# Copyright (c) 2005 Zed A. Shaw # You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Ruby. # # Additional work donated by contributors. See http://mongrel.rubyforge.org/attributions.html # for more information. require 'mongrel/stats' require 'zlib' require 'yaml' module Mongrel # You implement your application handler with this. It's very light giving # just the minimum necessary for you to handle a request and shoot back # a response. Look at the HttpRequest and HttpResponse objects for how # to use them. # # This is used for very simple handlers that don't require much to operate. # More extensive plugins or those you intend to distribute as GemPlugins # should be implemented using the HttpHandlerPlugin mixin. # class HttpHandler attr_reader :request_notify attr_accessor :listener # This will be called by Mongrel if HttpHandler.request_notify set to *true*. # You only get the parameters for the request, with the idea that you'd "bound" # the beginning of the request processing and the first call to process. def request_begins(params) end # Called by Mongrel for each IO chunk that is received on the request socket # from the client, allowing you to track the progress of the IO and monitor # the input. This will be called by Mongrel only if HttpHandler.request_notify # set to *true*. def request_progress(params, clen, total) end def process(request, response) end end # This is used when your handler is implemented as a GemPlugin. # The plugin always takes an options hash which you can modify # and then access later. They are stored by default for # the process method later. module HttpHandlerPlugin attr_reader :options attr_reader :request_notify attr_accessor :listener def request_begins(params) end def request_progress(params, clen, total) end def initialize(options={}) @options = options @header_only = false end def process(request, response) end end # The server normally returns a 404 response if an unknown URI is requested, but it # also returns a lame empty message. This lets you do a 404 response # with a custom message for special URIs. class Error404Handler < HttpHandler # Sets the message to return. This is constructed once for the handler # so it's pretty efficient. def initialize(msg) @response = Const::ERROR_404_RESPONSE + msg end # Just kicks back the standard 404 response with your special message. def process(request, response) response.socket.write(@response) end end # Serves the contents of a directory. You give it the path to the root # where the files are located, and it tries to find the files based on # the PATH_INFO inside the directory. If the requested path is a # directory then it returns a simple directory listing. # # It does a simple protection against going outside it's root path by # converting all paths to an absolute expanded path, and then making sure # that the final expanded path includes the root path. If it doesn't # than it simply gives a 404. # # If you pass nil as the root path, it will not check any locations or # expand any paths. This lets you serve files from multiple directories # on win32. # # The default content type is "text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1" but you # can change it anything you want using the DirHandler.default_content_type # attribute. class DirHandler < HttpHandler attr_accessor :default_content_type attr_reader :path MIME_TYPES_FILE = "mime_types.yml" MIME_TYPES = YAML.load_file(File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), MIME_TYPES_FILE)) ONLY_HEAD_GET="Only HEAD and GET allowed.".freeze # You give it the path to the directory root and and optional listing_allowed and index_html def initialize(path, listing_allowed=true, index_html="index.html") @path = File.expand_path(path) if path @listing_allowed=listing_allowed @index_html = index_html @default_content_type = "application/octet-stream".freeze end # Checks if the given path can be served and returns the full path (or nil if not). def can_serve(path_info) req_path = HttpRequest.unescape(path_info) if @path req_path = File.expand_path(File.join(@path, path_info), @path) else req_path = File.expand_path(req_path) end if req_path.index(@path) == 0 and File.exist? req_path # it exists and it's in the right location if File.directory? req_path # the request is for a directory index = File.join(req_path, @index_html) if File.exist? index # serve the index return index elsif @listing_allowed # serve the directory return req_path else # do not serve anything return nil end else # it's a file and it's there return req_path end else # does not exist or isn't in the right spot return nil end end # Returns a simplistic directory listing if they're enabled, otherwise a 403. # Base is the base URI from the REQUEST_URI, dir is the directory to serve # on the file system (comes from can_serve()), and response is the HttpResponse # object to send the results on. def send_dir_listing(base, dir, response) # take off any trailing / so the links come out right base = HttpRequest.unescape(base) base.chop! if base[-1] == "/"[-1] if @listing_allowed response.start(200) do |head,out| head[Const::CONTENT_TYPE] = "text/html" out << "Directory Listing" Dir.entries(dir).each do |child| next if child == "." out << "" out << (child == ".." ? "Up to parent.." : child) out << "
" end out << "" end else response.start(403) do |head,out| out.write("Directory listings not allowed") end end end # Sends the contents of a file back to the user. Not terribly efficient since it's # opening and closing the file for each read. def send_file(req_path, request, response, header_only=false) stat = File.stat(req_path) # Set the last modified times as well and etag for all files mtime = stat.mtime # Calculated the same as apache, not sure how well the works on win32 etag = Const::ETAG_FORMAT % [mtime.to_i, stat.size, stat.ino] modified_since = request.params[Const::HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE] none_match = request.params[Const::HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH] # test to see if this is a conditional request, and test if # the response would be identical to the last response same_response = case when modified_since && !last_response_time = Time.httpdate(modified_since) rescue nil : false when modified_since && last_response_time > Time.now : false when modified_since && mtime > last_response_time : false when none_match && none_match == '*' : false when none_match && !none_match.strip.split(/\s*,\s*/).include?