. |
| |
| :param iterable: updates the set with the items from the iterable. |
| """ |
| inserted_any = False |
| for header in iterable: |
| key = header.lower() |
| if key not in self._set: |
| self._headers.append(header) |
| self._set.add(key) |
| inserted_any = True |
| if inserted_any and self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def discard(self, header): |
| """Like :meth:`remove` but ignores errors. |
| |
| :param header: the header to be discarded. |
| """ |
| try: |
| self.remove(header) |
| except KeyError: |
| pass |
|
|
| def find(self, header): |
| """Return the index of the header in the set or return -1 if not found. |
| |
| :param header: the header to be looked up. |
| """ |
| header = header.lower() |
| for idx, item in enumerate(self._headers): |
| if item.lower() == header: |
| return idx |
| return -1 |
|
|
| def index(self, header): |
| """Return the index of the header in the set or raise an |
| :exc:`IndexError`. |
| |
| :param header: the header to be looked up. |
| """ |
| rv = self.find(header) |
| if rv < 0: |
| raise IndexError(header) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def clear(self): |
| """Clear the set.""" |
| self._set.clear() |
| del self._headers[:] |
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def as_set(self, preserve_casing=False): |
| """Return the set as real python set type. When calling this, all |
| the items are converted to lowercase and the ordering is lost. |
| |
| :param preserve_casing: if set to `True` the items in the set returned |
| will have the original case like in the |
| :class:`HeaderSet`, otherwise they will |
| be lowercase. |
| """ |
| if preserve_casing: |
| return set(self._headers) |
| return set(self._set) |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert the header set into an HTTP header string.""" |
| return ", ".join(map(http.quote_header_value, self._headers)) |
|
|
| def __getitem__(self, idx): |
| return self._headers[idx] |
|
|
| def __delitem__(self, idx): |
| rv = self._headers.pop(idx) |
| self._set.remove(rv.lower()) |
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def __setitem__(self, idx, value): |
| old = self._headers[idx] |
| self._set.remove(old.lower()) |
| self._headers[idx] = value |
| self._set.add(value.lower()) |
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def __contains__(self, header): |
| return header.lower() in self._set |
|
|
| def __len__(self): |
| return len(self._set) |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| return iter(self._headers) |
|
|
| def __bool__(self): |
| return bool(self._set) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"{type(self).__name__}({self._headers!r})" |
|
|
|
|
| class ETags(Collection): |
| """A set that can be used to check if one etag is present in a collection |
| of etags. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, strong_etags=None, weak_etags=None, star_tag=False): |
| if not star_tag and strong_etags: |
| self._strong = frozenset(strong_etags) |
| else: |
| self._strong = frozenset() |
|
|
| self._weak = frozenset(weak_etags or ()) |
| self.star_tag = star_tag |
|
|
| def as_set(self, include_weak=False): |
| """Convert the `ETags` object into a python set. Per default all the |
| weak etags are not part of this set.""" |
| rv = set(self._strong) |
| if include_weak: |
| rv.update(self._weak) |
| return rv |
|
|
| def is_weak(self, etag): |
| """Check if an etag is weak.""" |
| return etag in self._weak |
|
|
| def is_strong(self, etag): |
| """Check if an etag is strong.""" |
| return etag in self._strong |
|
|
| def contains_weak(self, etag): |
| """Check if an etag is part of the set including weak and strong tags.""" |
| return self.is_weak(etag) or self.contains(etag) |
|
|
| def contains(self, etag): |
| """Check if an etag is part of the set ignoring weak tags. |
| It is also possible to use the ``in`` operator. |
| """ |
| if self.star_tag: |
| return True |
| return self.is_strong(etag) |
|
|
| def contains_raw(self, etag): |
| """When passed a quoted tag it will check if this tag is part of the |
| set. If the tag is weak it is checked against weak and strong tags, |
| otherwise strong only.""" |
| etag, weak = http.unquote_etag(etag) |
| if weak: |
| return self.contains_weak(etag) |
| return self.contains(etag) |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert the etags set into a HTTP header string.""" |
