1576 lines
69 KiB
Plaintext
1576 lines
69 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 444
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Title: Python Web3 Interface
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Chris McDonough <chrism@plope.com>,
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Armin Ronacher <armin.ronacher@active-4.com>
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Discussions-To: web-sig@python.org
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Status: Deferred
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Type: Informational
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 19-Jul-2010
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Abstract
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========
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This document specifies a proposed second-generation standard
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interface between web servers and Python web applications or
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frameworks.
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PEP Deferral
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============
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Further exploration of the concepts covered in this PEP has been deferred
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for lack of a current champion interested in promoting the goals of the PEP
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and collecting and incorporating feedback, and with sufficient available
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time to do so effectively.
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Note that since this PEP was first created, :pep:`3333` was created as a more
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incremental update that permitted use of WSGI on Python 3.2+. However, an
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alternative specification that furthers the Python 3 goals of a cleaner
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separation of binary and text data may still be valuable.
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Rationale and Goals
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===================
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This protocol and specification is influenced heavily by the Web
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Services Gateway Interface (WSGI) 1.0 standard described in :pep:`333`.
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The high-level rationale for having any standard that allows
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Python-based web servers and applications to interoperate is outlined
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in :pep:`333`. This document essentially uses :pep:`333` as a template, and
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changes its wording in various places for the purpose of forming a
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different standard.
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Python currently boasts a wide variety of web application frameworks
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which use the WSGI 1.0 protocol. However, due to changes in the
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language, the WSGI 1.0 protocol is not compatible with Python 3. This
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specification describes a standardized WSGI-like protocol that lets
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Python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.1+ applications communicate with web servers.
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Web3 is clearly a WSGI derivative; it only uses a different name than
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"WSGI" in order to indicate that it is not in any way backwards
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compatible.
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Applications and servers which are written to this specification are
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meant to work properly under Python 2.6.X, Python 2.7.X and Python
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3.1+. Neither an application nor a server that implements the Web3
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specification can be easily written which will work under Python 2
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versions earlier than 2.6 nor Python 3 versions earlier than 3.1.
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.. note::
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Whatever Python 3 version fixed http://bugs.python.org/issue4006 so
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``os.environ['foo']`` returns surrogates (ala :pep:`383`) when the
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value of 'foo' cannot be decoded using the current locale instead
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of failing with a KeyError is the *true* minimum Python 3 version.
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In particular, however, Python 3.0 is not supported.
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.. note::
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Python 2.6 is the first Python version that supported an alias for
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``bytes`` and the ``b"foo"`` literal syntax. This is why it is the
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minimum version supported by Web3.
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Explicability and documentability are the main technical drivers for
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the decisions made within the standard.
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Differences from WSGI
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=====================
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- All protocol-specific environment names are prefixed with ``web3.``
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rather than ``wsgi.``, eg. ``web3.input`` rather than
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``wsgi.input``.
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- All values present as environment dictionary *values* are explicitly
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*bytes* instances instead of native strings. (Environment *keys*
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however are native strings, always ``str`` regardless of
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platform).
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- All values returned by an application must be bytes instances,
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including status code, header names and values, and the body.
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- Wherever WSGI 1.0 referred to an ``app_iter``, this specification
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refers to a ``body``.
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- No ``start_response()`` callback (and therefore no ``write()``
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callable nor ``exc_info`` data).
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- The ``readline()`` function of ``web3.input`` must support a size
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hint parameter.
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- The ``read()`` function of ``web3.input`` must be length delimited.
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A call without a size argument must not read more than the content
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length header specifies. In case a content length header is absent
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the stream must not return anything on read. It must never request
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more data than specified from the client.
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- No requirement for middleware to yield an empty string if it needs
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more information from an application to produce output (e.g. no
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"Middleware Handling of Block Boundaries").
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- Filelike objects passed to a "file_wrapper" must have an
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``__iter__`` which returns bytes (never text).
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- ``wsgi.file_wrapper`` is not supported.
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- ``QUERY_STRING``, ``SCRIPT_NAME``, ``PATH_INFO`` values required to
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be placed in environ by server (each as the empty bytes instance if
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no associated value is received in the HTTP request).
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- ``web3.path_info`` and ``web3.script_name`` should be put into the
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Web3 environment, if possible, by the origin Web3 server. When
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available, each is the original, plain 7-bit ASCII, URL-encoded
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variant of its CGI equivalent derived directly from the request URI
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(with %2F segment markers and other meta-characters intact). If the
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server cannot provide one (or both) of these values, it must omit
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the value(s) it cannot provide from the environment.
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- This requirement was removed: "middleware components **must not**
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block iteration waiting for multiple values from an application
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iterable. If the middleware needs to accumulate more data from the
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application before it can produce any output, it **must** yield an
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empty string."
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- ``SERVER_PORT`` must be a bytes instance (not an integer).
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- The server must not inject an additional ``Content-Length`` header
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by guessing the length from the response iterable. This must be set
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by the application itself in all situations.
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- If the origin server advertises that it has the ``web3.async``
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capability, a Web3 application callable used by the server is
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permitted to return a callable that accepts no arguments. When it
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does so, this callable is to be called periodically by the origin
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server until it returns a non-``None`` response, which must be a
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normal Web3 response tuple.
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.. XXX (chrism) Needs a section of its own for explanation.
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Specification Overview
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======================
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The Web3 interface has two sides: the "server" or "gateway" side, and
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the "application" or "framework" side. The server side invokes a
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callable object that is provided by the application side. The
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specifics of how that object is provided are up to the server or
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gateway. It is assumed that some servers or gateways will require an
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application's deployer to write a short script to create an instance
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of the server or gateway, and supply it with the application object.
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Other servers and gateways may use configuration files or other
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mechanisms to specify where an application object should be imported
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from, or otherwise obtained.
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In addition to "pure" servers/gateways and applications/frameworks, it
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is also possible to create "middleware" components that implement both
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sides of this specification. Such components act as an application to
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their containing server, and as a server to a contained application,
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and can be used to provide extended APIs, content transformation,
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navigation, and other useful functions.
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Throughout this specification, we will use the term "application
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callable" to mean "a function, a method, or an instance with a
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``__call__`` method". It is up to the server, gateway, or application
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implementing the application callable to choose the appropriate
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implementation technique for their needs. Conversely, a server,
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gateway, or application that is invoking a callable **must not** have
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any dependency on what kind of callable was provided to it.
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Application callables are only to be called, not introspected upon.
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The Application/Framework Side
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------------------------------
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The application object is simply a callable object that accepts one
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argument. The term "object" should not be misconstrued as requiring
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an actual object instance: a function, method, or instance with a
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``__call__`` method are all acceptable for use as an application
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object. Application objects must be able to be invoked more than
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once, as virtually all servers/gateways (other than CGI) will make
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such repeated requests. If this cannot be guaranteed by the
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implementation of the actual application, it has to be wrapped in a
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function that creates a new instance on each call.
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.. note::
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Although we refer to it as an "application" object, this should not
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be construed to mean that application developers will use Web3 as a
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web programming API. It is assumed that application developers
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will continue to use existing, high-level framework services to
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develop their applications. Web3 is a tool for framework and
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server developers, and is not intended to directly support
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application developers.)
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An example of an application which is a function (``simple_app``)::
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def simple_app(environ):
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"""Simplest possible application object"""
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status = b'200 OK'
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headers = [(b'Content-type', b'text/plain')]
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body = [b'Hello world!\n']
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return body, status, headers
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An example of an application which is an instance (``simple_app``)::
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class AppClass(object):
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"""Produce the same output, but using an instance. An
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instance of this class must be instantiated before it is
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passed to the server. """
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def __call__(self, environ):
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status = b'200 OK'
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headers = [(b'Content-type', b'text/plain')]
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body = [b'Hello world!\n']
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return body, status, headers
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simple_app = AppClass()
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Alternately, an application callable may return a callable instead of
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the tuple if the server supports asynchronous execution. See
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information concerning ``web3.async`` for more information.
