rack 2.2.3 → 3.0.0.beta1

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Files changed (84) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/CHANGELOG.md +164 -69
  3. data/CONTRIBUTING.md +53 -47
  4. data/MIT-LICENSE +1 -1
  5. data/README.md +287 -0
  6. data/Rakefile +40 -7
  7. data/SPEC.rdoc +166 -125
  8. data/contrib/LICENSE.md +7 -0
  9. data/contrib/logo.webp +0 -0
  10. data/lib/rack/auth/abstract/handler.rb +3 -1
  11. data/lib/rack/auth/abstract/request.rb +3 -1
  12. data/lib/rack/auth/digest/md5.rb +1 -131
  13. data/lib/rack/auth/digest/nonce.rb +1 -54
  14. data/lib/rack/auth/digest/params.rb +1 -54
  15. data/lib/rack/auth/digest/request.rb +1 -43
  16. data/lib/rack/auth/digest.rb +256 -0
  17. data/lib/rack/body_proxy.rb +3 -1
  18. data/lib/rack/builder.rb +60 -42
  19. data/lib/rack/cascade.rb +2 -0
  20. data/lib/rack/chunked.rb +16 -13
  21. data/lib/rack/common_logger.rb +24 -16
  22. data/lib/rack/conditional_get.rb +18 -15
  23. data/lib/rack/constants.rb +62 -0
  24. data/lib/rack/content_length.rb +12 -16
  25. data/lib/rack/content_type.rb +8 -5
  26. data/lib/rack/deflater.rb +40 -26
  27. data/lib/rack/directory.rb +9 -3
  28. data/lib/rack/etag.rb +14 -21
  29. data/lib/rack/events.rb +4 -0
  30. data/lib/rack/file.rb +2 -0
  31. data/lib/rack/files.rb +15 -17
  32. data/lib/rack/head.rb +9 -8
  33. data/lib/rack/headers.rb +154 -0
  34. data/lib/rack/lint.rb +764 -684
  35. data/lib/rack/lock.rb +2 -5
  36. data/lib/rack/logger.rb +2 -0
  37. data/lib/rack/media_type.rb +1 -1
  38. data/lib/rack/method_override.rb +4 -0
  39. data/lib/rack/mime.rb +8 -0
  40. data/lib/rack/mock.rb +1 -271
  41. data/lib/rack/mock_request.rb +166 -0
  42. data/lib/rack/mock_response.rb +124 -0
  43. data/lib/rack/multipart/generator.rb +7 -5
  44. data/lib/rack/multipart/parser.rb +120 -62
  45. data/lib/rack/multipart/uploaded_file.rb +4 -0
  46. data/lib/rack/multipart.rb +20 -41
  47. data/lib/rack/null_logger.rb +9 -0
  48. data/lib/rack/query_parser.rb +80 -44
  49. data/lib/rack/recursive.rb +2 -0
  50. data/lib/rack/reloader.rb +0 -2
  51. data/lib/rack/request.rb +187 -89
  52. data/lib/rack/response.rb +131 -61
  53. data/lib/rack/rewindable_input.rb +24 -5
  54. data/lib/rack/runtime.rb +7 -6
  55. data/lib/rack/sendfile.rb +30 -25
  56. data/lib/rack/show_exceptions.rb +15 -2
  57. data/lib/rack/show_status.rb +17 -7
  58. data/lib/rack/static.rb +8 -8
  59. data/lib/rack/tempfile_reaper.rb +15 -4
  60. data/lib/rack/urlmap.rb +3 -1
  61. data/lib/rack/utils.rb +199 -170
  62. data/lib/rack/version.rb +9 -4
  63. data/lib/rack.rb +5 -76
  64. data/rack.gemspec +6 -6
  65. metadata +19 -31
  66. data/README.rdoc +0 -306
  67. data/bin/rackup +0 -5
  68. data/contrib/rack.png +0 -0
  69. data/contrib/rack.svg +0 -150
  70. data/contrib/rack_logo.svg +0 -164
  71. data/lib/rack/core_ext/regexp.rb +0 -14
  72. data/lib/rack/handler/cgi.rb +0 -59
  73. data/lib/rack/handler/fastcgi.rb +0 -100
  74. data/lib/rack/handler/lsws.rb +0 -61
  75. data/lib/rack/handler/scgi.rb +0 -71
  76. data/lib/rack/handler/thin.rb +0 -36
  77. data/lib/rack/handler/webrick.rb +0 -129
