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/**
* @file httpcommon.h
* @brief Public-facing declarations and definitions of common types
*
* $LicenseInfo:firstyear=2012&license=viewerlgpl$
* Second Life Viewer Source Code
* Copyright (C) 2012, Linden Research, Inc.
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation;
* version 2.1 of the License only.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
*
* Linden Research, Inc., 945 Battery Street, San Francisco, CA 94111 USA
* $/LicenseInfo$
*/
#ifndef _LLCORE_HTTP_COMMON_H_
#define _LLCORE_HTTP_COMMON_H_
/// @package LLCore::HTTP
///
/// This library implements a high-level, Indra-code-free client interface to
/// HTTP services based on actual patterns found in the viewer and simulator.
/// Interfaces are similar to those supplied by the legacy classes
/// LLCurlRequest and LLHTTPClient. To that is added a policy scheme that
/// allows an application to specify connection behaviors: limits on
/// connections, HTTP keepalive, HTTP pipelining, retry-on-error limits, etc.
///
/// Features of the library include:
/// - Single, private working thread where all transport and processing occurs.
/// - Support for multiple consumers running in multiple threads.
/// - Scatter/gather (a.k.a. buffer array) model for bulk data movement.
/// - Reference counting used for many object instance lifetimes.
/// - Minimal data sharing across threads for correctness and low latency.
///
/// The public interface is declared in a few key header files:
/// - "llcorehttp/bufferarray.h"
/// - "llcorehttp/httpcommon.h"
/// - "llcorehttp/httphandler.h"
/// - "llcorehttp/httpheaders.h"
/// - "llcorehttp/httpoptions.h"
/// - "llcorehttp/httprequest.h"
/// - "llcorehttp/httpresponse.h"
///
/// The library is still under early development and particular users
/// may need access to internal implementation details that are found
/// in the _*.h header files. But this is a crutch to be avoided if at
/// all possible and probably indicates some interface work is neeeded.
///
/// Using the library is fairly easy. Global setup needs a few
/// steps:
///
/// - libcurl initialization including thread-safely callbacks for SSL:
/// . curl_global_init(...)
/// . CRYPTO_set_locking_callback(...)
/// . CRYPTO_set_id_callback(...)
/// - HttpRequest::createService() called to instantiate singletons
/// and support objects.
///
/// An HTTP consumer in an application, and an application may have many
/// consumers, does a few things:
///
/// - Instantiate and retain an object based on HttpRequest. This
/// object becomes the portal into runtime services for the consumer.
/// - Derive or mixin the HttpHandler class if you want notification
/// when requests succeed or fail. This object's onCompleted()
/// method is invoked and an instance can be shared across
/// requests.
///
/// Issuing a request is straightforward:
/// - Construct a suitable URL.
/// - Configure HTTP options for the request. (optional)
/// - Build a list of additional headers. (optional)
/// - Invoke one of the requestXXXX() methods (requestGetByteRange,
/// requestPost, etc.) on the HttpRequest instance supplying the
/// above along with a policy class, a priority and an optional
/// pointer to an HttpHandler instance. Work is then queued to
/// the worker thread and occurs asynchronously.
/// - Periodically invoke the update() method on the HttpRequest
/// instance which performs completion notification to HttpHandler
/// objects.
/// - Do completion processing in your onCompletion() method.
///
/// Code fragments:
/// Rather than a poorly-maintained example in comments, look in the
/// example subdirectory which is a minimal yet functional tool to do
/// GET request performance testing. With four calls:
///
/// init_curl();
/// LLCore::HttpRequest::createService();
/// LLCore::HttpRequest::startThread();
/// LLCore::HttpRequest * hr = new LLCore::HttpRequest();
///
/// the program is basically ready to issue requests.
///
#include "linden_common.h" // Modifies curl/curl.h interfaces
#include <string>
namespace LLCore
{
/// All queued requests are represented by an HttpHandle value.
/// The invalid value is returned when a request failed to queue.
/// The actual status for these failures is then fetched with
/// HttpRequest::getStatus().
///
/// The handle is valid only for the life of a request. On
/// return from any HttpHandler notification, the handle immediately
/// becomes invalid and may be recycled for other queued requests.
typedef void * HttpHandle;
#define LLCORE_HTTP_HANDLE_INVALID (NULL)
/// For internal scheduling and metrics, we use a microsecond
/// timebase compatible with the environment.
typedef U64 HttpTime;
/// Error codes defined by the library itself as distinct from
/// libcurl (or any other transport provider).
enum HttpError
{
// Successful value compatible with the libcurl codes.
HE_SUCCESS = 0,
// Intended for HTTP reply codes 100-999, indicates that
// the reply should be considered an error by the application.