| if self.star_tag: |
| return "*" |
| return ", ".join( |
| [f'"{x}"' for x in self._strong] + [f'W/"{x}"' for x in self._weak] |
| ) |
|
|
| def __call__(self, etag=None, data=None, include_weak=False): |
| if [etag, data].count(None) != 1: |
| raise TypeError("either tag or data required, but at least one") |
| if etag is None: |
| etag = http.generate_etag(data) |
| if include_weak: |
| if etag in self._weak: |
| return True |
| return etag in self._strong |
|
|
| def __bool__(self): |
| return bool(self.star_tag or self._strong or self._weak) |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __len__(self): |
| return len(self._strong) |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| return iter(self._strong) |
|
|
| def __contains__(self, etag): |
| return self.contains(etag) |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {str(self)!r}>" |
|
|
|
|
| class IfRange: |
| """Very simple object that represents the `If-Range` header in parsed |
| form. It will either have neither a etag or date or one of either but |
| never both. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, etag=None, date=None): |
| |
| |
| self.etag = etag |
| |
| self.date = date |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Converts the object back into an HTTP header.""" |
| if self.date is not None: |
| return http.http_date(self.date) |
| if self.etag is not None: |
| return http.quote_etag(self.etag) |
| return "" |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {str(self)!r}>" |
|
|
|
|
| class Range: |
| """Represents a ``Range`` header. All methods only support only |
| bytes as the unit. Stores a list of ranges if given, but the methods |
| only work if only one range is provided. |
| |
| :raise ValueError: If the ranges provided are invalid. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.15 |
| The ranges passed in are validated. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, units, ranges): |
| |
| self.units = units |
| |
| |
| self.ranges = ranges |
|
|
| for start, end in ranges: |
| if start is None or (end is not None and (start < 0 or start >= end)): |
| raise ValueError(f"{(start, end)} is not a valid range.") |
|
|
| def range_for_length(self, length): |
| """If the range is for bytes, the length is not None and there is |
| exactly one range and it is satisfiable it returns a ``(start, stop)`` |
| tuple, otherwise `None`. |
| """ |
| if self.units != "bytes" or length is None or len(self.ranges) != 1: |
| return None |
| start, end = self.ranges[0] |
| if end is None: |
| end = length |
| if start < 0: |
| start += length |
| if http.is_byte_range_valid(start, end, length): |
| return start, min(end, length) |
| return None |
|
|
| def make_content_range(self, length): |
| """Creates a :class:`~werkzeug.datastructures.ContentRange` object |
| from the current range and given content length. |
| """ |
| rng = self.range_for_length(length) |
| if rng is not None: |
| return ContentRange(self.units, rng[0], rng[1], length) |
| return None |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Converts the object back into an HTTP header.""" |
| ranges = [] |
| for begin, end in self.ranges: |
| if end is None: |
| ranges.append(f"{begin}-" if begin >= 0 else str(begin)) |
| else: |
| ranges.append(f"{begin}-{end - 1}") |
| return f"{self.units}={','.join(ranges)}" |
|
|
| def to_content_range_header(self, length): |
| """Converts the object into `Content-Range` HTTP header, |
| based on given length |
| """ |
| range = self.range_for_length(length) |
| if range is not None: |
| return f"{self.units} {range[0]}-{range[1] - 1}/{length}" |
| return None |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {str(self)!r}>" |
|
|
|
|
| def _callback_property(name): |
| def fget(self): |
| return getattr(self, name) |
|
|
| def fset(self, value): |
| setattr(self, name, value) |
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| return property(fget, fset) |
|
|
|
|
| class ContentRange: |
| """Represents the content range header. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, units, start, stop, length=None, on_update=None): |
| assert http.is_byte_range_valid(start, stop, length), "Bad range provided" |
| self.on_update = on_update |
| self.set(start, stop, length, units) |
|
|
| |
| units = _callback_property("_units") |
| |