  78. data/lib/rack/handler.rb +0 -104
  79. data/lib/rack/lobster.rb +0 -70
  80. data/lib/rack/server.rb +0 -466
  81. data/lib/rack/session/abstract/id.rb +0 -523
  82. data/lib/rack/session/cookie.rb +0 -203
  83. data/lib/rack/session/memcache.rb +0 -10
  84. data/lib/rack/session/pool.rb +0 -85
data/SPEC.rdoc CHANGED
@@ -1,23 +1,27 @@
1
- This specification aims to formalize the Rack protocol. You
1
+ This specification aims to formalize the Rack protocol. You
2
2
  can (and should) use Rack::Lint to enforce it.
3
3
 
4
4
  When you develop middleware, be sure to add a Lint before and
5
5
  after to catch all mistakes.
6
+
6
7
  = Rack applications
8
+
7
9
  A Rack application is a Ruby object (not a class) that
8
10
  responds to +call+.
9
11
  It takes exactly one argument, the *environment*
10
- and returns an Array of exactly three values:
12
+ and returns a non-frozen Array of exactly three values:
11
13
  The *status*,
12
14
  the *headers*,
13
15
  and the *body*.
16
+
14
17
  == The Environment
18
+
15
19
  The environment must be an unfrozen instance of Hash that includes
16
- CGI-like headers. The application is free to modify the
20
+ CGI-like headers. The Rack application is free to modify the
17
21
  environment.
18
22
 
19
23
  The environment is required to include these variables
20
- (adopted from PEP333), except when they'd be empty, but see
24
+ (adopted from {PEP 333}[https://peps.python.org/pep-0333/]), except when they'd be empty, but see
21
25
  below.
22
26
  <tt>REQUEST_METHOD</tt>:: The HTTP request method, such as
23
27
  "GET" or "POST". This cannot ever
@@ -54,6 +58,8 @@ below.
54
58
  <tt>SERVER_PORT</tt>:: An optional +Integer+ which is the port the
55
59
  server is running on. Should be specified if
56
60
  the server is running on a non-standard port.
61
+ <tt>SERVER_PROTOCOL</tt>:: A string representing the HTTP version used
62
+ for the request.
57
63
  <tt>HTTP_</tt> Variables:: Variables corresponding to the
58
64
  client-supplied HTTP request
59
65
  headers (i.e., variables whose
@@ -67,40 +73,19 @@ below.
67
73
  for specific behavior.
68
74
  In addition to this, the Rack environment must include these
69
75
  Rack-specific variables:
70
- <tt>rack.version</tt>:: The Array representing this version of Rack
71
- See Rack::VERSION, that corresponds to
72
- the version of this SPEC.
73
76
  <tt>rack.url_scheme</tt>:: +http+ or +https+, depending on the
74
77
  request URL.
75
78
  <tt>rack.input</tt>:: See below, the input stream.
76
79
  <tt>rack.errors</tt>:: See below, the error stream.
77
- <tt>rack.multithread</tt>:: true if the application object may be
78
- simultaneously invoked by another thread
79
- in the same process, false otherwise.
80
- <tt>rack.multiprocess</tt>:: true if an equivalent application object
81
- may be simultaneously invoked by another
82
- process, false otherwise.
83
- <tt>rack.run_once</tt>:: true if the server expects
84
- (but does not guarantee!) that the
85
- application will only be invoked this one
86
- time during the life of its containing
87
- process. Normally, this will only be true
88
- for a server based on CGI
89
- (or something similar).
