// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// HTTP server. See RFC 7230 through 7235.
package http
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"context"
"crypto/tls"
"errors"
"fmt"
"internal/godebug"
"io"
"log"
"maps"
"math/rand"
"net"
"net/textproto"
"net/url"
urlpkg "net/url"
"path"
"runtime"
"slices"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
_ "unsafe" // for linkname
"golang.org/x/net/http/httpguts"
)
// Errors used by the HTTP server.
var (
// ErrBodyNotAllowed is returned by ResponseWriter.Write calls
// when the HTTP method or response code does not permit a
// body.
ErrBodyNotAllowed = errors.New("http: request method or response status code does not allow body")
// ErrHijacked is returned by ResponseWriter.Write calls when
// the underlying connection has been hijacked using the
// Hijacker interface. A zero-byte write on a hijacked
// connection will return ErrHijacked without any other side
// effects.
ErrHijacked = errors.New("http: connection has been hijacked")
// ErrContentLength is returned by ResponseWriter.Write calls
// when a Handler set a Content-Length response header with a
// declared size and then attempted to write more bytes than
// declared.
ErrContentLength = errors.New("http: wrote more than the declared Content-Length")
// Deprecated: ErrWriteAfterFlush is no longer returned by
// anything in the net/http package. Callers should not
// compare errors against this variable.
ErrWriteAfterFlush = errors.New("unused")
)
// A Handler responds to an HTTP request.
//
// [Handler.ServeHTTP] should write reply headers and data to the [ResponseWriter]
// and then return. Returning signals that the request is finished; it
// is not valid to use the [ResponseWriter] or read from the
// [Request.Body] after or concurrently with the completion of the
// ServeHTTP call.
//
// Depending on the HTTP client software, HTTP protocol version, and
// any intermediaries between the client and the Go server, it may not
// be possible to read from the [Request.Body] after writing to the
// [ResponseWriter]. Cautious handlers should read the [Request.Body]
// first, and then reply.
//
// Except for reading the body, handlers should not modify the
// provided Request.
//
// If ServeHTTP panics, the server (the caller of ServeHTTP) assumes
// that the effect of the panic was isolated to the active request.
// It recovers the panic, logs a stack trace to the server error log,
// and either closes the network connection or sends an HTTP/2
// RST_STREAM, depending on the HTTP protocol. To abort a handler so
// the client sees an interrupted response but the server doesn't log
// an error, panic with the value [ErrAbortHandler].
type Handler interface {
ServeHTTP(ResponseWriter, *Request)
}
// A ResponseWriter interface is used by an HTTP handler to
// construct an HTTP response.
//
// A ResponseWriter may not be used after [Handler.ServeHTTP] has returned.
type ResponseWriter interface {
// Header returns the header map that will be sent by
// [ResponseWriter.WriteHeader]. The [Header] map also is the mechanism with which
// [Handler] implementations can set HTTP trailers.
//
// Changing the header map after a call to [ResponseWriter.WriteHeader] (or
// [ResponseWriter.Write]) has no effect unless the HTTP status code was of the
// 1xx class or the modified headers are trailers.
//
// There are two ways to set Trailers. The preferred way is to
// predeclare in the headers which trailers you will later
// send by setting the "Trailer" header to the names of the
// trailer keys which will come later. In this case, those
// keys of the Header map are treated as if they were
// trailers. See the example. The second way, for trailer
// keys not known to the [Handler] until after the first [ResponseWriter.Write],
// is to prefix the [Header] map keys with the [TrailerPrefix]
// constant value.
//
// To suppress automatic response headers (such as "Date"), set
// their value to nil.
Header() Header
// Write writes the data to the connection as part of an HTTP reply.
//
// If [ResponseWriter.WriteHeader] has not yet been called, Write calls
// WriteHeader(http.StatusOK) before writing the data. If the Header
// does not contain a Content-Type line, Write adds a Content-Type set
// to the result of passing the initial 512 bytes of written data to
// [DetectContentType]. Additionally, if the total size of all written
// data is under a few KB and there are no Flush calls, the
// Content-Length header is added automatically.