| start = _callback_property("_start") |
| |
| |
| stop = _callback_property("_stop") |
| |
| length = _callback_property("_length") |
|
|
| def set(self, start, stop, length=None, units="bytes"): |
| """Simple method to update the ranges.""" |
| assert http.is_byte_range_valid(start, stop, length), "Bad range provided" |
| self._units = units |
| self._start = start |
| self._stop = stop |
| self._length = length |
| if self.on_update is not None: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def unset(self): |
| """Sets the units to `None` which indicates that the header should |
| no longer be used. |
| """ |
| self.set(None, None, units=None) |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| if self.units is None: |
| return "" |
| if self.length is None: |
| length = "*" |
| else: |
| length = self.length |
| if self.start is None: |
| return f"{self.units} */{length}" |
| return f"{self.units} {self.start}-{self.stop - 1}/{length}" |
|
|
| def __bool__(self): |
| return self.units is not None |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {str(self)!r}>" |
|
|
|
|
| class Authorization(ImmutableDictMixin, dict): |
| """Represents an ``Authorization`` header sent by the client. |
| |
| This is returned by |
| :func:`~werkzeug.http.parse_authorization_header`. It can be useful |
| to create the object manually to pass to the test |
| :class:`~werkzeug.test.Client`. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 0.5 |
| This object became immutable. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__(self, auth_type, data=None): |
| dict.__init__(self, data or {}) |
| self.type = auth_type |
|
|
| @property |
| def username(self): |
| """The username transmitted. This is set for both basic and digest |
| auth all the time. |
| """ |
| return self.get("username") |
|
|
| @property |
| def password(self): |
| """When the authentication type is basic this is the password |
| transmitted by the client, else `None`. |
| """ |
| return self.get("password") |
|
|
| @property |
| def realm(self): |
| """This is the server realm sent back for HTTP digest auth.""" |
| return self.get("realm") |
|
|
| @property |
| def nonce(self): |
| """The nonce the server sent for digest auth, sent back by the client. |
| A nonce should be unique for every 401 response for HTTP digest auth. |
| """ |
| return self.get("nonce") |
|
|
| @property |
| def uri(self): |
| """The URI from Request-URI of the Request-Line; duplicated because |
| proxies are allowed to change the Request-Line in transit. HTTP |
| digest auth only. |
| """ |
| return self.get("uri") |
|
|
| @property |
| def nc(self): |
| """The nonce count value transmitted by clients if a qop-header is |
| also transmitted. HTTP digest auth only. |
| """ |
| return self.get("nc") |
|
|
| @property |
| def cnonce(self): |
| """If the server sent a qop-header in the ``WWW-Authenticate`` |
| header, the client has to provide this value for HTTP digest auth. |
| See the RFC for more details. |
| """ |
| return self.get("cnonce") |
|
|
| @property |
| def response(self): |
| """A string of 32 hex digits computed as defined in RFC 2617, which |
| proves that the user knows a password. Digest auth only. |
| """ |
| return self.get("response") |
|
|
| @property |
| def opaque(self): |
| """The opaque header from the server returned unchanged by the client. |
| It is recommended that this string be base64 or hexadecimal data. |
| Digest auth only. |
| """ |
| return self.get("opaque") |
|
|
| @property |
| def qop(self): |
| """Indicates what "quality of protection" the client has applied to |
| the message for HTTP digest auth. Note that this is a single token, |
| not a quoted list of alternatives as in WWW-Authenticate. |
| """ |
| return self.get("qop") |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert to a string value for an ``Authorization`` header. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.0 |
| Added to support passing authorization to the test client. |
| """ |
| if self.type == "basic": |
| value = base64.b64encode( |
| f"{self.username}:{self.password}".encode() |
| ).decode("utf8") |
| return f"Basic {value}" |
|
|
| if self.type == "digest": |
| return f"Digest {http.dump_header(self)}" |
|
|
| raise ValueError(f"Unsupported type {self.type!r}.") |
|
|
|
|
| def auth_property(name, doc=None): |
| """A static helper function for Authentication subclasses to add |
