view tests/dumbhttp.py @ 40034:393e44324037

httppeer: report http statistics Now that keepalive.py records HTTP request count and the number of bytes sent and received as part of performing those requests, we can easily print a report on the activity when closing a peer instance! Exact byte counts are globbed in tests because they are influenced by non-deterministic things, such as hostnames and port numbers. Plus, the exact byte count isn't too important anyway. I feel obliged to note that printing the byte count could have security implications. e.g. if sending a password via HTTP basic auth, the length of that password will influence the byte count and the reporting of the byte count could be a side-channel leak of the password length. I /think/ this is beyond our threshold for concern. But if we think it poses a problem, we can teach the byte count logging code to e.g. ignore sensitive HTTP request headers. We could also consider not reporting the byte count of request headers altogether. But since the wire protocol uses HTTP headers for sending command arguments, it is kind of important to report their size. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4858
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Mon, 01 Oct 2018 13:17:38 -0700
parents e46c3b6a47b5
children 2372284d9457
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#!/usr/bin/env python

from __future__ import absolute_import

"""
Small and dumb HTTP server for use in tests.
"""

import optparse
import os
import signal
import socket
import sys

from mercurial import (
    encoding,
    pycompat,
    server,
    util,
)

httpserver = util.httpserver
OptionParser = optparse.OptionParser

if os.environ.get('HGIPV6', '0') == '1':
    class simplehttpserver(httpserver.httpserver):
        address_family = socket.AF_INET6
else:
    simplehttpserver = httpserver.httpserver

class _httprequesthandler(httpserver.simplehttprequesthandler):
    def log_message(self, format, *args):
        httpserver.simplehttprequesthandler.log_message(self, format, *args)
        sys.stderr.flush()

class simplehttpservice(object):
    def __init__(self, host, port):
        self.address = (host, port)
    def init(self):
        self.httpd = simplehttpserver(self.address, _httprequesthandler)
    def run(self):
        self.httpd.serve_forever()

if __name__ == '__main__':
    parser = OptionParser()
    parser.add_option('-p', '--port', dest='port', type='int', default=8000,
        help='TCP port to listen on', metavar='PORT')
    parser.add_option('-H', '--host', dest='host', default='localhost',
        help='hostname or IP to listen on', metavar='HOST')
    parser.add_option('--logfile', help='file name of access/error log')
    parser.add_option('--pid', dest='pid',
        help='file name where the PID of the server is stored')
    parser.add_option('-f', '--foreground', dest='foreground',
        action='store_true',
        help='do not start the HTTP server in the background')
    parser.add_option('--daemon-postexec', action='append')

    (options, args) = parser.parse_args()

    signal.signal(signal.SIGTERM, lambda x, y: sys.exit(0))

    if options.foreground and options.logfile:
        parser.error("options --logfile and --foreground are mutually "
                     "exclusive")
    if options.foreground and options.pid:
        parser.error("options --pid and --foreground are mutually exclusive")

    opts = {b'pid_file': options.pid,
            b'daemon': not options.foreground,
            b'daemon_postexec': pycompat.rapply(encoding.strtolocal,
                                                options.daemon_postexec)}
    service = simplehttpservice(options.host, options.port)
    runargs = [sys.executable, __file__] + sys.argv[1:]
    runargs = [pycompat.fsencode(a) for a in runargs]
    server.runservice(opts, initfn=service.init, runfn=service.run,
                      logfile=options.logfile,
                      runargs=runargs)