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The Server/Gateway Side
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-----------------------
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The server or gateway invokes the application callable once for each
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request it receives from an HTTP client, that is directed at the
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application. To illustrate, here is a simple CGI gateway, implemented
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as a function taking an application object. Note that this simple
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example has limited error handling, because by default an uncaught
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exception will be dumped to ``sys.stderr`` and logged by the web
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server.
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::
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import locale
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import os
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import sys
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encoding = locale.getpreferredencoding()
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stdout = sys.stdout
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if hasattr(sys.stdout, 'buffer'):
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# Python 3 compatibility; we need to be able to push bytes out
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stdout = sys.stdout.buffer
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def get_environ():
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d = {}
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for k, v in os.environ.items():
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# Python 3 compatibility
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if not isinstance(v, bytes):
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# We must explicitly encode the string to bytes under
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# Python 3.1+
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v = v.encode(encoding, 'surrogateescape')
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d[k] = v
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return d
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def run_with_cgi(application):
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environ = get_environ()
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environ['web3.input'] = sys.stdin
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environ['web3.errors'] = sys.stderr
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environ['web3.version'] = (1, 0)
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environ['web3.multithread'] = False
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environ['web3.multiprocess'] = True
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environ['web3.run_once'] = True
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environ['web3.async'] = False
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if environ.get('HTTPS', b'off') in (b'on', b'1'):
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environ['web3.url_scheme'] = b'https'
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else:
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environ['web3.url_scheme'] = b'http'
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rv = application(environ)
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if hasattr(rv, '__call__'):
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raise TypeError('This webserver does not support asynchronous '
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'responses.')
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body, status, headers = rv
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CLRF = b'\r\n'
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try:
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stdout.write(b'Status: ' + status + CRLF)
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for header_name, header_val in headers:
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stdout.write(header_name + b': ' + header_val + CRLF)
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stdout.write(CRLF)
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for chunk in body:
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stdout.write(chunk)
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stdout.flush()
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finally:
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if hasattr(body, 'close'):
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body.close()
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Middleware: Components that Play Both Sides
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-------------------------------------------
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A single object may play the role of a server with respect to some
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application(s), while also acting as an application with respect to
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some server(s). Such "middleware" components can perform such
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functions as:
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* Routing a request to different application objects based on the
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target URL, after rewriting the ``environ`` accordingly.
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* Allowing multiple applications or frameworks to run side by side in
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the same process.
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* Load balancing and remote processing, by forwarding requests and
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responses over a network.
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* Perform content postprocessing, such as applying XSL stylesheets.
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The presence of middleware in general is transparent to both the
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"server/gateway" and the "application/framework" sides of the
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interface, and should require no special support. A user who desires
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to incorporate middleware into an application simply provides the
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middleware component to the server, as if it were an application, and
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configures the middleware component to invoke the application, as if
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the middleware component were a server. Of course, the "application"
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that the middleware wraps may in fact be another middleware component
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wrapping another application, and so on, creating what is referred to
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as a "middleware stack".
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A middleware must support asynchronous execution if possible or fall
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back to disabling itself.
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Here a middleware that changes the ``HTTP_HOST`` key if an ``X-Host``
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header exists and adds a comment to all html responses::
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import time
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def apply_filter(app, environ, filter_func):
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"""Helper function that passes the return value from an
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application to a filter function when the results are
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ready.
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"""
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app_response = app(environ)
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# synchronous response, filter now
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if not hasattr(app_response, '__call__'):
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return filter_func(*app_response)
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# asynchronous response. filter when results are ready
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def polling_function():
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rv = app_response()
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if rv is not None:
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return filter_func(*rv)
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return polling_function
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def proxy_and_timing_support(app):
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def new_application(environ):
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def filter_func(body, status, headers):
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now = time.time()
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for key, value in headers:
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if key.lower() == b'content-type' and \
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value.split(b';')[0] == b'text/html':
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# assumes ascii compatible encoding in body,
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# but the middleware should actually parse the
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# content type header and figure out the
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# encoding when doing that.
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body += ('<!-- Execution time: %.2fsec -->' %
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(now - then)).encode('ascii')
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break
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return body, status, headers
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then = time.time()
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host = environ.get('HTTP_X_HOST')
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if host is not None:
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environ['HTTP_HOST'] = host
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# use the apply_filter function that applies a given filter
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# function for both async and sync responses.
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return apply_filter(app, environ, filter_func)
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return new_application
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app = proxy_and_timing_support(app)
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Specification Details
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=====================
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The application callable must accept one positional argument. For the
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sake of illustration, we have named it ``environ``, but it is not
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required to have this name. A server or gateway **must** invoke the
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application object using a positional (not keyword) argument.
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(E.g. by calling ``body, status, headers = application(environ)`` as
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shown above.)
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The ``environ`` parameter is a dictionary object, containing CGI-style
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environment variables. This object **must** be a builtin Python
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dictionary (*not* a subclass, ``UserDict`` or other dictionary
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emulation), and the application is allowed to modify the dictionary in
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any way it desires. The dictionary must also include certain
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Web3-required variables (described in a later section), and may also
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include server-specific extension variables, named according to a
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convention that will be described below.
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When called by the server, the application object must return a tuple
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yielding three elements: ``status``, ``headers`` and ``body``, or, if
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supported by an async server, an argumentless callable which either
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returns ``None`` or a tuple of those three elements.
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The ``status`` element is a status in bytes of the form ``b'999
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Message here'``.
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``headers`` is a Python list of ``(header_name, header_value)`` pairs
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describing the HTTP response header. The ``headers`` structure must
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be a literal Python list; it must yield two-tuples. Both
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``header_name`` and ``header_value`` must be bytes values.
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The ``body`` is an iterable yielding zero or more bytes instances.
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This can be accomplished in a variety of ways, such as by returning a
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list containing bytes instances as ``body``, or by returning a
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generator function as ``body`` that yields bytes instances, or by the
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``body`` being an instance of a class which is iterable. Regardless
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of how it is accomplished, the application object must always return a
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``body`` iterable yielding zero or more bytes instances.
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The server or gateway must transmit the yielded bytes to the client in
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an unbuffered fashion, completing the transmission of each set of
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bytes before requesting another one. (In other words, applications
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**should** perform their own buffering. See the `Buffering and
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Streaming`_ section below for more on how application output must be
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handled.)
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The server or gateway should treat the yielded bytes as binary byte
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sequences: in particular, it should ensure that line endings are not
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altered. The application is responsible for ensuring that the
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string(s) to be written are in a format suitable for the client. (The
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server or gateway **may** apply HTTP transfer encodings, or perform
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other transformations for the purpose of implementing HTTP features
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such as byte-range transmission. See `Other HTTP Features`_, below,
|
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for more details.)
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If the ``body`` iterable returned by the application has a ``close()``
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method, the server or gateway **must** call that method upon
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completion of the current request, whether the request was completed
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normally, or terminated early due to an error. This is to support
|
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resource release by the application amd is intended to complement PEP
|
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325's generator support, and other common iterables with ``close()``
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methods.
|
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Finally, servers and gateways **must not** directly use any other
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attributes of the ``body`` iterable returned by the application.