//
// Depending on the HTTP protocol version and the client, calling
// Write or WriteHeader may prevent future reads on the
// Request.Body. For HTTP/1.x requests, handlers should read any
// needed request body data before writing the response. Once the
// headers have been flushed (due to either an explicit Flusher.Flush
// call or writing enough data to trigger a flush), the request body
// may be unavailable. For HTTP/2 requests, the Go HTTP server permits
// handlers to continue to read the request body while concurrently
// writing the response. However, such behavior may not be supported
// by all HTTP/2 clients. Handlers should read before writing if
// possible to maximize compatibility.
Write([]byte) (int, error)
// WriteHeader sends an HTTP response header with the provided
// status code.
//
// If WriteHeader is not called explicitly, the first call to Write
// will trigger an implicit WriteHeader(http.StatusOK).
// Thus explicit calls to WriteHeader are mainly used to
// send error codes or 1xx informational responses.
//
// The provided code must be a valid HTTP 1xx-5xx status code.
// Any number of 1xx headers may be written, followed by at most
// one 2xx-5xx header. 1xx headers are sent immediately, but 2xx-5xx
// headers may be buffered. Use the Flusher interface to send
// buffered data. The header map is cleared when 2xx-5xx headers are
// sent, but not with 1xx headers.
//
// The server will automatically send a 100 (Continue) header
// on the first read from the request body if the request has
// an "Expect: 100-continue" header.
WriteHeader(statusCode int)
}
// The Flusher interface is implemented by ResponseWriters that allow
// an HTTP handler to flush buffered data to the client.
//
// The default HTTP/1.x and HTTP/2 [ResponseWriter] implementations
// support [Flusher], but ResponseWriter wrappers may not. Handlers
// should always test for this ability at runtime.
//
// Note that even for ResponseWriters that support Flush,
// if the client is connected through an HTTP proxy,
// the buffered data may not reach the client until the response
// completes.
type Flusher interface {
// Flush sends any buffered data to the client.
Flush()
}
// The Hijacker interface is implemented by ResponseWriters that allow
// an HTTP handler to take over the connection.
//
// The default [ResponseWriter] for HTTP/1.x connections supports
// Hijacker, but HTTP/2 connections intentionally do not.
// ResponseWriter wrappers may also not support Hijacker. Handlers
// should always test for this ability at runtime.
type Hijacker interface {
// Hijack lets the caller take over the connection.
// After a call to Hijack the HTTP server library
// will not do anything else with the connection.
//
// It becomes the caller's responsibility to manage
// and close the connection.
//
// The returned net.Conn may have read or write deadlines
// already set, depending on the configuration of the
// Server. It is the caller's responsibility to set
// or clear those deadlines as needed.
//
// The returned bufio.Reader may contain unprocessed buffered
// data from the client.
//
// After a call to Hijack, the original Request.Body must not
// be used. The original Request's Context remains valid and
// is not canceled until the Request's ServeHTTP method
// returns.
Hijack() (net.Conn, *bufio.ReadWriter, error)
}
// The CloseNotifier interface is implemented by ResponseWriters which
// allow detecting when the underlying connection has gone away.
//
// This mechanism can be used to cancel long operations on the server
// if the client has disconnected before the response is ready.
//
// Deprecated: the CloseNotifier interface predates Go's context package.
// New code should use [Request.Context] instead.
type CloseNotifier interface {
// CloseNotify returns a channel that receives at most a
// single value (true) when the client connection has gone
// away.
//
// CloseNotify may wait to notify until Request.Body has been
// fully read.
//
// After the Handler has returned, there is no guarantee
// that the channel receives a value.
//
// If the protocol is HTTP/1.1 and CloseNotify is called while
// processing an idempotent request (such as GET) while
// HTTP/1.1 pipelining is in use, the arrival of a subsequent
// pipelined request may cause a value to be sent on the
// returned channel. In practice HTTP/1.1 pipelining is not
// enabled in browsers and not seen often in the wild. If this
// is a problem, use HTTP/2 or only use CloseNotify on methods
// such as POST.
CloseNotify() <-chan bool
}
var (
// ServerContextKey is a context key. It can be used in HTTP
// handlers with Context.Value to access the server that
// started the handler. The associated value will be of
// type *Server.