90
- <tt>rack.hijack?</tt>:: present and true if the server supports
91
- connection hijacking. See below, hijacking.
92
- <tt>rack.hijack</tt>:: an object responding to #call that must be
93
- called at least once before using
94
- rack.hijack_io.
95
- It is recommended #call return rack.hijack_io
96
- as well as setting it in env if necessary.
97
- <tt>rack.hijack_io</tt>:: if rack.hijack? is true, and rack.hijack
98
- has received #call, this will contain
99
- an object resembling an IO. See hijacking.
80
+ <tt>rack.hijack?</tt>:: See below, if present and true, indicates
81
+ that the server supports partial hijacking.
82
+ <tt>rack.hijack</tt>:: See below, if present, an object responding
83
+ to +call+ that is used to perform a full
84
+ hijack.
100
85
  Additional environment specifications have approved to
101
- standardized middleware APIs. None of these are required to
86
+ standardized middleware APIs. None of these are required to
102
87
  be implemented by the server.
103
- <tt>rack.session</tt>:: A hash like interface for storing
88
+ <tt>rack.session</tt>:: A hash-like interface for storing
104
89
  request session data.
105
90
  The store must implement:
106
91
  store(key, value) (aliased as []=);
@@ -126,6 +111,8 @@ accepted specifications and must not be used otherwise.
126
111
  The <tt>SERVER_PORT</tt> must be an Integer if set.
127
112
  The <tt>SERVER_NAME</tt> must be a valid authority as defined by RFC7540.
128
113
  The <tt>HTTP_HOST</tt> must be a valid authority as defined by RFC7540.
114
+ The <tt>SERVER_PROTOCOL</tt> must match the regexp <tt>HTTP/\d(\.\d)?</tt>.
115
+ If the <tt>HTTP_VERSION</tt> is present, it must equal the <tt>SERVER_PROTOCOL</tt>.
129
116
  The environment must not contain the keys
130
117
  <tt>HTTP_CONTENT_TYPE</tt> or <tt>HTTP_CONTENT_LENGTH</tt>
131
118
  (use the versions without <tt>HTTP_</tt>).
@@ -133,26 +120,26 @@ The CGI keys (named without a period) must have String values.
133
120
  If the string values for CGI keys contain non-ASCII characters,
134
121
  they should use ASCII-8BIT encoding.
135
122
  There are the following restrictions:
136
- * <tt>rack.version</tt> must be an array of Integers.
137
123
  * <tt>rack.url_scheme</tt> must either be +http+ or +https+.
138
124
  * There must be a valid input stream in <tt>rack.input</tt>.
139
125
  * There must be a valid error stream in <tt>rack.errors</tt>.
140
- * There may be a valid hijack stream in <tt>rack.hijack_io</tt>
126
+ * There may be a valid hijack callback in <tt>rack.hijack</tt>
141
127
  * The <tt>REQUEST_METHOD</tt> must be a valid token.
142
128
  * The <tt>SCRIPT_NAME</tt>, if non-empty, must start with <tt>/</tt>
143
129
  * The <tt>PATH_INFO</tt>, if non-empty, must start with <tt>/</tt>
144
130
  * The <tt>CONTENT_LENGTH</tt>, if given, must consist of digits only.
145
131
  * One of <tt>SCRIPT_NAME</tt> or <tt>PATH_INFO</tt> must be
146
- set. <tt>PATH_INFO</tt> should be <tt>/</tt> if
132
+ set. <tt>PATH_INFO</tt> should be <tt>/</tt> if
147
133
  <tt>SCRIPT_NAME</tt> is empty.
148
134
  <tt>SCRIPT_NAME</tt> never should be <tt>/</tt>, but instead be empty.
135
+
149
136
  === The Input Stream
150
137
 
151
138
  The input stream is an IO-like object which contains the raw HTTP
152
139
  POST data.