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``environ`` Variables
|
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---------------------
|
||
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The ``environ`` dictionary is required to contain various CGI
|
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environment variables, as defined by the Common Gateway Interface
|
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specification [2]_.
|
||
|
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The following CGI variables **must** be present. Each key is a native
|
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string. Each value is a bytes instance.
|
||
|
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.. note::
|
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|
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In Python 3.1+, a "native string" is a ``str`` type decoded using
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the ``surrogateescape`` error handler, as done by
|
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``os.environ.__getitem__``. In Python 2.6 and 2.7, a "native
|
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string" is a ``str`` types representing a set of bytes.
|
||
|
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``REQUEST_METHOD``
|
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The HTTP request method, such as ``"GET"`` or ``"POST"``.
|
||
|
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``SCRIPT_NAME``
|
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The initial portion of the request URL's "path" that corresponds to
|
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the application object, so that the application knows its virtual
|
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"location". This may be the empty bytes instance if the application
|
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corresponds to the "root" of the server. SCRIPT_NAME will be a
|
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bytes instance representing a sequence of URL-encoded segments
|
||
separated by the slash character (``/``). It is assumed that
|
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``%2F`` characters will be decoded into literal slash characters
|
||
within ``PATH_INFO``, as per CGI.
|
||
|
||
``PATH_INFO``
|
||
The remainder of the request URL's "path", designating the virtual
|
||
"location" of the request's target within the application. This
|
||
**may** be a bytes instance if the request URL targets the
|
||
application root and does not have a trailing slash. PATH_INFO will
|
||
be a bytes instance representing a sequence of URL-encoded segments
|
||
separated by the slash character (``/``). It is assumed that
|
||
``%2F`` characters will be decoded into literal slash characters
|
||
within ``PATH_INFO``, as per CGI.
|
||
|
||
``QUERY_STRING``
|
||
The portion of the request URL (in bytes) that follows the ``"?"``,
|
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if any, or the empty bytes instance.
|
||
|
||
``SERVER_NAME``, ``SERVER_PORT``
|
||
When combined with ``SCRIPT_NAME`` and ``PATH_INFO`` (or their raw
|
||
equivalents), these variables can be used to complete the URL.
|
||
Note, however, that ``HTTP_HOST``, if present, should be used in
|
||
preference to ``SERVER_NAME`` for reconstructing the request URL.
|
||
See the `URL Reconstruction`_ section below for more detail.
|
||
``SERVER_PORT`` should be a bytes instance, not an integer.
|
||
|
||
``SERVER_PROTOCOL``
|
||
The version of the protocol the client used to send the request.
|
||
Typically this will be something like ``"HTTP/1.0"`` or
|
||
``"HTTP/1.1"`` and may be used by the application to determine how
|
||
to treat any HTTP request headers. (This variable should probably
|
||
be called ``REQUEST_PROTOCOL``, since it denotes the protocol used
|
||
in the request, and is not necessarily the protocol that will be
|
||
used in the server's response. However, for compatibility with CGI
|
||
we have to keep the existing name.)
|
||
|
||
The following CGI values **may** present be in the Web3 environment.
|
||
Each key is a native string. Each value is a bytes instances.
|
||
|
||
``CONTENT_TYPE``
|
||
The contents of any ``Content-Type`` fields in the HTTP request.
|
||
|
||
``CONTENT_LENGTH``
|
||
The contents of any ``Content-Length`` fields in the HTTP request.
|
||
|
||
``HTTP_`` Variables
|
||
Variables corresponding to the client-supplied HTTP request headers
|
||
(i.e., variables whose names begin with ``"HTTP_"``). The presence
|
||
or absence of these variables should correspond with the presence or
|
||
absence of the appropriate HTTP header in the request.
|
||
|
||
A server or gateway **should** attempt to provide as many other CGI
|
||
variables as are applicable, each with a string for its key and a
|
||
bytes instance for its value. In addition, if SSL is in use, the
|
||
server or gateway **should** also provide as many of the Apache SSL
|
||
environment variables [4]_ as are applicable, such as ``HTTPS=on`` and
|
||
``SSL_PROTOCOL``. Note, however, that an application that uses any
|
||
CGI variables other than the ones listed above are necessarily
|
||
non-portable to web servers that do not support the relevant
|
||
extensions. (For example, web servers that do not publish files will
|
||
not be able to provide a meaningful ``DOCUMENT_ROOT`` or
|
||
``PATH_TRANSLATED``.)
|
||
|
||
A Web3-compliant server or gateway **should** document what variables
|
||
it provides, along with their definitions as appropriate.
|
||
Applications **should** check for the presence of any variables they
|
||
require, and have a fallback plan in the event such a variable is
|
||
absent.
|
||
|
||
Note that CGI variable *values* must be bytes instances, if they are
|
||
present at all. It is a violation of this specification for a CGI
|
||
variable's value to be of any type other than ``bytes``. On Python 2,
|
||
this means they will be of type ``str``. On Python 3, this means they
|
||
will be of type ``bytes``.
|
||
|
||
They *keys* of all CGI and non-CGI variables in the environ, however,
|
||
must be "native strings" (on both Python 2 and Python 3, they will be
|
||
of type ``str``).
|
||
|
||
In addition to the CGI-defined variables, the ``environ`` dictionary
|
||
**may** also contain arbitrary operating-system "environment
|
||
variables", and **must** contain the following Web3-defined variables.
|
||
|
||
===================== ===============================================
|
||
Variable Value
|
||
===================== ===============================================
|
||
``web3.version`` The tuple ``(1, 0)``, representing Web3
|
||
version 1.0.
|
||
|
||
``web3.url_scheme`` A bytes value representing the "scheme" portion of
|
||
the URL at which the application is being
|
||
invoked. Normally, this will have the value
|
||
``b"http"`` or ``b"https"``, as appropriate.
|
||
|
||
``web3.input`` An input stream (file-like object) from which bytes
|
||
constituting the HTTP request body can be read.
|
||
(The server or gateway may perform reads
|
||
on-demand as requested by the application, or
|
||
it may pre- read the client's request body and
|
||
buffer it in-memory or on disk, or use any
|
||
other technique for providing such an input
|
||
stream, according to its preference.)
|
||
|
||
``web3.errors`` An output stream (file-like object) to which error
|
||
output text can be written, for the purpose of
|
||
recording program or other errors in a
|
||
standardized and possibly centralized location.
|
||
This should be a "text mode" stream; i.e.,
|
||
applications should use ``"\n"`` as a line
|
||
ending, and assume that it will be converted to
|
||
the correct line ending by the server/gateway.
|
||
Applications may *not* send bytes to the
|
||
'write' method of this stream; they may only
|
||
send text.
|
||
|
||
For many servers, ``web3.errors`` will be the
|
||
server's main error log. Alternatively, this
|
||
may be ``sys.stderr``, or a log file of some
|
||
sort. The server's documentation should
|
||
include an explanation of how to configure this
|
||
or where to find the recorded output. A server
|
||
or gateway may supply different error streams
|
||
to different applications, if this is desired.
|
||
|
||
``web3.multithread`` This value should evaluate true if the
|
||
application object may be simultaneously
|
||
invoked by another thread in the same process,
|
||
and should evaluate false otherwise.
|
||
|
||
``web3.multiprocess`` This value should evaluate true if an
|
||
equivalent application object may be
|
||
simultaneously invoked by another process, and
|
||
should evaluate false otherwise.
|
||
|
||
``web3.run_once`` This value should evaluate true if the server
|
||
or gateway expects (but does not guarantee!)
|
||
that the application will only be invoked this
|
||
one time during the life of its containing
|
||
process. Normally, this will only be true for
|
||
a gateway based on CGI (or something similar).
|
||
|
||
``web3.script_name`` The non-URL-decoded ``SCRIPT_NAME`` value.
|
||
Through a historical inequity, by virtue of the
|
||
CGI specification, ``SCRIPT_NAME`` is present
|
||
within the environment as an already
|
||
URL-decoded string. This is the original
|
||
URL-encoded value derived from the request URI.
|
||
If the server cannot provide this value, it
|
||
must omit it from the environ.
|
||
|
||
``web3.path_info`` The non-URL-decoded ``PATH_INFO`` value.
|
||
Through a historical inequity, by virtue of the
|
||
CGI specification, ``PATH_INFO`` is present
|
||
within the environment as an already
|
||
URL-decoded string. This is the original
|
||
URL-encoded value derived from the request URI.
|
||
If the server cannot provide this value, it
|
||
must omit it from the environ.
|
||
|
||
``web3.async`` This is ``True`` if the webserver supports
|
||
async invocation. In that case an application
|
||
is allowed to return a callable instead of a
|
||
tuple with the response. The exact semantics
|
||
are not specified by this specification.
