Mercurial > hg-stable
changeset 36026:6010fe1da619
wireprotoserver: document and improve the httplib workaround
This workaround dates all the way back to a42d27bc809d in 2008.
The code is esoteric enough to warrant an inline explanation.
So I've added one.
At the time the code was written, the only wire protocol command
that accepted an HTTP request body was "unbundle." In the years
since, we've grown the ability to accept command arguments via
HTTP POST requests. So, the code has been changed to apply the
httplib workaround to all HTTP POST requests.
While staring at this code, I realized that the HTTP response
body in case of error is always the same. And, it appears to
mimic the behavior of a failed call to the "unbundle" command.
Since we can hit this code path on theoretically any protocol
request (since self.check_perm accepts custom auth checking
functions which may raise), I'm having a hard time believing
that clients react well to an "unbundle" response payload on
any wire protocol command. I wouldn't be surprised if our test
coverage for this feature only covers HTTP POST calls to
"unbundle." In other words, the experimental support for sending
arguments via HTTP POST request bodies may result in badness on
the client. Something to investigate another time perhaps...
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2064
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 01 Feb 2018 16:11:54 -0800 |
parents | 98a00aa0288d |
children | 04231e893a12 |
files | mercurial/wireprotoserver.py |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 17 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/mercurial/wireprotoserver.py Wed Jan 31 17:34:45 2018 -0800 +++ b/mercurial/wireprotoserver.py Thu Feb 01 16:11:54 2018 -0800 @@ -292,8 +292,9 @@ req.respond(HTTP_OK, HGTYPE, body=rsp) return [] elif isinstance(rsp, wireproto.pusherr): - # drain the incoming bundle + # This is the httplib workaround documented in _handlehttperror(). req.drain() + proto.restore() rsp = '0\n%s\n' % rsp.res req.respond(HTTP_OK, HGTYPE, body=rsp) @@ -306,16 +307,28 @@ def _handlehttperror(e, req, cmd): """Called when an ErrorResponse is raised during HTTP request processing.""" - # A client that sends unbundle without 100-continue will - # break if we respond early. - if (cmd == 'unbundle' and + + # Clients using Python's httplib are stateful: the HTTP client + # won't process an HTTP response until all request data is + # sent to the server. The intent of this code is to ensure + # we always read HTTP request data from the client, thus + # ensuring httplib transitions to a state that allows it to read + # the HTTP response. In other words, it helps prevent deadlocks + # on clients using httplib. + + if (req.env[r'REQUEST_METHOD'] == r'POST' and + # But not if Expect: 100-continue is being used. (req.env.get('HTTP_EXPECT', '').lower() != '100-continue') or + # Or the non-httplib HTTP library is being advertised by + # the client. req.env.get('X-HgHttp2', '')): req.drain() else: req.headers.append((r'Connection', r'Close')) + # TODO This response body assumes the failed command was + # "unbundle." That assumption is not always valid. req.respond(e, HGTYPE, body='0\n%s\n' % e) return ''