| extra authentication system properties onto a class:: |
| |
| class FooAuthenticate(WWWAuthenticate): |
| special_realm = auth_property('special_realm') |
| |
| For more information have a look at the sourcecode to see how the |
| regular properties (:attr:`realm` etc.) are implemented. |
| """ |
|
|
| def _set_value(self, value): |
| if value is None: |
| self.pop(name, None) |
| else: |
| self[name] = str(value) |
|
|
| return property(lambda x: x.get(name), _set_value, doc=doc) |
|
|
|
|
| def _set_property(name, doc=None): |
| def fget(self): |
| def on_update(header_set): |
| if not header_set and name in self: |
| del self[name] |
| elif header_set: |
| self[name] = header_set.to_header() |
|
|
| return http.parse_set_header(self.get(name), on_update) |
|
|
| return property(fget, doc=doc) |
|
|
|
|
| class WWWAuthenticate(UpdateDictMixin, dict): |
| """Provides simple access to `WWW-Authenticate` headers.""" |
|
|
| |
| _require_quoting = frozenset(["domain", "nonce", "opaque", "realm", "qop"]) |
|
|
| def __init__(self, auth_type=None, values=None, on_update=None): |
| dict.__init__(self, values or ()) |
| if auth_type: |
| self["__auth_type__"] = auth_type |
| self.on_update = on_update |
|
|
| def set_basic(self, realm="authentication required"): |
| """Clear the auth info and enable basic auth.""" |
| dict.clear(self) |
| dict.update(self, {"__auth_type__": "basic", "realm": realm}) |
| if self.on_update: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def set_digest( |
| self, realm, nonce, qop=("auth",), opaque=None, algorithm=None, stale=False |
| ): |
| """Clear the auth info and enable digest auth.""" |
| d = { |
| "__auth_type__": "digest", |
| "realm": realm, |
| "nonce": nonce, |
| "qop": http.dump_header(qop), |
| } |
| if stale: |
| d["stale"] = "TRUE" |
| if opaque is not None: |
| d["opaque"] = opaque |
| if algorithm is not None: |
| d["algorithm"] = algorithm |
| dict.clear(self) |
| dict.update(self, d) |
| if self.on_update: |
| self.on_update(self) |
|
|
| def to_header(self): |
| """Convert the stored values into a WWW-Authenticate header.""" |
| d = dict(self) |
| auth_type = d.pop("__auth_type__", None) or "basic" |
| kv_items = ( |
| (k, http.quote_header_value(v, allow_token=k not in self._require_quoting)) |
| for k, v in d.items() |
| ) |
| kv_string = ", ".join([f"{k}={v}" for k, v in kv_items]) |
| return f"{auth_type.title()} {kv_string}" |
|
|
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.to_header() |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__} {self.to_header()!r}>" |
|
|
| type = auth_property( |
| "__auth_type__", |
| doc="""The type of the auth mechanism. HTTP currently specifies |
| ``Basic`` and ``Digest``.""", |
| ) |
| realm = auth_property( |
| "realm", |
| doc="""A string to be displayed to users so they know which |
| username and password to use. This string should contain at |
| least the name of the host performing the authentication and |
| might additionally indicate the collection of users who might |
| have access.""", |
| ) |
| domain = _set_property( |
| "domain", |
| doc="""A list of URIs that define the protection space. If a URI |
| is an absolute path, it is relative to the canonical root URL of |
| the server being accessed.""", |
| ) |
| nonce = auth_property( |
| "nonce", |
| doc=""" |
| A server-specified data string which should be uniquely generated |
| each time a 401 response is made. It is recommended that this |
| string be base64 or hexadecimal data.""", |
| ) |
| opaque = auth_property( |
| "opaque", |
| doc="""A string of data, specified by the server, which should |
| be returned by the client unchanged in the Authorization header |
| of subsequent requests with URIs in the same protection space. |
| It is recommended that this string be base64 or hexadecimal |
| data.""", |
| ) |
| algorithm = auth_property( |
| "algorithm", |
| doc="""A string indicating a pair of algorithms used to produce |
| the digest and a checksum. If this is not present it is assumed |
| to be "MD5". If the algorithm is not understood, the challenge |
| should be ignored (and a different one used, if there is more |
| than one).""", |
| ) |
| qop = _set_property( |
| "qop", |
| doc="""A set of quality-of-privacy directives such as auth and |
| auth-int.""", |
| ) |
|
|
| @property |
| def stale(self): |