|
||
|
||
===================== ===============================================
|
||
|
||
Finally, the ``environ`` dictionary may also contain server-defined
|
||
variables. These variables should have names which are native
|
||
strings, composed of only lower-case letters, numbers, dots, and
|
||
underscores, and should be prefixed with a name that is unique to the
|
||
defining server or gateway. For example, ``mod_web3`` might define
|
||
variables with names like ``mod_web3.some_variable``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Input Stream
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The input stream (``web3.input``) provided by the server must support
|
||
the following methods:
|
||
|
||
===================== ========
|
||
Method Notes
|
||
===================== ========
|
||
``read(size)`` 1,4
|
||
``readline([size])`` 1,2,4
|
||
``readlines([size])`` 1,3,4
|
||
``__iter__()`` 4
|
||
===================== ========
|
||
|
||
The semantics of each method are as documented in the Python Library
|
||
Reference, except for these notes as listed in the table above:
|
||
|
||
1. The server is not required to read past the client's specified
|
||
``Content-Length``, and is allowed to simulate an end-of-file
|
||
condition if the application attempts to read past that point. The
|
||
application **should not** attempt to read more data than is
|
||
specified by the ``CONTENT_LENGTH`` variable.
|
||
|
||
2. The implementation must support the optional ``size`` argument to
|
||
``readline()``.
|
||
|
||
3. The application is free to not supply a ``size`` argument to
|
||
``readlines()``, and the server or gateway is free to ignore the
|
||
value of any supplied ``size`` argument.
|
||
|
||
4. The ``read``, ``readline`` and ``__iter__`` methods must return a
|
||
bytes instance. The ``readlines`` method must return a sequence
|
||
which contains instances of bytes.
|
||
|
||
The methods listed in the table above **must** be supported by all
|
||
servers conforming to this specification. Applications conforming to
|
||
this specification **must not** use any other methods or attributes of
|
||
the ``input`` object. In particular, applications **must not**
|
||
attempt to close this stream, even if it possesses a ``close()``
|
||
method.
|
||
|
||
The input stream should silently ignore attempts to read more than the
|
||
content length of the request. If no content length is specified the
|
||
stream must be a dummy stream that does not return anything.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Error Stream
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
The error stream (``web3.errors``) provided by the server must support
|
||
the following methods:
|
||
|
||
=================== ========== ========
|
||
Method Stream Notes
|
||
=================== ========== ========
|
||
``flush()`` ``errors`` 1
|
||
``write(str)`` ``errors`` 2
|
||
``writelines(seq)`` ``errors`` 2
|
||
=================== ========== ========
|
||
|
||
The semantics of each method are as documented in the Python Library
|
||
Reference, except for these notes as listed in the table above:
|
||
|
||
1. Since the ``errors`` stream may not be rewound, servers and
|
||
gateways are free to forward write operations immediately, without
|
||
buffering. In this case, the ``flush()`` method may be a no-op.
|
||
Portable applications, however, cannot assume that output is
|
||
unbuffered or that ``flush()`` is a no-op. They must call
|
||
``flush()`` if they need to ensure that output has in fact been
|
||
written. (For example, to minimize intermingling of data from
|
||
multiple processes writing to the same error log.)
|
||
|
||
2. The ``write()`` method must accept a string argument, but needn't
|
||
necessarily accept a bytes argument. The ``writelines()`` method
|
||
must accept a sequence argument that consists entirely of strings,
|
||
but needn't necessarily accept any bytes instance as a member of
|
||
the sequence.
|
||
|
||
The methods listed in the table above **must** be supported by all
|
||
servers conforming to this specification. Applications conforming to
|
||
this specification **must not** use any other methods or attributes of
|
||
the ``errors`` object. In particular, applications **must not**
|
||
attempt to close this stream, even if it possesses a ``close()``
|
||
method.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Values Returned by A Web3 Application
|
||
-------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Web3 applications return a tuple in the form (``status``, ``headers``,
|
||
``body``). If the server supports asynchronous applications
|
||
(``web3.async``), the response may be a callable object (which accepts no
|
||
arguments).
|
||
|
||
The ``status`` value is assumed by a gateway or server to be an HTTP
|
||
"status" bytes instance like ``b'200 OK'`` or ``b'404 Not Found'``.
|
||
That is, it is a string consisting of a Status-Code and a
|
||
Reason-Phrase, in that order and separated by a single space, with no
|
||
surrounding whitespace or other characters. (See :rfc:`2616`, Section
|
||
6.1.1 for more information.) The string **must not** contain control
|
||
characters, and must not be terminated with a carriage return,
|
||
linefeed, or combination thereof.
|
||
|
||
The ``headers`` value is assumed by a gateway or server to be a
|
||
literal Python list of ``(header_name, header_value)`` tuples. Each
|
||
``header_name`` must be a bytes instance representing a valid HTTP
|
||
header field-name (as defined by :rfc:`2616`, Section 4.2), without a
|
||
trailing colon or other punctuation. Each ``header_value`` must be a
|
||
bytes instance and **must not** include any control characters,
|
||
including carriage returns or linefeeds, either embedded or at the
|
||
end. (These requirements are to minimize the complexity of any
|
||
parsing that must be performed by servers, gateways, and intermediate
|
||
response processors that need to inspect or modify response headers.)
|
||
|
||
In general, the server or gateway is responsible for ensuring that
|
||
correct headers are sent to the client: if the application omits a
|
||
header required by HTTP (or other relevant specifications that are in
|
||
effect), the server or gateway **must** add it. For example, the HTTP
|
||
``Date:`` and ``Server:`` headers would normally be supplied by the
|
||
server or gateway. The gateway must however not override values with
|
||
the same name if they are emitted by the application.
|
||
|
||
(A reminder for server/gateway authors: HTTP header names are
|
||
case-insensitive, so be sure to take that into consideration when
|
||
examining application-supplied headers!)
|
||
|
||
Applications and middleware are forbidden from using HTTP/1.1
|
||
"hop-by-hop" features or headers, any equivalent features in HTTP/1.0,
|
||
or any headers that would affect the persistence of the client's
|
||
connection to the web server. These features are the exclusive
|
||
province of the actual web server, and a server or gateway **should**
|
||
consider it a fatal error for an application to attempt sending them,
|
||
and raise an error if they are supplied as return values from an
|
||
application in the ``headers`` structure. (For more specifics on
|
||
"hop-by-hop" features and headers, please see the `Other HTTP
|
||
Features`_ section below.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dealing with Compatibility Across Python Versions
|
||
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Creating Web3 code that runs under both Python 2.6/2.7 and Python 3.1+
|
||
requires some care on the part of the developer. In general, the Web3
|
||
specification assumes a certain level of equivalence between the
|
||
Python 2 ``str`` type and the Python 3 ``bytes`` type. For example,
|
||
under Python 2, the values present in the Web3 ``environ`` will be
|
||
instances of the ``str`` type; in Python 3, these will be instances of
|
||
the ``bytes`` type. The Python 3 ``bytes`` type does not possess all
|
||
the methods of the Python 2 ``str`` type, and some methods which it
|
||
does possess behave differently than the Python 2 ``str`` type.
|
||
Effectively, to ensure that Web3 middleware and applications work
|
||
across Python versions, developers must do these things:
|
||
|
||
#) Do not assume comparison equivalence between text values and bytes
|
||
values. If you do so, your code may work under Python 2, but it
|
||
will not work properly under Python 3. For example, don't write
|
||
``somebytes == 'abc'``. This will sometimes be true on Python 2
|
||
but it will never be true on Python 3, because a sequence of bytes
|
||
never compares equal to a string under Python 3. Instead, always
|
||
compare a bytes value with a bytes value, e.g. "somebytes ==
|
||
b'abc'". Code which does this is compatible with and works the
|
||
same in Python 2.6, 2.7, and 3.1. The ``b`` in front of ``'abc'``
|
||
signals to Python 3 that the value is a literal bytes instance;
|
||
under Python 2 it's a forward compatibility placebo.
|
||
|
||
#) Don't use the ``__contains__`` method (directly or indirectly) of
|
||
items that are meant to be byteslike without ensuring that its
|
||
argument is also a bytes instance. If you do so, your code may
|
||
work under Python 2, but it will not work properly under Python 3.
|
||
For example, ``'abc' in somebytes'`` will raise a ``TypeError``
|
||
under Python 3, but it will return ``True`` under Python 2.6 and
|
||
2.7. However, ``b'abc' in somebytes`` will work the same on both
|
||
versions. In Python 3.2, this restriction may be partially
|
||
removed, as it's rumored that bytes types may obtain a ``__mod__``
|
||
implementation.