153
140
  When applicable, its external encoding must be "ASCII-8BIT" and it
154
141
  must be opened in binary mode, for Ruby 1.9 compatibility.
155
- The input stream must respond to +gets+, +each+, +read+ and +rewind+.
142
+ The input stream must respond to +gets+, +each+, and +read+.
156
143
  * +gets+ must be called without arguments and return a string,
157
144
  or +nil+ on EOF.
158
145
  * +read+ behaves like IO#read.
@@ -173,120 +160,174 @@ The input stream must respond to +gets+, +each+, +read+ and +rewind+.
173
160
  If +buffer+ is given, then the read data will be placed
174
161
  into +buffer+ instead of a newly created String object.
175
162
  * +each+ must be called without arguments and only yield Strings.
176
- * +rewind+ must be called without arguments. It rewinds the input
177
- stream back to the beginning. It must not raise Errno::ESPIPE:
178
- that is, it may not be a pipe or a socket. Therefore, handler
179
- developers must buffer the input data into some rewindable object
180
- if the underlying input stream is not rewindable.
181
163
  * +close+ must never be called on the input stream.
164
+
182
165
  === The Error Stream
166
+
183
167
  The error stream must respond to +puts+, +write+ and +flush+.
184
168
  * +puts+ must be called with a single argument that responds to +to_s+.
185
169
  * +write+ must be called with a single argument that is a String.
186
170
  * +flush+ must be called without arguments and must be called
187
171
  in order to make the error appear for sure.
188
172
  * +close+ must never be called on the error stream.
173
+
189
174
  === Hijacking
190
- ==== Request (before status)
191
- If rack.hijack? is true then rack.hijack must respond to #call.
192
- rack.hijack must return the io that will also be assigned (or is
193
- already present, in rack.hijack_io.
194
175
 
195
- rack.hijack_io must respond to:
196
- <tt>read, write, read_nonblock, write_nonblock, flush, close,
197
- close_read, close_write, closed?</tt>
176
+ The hijacking interfaces provides a means for an application to take
177
+ control of the HTTP connection. There are two distinct hijack
178
+ interfaces: full hijacking where the application takes over the raw
179
+ connection, and partial hijacking where the application takes over
180
+ just the response body stream. In both cases, the application is
181
+ responsible for closing the hijacked stream.
198
182
 
199
- The semantics of these IO methods must be a best effort match to
200
- those of a normal ruby IO or Socket object, using standard
201
- arguments and raising standard exceptions. Servers are encouraged
202
- to simply pass on real IO objects, although it is recognized that
203
- this approach is not directly compatible with SPDY and HTTP 2.0.
204
-
205
- IO provided in rack.hijack_io should preference the
206
- IO::WaitReadable and IO::WaitWritable APIs wherever supported.
207
-
208
- There is a deliberate lack of full specification around
209
- rack.hijack_io, as semantics will change from server to server.
210
- Users are encouraged to utilize this API with a knowledge of their
211
- server choice, and servers may extend the functionality of
212
- hijack_io to provide additional features to users. The purpose of
213
- rack.hijack is for Rack to "get out of the way", as such, Rack only
214
- provides the minimum of specification and support.
215
-
216
- If rack.hijack? is false, then rack.hijack should not be set.
217
-
218
- If rack.hijack? is false, then rack.hijack_io should not be set.
219
- ==== Response (after headers)
220
- It is also possible to hijack a response after the status and headers
221
- have been sent.
222
- In order to do this, an application may set the special header
223
- <tt>rack.hijack</tt> to an object that responds to <tt>call</tt>
224
- accepting an argument that conforms to the <tt>rack.hijack_io</tt>
225
- protocol.
226
-
227
- After the headers have been sent, and this hijack callback has been
228
- called, the application is now responsible for the remaining lifecycle
229
- of the IO. The application is also responsible for maintaining HTTP
230
- semantics. Of specific note, in almost all cases in the current SPEC,
231
- applications will have wanted to specify the header Connection:close in
232
- HTTP/1.1, and not Connection:keep-alive, as there is no protocol for
233
- returning hijacked sockets to the web server. For that purpose, use the
234
- body streaming API instead (progressively yielding strings via each).