HE_REPLY_ERROR = 1,
// Service is shutting down and requested operation will
// not be queued or performed.
HE_SHUTTING_DOWN = 2,
// Operation was canceled by request.
HE_OP_CANCELED = 3,
// Invalid content range header received.
HE_INV_CONTENT_RANGE_HDR = 4,
// Request handle not found
HE_HANDLE_NOT_FOUND = 5,
// Invalid datatype for option/setting
HE_INVALID_ARG = 6,
// Option hasn't been explicitly set
HE_OPT_NOT_SET = 7,
// Option not dynamic, must be set during init phase
HE_OPT_NOT_DYNAMIC = 8,
// Invalid HTTP status code returned by server
HE_INVALID_HTTP_STATUS = 9
}; // end enum HttpError
/// HttpStatus encapsulates errors from libcurl (easy, multi), HTTP
/// reply status codes and internal errors as well. The encapsulation
/// isn't expected to completely isolate the caller from libcurl but
/// basic operational tests (success or failure) are provided.
///
/// Non-HTTP status are encoded as (type, status) with type being
/// one of: EXT_CURL_EASY, EXT_CURL_MULTI or LLCORE and status
/// being the success/error code from that domain. HTTP status
/// is encoded as (status, error_flag). Status should be in the
/// range [100, 999] and error_flag is either HE_SUCCESS or
/// HE_REPLY_ERROR to indicate whether this should be treated as
/// a successful status or an error. The application is responsible
/// for making that determination and a range like [200, 299] isn't
/// automatically assumed to be definitive.
///
/// Examples:
///
/// 1. Construct a default, successful status code:
/// HttpStatus();
///
/// 2. Construct a successful, HTTP 200 status code:
/// HttpStatus(200);
///
/// 3. Construct a failed, HTTP 404 not-found status code:
/// HttpStatus(404);
///
/// 4. Construct a failed libcurl couldn't connect status code:
/// HttpStatus(HttpStatus::EXT_CURL_EASY, CURLE_COULDNT_CONNECT);
///
/// 5. Construct an HTTP 301 status code to be treated as success:
/// HttpStatus(301, HE_SUCCESS);
///
struct HttpStatus
{
typedef unsigned short type_enum_t;
HttpStatus()
: mType(LLCORE),
mStatus(HE_SUCCESS)
{}
HttpStatus(type_enum_t type, short status)
: mType(type),
mStatus(status)
{}
HttpStatus(int http_status)
: mType(http_status),
mStatus(http_status >= 200 && http_status <= 299
? HE_SUCCESS
: HE_REPLY_ERROR)
{
llassert(http_status >= 100 && http_status <= 999);
}
HttpStatus(const HttpStatus & rhs)
: mType(rhs.mType),
mStatus(rhs.mStatus)
{}
HttpStatus & operator=(const HttpStatus & rhs)
{
// Don't care if lhs & rhs are the same object
mType = rhs.mType;
mStatus = rhs.mStatus;
return *this;
}
static const type_enum_t EXT_CURL_EASY = 0;
static const type_enum_t EXT_CURL_MULTI = 1;
static const type_enum_t LLCORE = 2;
type_enum_t mType;
short mStatus;
/// Test for successful status in the code regardless
/// of error source (internal, libcurl).
///
/// @return 'true' when status is successful.
///
operator bool() const
{
return 0 == mStatus;
}
/// Inverse of previous operator.
///
/// @return 'true' on any error condition
bool operator !() const
{
return 0 != mStatus;
}
/// Equality and inequality tests to bypass bool conversion
/// which will do the wrong thing in conditional expressions.
bool operator==(const HttpStatus & rhs) const
{
return mType == rhs.mType && mStatus == rhs.mStatus;
}
bool operator!=(const HttpStatus & rhs) const
{
return ! operator==(rhs);
}
/// Convert to single numeric representation. Mainly
/// for logging or other informal purposes. Also
/// creates an ambiguous second path to integer conversion
/// which tends to find programming errors such as formatting
/// the status to a stream (operator<<).
operator unsigned long() const;
unsigned long toULong() const
{
return operator unsigned long();
}
/// And to convert to a hex string.
std::string toHex() const;
/// Convert status to a string representation. For
/// success, returns an empty string. For failure
/// statuses, a string as appropriate for the source of
/// the error code (libcurl easy, libcurl multi, or
/// LLCore itself).
std::string toString() const;
/// Returns true if the status value represents an
/// HTTP response status (100 - 999).
bool isHttpStatus() const
{
return mType >= type_enum_t(100) && mType <= type_enum_t(999);
}
}; // end struct HttpStatus
} // end namespace LLCore
#endif // _LLCORE_HTTP_COMMON_H_
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