|
||
|
||
#) ``__getitem__`` should not be used.
|
||
|
||
.. XXX
|
||
|
||
#) Don't try to use the ``format`` method or the ``__mod__`` method of
|
||
instances of bytes (directly or indirectly). In Python 2, the
|
||
``str`` type which we treat equivalently to Python 3's ``bytes``
|
||
supports these method but actual Python 3's ``bytes`` instances
|
||
don't support these methods. If you use these methods, your code
|
||
will work under Python 2, but not under Python 3.
|
||
|
||
#) Do not try to concatenate a bytes value with a string value. This
|
||
may work under Python 2, but it will not work under Python 3. For
|
||
example, doing ``'abc' + somebytes`` will work under Python 2, but
|
||
it will result in a ``TypeError`` under Python 3. Instead, always
|
||
make sure you're concatenating two items of the same type,
|
||
e.g. ``b'abc' + somebytes``.
|
||
|
||
Web3 expects byte values in other places, such as in all the values
|
||
returned by an application.
|
||
|
||
In short, to ensure compatibility of Web3 application code between
|
||
Python 2 and Python 3, in Python 2, treat CGI and server variable
|
||
values in the environment as if they had the Python 3 ``bytes`` API
|
||
even though they actually have a more capable API. Likewise for all
|
||
stringlike values returned by a Web3 application.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Buffering and Streaming
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
Generally speaking, applications will achieve the best throughput by
|
||
buffering their (modestly-sized) output and sending it all at once.
|
||
This is a common approach in existing frameworks: the output is
|
||
buffered in a StringIO or similar object, then transmitted all at
|
||
once, along with the response headers.
|
||
|
||
The corresponding approach in Web3 is for the application to simply
|
||
return a single-element ``body`` iterable (such as a list) containing
|
||
the response body as a single string. This is the recommended
|
||
approach for the vast majority of application functions, that render
|
||
HTML pages whose text easily fits in memory.
|
||
|
||
For large files, however, or for specialized uses of HTTP streaming
|
||
(such as multipart "server push"), an application may need to provide
|
||
output in smaller blocks (e.g. to avoid loading a large file into
|
||
memory). It's also sometimes the case that part of a response may be
|
||
time-consuming to produce, but it would be useful to send ahead the
|
||
portion of the response that precedes it.
|
||
|
||
In these cases, applications will usually return a ``body`` iterator
|
||
(often a generator-iterator) that produces the output in a
|
||
block-by-block fashion. These blocks may be broken to coincide with
|
||
multipart boundaries (for "server push"), or just before
|
||
time-consuming tasks (such as reading another block of an on-disk
|
||
file).
|
||
|
||
Web3 servers, gateways, and middleware **must not** delay the
|
||
transmission of any block; they **must** either fully transmit the
|
||
block to the client, or guarantee that they will continue transmission
|
||
even while the application is producing its next block. A
|
||
server/gateway or middleware may provide this guarantee in one of
|
||
three ways:
|
||
|
||
1. Send the entire block to the operating system (and request that any
|
||
O/S buffers be flushed) before returning control to the
|
||
application, OR
|
||
|
||
2. Use a different thread to ensure that the block continues to be
|
||
transmitted while the application produces the next block.
|
||
|
||
3. (Middleware only) send the entire block to its parent
|
||
gateway/server.
|
||
|
||
By providing this guarantee, Web3 allows applications to ensure that
|
||
transmission will not become stalled at an arbitrary point in their
|
||
output data. This is critical for proper functioning of
|
||
e.g. multipart "server push" streaming, where data between multipart
|
||
boundaries should be transmitted in full to the client.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Unicode Issues
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
HTTP does not directly support Unicode, and neither does this
|
||
interface. All encoding/decoding must be handled by the
|
||
**application**; all values passed to or from the server must be of
|
||
the Python 3 type ``bytes`` or instances of the Python 2 type ``str``,
|
||
not Python 2 ``unicode`` or Python 3 ``str`` objects.
|
||
|
||
All "bytes instances" referred to in this specification **must**:
|
||
|
||
- On Python 2, be of type ``str``.
|
||
|
||
- On Python 3, be of type ``bytes``.
|
||
|
||
All "bytes instances" **must not** :
|
||
|
||
- On Python 2, be of type ``unicode``.
|
||
|
||
- On Python 3, be of type ``str``.
|
||
|
||
The result of using a textlike object where a byteslike object is
|
||
required is undefined.
|
||
|
||
Values returned from a Web3 app as a status or as response headers
|
||
**must** follow :rfc:`2616` with respect to encoding. That is, the bytes
|
||
returned must contain a character stream of ISO-8859-1 characters, or
|
||
the character stream should use :rfc:`2047` MIME encoding.
|
||
|
||
On Python platforms which do not have a native bytes-like type
|
||
(e.g. IronPython, etc.), but instead which generally use textlike
|
||
strings to represent bytes data, the definition of "bytes instance"
|
||
can be changed: their "bytes instances" must be native strings that
|
||
contain only code points representable in ISO-8859-1 encoding
|
||
(``\u0000`` through ``\u00FF``, inclusive). It is a fatal error for
|
||
an application on such a platform to supply strings containing any
|
||
other Unicode character or code point. Similarly, servers and
|
||
gateways on those platforms **must not** supply strings to an
|
||
application containing any other Unicode characters.
|
||
|
||
.. XXX (armin: Jython now has a bytes type, we might remove this
|
||
section after seeing about IronPython)
|
||
|
||
|
||
HTTP 1.1 Expect/Continue
|
||
------------------------
|
||
|
||
Servers and gateways that implement HTTP 1.1 **must** provide
|
||
transparent support for HTTP 1.1's "expect/continue" mechanism. This
|
||
may be done in any of several ways:
|
||
|
||
1. Respond to requests containing an ``Expect: 100-continue`` request
|
||
with an immediate "100 Continue" response, and proceed normally.
|
||
|
||
2. Proceed with the request normally, but provide the application with
|
||
a ``web3.input`` stream that will send the "100 Continue" response
|
||
if/when the application first attempts to read from the input
|
||
stream. The read request must then remain blocked until the client
|
||
responds.
|
||
|
||
3. Wait until the client decides that the server does not support
|
||
expect/continue, and sends the request body on its own. (This is
|
||
suboptimal, and is not recommended.)
|
||
|
||
Note that these behavior restrictions do not apply for HTTP 1.0
|
||
requests, or for requests that are not directed to an application
|
||
object. For more information on HTTP 1.1 Expect/Continue, see
|
||
:rfc:`2616`, sections 8.2.3 and 10.1.1.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other HTTP Features
|
||
-------------------
|
||
|
||
In general, servers and gateways should "play dumb" and allow the
|
||
application complete control over its output. They should only make
|
||
changes that do not alter the effective semantics of the application's
|
||
response. It is always possible for the application developer to add
|
||
middleware components to supply additional features, so server/gateway
|
||
developers should be conservative in their implementation. In a
|
||
sense, a server should consider itself to be like an HTTP "gateway
|
||
server", with the application being an HTTP "origin server". (See
|
||
:rfc:`2616`, section 1.3, for the definition of these terms.)
|
||
|
||
However, because Web3 servers and applications do not communicate via
|
||
HTTP, what :rfc:`2616` calls "hop-by-hop" headers do not apply to Web3
|
||
internal communications. Web3 applications **must not** generate any
|
||
:rfc:`"hop-by-hop" headers <2616#section-13.5.1>`,
|
||
attempt to use HTTP features that would
|
||
require them to generate such headers, or rely on the content of any
|
||
incoming "hop-by-hop" headers in the ``environ`` dictionary. Web3
|
||
servers **must** handle any supported inbound "hop-by-hop" headers on
|
||
their own, such as by decoding any inbound ``Transfer-Encoding``,
|
||
including chunked encoding if applicable.