(etag) : false else modified_since || none_match # validation successful if we get this far and at least one of the header exists end header = response.header header[Const::ETAG] = etag if same_response response.start(304) {} else # First we setup the headers and status then we do a very fast send on the socket directly # Support custom responses except 404, which is the default. A little awkward. response.status = 200 if response.status == 404 header[Const::LAST_MODIFIED] = mtime.httpdate # Set the mime type from our map based on the ending dot_at = req_path.rindex('.') if dot_at header[Const::CONTENT_TYPE] = MIME_TYPES[req_path[dot_at .. -1]] || @default_content_type else header[Const::CONTENT_TYPE] = @default_content_type end # send a status with out content length response.send_status(stat.size) response.send_header if not header_only response.send_file(req_path, stat.size < Const::CHUNK_SIZE * 2) end end end # Process the request to either serve a file or a directory listing # if allowed (based on the listing_allowed parameter to the constructor). def process(request, response) req_method = request.params[Const::REQUEST_METHOD] || Const::GET req_path = can_serve request.params[Const::PATH_INFO] if not req_path # not found, return a 404 response.start(404) do |head,out| out << "File not found" end else begin if File.directory? req_path send_dir_listing(request.params[Const::REQUEST_URI], req_path, response) elsif req_method == Const::HEAD send_file(req_path, request, response, true) elsif req_method == Const::GET send_file(req_path, request, response, false) else response.start(403) {|head,out| out.write(ONLY_HEAD_GET) } end rescue => details STDERR.puts "Error sending file #{req_path}: #{details}" end end end # There is a small number of default mime types for extensions, but # this lets you add any others you'll need when serving content. def DirHandler::add_mime_type(extension, type) MIME_TYPES[extension] = type end end # When added to a config script (-S in mongrel_rails) it will # look at the client's allowed response types and then gzip # compress anything that is going out. # # Valid option is :always_deflate => false which tells the handler to # deflate everything even if the client can't handle it. class DeflateFilter < HttpHandler include Zlib HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING = "HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING" def initialize(ops={}) @options = ops @always_deflate = ops[:always_deflate] || false end def process(request, response) accepts = request.params[HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING] # only process if they support compression if @always_deflate or (accepts and (accepts.include? "deflate" and not response.body_sent)) response.header["Content-Encoding"] = "deflate" response.body = deflate(response.body) end end private def deflate(stream) deflater = Deflate.new( DEFAULT_COMPRESSION, # drop the zlib header which causes both Safari and IE to choke -MAX_WBITS, DEF_MEM_LEVEL, DEFAULT_STRATEGY) stream.rewind gzout = StringIO.new(deflater.deflate(stream.read, FINISH)) stream.close gzout.rewind gzout end end # Implements a few basic statistics for a particular URI. Register it anywhere # you want in the request chain and it'll quickly gather some numbers for you # to analyze. It is pretty fast, but don't put it out in production. # # You should pass the filter to StatusHandler as StatusHandler.new(:stats_filter => stats). # This lets you then hit the status URI you want and get these stats from a browser. # # StatisticsFilter takes an option of :sample_rate. This is a number that's passed to # rand and if that number gets hit then a sample is taken. This helps reduce the load # and keeps the statistics valid (since sampling is a part of how they work). # # The exception to :sample_rate is that inter-request time is sampled on every request. # If this wasn't done then it wouldn't be accurate as a measure of time between requests. class StatisticsFilter < HttpHandler attr_reader :stats def initialize(ops={}) @sample_rate = ops[:sample_rate] || 300 @processors = Mongrel::Stats.new("processors") @reqsize = Mongrel::Stats.new("request Kb") @headcount = Mongrel::Stats.new("req param count") @respsize = Mongrel::Stats.new("response Kb") @interreq = Mongrel::Stats.new("inter-request time") end def process(request, response) if rand(@sample_rate)+1 == @sample_rate @processors.sample(listener.workers.list.length) @headcount.sample(request.params.length) @reqsize.sample(request.body.length / 1024.0) @respsize.sample((response.body.length + response.header.out.length) / 1024.0) end @interreq.tick end def dump "#{@processors.to_s}\n#{@reqsize.to_s}\n#{@headcount.to_s}\n#{@respsize.to_s}\n#{@interreq.to_s}" end end # The :stats_filter is basically any configured stats filter that you've added to this same # URI. This lets the status handler print out statistics on how Mongrel is doing. class StatusHandler < HttpHandler def initialize(ops={}) @stats = ops[:stats_filter] end def table(title, rows) results = "" rows.each do |cols| results << "" cols.each {|col| results << "" } results << "" end results + "
#{title}
#{col}
" end def describe_listener results = "" results << "

