migrate to go modules from vndr

Signed-off-by: Tariq Ibrahim <tariq181290@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Tariq Ibrahim 2019-06-05 15:40:29 -07:00
parent dcfe05ce6c
commit 5223c27422
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GPG key ID: DFC94E4A008B908A
503 changed files with 273730 additions and 9491 deletions

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@ -13,7 +13,8 @@
// See https://http2.github.io/ for more information on HTTP/2.
//
// See https://http2.golang.org/ for a test server running this code.
package http2
//
package http2 // import "golang.org/x/net/http2"
import (
"bufio"
@ -27,12 +28,15 @@ import (
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"golang.org/x/net/http/httpguts"
)
var (
VerboseLogs bool
logFrameWrites bool
logFrameReads bool
inTests bool
)
func init() {
@ -74,13 +78,23 @@ var (
type streamState int
// HTTP/2 stream states.
//
// See http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7540#section-5.1.
//
// For simplicity, the server code merges "reserved (local)" into
// "half-closed (remote)". This is one less state transition to track.
// The only downside is that we send PUSH_PROMISEs slightly less
// liberally than allowable. More discussion here:
// https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/ietf-http-wg/2016JulSep/0599.html
//
// "reserved (remote)" is omitted since the client code does not
// support server push.
const (
stateIdle streamState = iota
stateOpen
stateHalfClosedLocal
stateHalfClosedRemote
stateResvLocal
stateResvRemote
stateClosed
)
@ -89,8 +103,6 @@ var stateName = [...]string{
stateOpen: "Open",
stateHalfClosedLocal: "HalfClosedLocal",
stateHalfClosedRemote: "HalfClosedRemote",
stateResvLocal: "ResvLocal",
stateResvRemote: "ResvRemote",
stateClosed: "Closed",
}
@ -166,76 +178,35 @@ var (
errInvalidHeaderFieldValue = errors.New("http2: invalid header field value")
)
// validHeaderFieldName reports whether v is a valid header field name (key).
// RFC 7230 says:
// header-field = field-name ":" OWS field-value OWS
// field-name = token
// tchar = "!" / "#" / "$" / "%" / "&" / "'" / "*" / "+" / "-" / "." /
// "^" / "_" / "
// validWireHeaderFieldName reports whether v is a valid header field
// name (key). See httpguts.ValidHeaderName for the base rules.
//
// Further, http2 says:
// "Just as in HTTP/1.x, header field names are strings of ASCII
// characters that are compared in a case-insensitive
// fashion. However, header field names MUST be converted to
// lowercase prior to their encoding in HTTP/2. "
func validHeaderFieldName(v string) bool {
func validWireHeaderFieldName(v string) bool {
if len(v) == 0 {
return false
}
for _, r := range v {
if int(r) >= len(isTokenTable) || ('A' <= r && r <= 'Z') {
if !httpguts.IsTokenRune(r) {
return false
}
if !isTokenTable[byte(r)] {
if 'A' <= r && r <= 'Z' {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// validHeaderFieldValue reports whether v is a valid header field value.
//
// RFC 7230 says:
// field-value = *( field-content / obs-fold )
// obj-fold = N/A to http2, and deprecated
// field-content = field-vchar [ 1*( SP / HTAB ) field-vchar ]
// field-vchar = VCHAR / obs-text
// obs-text = %x80-FF
// VCHAR = "any visible [USASCII] character"
//
// http2 further says: "Similarly, HTTP/2 allows header field values
// that are not valid. While most of the values that can be encoded
// will not alter header field parsing, carriage return (CR, ASCII
// 0xd), line feed (LF, ASCII 0xa), and the zero character (NUL, ASCII
// 0x0) might be exploited by an attacker if they are translated
// verbatim. Any request or response that contains a character not
// permitted in a header field value MUST be treated as malformed
// (Section 8.1.2.6). Valid characters are defined by the
// field-content ABNF rule in Section 3.2 of [RFC7230]."