|
||
|
||
Applying these principles to a variety of HTTP features, it should be
|
||
clear that a server **may** handle cache validation via the
|
||
``If-None-Match`` and ``If-Modified-Since`` request headers and the
|
||
``Last-Modified`` and ``ETag`` response headers. However, it is not
|
||
required to do this, and the application **should** perform its own
|
||
cache validation if it wants to support that feature, since the
|
||
server/gateway is not required to do such validation.
|
||
|
||
Similarly, a server **may** re-encode or transport-encode an
|
||
application's response, but the application **should** use a suitable
|
||
content encoding on its own, and **must not** apply a transport
|
||
encoding. A server **may** transmit byte ranges of the application's
|
||
response if requested by the client, and the application doesn't
|
||
natively support byte ranges. Again, however, the application
|
||
**should** perform this function on its own if desired.
|
||
|
||
Note that these restrictions on applications do not necessarily mean
|
||
that every application must reimplement every HTTP feature; many HTTP
|
||
features can be partially or fully implemented by middleware
|
||
components, thus freeing both server and application authors from
|
||
implementing the same features over and over again.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thread Support
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
Thread support, or lack thereof, is also server-dependent. Servers
|
||
that can run multiple requests in parallel, **should** also provide
|
||
the option of running an application in a single-threaded fashion, so
|
||
that applications or frameworks that are not thread-safe may still be
|
||
used with that server.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Implementation/Application Notes
|
||
================================
|
||
|
||
Server Extension APIs
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
Some server authors may wish to expose more advanced APIs, that
|
||
application or framework authors can use for specialized purposes.
|
||
For example, a gateway based on ``mod_python`` might wish to expose
|
||
part of the Apache API as a Web3 extension.
|
||
|
||
In the simplest case, this requires nothing more than defining an
|
||
``environ`` variable, such as ``mod_python.some_api``. But, in many
|
||
cases, the possible presence of middleware can make this difficult.
|
||
For example, an API that offers access to the same HTTP headers that
|
||
are found in ``environ`` variables, might return different data if
|
||
``environ`` has been modified by middleware.
|
||
|
||
In general, any extension API that duplicates, supplants, or bypasses
|
||
some portion of Web3 functionality runs the risk of being incompatible
|
||
with middleware components. Server/gateway developers should *not*
|
||
assume that nobody will use middleware, because some framework
|
||
developers specifically organize their frameworks to function almost
|
||
entirely as middleware of various kinds.
|
||
|
||
So, to provide maximum compatibility, servers and gateways that
|
||
provide extension APIs that replace some Web3 functionality, **must**
|
||
design those APIs so that they are invoked using the portion of the
|
||
API that they replace. For example, an extension API to access HTTP
|
||
request headers must require the application to pass in its current
|
||
``environ``, so that the server/gateway may verify that HTTP headers
|
||
accessible via the API have not been altered by middleware. If the
|
||
extension API cannot guarantee that it will always agree with
|
||
``environ`` about the contents of HTTP headers, it must refuse service
|
||
to the application, e.g. by raising an error, returning ``None``
|
||
instead of a header collection, or whatever is appropriate to the API.
|
||
|
||
These guidelines also apply to middleware that adds information such
|
||
as parsed cookies, form variables, sessions, and the like to
|
||
``environ``. Specifically, such middleware should provide these
|
||
features as functions which operate on ``environ``, rather than simply
|
||
stuffing values into ``environ``. This helps ensure that information
|
||
is calculated from ``environ`` *after* any middleware has done any URL
|
||
rewrites or other ``environ`` modifications.
|
||
|
||
It is very important that these "safe extension" rules be followed by
|
||
both server/gateway and middleware developers, in order to avoid a
|
||
future in which middleware developers are forced to delete any and all
|
||
extension APIs from ``environ`` to ensure that their mediation isn't
|
||
being bypassed by applications using those extensions!
|
||
|
||
|
||
Application Configuration
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
|
||
This specification does not define how a server selects or obtains an
|
||
application to invoke. These and other configuration options are
|
||
highly server-specific matters. It is expected that server/gateway
|
||
authors will document how to configure the server to execute a
|
||
particular application object, and with what options (such as
|
||
threading options).
|
||
|
||
Framework authors, on the other hand, should document how to create an
|
||
application object that wraps their framework's functionality. The
|
||
user, who has chosen both the server and the application framework,
|
||
must connect the two together. However, since both the framework and
|
||
the server have a common interface, this should be merely a mechanical
|
||
matter, rather than a significant engineering effort for each new
|
||
server/framework pair.
|
||
|
||
Finally, some applications, frameworks, and middleware may wish to use
|
||
the ``environ`` dictionary to receive simple string configuration
|
||
options. Servers and gateways **should** support this by allowing an
|
||
application's deployer to specify name-value pairs to be placed in
|
||
``environ``. In the simplest case, this support can consist merely of
|
||
copying all operating system-supplied environment variables from
|
||
``os.environ`` into the ``environ`` dictionary, since the deployer in
|
||
principle can configure these externally to the server, or in the CGI
|
||
case they may be able to be set via the server's configuration files.
|
||
|
||
Applications **should** try to keep such required variables to a
|
||
minimum, since not all servers will support easy configuration of
|
||
them. Of course, even in the worst case, persons deploying an
|
||
application can create a script to supply the necessary configuration
|
||
values::
|
||
|
||
from the_app import application
|
||
|
||
def new_app(environ):
|
||
environ['the_app.configval1'] = b'something'
|
||
return application(environ)
|
||
|
||
But, most existing applications and frameworks will probably only need
|
||
a single configuration value from ``environ``, to indicate the
|
||
location of their application or framework-specific configuration
|
||
file(s). (Of course, applications should cache such configuration, to
|
||
avoid having to re-read it upon each invocation.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
URL Reconstruction
|
||
------------------
|
||
|
||
If an application wishes to reconstruct a request's complete URL (as a
|
||
bytes object), it may do so using the following algorithm::
|
||
|
||
host = environ.get('HTTP_HOST')
|
||
|
||
scheme = environ['web3.url_scheme']
|
||
port = environ['SERVER_PORT']
|
||
query = environ['QUERY_STRING']
|
||
|
||
url = scheme + b'://'
|
||
|
||
if host:
|
||
url += host
|
||
else:
|
||
url += environ['SERVER_NAME']
|
||
|
||
if scheme == b'https':
|
||
if port != b'443':
|
||
url += b':' + port
|
||
else:
|
||
if port != b'80':
|
||
url += b':' + port
|
||
|
||
if 'web3.script_name' in url:
|
||
url += url_quote(environ['web3.script_name'])
|
||
else:
|
||
url += environ['SCRIPT_NAME']
|
||
if 'web3.path_info' in environ:
|
||
url += url_quote(environ['web3.path_info'])
|
||
else:
|
||
url += environ['PATH_INFO']
|
||
if query:
|
||
url += b'?' + query
|
||
|
||
Note that such a reconstructed URL may not be precisely the same URI
|
||
as requested by the client. Server rewrite rules, for example, may
|
||
have modified the client's originally requested URL to place it in a
|
||
canonical form.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Open Questions
|
||
==============
|
||
|
||
- ``file_wrapper`` replacement. Currently nothing is specified here
|
||
but it's clear that the old system of in-band signalling is broken
|
||
if it does not provide a way to figure out as a middleware in the
|
||
process if the response is a file wrapper.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Points of Contention
|
||
====================
|
||
|
||
Outlined below are potential points of contention regarding this
|
||
specification.
|
||
|
||
|
||
WSGI 1.0 Compatibility
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
Components written using the WSGI 1.0 specification will not
|
||
transparently interoperate with components written using this
|
||
specification. That's because the goals of this proposal and the
|
||
goals of WSGI 1.0 are not directly aligned.
|
||
|
||
WSGI 1.0 is obliged to provide specification-level backwards
|
||
compatibility with versions of Python between 2.2 and 2.7. This
|
||
specification, however, ditches Python 2.5 and lower compatibility in
|
||
order to provide compatibility between relatively recent versions of
|
||
Python 2 (2.6 and 2.7) as well as relatively recent versions of Python
|
||
3 (3.1).