Listener #{listener.host}:#{listener.port}

" results << table("settings", [ ["host",listener.host], ["port",listener.port], ["throttle",listener.throttle], ["timeout",listener.timeout], ["workers max",listener.num_processors], ]) if @stats results << "

Statistics

N means the number of samples, pay attention to MEAN, SD, MIN and MAX." results << "

#{@stats.dump}
" end results << "

Registered Handlers

" handler_map = listener.classifier.handler_map results << table("handlers", handler_map.map {|uri,handlers| [uri, "
" + 
            handlers.map {|h| h.class.to_s }.join("\n") + 
            "
" ] }) results end def process(request, response) response.start do |head,out| out.write <<-END Mongrel Server Status #{describe_listener} END end end end # This handler allows you to redirect one url to another. # You can use it like String#gsub, where the string is the REQUEST_URI. # REQUEST_URI is the full path with GET parameters. # # Eg. /test/something?help=true&disclaimer=false # # == Examples # # h = Mongrel::HttpServer.new('0.0.0.0') # h.register '/test', Mongrel::RedirectHandler.new('/to/there') # simple # h.register '/to', Mongrel::RedirectHandler.new(/t/, 'w') # regexp # # and with a block # h.register '/hey', Mongrel::RedirectHandler.new(/(\w+)/) { |match| ... } # class RedirectHandler < Mongrel::HttpHandler # You set the rewrite rules when building the object. # # pattern => What to look for or replacement if used alone # # replacement, block => One of them is used to replace the found text def initialize(pattern, replacement = nil, &block) unless replacement or block @pattern, @replacement = nil, pattern else @pattern, @replacement, @block = pattern, replacement, block end end # Process the request and return a redirect response def process(request, response) unless @pattern response.socket.write(Mongrel::Const::REDIRECT % @replacement) else if @block new_path = request.params['REQUEST_URI'].gsub(@pattern, &@block) else new_path = request.params['REQUEST_URI'].gsub(@pattern, @replacement) end response.socket.write(Mongrel::Const::REDIRECT % new_path) end end end end