235
-
236
- Servers must ignore the <tt>body</tt> part of the response tuple when
237
- the <tt>rack.hijack</tt> response API is in use.
238
-
239
- The special response header <tt>rack.hijack</tt> must only be set
240
- if the request env has <tt>rack.hijack?</tt> <tt>true</tt>.
241
- ==== Conventions
242
- * Middleware should not use hijack unless it is handling the whole
243
- response.
244
- * Middleware may wrap the IO object for the response pattern.
245
- * Middleware should not wrap the IO object for the request pattern. The
246
- request pattern is intended to provide the hijacker with "raw tcp".
183
+ Full hijacking only works with HTTP/1. Partial hijacking is functionally
184
+ equivalent to streaming bodies, and is still optionally supported for
185
+ backwards compatibility with older Rack versions.
186
+
187
+ ==== Full Hijack
188
+
189
+ Full hijack is used to completely take over an HTTP/1 connection. It
190
+ occurs before any headers are written and causes the request to
191
+ ignores any response generated by the application.
192
+
193
+ It is intended to be used when applications need access to raw HTTP/1
194
+ connection.
195
+
196
+ If +rack.hijack+ is present in +env+, it must respond to +call+
197
+ and return an +IO+ instance which can be used to read and write
198
+ to the underlying connection using HTTP/1 semantics and
199
+ formatting.
200
+
201
+ ==== Partial Hijack
202
+
203
+ Partial hijack is used for bi-directional streaming of the request and
204
+ response body. It occurs after the status and headers are written by
205
+ the server and causes the server to ignore the Body of the response.
206
+
207
+ It is intended to be used when applications need bi-directional
208
+ streaming.
209
+
210
+ If +rack.hijack?+ is present in +env+ and truthy,
211
+ an application may set the special response header +rack.hijack+
212
+ to an object that responds to +call+,
213
+ accepting a +stream+ argument.
214
+
215
+ After the response status and headers have been sent, this hijack
216
+ callback will be invoked with a +stream+ argument which follows the
217
+ same interface as outlined in "Streaming Body". Servers must
218
+ ignore the +body+ part of the response tuple when the
219
+ +rack.hijack+ response header is present. Using an empty +Array+
220
+ instance is recommended.
221
+
222
+ The special response header +rack.hijack+ must only be set
223
+ if the request +env+ has a truthy +rack.hijack?+.
247
224
  == The Response
225
+
248
226
  === The Status
249
- This is an HTTP status. When parsed as integer (+to_i+), it must be
250
- greater than or equal to 100.
227
+
228
+ This is an HTTP status. It must be an Integer greater than or equal to
229
+ 100.
230
+
251
231
  === The Headers
252
- The header must respond to +each+, and yield values of key and value.
232
+
233
+ The headers must be a unfrozen Hash.
253
234
  The header keys must be Strings.
254
235
  Special headers starting "rack." are for communicating with the
255
236
  server, and must not be sent back to the client.
256
237
  The header must not contain a +Status+ key.
257
- The header must conform to RFC7230 token specification, i.e. cannot
238
+ Header keys must conform to RFC7230 token specification, i.e. cannot
258
239
  contain non-printable ASCII, DQUOTE or "(),/:;<=>?@[\]{}".
259
- The values of the header must be Strings,
260
- consisting of lines (for multiple header values, e.g. multiple
261
- <tt>Set-Cookie</tt> values) separated by "\\n".
262
- The lines must not contain characters below 037.
263
- === The Content-Type
264
- There must not be a <tt>Content-Type</tt>, when the +Status+ is 1xx,
265
- 204 or 304.
266
- === The Content-Length
267
- There must not be a <tt>Content-Length</tt> header when the
268
- +Status+ is 1xx, 204 or 304.