|
||
|
||
It is currently impossible to write components which work reliably
|
||
under both Python 2 and Python 3 using the WSGI 1.0 specification,
|
||
because the specification implicitly posits that CGI and server
|
||
variable values in the environ and values returned via
|
||
``start_response`` represent a sequence of bytes that can be addressed
|
||
using the Python 2 string API. It posits such a thing because that
|
||
sort of data type was the sensible way to represent bytes in all
|
||
Python 2 versions, and WSGI 1.0 was conceived before Python 3 existed.
|
||
|
||
Python 3's ``str`` type supports the full API provided by the Python 2
|
||
``str`` type, but Python 3's ``str`` type does not represent a
|
||
sequence of bytes, it instead represents text. Therefore, using it to
|
||
represent environ values also requires that the environ byte sequence
|
||
be decoded to text via some encoding. We cannot decode these bytes to
|
||
text (at least in any way where the decoding has any meaning other
|
||
than as a tunnelling mechanism) without widening the scope of WSGI to
|
||
include server and gateway knowledge of decoding policies and
|
||
mechanics. WSGI 1.0 never concerned itself with encoding and
|
||
decoding. It made statements about allowable transport values, and
|
||
suggested that various values might be best decoded as one encoding or
|
||
another, but it never required a server to *perform* any decoding
|
||
before
|
||
|
||
Python 3 does not have a stringlike type that can be used instead to
|
||
represent bytes: it has a ``bytes`` type. A bytes type operates quite
|
||
a bit like a Python 2 ``str`` in Python 3.1+, but it lacks behavior
|
||
equivalent to ``str.__mod__`` and its iteration protocol, and
|
||
containment, sequence treatment, and equivalence comparisons are
|
||
different.
|
||
|
||
In either case, there is no type in Python 3 that behaves just like
|
||
the Python 2 ``str`` type, and a way to create such a type doesn't
|
||
exist because there is no such thing as a "String ABC" which would
|
||
allow a suitable type to be built. Due to this design
|
||
incompatibility, existing WSGI 1.0 servers, middleware, and
|
||
applications will not work under Python 3, even after they are run
|
||
through ``2to3``.
|
||
|
||
Existing Web-SIG discussions about updating the WSGI specification so
|
||
that it is possible to write a WSGI application that runs in both
|
||
Python 2 and Python 3 tend to revolve around creating a
|
||
specification-level equivalence between the Python 2 ``str`` type
|
||
(which represents a sequence of bytes) and the Python 3 ``str`` type
|
||
(which represents text). Such an equivalence becomes strained in
|
||
various areas, given the different roles of these types. An arguably
|
||
more straightforward equivalence exists between the Python 3 ``bytes``
|
||
type API and a subset of the Python 2 ``str`` type API. This
|
||
specification exploits this subset equivalence.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime, aside from any Python 2 vs. Python 3 compatibility
|
||
issue, as various discussions on Web-SIG have pointed out, the WSGI
|
||
1.0 specification is too general, providing support (via ``.write``)
|
||
for asynchronous applications at the expense of implementation
|
||
complexity. This specification uses the fundamental incompatibility
|
||
between WSGI 1.0 and Python 3 as a natural divergence point to create
|
||
a specification with reduced complexity by changing specialized
|
||
support for asynchronous applications.
|
||
|
||
To provide backwards compatibility for older WSGI 1.0 applications, so
|
||
that they may run on a Web3 stack, it is presumed that Web3 middleware
|
||
will be created which can be used "in front" of existing WSGI 1.0
|
||
applications, allowing those existing WSGI 1.0 applications to run
|
||
under a Web3 stack. This middleware will require, when under Python
|
||
3, an equivalence to be drawn between Python 3 ``str`` types and the
|
||
bytes values represented by the HTTP request and all the attendant
|
||
encoding-guessing (or configuration) it implies.
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
|
||
Such middleware *might* in the future, instead of drawing an
|
||
equivalence between Python 3 ``str`` and HTTP byte values, make use
|
||
of a yet-to-be-created "ebytes" type (aka "bytes-with-benefits"),
|
||
particularly if a String ABC proposal is accepted into the Python
|
||
core and implemented.
|
||
|
||
Conversely, it is presumed that WSGI 1.0 middleware will be created
|
||
which will allow a Web3 application to run behind a WSGI 1.0 stack on
|
||
the Python 2 platform.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Environ and Response Values as Bytes
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Casual middleware and application writers may consider the use of
|
||
bytes as environment values and response values inconvenient. In
|
||
particular, they won't be able to use common string formatting
|
||
functions such as ``('%s' % bytes_val)`` or
|
||
``bytes_val.format('123')`` because bytes don't have the same API as
|
||
strings on platforms such as Python 3 where the two types differ.
|
||
Likewise, on such platforms, stdlib HTTP-related API support for using
|
||
bytes interchangeably with text can be spotty. In places where bytes
|
||
are inconvenient or incompatible with library APIs, middleware and
|
||
application writers will have to decode such bytes to text explicitly.
|
||
This is particularly inconvenient for middleware writers: to work with
|
||
environment values as strings, they'll have to decode them from an
|
||
implied encoding and if they need to mutate an environ value, they'll
|
||
then need to encode the value into a byte stream before placing it
|
||
into the environ. While the use of bytes by the specification as
|
||
environ values might be inconvenient for casual developers, it
|
||
provides several benefits.
|
||
|
||
Using bytes types to represent HTTP and server values to an
|
||
application most closely matches reality because HTTP is fundamentally
|
||
a bytes-oriented protocol. If the environ values are mandated to be
|
||
strings, each server will need to use heuristics to guess about the
|
||
encoding of various values provided by the HTTP environment. Using
|
||
all strings might increase casual middleware writer convenience, but
|
||
will also lead to ambiguity and confusion when a value cannot be
|
||
decoded to a meaningful non-surrogate string.
|
||
|
||
Use of bytes as environ values avoids any potential for the need for
|
||
the specification to mandate that a participating server be informed
|
||
of encoding configuration parameters. If environ values are treated
|
||
as strings, and so must be decoded from bytes, configuration
|
||
parameters may eventually become necessary as policy clues from the
|
||
application deployer. Such a policy would be used to guess an
|
||
appropriate decoding strategy in various circumstances, effectively
|
||
placing the burden for enforcing a particular application encoding
|
||
policy upon the server. If the server must serve more than one
|
||
application, such configuration would quickly become complex. Many
|
||
policies would also be impossible to express declaratively.
|
||
|
||
In reality, HTTP is a complicated and legacy-fraught protocol which
|
||
requires a complex set of heuristics to make sense of. It would be
|
||
nice if we could allow this protocol to protect us from this
|
||
complexity, but we cannot do so reliably while still providing to
|
||
application writers a level of control commensurate with reality.
|
||
Python applications must often deal with data embedded in the
|
||
environment which not only must be parsed by legacy heuristics, but
|
||
*does not conform even to any existing HTTP specification*. While
|
||
these eventualities are unpleasant, they crop up with regularity,
|
||
making it impossible and undesirable to hide them from application
|
||
developers, as application developers are the only people who are able
|
||
to decide upon an appropriate action when an HTTP specification
|
||
violation is detected.
|
||
|
||
Some have argued for mixed use of bytes and string values as environ
|
||
*values*. This proposal avoids that strategy. Sole use of bytes as
|
||
environ values makes it possible to fit this specification entirely in
|
||
one's head; you won't need to guess about which values are strings and
|
||
which are bytes.
|
||
|
||
This protocol would also fit in a developer's head if all environ
|
||
values were strings, but this specification doesn't use that strategy.
|
||
This will likely be the point of greatest contention regarding the use
|
||
of bytes. In defense of bytes: developers often prefer protocols with
|
||
consistent contracts, even if the contracts themselves are suboptimal.