| """A flag, indicating that the previous request from the client |
| was rejected because the nonce value was stale. |
| """ |
| val = self.get("stale") |
| if val is not None: |
| return val.lower() == "true" |
|
|
| @stale.setter |
| def stale(self, value): |
| if value is None: |
| self.pop("stale", None) |
| else: |
| self["stale"] = "TRUE" if value else "FALSE" |
|
|
| auth_property = staticmethod(auth_property) |
|
|
|
|
| class FileStorage: |
| """The :class:`FileStorage` class is a thin wrapper over incoming files. |
| It is used by the request object to represent uploaded files. All the |
| attributes of the wrapper stream are proxied by the file storage so |
| it's possible to do ``storage.read()`` instead of the long form |
| ``storage.stream.read()``. |
| """ |
|
|
| def __init__( |
| self, |
| stream=None, |
| filename=None, |
| name=None, |
| content_type=None, |
| content_length=None, |
| headers=None, |
| ): |
| self.name = name |
| self.stream = stream or BytesIO() |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| if filename is None: |
| filename = getattr(stream, "name", None) |
|
|
| if filename is not None: |
| filename = os.fsdecode(filename) |
|
|
| if filename and filename[0] == "<" and filename[-1] == ">": |
| filename = None |
| else: |
| filename = os.fsdecode(filename) |
|
|
| self.filename = filename |
|
|
| if headers is None: |
| headers = Headers() |
| self.headers = headers |
| if content_type is not None: |
| headers["Content-Type"] = content_type |
| if content_length is not None: |
| headers["Content-Length"] = str(content_length) |
|
|
| def _parse_content_type(self): |
| if not hasattr(self, "_parsed_content_type"): |
| self._parsed_content_type = http.parse_options_header(self.content_type) |
|
|
| @property |
| def content_type(self): |
| """The content-type sent in the header. Usually not available""" |
| return self.headers.get("content-type") |
|
|
| @property |
| def content_length(self): |
| """The content-length sent in the header. Usually not available""" |
| return int(self.headers.get("content-length") or 0) |
|
|
| @property |
| def mimetype(self): |
| """Like :attr:`content_type`, but without parameters (eg, without |
| charset, type etc.) and always lowercase. For example if the content |
| type is ``text/HTML; charset=utf-8`` the mimetype would be |
| ``'text/html'``. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
| self._parse_content_type() |
| return self._parsed_content_type[0].lower() |
|
|
| @property |
| def mimetype_params(self): |
| """The mimetype parameters as dict. For example if the content |
| type is ``text/html; charset=utf-8`` the params would be |
| ``{'charset': 'utf-8'}``. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 0.7 |
| """ |
| self._parse_content_type() |
| return self._parsed_content_type[1] |
|
|
| def save(self, dst, buffer_size=16384): |
| """Save the file to a destination path or file object. If the |
| destination is a file object you have to close it yourself after the |
| call. The buffer size is the number of bytes held in memory during |
| the copy process. It defaults to 16KB. |
| |
| For secure file saving also have a look at :func:`secure_filename`. |
| |
| :param dst: a filename, :class:`os.PathLike`, or open file |
| object to write to. |
| :param buffer_size: Passed as the ``length`` parameter of |
| :func:`shutil.copyfileobj`. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 1.0 |
| Supports :mod:`pathlib`. |
| """ |
| from shutil import copyfileobj |
|
|
| close_dst = False |
|
|
| if hasattr(dst, "__fspath__"): |
| dst = fspath(dst) |
|
|
| if isinstance(dst, str): |
| dst = open(dst, "wb") |
| close_dst = True |
|
|
| try: |
| copyfileobj(self.stream, dst, buffer_size) |
| finally: |
| if close_dst: |
| dst.close() |
|
|
| def close(self): |
| """Close the underlying file if possible.""" |
| try: |
| self.stream.close() |
| except Exception: |
| pass |
|
|
| def __bool__(self): |
| return bool(self.filename) |
|
|
| def __getattr__(self, name): |
| try: |
| return getattr(self.stream, name) |
| except AttributeError: |
| |
| |
| |
| if hasattr(self.stream, "_file"): |
| return getattr(self.stream._file, name) |
| raise |
|
|
| def __iter__(self): |
| return iter(self.stream) |
|
|
| def __repr__(self): |
| return f"<{type(self).__name__}: {self.filename!r} ({self.content_type!r})>" |
|
|
|
|
| |
| from . import http |
|
|