240
+ Header keys must not contain uppercase ASCII characters (A-Z).
241
+ Header values must be either a String instance,
242
+ or an Array of String instances,
243
+ such that each String instance must not contain characters below 037.
244
+
245
+ === The content-type
246
+
247
+ There must not be a <tt>content-type</tt> header key when the +Status+ is 1xx,
248
+ 204, or 304.
249
+
250
+ === The content-length
251
+
252
+ There must not be a <tt>content-length</tt> header key when the
253
+ +Status+ is 1xx, 204, or 304.
254
+
269
255
  === The Body
270
- The Body must respond to +each+
256
+
257
+ The Body is typically an +Array+ of +String+ instances, an enumerable
258
+ that yields +String+ instances, a +Proc+ instance, or a File-like
259
+ object.
260
+
261
+ The Body must respond to +each+ or +call+. It may optionally respond
262
+ to +to_path+ or +to_ary+. A Body that responds to +each+ is considered
263
+ to be an Enumerable Body. A Body that responds to +call+ is considered
264
+ to be a Streaming Body.
265
+
266
+ A Body that responds to both +each+ and +call+ must be treated as an
267
+ Enumerable Body, not a Streaming Body. If it responds to +each+, you
268
+ must call +each+ and not +call+. If the Body doesn't respond to
269
+ +each+, then you can assume it responds to +call+.
270
+
271
+ The Body must either be consumed or returned. The Body is consumed by
272
+ optionally calling either +each+ or +call+.
273
+ Then, if the Body responds to +close+, it must be called to release
274
+ any resources associated with the generation of the body.
275
+ In other words, +close+ must always be called at least once; typically
276
+ after the web server has sent the response to the client, but also in
277
+ cases where the Rack application makes internal/virtual requests and
278
+ discards the response.
279
+
280
+
281
+ After calling +close+, the Body is considered closed and should not
282
+ be consumed again.
283
+ If the original Body is replaced by a new Body, the new Body must
284
+ also consume the original Body by calling +close+ if possible.
285
+
286
+ If the Body responds to +to_path+, it must return a +String+
287
+ path for the local file system whose contents are identical
288
+ to that produced by calling +each+; this may be used by the
289
+ server as an alternative, possibly more efficient way to
290
+ transport the response. The +to_path+ method does not consume
291
+ the body.
292
+
293
+ ==== Enumerable Body
294
+
295
+ The Enumerable Body must respond to +each+.
296
+ It must only be called once.
297
+ It must not be called after being closed.
271
298
  and must only yield String values.
272
299
 
273
300
  The Body itself should not be an instance of String, as this will
274
301
  break in Ruby 1.9.
275
302
 
276
- If the Body responds to +close+, it will be called after iteration. If
277
- the body is replaced by a middleware after action, the original body
278
- must be closed first, if it responds to close.
303
+ Middleware must not call +each+ directly on the Body.
304
+ Instead, middleware can return a new Body that calls +each+ on the
305
+ original Body, yielding at least once per iteration.
279
306
 
280
- If the Body responds to +to_path+, it must return a String
281
- identifying the location of a file whose contents are identical
282
- to that produced by calling +each+; this may be used by the
283
- server as an alternative, possibly more efficient way to
284
- transport the response.
307
+ If the Body responds to +to_ary+, it must return an +Array+ whose
308
+ contents are identical to that produced by calling +each+.
309
+ Middleware may call +to_ary+ directly on the Body and return a new
310
+ Body in its place. In other words, middleware can only process the
311
+ Body directly if it responds to +to_ary+. If the Body responds to both
312
+ +to_ary+ and +close+, its implementation of +to_ary+ must call
313
+ +close+.
314
+
315
+ ==== Streaming Body
316
+
317
+ The Streaming Body must respond to +call+.
318
+ It must only be called once.
319
+ It must not be called after being closed.
320
+ It takes a +stream+ argument.