ServerContextKey = &contextKey{"http-server"}
// LocalAddrContextKey is a context key. It can be used in
// HTTP handlers with Context.Value to access the local
// address the connection arrived on.
// The associated value will be of type net.Addr.
LocalAddrContextKey = &contextKey{"local-addr"}
)
// A conn represents the server side of an HTTP connection.
type conn struct {
// server is the server on which the connection arrived.
// Immutable; never nil.
server *Server
// cancelCtx cancels the connection-level context.
cancelCtx context.CancelFunc
// rwc is the underlying network connection.
// This is never wrapped by other types and is the value given out
// to CloseNotifier callers. It is usually of type *net.TCPConn or
// *tls.Conn.
rwc net.Conn
// remoteAddr is rwc.RemoteAddr().String(). It is not populated synchronously
// inside the Listener's Accept goroutine, as some implementations block.
// It is populated immediately inside the (*conn).serve goroutine.
// This is the value of a Handler's (*Request).RemoteAddr.
remoteAddr string
// tlsState is the TLS connection state when using TLS.
// nil means not TLS.
tlsState *tls.ConnectionState
// werr is set to the first write error to rwc.
// It is set via checkConnErrorWriter{w}, where bufw writes.
werr error
// r is bufr's read source. It's a wrapper around rwc that provides
// io.LimitedReader-style limiting (while reading request headers)
// and functionality to support CloseNotifier. See *connReader docs.
r *connReader
// bufr reads from r.
bufr *bufio.Reader
// bufw writes to checkConnErrorWriter{c}, which populates werr on error.
bufw *bufio.Writer
// lastMethod is the method of the most recent request
// on this connection, if any.
lastMethod string
curReq atomic.Pointer[response] // (which has a Request in it)
curState atomic.Uint64 // packed (unixtime<<8|uint8(ConnState))
// mu guards hijackedv
mu sync.Mutex
// hijackedv is whether this connection has been hijacked
// by a Handler with the Hijacker interface.
// It is guarded by mu.
hijackedv bool
}
func (c *conn) hijacked() bool {
c.mu.Lock()
defer c.mu.Unlock()
return c.hijackedv
}
// c.mu must be held.
func (c *conn) hijackLocked() (rwc net.Conn, buf *bufio.ReadWriter, err error) {
if c.hijackedv {
return nil, nil, ErrHijacked
}
c.r.abortPendingRead()
c.hijackedv = true
rwc = c.rwc
rwc.SetDeadline(time.Time{})
buf = bufio.NewReadWriter(c.bufr, bufio.NewWriter(rwc))
if c.r.hasByte {
if _, err := c.bufr.Peek(c.bufr.Buffered() + 1); err != nil {
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("unexpected Peek failure reading buffered byte: %v", err)
}
}
c.setState(rwc, StateHijacked, runHooks)
return
}
// This should be >= 512 bytes for DetectContentType,
// but otherwise it's somewhat arbitrary.
const bufferBeforeChunkingSize = 2048
// chunkWriter writes to a response's conn buffer, and is the writer
// wrapped by the response.w buffered writer.
//
// chunkWriter also is responsible for finalizing the Header, including
// conditionally setting the Content-Type and setting a Content-Length
// in cases where the handler's final output is smaller than the buffer
// size. It also conditionally adds chunk headers, when in chunking mode.
//
// See the comment above (*response).Write for the entire write flow.
type chunkWriter struct {
res *response
// header is either nil or a deep clone of res.handlerHeader
// at the time of res.writeHeader, if res.writeHeader is
// called and extra buffering is being done to calculate
// Content-Type and/or Content-Length.
header Header
// wroteHeader tells whether the header's been written to "the
// wire" (or rather: w.conn.buf). this is unlike
// (*response).wroteHeader, which tells only whether it was
// logically written.
wroteHeader bool
// set by the writeHeader method:
chunking bool // using chunked transfer encoding for reply body
}
var (
crlf = []byte("\r\n")
colonSpace = []byte(": ")
)
func (cw *chunkWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if !cw.wroteHeader {
cw.writeHeader(p)
}
if cw.res.req.Method == "HEAD" {
// Eat writes.