//
// This function does not (yet?) properly handle the rejection of
// strings that begin or end with SP or HTAB.
func validHeaderFieldValue(v string) bool {
for i := 0; i < len(v); i++ {
if b := v[i]; b < ' ' && b != '\t' || b == 0x7f {
return false
}
}
return true
}
var httpCodeStringCommon = map[int]string{} // n -> strconv.Itoa(n)
func init() {
for i := 100; i <= 999; i++ {
if v := http.StatusText(i); v != "" {
httpCodeStringCommon[i] = strconv.Itoa(i)
}
}
}
func httpCodeString(code int) string {
if s, ok := httpCodeStringCommon[code]; ok {
return s
switch code {
case 200:
return "200"
case 404:
return "404"
}
return strconv.Itoa(code)
}
@ -284,14 +255,27 @@ func newBufferedWriter(w io.Writer) *bufferedWriter {
return &bufferedWriter{w: w}
}
// bufWriterPoolBufferSize is the size of bufio.Writer's
// buffers created using bufWriterPool.
//
// TODO: pick a less arbitrary value? this is a bit under
// (3 x typical 1500 byte MTU) at least. Other than that,
// not much thought went into it.
const bufWriterPoolBufferSize = 4 << 10
var bufWriterPool = sync.Pool{
New: func() interface{} {
// TODO: pick something better? this is a bit under
// (3 x typical 1500 byte MTU) at least.
return bufio.NewWriterSize(nil, 4<<10)
return bufio.NewWriterSize(nil, bufWriterPoolBufferSize)
},
}
func (w *bufferedWriter) Available() int {
if w.bw == nil {
return bufWriterPoolBufferSize
}
return w.bw.Available()
}
func (w *bufferedWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if w.bw == nil {
bw := bufWriterPool.Get().(*bufio.Writer)
@ -321,7 +305,7 @@ func mustUint31(v int32) uint32 {
}
// bodyAllowedForStatus reports whether a given response status code
// permits a body. See RFC2616, section 4.4.
// permits a body. See RFC 7230, section 3.3.
func bodyAllowedForStatus(status int) bool {
switch {
case status >= 100 && status <= 199:
@ -345,86 +329,6 @@ func (e *httpError) Temporary() bool { return true }
var errTimeout error = &httpError{msg: "http2: timeout awaiting response headers", timeout: true}
var isTokenTable = [127]bool{
'!': true,
'#': true,
'$': true,
'%': true,
'&': true,
'\'': true,
'*': true,
'+': true,
'-': true,
'.': true,
'0': true,
'1': true,
'2': true,
'3': true,
'4': true,
'5': true,
'6': true,
'7': true,
'8': true,
'9': true,
'A': true,
'B': true,
'C': true,
'D': true,
'E': true,
'F': true,
'G': true,
'H': true,
'I': true,
'J': true,
'K': true,
'L': true,
'M': true,
'N': true,
'O': true,
'P': true,
'Q': true,
'R': true,
'S': true,
'T': true,
'U': true,
'W': true,
'V': true,
'X': true,
'Y': true,
'Z': true,
'^': true,
'_': true,
'`': true,
'a': true,
'b': true,
'c': true,
'd': true,
'e': true,
'f': true,
'g': true,
'h': true,
'i': true,
'j': true,
'k': true,
'l': true,
'm': true,
'n': true,
'o': true,
'p': true,
'q': true,
'r': true,
's': true,
't': true,
'u': true,
'v': true,
'w': true,
'x': true,
'y': true,
'z': true,
'|': true,
'~': true,
}
type connectionStater interface {
ConnectionState() tls.ConnectionState
}
@ -454,10 +358,27 @@ func (s *sorter) Keys(h http.Header) []string {
}
func (s *sorter) SortStrings(ss []string) {
// Our sorter works on s.v, which sorter owners, so
// Our sorter works on s.v, which sorter owns, so
// stash it away while we sort the user's buffer.
save := s.v
s.v = ss
sort.Sort(s)
s.v = save
}
// validPseudoPath reports whether v is a valid :path pseudo-header
// value. It must be either:
//
// *) a non-empty string starting with '/'
// *) the string '*', for OPTIONS requests.
//
// For now this is only used a quick check for deciding when to clean
// up Opaque URLs before sending requests from the Transport.
// See golang.org/issue/16847
//
// We used to enforce that the path also didn't start with "//", but
// Google's GFE accepts such paths and Chrome sends them, so ignore
// that part of the spec. See golang.org/issue/19103.
func validPseudoPath(v string) bool {
return (len(v) > 0 && v[0] == '/') || v == "*"
}