321
+
322
+ The +stream+ argument must implement:
323
+ <tt>read, write, flush, close, close_read, close_write, closed?</tt>
324
+
325
+ The semantics of these IO methods must be a best effort match to
326
+ those of a normal Ruby IO or Socket object, using standard arguments
327
+ and raising standard exceptions. Servers are encouraged to simply
328
+ pass on real IO objects, although it is recognized that this approach
329
+ is not directly compatible with HTTP/2.
285
330
 
286
- The Body commonly is an Array of Strings, the application
287
- instance itself, or a File-like object.
288
331
  == Thanks
289
- Some parts of this specification are adopted from PEP333: Python
290
- Web Server Gateway Interface
291
- v1.0 (http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0333/). I'd like to thank
292
- everyone involved in that effort.
332
+ Some parts of this specification are adopted from {PEP 333 – Python Web Server Gateway Interface v1.0}[https://peps.python.org/pep-0333/]
333
+ I'd like to thank everyone involved in that effort.
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
1
+ # Contributed Materials
2
+
3
+ ## Logo
4
+
5
+ Copyright, 2022, by Malene Laugesen.
6
+
7
+ This work is licensed under a [Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
data/contrib/logo.webp ADDED
Binary file
@@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
1
1
  # frozen_string_literal: true
2
2
 
3
+ require_relative '../../constants'
4
+
3
5
  module Rack
4
6
  module Auth
5
7
  # Rack::Auth::AbstractHandler implements common authentication functionality.
@@ -21,7 +23,7 @@ module Rack
21
23
  return [ 401,
22
24
  { CONTENT_TYPE => 'text/plain',
23
25
  CONTENT_LENGTH => '0',
24
- 'WWW-Authenticate' => www_authenticate.to_s },
26
+ 'www-authenticate' => www_authenticate.to_s },
25
27
  []
26
28
  ]
27
29
  end
@@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
1
1
  # frozen_string_literal: true
2
2
 
3
+ require_relative '../../request'
4
+
3
5
  module Rack
4
6
  module Auth
5
7
  class AbstractRequest
@@ -25,7 +27,7 @@ module Rack
25
27
  end
26
28
 
27
29
  def scheme
28
- @scheme ||= parts.first && parts.first.downcase
30
+ @scheme ||= parts.first&.downcase
29
31
  end
30
32
 
31
33
  def params
@@ -1,131 +1 @@
1
- # frozen_string_literal: true
2
-
3
- require_relative '../abstract/handler'
4
- require_relative 'request'
5
- require_relative 'params'
6
- require_relative 'nonce'
7
- require 'digest/md5'
8
-
9
- module Rack
10
- module Auth
11
- module Digest
12
- # Rack::Auth::Digest::MD5 implements the MD5 algorithm version of
13
- # HTTP Digest Authentication, as per RFC 2617.
14
- #
15
- # Initialize with the [Rack] application that you want protecting,
16
- # and a block that looks up a plaintext password for a given username.
17
- #
18
- # +opaque+ needs to be set to a constant base64/hexadecimal string.
19
- #
20
- class MD5 < AbstractHandler
21
-
22
- attr_accessor :opaque
23
-
24
- attr_writer :passwords_hashed
25
-
26
- def initialize(app, realm = nil, opaque = nil, &authenticator)
27
- @passwords_hashed = nil
28
- if opaque.nil? and realm.respond_to? :values_at
29
- realm, opaque, @passwords_hashed = realm.values_at :realm, :opaque, :passwords_hashed
30
- end
31
- super(app, realm, &authenticator)
32
- @opaque = opaque
33
- end
34
-
35
- def passwords_hashed?
36
- !!@passwords_hashed
37
- end
38
-
39
- def call(env)
40
- auth = Request.new(env)
41
-
42
- unless auth.provided?
43
- return unauthorized
44
- end
45
-
46
- if !auth.digest? || !auth.correct_uri? || !valid_qop?(auth)
47
- return bad_request
48
- end
49
-
50
- if valid?(auth)
51
- if auth.nonce.stale?