return len(p), nil
}
if cw.chunking {
_, err = fmt.Fprintf(cw.res.conn.bufw, "%x\r\n", len(p))
if err != nil {
cw.res.conn.rwc.Close()
return
}
}
n, err = cw.res.conn.bufw.Write(p)
if cw.chunking && err == nil {
_, err = cw.res.conn.bufw.Write(crlf)
}
if err != nil {
cw.res.conn.rwc.Close()
}
return
}
func (cw *chunkWriter) flush() error {
if !cw.wroteHeader {
cw.writeHeader(nil)
}
return cw.res.conn.bufw.Flush()
}
func (cw *chunkWriter) close() {
if !cw.wroteHeader {
cw.writeHeader(nil)
}
if cw.chunking {
bw := cw.res.conn.bufw // conn's bufio writer
// zero chunk to mark EOF
bw.WriteString("0\r\n")
if trailers := cw.res.finalTrailers(); trailers != nil {
trailers.Write(bw) // the writer handles noting errors
}
// final blank line after the trailers (whether
// present or not)
bw.WriteString("\r\n")
}
}
// A response represents the server side of an HTTP response.
type response struct {
conn *conn
req *Request // request for this response
reqBody io.ReadCloser
cancelCtx context.CancelFunc // when ServeHTTP exits
wroteHeader bool // a non-1xx header has been (logically) written
wants10KeepAlive bool // HTTP/1.0 w/ Connection "keep-alive"
wantsClose bool // HTTP request has Connection "close"
// canWriteContinue is an atomic boolean that says whether or
// not a 100 Continue header can be written to the
// connection.
// writeContinueMu must be held while writing the header.
// These two fields together synchronize the body reader (the
// expectContinueReader, which wants to write 100 Continue)
// against the main writer.
writeContinueMu sync.Mutex
canWriteContinue atomic.Bool
w *bufio.Writer // buffers output in chunks to chunkWriter
cw chunkWriter
// handlerHeader is the Header that Handlers get access to,
// which may be retained and mutated even after WriteHeader.
// handlerHeader is copied into cw.header at WriteHeader
// time, and privately mutated thereafter.
handlerHeader Header
calledHeader bool // handler accessed handlerHeader via Header
written int64 // number of bytes written in body
contentLength int64 // explicitly-declared Content-Length; or -1
status int // status code passed to WriteHeader
// close connection after this reply. set on request and
// updated after response from handler if there's a
// "Connection: keep-alive" response header and a
// Content-Length.
closeAfterReply bool
// When fullDuplex is false (the default), we consume any remaining
// request body before starting to write a response.
fullDuplex bool
// requestBodyLimitHit is set by requestTooLarge when
// maxBytesReader hits its max size. It is checked in
// WriteHeader, to make sure we don't consume the
// remaining request body to try to advance to the next HTTP
// request. Instead, when this is set, we stop reading
// subsequent requests on this connection and stop reading
// input from it.
requestBodyLimitHit bool
// trailers are the headers to be sent after the handler
// finishes writing the body. This field is initialized from
// the Trailer response header when the response header is
// written.
trailers []string
handlerDone atomic.Bool // set true when the handler exits
// Buffers for Date, Content-Length, and status code
dateBuf [len(TimeFormat)]byte
clenBuf [10]byte
statusBuf [3]byte
// closeNotifyCh is the channel returned by CloseNotify.
// TODO(bradfitz): this is currently (for Go 1.8) always
// non-nil. Make this lazily-created again as it used to be?
closeNotifyCh chan bool
didCloseNotify atomic.Bool // atomic (only false->true winner should send)
}
func (c *response) SetReadDeadline(deadline time.Time) error {
return c.conn.rwc.SetReadDeadline(deadline)
}
func (c *response) SetWriteDeadline(deadline time.Time) error {
return c.conn.rwc.SetWriteDeadline(deadline)
}
func (c *response) EnableFullDuplex() error {
c.fullDuplex = true
return nil
}
// TrailerPrefix is a magic prefix for [ResponseWriter.Header] map keys
// that, if present, signals that the map entry is actually for
// the response trailers, and not the response headers. The prefix
// is stripped after the ServeHTTP call finishes and the values are
// sent in the trailers.
