require 'faraday' require 'set' # First saw on octokit, then copied from lostisland/faraday_middleware # and adapted for this library. # # faraday_middleware/lib/faraday_middleware/response/follow_redirects.rb module Github # Public: Exception thrown when the maximum amount of requests is exceeded. class RedirectLimitReached < Faraday::Error::ClientError attr_reader :response def initialize(response) super "too many redirects; last one to: #{response['location']}" @response = response end end # Public: Follow HTTP 301, 302, 303, 307, and 308 redirects. # # For HTTP 301, 302, and 303, the original GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, or PATCH # request gets converted into a GET. With `:standards_compliant => true`, # however, the HTTP method after 301/302 remains unchanged. This allows you # to opt into HTTP/1.1 compliance and act unlike the major web browsers. # # This middleware currently only works with synchronous requests; i.e. it # doesn't support parallelism. # # If you wish to persist cookies across redirects, you could use # the faraday-cookie_jar gem: # # Faraday.new(:url => url) do |faraday| # faraday.use FaradayMiddleware::FollowRedirects # faraday.use :cookie_jar # faraday.adapter Faraday.default_adapter # end class Response::FollowRedirects < Faraday::Middleware # HTTP methods for which 30x redirects can be followed ALLOWED_METHODS = Set.new [:head, :options, :get, :post, :put, :patch, :delete] # HTTP redirect status codes that this middleware implements REDIRECT_CODES = Set.new [301, 302, 303, 307, 308] # Keys in env hash which will get cleared between requests ENV_TO_CLEAR = Set.new [:status, :response, :response_headers] # Default value for max redirects followed FOLLOW_LIMIT = 3 # Regex that matches characters that need to be escaped in URLs, sans # the "%" character which we assume already represents an escaped sequence. URI_UNSAFE = /[^\-_.!~*'()a-zA-Z\d;\/?:@&=+$,\[\]%]/ # Public: Initialize the middleware. # # options - An options Hash (default: {}): # :limit - A Numeric redirect limit (default: 3) # :standards_compliant - A Boolean indicating whether to respect # the HTTP spec when following 301/302 # (default: false) # :callback - A callable that will be called on redirects # with the old and new envs def initialize(app, options = {}) super(app) @options = options @convert_to_get = Set.new [303] @convert_to_get << 301 << 302 unless standards_compliant? end def call(env) perform_with_redirection(env, follow_limit) end private def convert_to_get?(response) ![:head, :options].include?(response.env[:method]) && @convert_to_get.include?(response.status) end def perform_with_redirection(env, follows) request_body = env[:body] response = @app.call(env) response.on_complete do |response_env| if follow_redirect?(response_env, response) raise RedirectLimitReached, response if follows.zero? new_request_env = update_env(response_env.dup, request_body, response) callback.call(response_env, new_request_env) if callback response = perform_with_redirection(new_request_env, follows - 1) end end response end def update_env(env, request_body, response) env[:url] += safe_escape(response['location']) if convert_to_get?(response) env[:method] = :get env[:body] = nil else env[:body] = request_body end ENV_TO_CLEAR.each {|key| env.delete key } env end def follow_redirect?(env, response) ALLOWED_METHODS.include? env[:method] and REDIRECT_CODES.include? response.status end def follow_limit @options.fetch(:limit, FOLLOW_LIMIT) end def standards_compliant? @options.fetch(:standards_compliant, false) end def callback @options[:callback] end # Internal: escapes unsafe characters from an URL which might be a path # component only or a fully qualified URI so that it can be joined onto an # URI:HTTP using the `+` operator. Doesn't escape "%" characters so to not # risk double-escaping. def safe_escape(uri) uri = uri.split('#')[0] # we want to remove the fragment if present uri.to_s.gsub(URI_UNSAFE) { |match| '%' + match.unpack('H2' * match.bytesize).join('%').upcase } end end end