|
||
If we hide encoding issues from a developer until a value that
|
||
contains surrogates causes problems after it has already reached
|
||
beyond the I/O boundary of their application, they will need to do a
|
||
lot more work to fix assumptions made by their application than if we
|
||
were to just present the problem much earlier in terms of "here's some
|
||
bytes, you decode them". This is also a counter-argument to the
|
||
"bytes are inconvenient" assumption: while presenting bytes to an
|
||
application developer may be inconvenient for a casual application
|
||
developer who doesn't care about edge cases, they are extremely
|
||
convenient for the application developer who needs to deal with
|
||
complex, dirty eventualities, because use of bytes allows him the
|
||
appropriate level of control with a clear separation of
|
||
responsibility.
|
||
|
||
If the protocol uses bytes, it is presumed that libraries will be
|
||
created to make working with bytes-only in the environ and within
|
||
return values more pleasant; for example, analogues of the WSGI 1.0
|
||
libraries named "WebOb" and "Werkzeug". Such libraries will fill the
|
||
gap between convenience and control, allowing the spec to remain
|
||
simple and regular while still allowing casual authors a convenient
|
||
way to create Web3 middleware and application components. This seems
|
||
to be a reasonable alternative to baking encoding policy into the
|
||
protocol, because many such libraries can be created independently
|
||
from the protocol, and application developers can choose the one that
|
||
provides them the appropriate levels of control and convenience for a
|
||
particular job.
|
||
|
||
Here are some alternatives to using all bytes:
|
||
|
||
- Have the server decode all values representing CGI and server
|
||
environ values into strings using the ``latin-1`` encoding, which is
|
||
lossless. Smuggle any undecodable bytes within the resulting
|
||
string.
|
||
|
||
- Encode all CGI and server environ values to strings using the
|
||
``utf-8`` encoding with the ``surrogateescape`` error handler. This
|
||
does not work under any existing Python 2.
|
||
|
||
- Encode some values into bytes and other values into strings, as
|
||
decided by their typical usages.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Applications Should be Allowed to Read ``web3.input`` Past ``CONTENT_LENGTH``
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
At [5]_, Graham Dumpleton makes the assertion that ``wsgi.input``
|
||
should be required to return the empty string as a signifier of
|
||
out-of-data, and that applications should be allowed to read past the
|
||
number of bytes specified in ``CONTENT_LENGTH``, depending only upon
|
||
the empty string as an EOF marker. WSGI relies on an application
|
||
"being well behaved and once all data specified by ``CONTENT_LENGTH``
|
||
is read, that it processes the data and returns any response. That
|
||
same socket connection could then be used for a subsequent request."
|
||
Graham would like WSGI adapters to be required to wrap raw socket
|
||
connections: "this wrapper object will need to count how much data has
|
||
been read, and when the amount of data reaches that as defined by
|
||
``CONTENT_LENGTH``, any subsequent reads should return an empty string
|
||
instead." This may be useful to support chunked encoding and input
|
||
filters.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``web3.input`` Unknown Length
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
|
||
There's no documented way to indicate that there is content in
|
||
``environ['web3.input']``, but the content length is unknown.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``read()`` of ``web3.input`` Should Support No-Size Calling Convention
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
At [5]_, Graham Dumpleton makes the assertion that the ``read()``
|
||
method of ``wsgi.input`` should be callable without arguments, and
|
||
that the result should be "all available request content". Needs
|
||
discussion.
|
||
|
||
Comment Armin: I changed the spec to require that from an
|
||
implementation. I had too much pain with that in the past already.
|
||
Open for discussions though.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Input Filters should set environ ``CONTENT_LENGTH`` to -1
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
At [5]_, Graham Dumpleton suggests that an input filter might set
|
||
``environ['CONTENT_LENGTH']`` to -1 to indicate that it mutated the
|
||
input.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``headers`` as Literal List of Two-Tuples
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Why do we make applications return a ``headers`` structure that is a
|
||
literal list of two-tuples? I think the iterability of ``headers``
|
||
needs to be maintained while it moves up the stack, but I don't think
|
||
we need to be able to mutate it in place at all times. Could we
|
||
loosen that requirement?
|
||
|
||
Comment Armin: Strong yes
|
||
|
||
|
||
Removed Requirement that Middleware Not Block
|
||
---------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
This requirement was removed: "middleware components **must not**
|
||
block iteration waiting for multiple values from an application
|
||
iterable. If the middleware needs to accumulate more data from the
|
||
application before it can produce any output, it **must** yield an
|
||
empty string." This requirement existed to support asynchronous
|
||
applications and servers (see :pep:`333`'s "Middleware Handling of Block
|
||
Boundaries"). Asynchronous applications are now serviced explicitly
|
||
by ``web3.async`` capable protocol (a Web3 application callable may
|
||
itself return a callable).
|
||
|
||
|
||
``web3.script_name`` and ``web3.path_info``
|
||
-------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
These values are required to be placed into the environment by an
|
||
origin server under this specification. Unlike ``SCRIPT_NAME`` and
|
||
``PATH_INFO``, these must be the original *URL-encoded* variants
|
||
derived from the request URI. We probably need to figure out how
|
||
these should be computed originally, and what their values should be
|
||
if the server performs URL rewriting.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Long Response Headers
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
Bob Brewer notes on Web-SIG [6]_:
|
||
|
||
Each header_value must not include any control characters,
|
||
including carriage returns or linefeeds, either embedded or at the
|
||
end. (These requirements are to minimize the complexity of any
|
||
parsing that must be performed by servers, gateways, and
|
||
intermediate response processors that need to inspect or modify
|
||
response headers.) (:pep:`333`)
|
||
|
||
That's understandable, but HTTP headers are defined as (mostly)
|
||
\*TEXT, and "words of \*TEXT MAY contain characters from character
|
||
sets other than ISO-8859-1 only when encoded according to the rules of
|
||
:rfc:`2047`." [2]_ And :rfc:`2047` specifies that "an 'encoded-word' may
|
||
not be more than 75 characters long... If it is desirable to encode
|
||
more text than will fit in an 'encoded-word' of 75 characters,
|
||
multiple 'encoded-word's (separated by CRLF SPACE) may be used." [3]_
|
||
This satisfies HTTP header folding rules, as well: "Header fields can
|
||
be extended over multiple lines by preceding each extra line with at
|
||
least one SP or HT." (:pep:`333`)
|
||
|
||
So in my reading of HTTP, some code somewhere should introduce
|
||
newlines in longish, encoded response header values. I see three
|
||
options:
|
||
|
||
1. Keep things as they are and disallow response header values if they
|
||
contain words over 75 chars that are outside the ISO-8859-1
|
||
character set.
|
||
|
||
2. Allow newline characters in WSGI response headers.
|
||
|
||
3. Require/strongly suggest WSGI servers to do the encoding and
|
||
folding before sending the value over HTTP.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Request Trailers and Chunked Transfer Encoding
|
||
----------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
When using chunked transfer encoding on request content, the RFCs
|
||
allow there to be request trailers. These are like request headers
|
||
but come after the final null data chunk. These trailers are only
|
||
available when the chunked data stream is finite length and when it
|
||
has all been read in. Neither WSGI nor Web3 currently supports them.
|
||
|
||
.. XXX (armin) yield from application iterator should be specify write
|
||
plus flush by server.
|
||
|
||
.. XXX (armin) websocket API.
|
||
|
||
|
||
References
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
.. [2] The Common Gateway Interface Specification, v 1.1, 3rd Draft
|
||
(https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-coar-cgi-v11-03)
|
||
|
||
.. [3] "Chunked Transfer Coding" -- HTTP/1.1, :rfc:`2616#section-3.6.1`
|
||
|
||
.. [4] mod_ssl Reference, "Environment Variables"
|
||
(http://www.modssl.org/docs/2.8/ssl_reference.html#ToC25)
|
||
|
||
.. [5] Details on WSGI 1.0 amendments/clarifications.
|
||
(http://blog.dscpl.com.au/2009/10/details-on-wsgi-10-amendmentsclarificat.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [6] [Web-SIG] WSGI and long response header values
|
||
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/web-sig/2006-September/002244.html
|
||
|
||
Copyright
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
This document has been placed in the public domain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
..
|
||
Local Variables:
|
||
mode: indented-text
|
||
indent-tabs-mode: nil
|
||
sentence-end-double-space: t
|
||
fill-column: 70
|
||
coding: utf-8
|
||
End:
|