//
// This mechanism is intended only for trailers that are not known
// prior to the headers being written. If the set of trailers is fixed
// or known before the header is written, the normal Go trailers mechanism
// is preferred:
//
// https://pkg.go.dev/net/http#ResponseWriter
// https://pkg.go.dev/net/http#example-ResponseWriter-Trailers
const TrailerPrefix = "Trailer:"
// finalTrailers is called after the Handler exits and returns a non-nil
// value if the Handler set any trailers.
func (w *response) finalTrailers() Header {
var t Header
for k, vv := range w.handlerHeader {
if kk, found := strings.CutPrefix(k, TrailerPrefix); found {
if t == nil {
t = make(Header)
}
t[kk] = vv
}
}
for _, k := range w.trailers {
if t == nil {
t = make(Header)
}
for _, v := range w.handlerHeader[k] {
t.Add(k, v)
}
}
return t
}
// declareTrailer is called for each Trailer header when the
// response header is written. It notes that a header will need to be
// written in the trailers at the end of the response.
func (w *response) declareTrailer(k string) {
k = CanonicalHeaderKey(k)
if !httpguts.ValidTrailerHeader(k) {
// Forbidden by RFC 7230, section 4.1.2
return
}
w.trailers = append(w.trailers, k)
}
// requestTooLarge is called by maxBytesReader when too much input has
// been read from the client.
func (w *response) requestTooLarge() {
w.closeAfterReply = true
w.requestBodyLimitHit = true
if !w.wroteHeader {
w.Header().Set("Connection", "close")
}
}
// disableWriteContinue stops Request.Body.Read from sending an automatic 100-Continue.
// If a 100-Continue is being written, it waits for it to complete before continuing.
func (w *response) disableWriteContinue() {
w.writeContinueMu.Lock()
w.canWriteContinue.Store(false)
w.writeContinueMu.Unlock()
}
// writerOnly hides an io.Writer value's optional ReadFrom method
// from io.Copy.
type writerOnly struct {
io.Writer
}
// ReadFrom is here to optimize copying from an [*os.File] regular file
// to a [*net.TCPConn] with sendfile, or from a supported src type such
// as a *net.TCPConn on Linux with splice.
func (w *response) ReadFrom(src io.Reader) (n int64, err error) {
buf := getCopyBuf()
defer putCopyBuf(buf)
// Our underlying w.conn.rwc is usually a *TCPConn (with its
// own ReadFrom method). If not, just fall back to the normal
// copy method.
rf, ok := w.conn.rwc.(io.ReaderFrom)
if !ok {
return io.CopyBuffer(writerOnly{w}, src, buf)
}
// Copy the first sniffLen bytes before switching to ReadFrom.
// This ensures we don't start writing the response before the
// source is available (see golang.org/issue/5660) and provides
// enough bytes to perform Content-Type sniffing when required.
if !w.cw.wroteHeader {
n0, err := io.CopyBuffer(writerOnly{w}, io.LimitReader(src, sniffLen), buf)
n += n0
if err != nil || n0 < sniffLen {
return n, err
}
}
w.w.Flush() // get rid of any previous writes
w.cw.flush() // make sure Header is written; flush data to rwc
// Now that cw has been flushed, its chunking field is guaranteed initialized.
if !w.cw.chunking && w.bodyAllowed() {
n0, err := rf.ReadFrom(src)
n += n0
w.written += n0
return n, err
}
n0, err := io.CopyBuffer(writerOnly{w}, src, buf)
n += n0
return n, err
}
// debugServerConnections controls whether all server connections are wrapped
// with a verbose logging wrapper.
const debugServerConnections = false
// Create new connection from rwc.
func (srv *Server) newConn(rwc net.Conn) *conn {
c := &conn{
server: srv,
rwc: rwc,
}
if debugServerConnections {
c.rwc = newLoggingConn("server", c.rwc)
}
return c
}
type readResult struct {
_ incomparable
n int
err error
b byte // byte read, if n == 1
}
// connReader is the io.Reader wrapper used by *conn. It combines a
// selectively-activated io.LimitedReader (to bound request header
// read sizes) with support for selectively keeping an io.Reader.Read
// call blocked in a background goroutine to wait for activity and
// trigger a CloseNotifier channel.