52
- return unauthorized(challenge(stale: true))
53
- else
54
- env['REMOTE_USER'] = auth.username
55
-
56
- return @app.call(env)
57
- end
58
- end
59
-
60
- unauthorized
61
- end
62
-
63
-
64
- private
65
-
66
- QOP = 'auth'
67
-
68
- def params(hash = {})
69
- Params.new do |params|
70
- params['realm'] = realm
71
- params['nonce'] = Nonce.new.to_s
72
- params['opaque'] = H(opaque)
73
- params['qop'] = QOP
74
-
75
- hash.each { |k, v| params[k] = v }
76
- end
77
- end
78
-
79
- def challenge(hash = {})
80
- "Digest #{params(hash)}"
81
- end
82
-
83
- def valid?(auth)
84
- valid_opaque?(auth) && valid_nonce?(auth) && valid_digest?(auth)
85
- end
86
-
87
- def valid_qop?(auth)
88
- QOP == auth.qop
89
- end
90
-
91
- def valid_opaque?(auth)
92
- H(opaque) == auth.opaque
93
- end
94
-
95
- def valid_nonce?(auth)
96
- auth.nonce.valid?
97
- end
98
-
99
- def valid_digest?(auth)
100
- pw = @authenticator.call(auth.username)
101
- pw && Rack::Utils.secure_compare(digest(auth, pw), auth.response)
102
- end
103
-
104
- def md5(data)
105
- ::Digest::MD5.hexdigest(data)
106
- end
107
-
108
- alias :H :md5
109
-
110
- def KD(secret, data)
111
- H "#{secret}:#{data}"
112
- end
113
-
114
- def A1(auth, password)
115
- "#{auth.username}:#{auth.realm}:#{password}"
116
- end
117
-
118
- def A2(auth)
119
- "#{auth.method}:#{auth.uri}"
120
- end
121
-
122
- def digest(auth, password)
123
- password_hash = passwords_hashed? ? password : H(A1(auth, password))
124
-
125
- KD password_hash, "#{auth.nonce}:#{auth.nc}:#{auth.cnonce}:#{QOP}:#{H A2(auth)}"
126
- end
127
-
128
- end
129
- end
130
- end
131
- end
1
+ require_relative '../digest'
@@ -1,54 +1 @@
1
- # frozen_string_literal: true
2
-
3
- require 'digest/md5'
4
- require 'base64'
5
-
6
- module Rack
7
- module Auth
8
- module Digest
9
- # Rack::Auth::Digest::Nonce is the default nonce generator for the
10
- # Rack::Auth::Digest::MD5 authentication handler.
11
- #
12
- # +private_key+ needs to set to a constant string.
13
- #
14
- # +time_limit+ can be optionally set to an integer (number of seconds),
15
- # to limit the validity of the generated nonces.
16
-
17
- class Nonce
18
-
19
- class << self
20
- attr_accessor :private_key, :time_limit
21
- end
22
-
23
- def self.parse(string)
24
- new(*Base64.decode64(string).split(' ', 2))
25
- end
26
-
27
- def initialize(timestamp = Time.now, given_digest = nil)
28
- @timestamp, @given_digest = timestamp.to_i, given_digest
29
- end
30
-
31
- def to_s
32
- Base64.encode64("#{@timestamp} #{digest}").strip
33
- end
34
-
35
- def digest
36
- ::Digest::MD5.hexdigest("#{@timestamp}:#{self.class.private_key}")
37
- end
38
-
39
- def valid?
40
- digest == @given_digest
41
- end
42
-
43
- def stale?
44
- !self.class.time_limit.nil? && (Time.now.to_i - @timestamp) > self.class.time_limit
45
- end
46
-
47
- def fresh?
48
- !stale?
49
- end
50
-
51
- end
52
- end
53
- end
54
- end
1
+ require_relative '../digest'