type connReader struct {
conn *conn
mu sync.Mutex // guards following
hasByte bool
byteBuf [1]byte
cond *sync.Cond
inRead bool
aborted bool // set true before conn.rwc deadline is set to past
remain int64 // bytes remaining
}
func (cr *connReader) lock() {
cr.mu.Lock()
if cr.cond == nil {
cr.cond = sync.NewCond(&cr.mu)
}
}
func (cr *connReader) unlock() { cr.mu.Unlock() }
func (cr *connReader) startBackgroundRead() {
cr.lock()
defer cr.unlock()
if cr.inRead {
panic("invalid concurrent Body.Read call")
}
if cr.hasByte {
return
}
cr.inRead = true
cr.conn.rwc.SetReadDeadline(time.Time{})
go cr.backgroundRead()
}
func (cr *connReader) backgroundRead() {
n, err := cr.conn.rwc.Read(cr.byteBuf[:])
cr.lock()
if n == 1 {
cr.hasByte = true
// We were past the end of the previous request's body already
// (since we wouldn't be in a background read otherwise), so
// this is a pipelined HTTP request. Prior to Go 1.11 we used to
// send on the CloseNotify channel and cancel the context here,
// but the behavior was documented as only "may", and we only
// did that because that's how CloseNotify accidentally behaved
// in very early Go releases prior to context support. Once we
// added context support, people used a Handler's
// Request.Context() and passed it along. Having that context
// cancel on pipelined HTTP requests caused problems.
// Fortunately, almost nothing uses HTTP/1.x pipelining.
// Unfortunately, apt-get does, or sometimes does.
// New Go 1.11 behavior: don't fire CloseNotify or cancel
// contexts on pipelined requests. Shouldn't affect people, but
// fixes cases like Issue 23921. This does mean that a client
// closing their TCP connection after sending a pipelined
// request won't cancel the context, but we'll catch that on any
// write failure (in checkConnErrorWriter.Write).
// If the server never writes, yes, there are still contrived
// server & client behaviors where this fails to ever cancel the
// context, but that's kinda why HTTP/1.x pipelining died
// anyway.
}
if ne, ok := err.(net.Error); ok && cr.aborted && ne.Timeout() {
// Ignore this error. It's the expected error from
// another goroutine calling abortPendingRead.
} else if err != nil {
cr.handleReadError(err)
}
cr.aborted = false
cr.inRead = false
cr.unlock()
cr.cond.Broadcast()
}
func (cr *connReader) abortPendingRead() {
cr.lock()
defer cr.unlock()
if !cr.inRead {
return
}
cr.aborted = true
cr.conn.rwc.SetReadDeadline(aLongTimeAgo)
for cr.inRead {
cr.cond.Wait()
}
cr.conn.rwc.SetReadDeadline(time.Time{})
}
func (cr *connReader) setReadLimit(remain int64) { cr.remain = remain }
func (cr *connReader) setInfiniteReadLimit() { cr.remain = maxInt64 }
func (cr *connReader) hitReadLimit() bool { return cr.remain <= 0 }
// handleReadError is called whenever a Read from the client returns a
// non-nil error.
//
// The provided non-nil err is almost always io.EOF or a "use of
// closed network connection". In any case, the error is not
// particularly interesting, except perhaps for debugging during
// development. Any error means the connection is dead and we should
// down its context.
//
// It may be called from multiple goroutines.
func (cr *connReader) handleReadError(_ error) {
cr.conn.cancelCtx()
cr.closeNotify()
}
// may be called from multiple goroutines.
func (cr *connReader) closeNotify() {
res := cr.conn.curReq.Load()
if res != nil && !res.didCloseNotify.Swap(true) {
res.closeNotifyCh <- true
}
}
func (cr *connReader) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
cr.lock()
if cr.inRead {
cr.unlock()
if cr.conn.hijacked() {
panic("invalid Body.Read call. After hijacked, the original Request must not be used")
}
panic("invalid concurrent Body.Read call")
}
if cr.hitReadLimit() {
cr.unlock()
return 0, io.EOF
}
if len(p) == 0 {
cr.unlock()
return 0, nil
}
if int64(len(p)) > cr.remain {
p = p[:cr.remain]
}
if cr.hasByte {
p[0] = cr.byteBuf[0]
cr.hasByte = false
cr.unlock()
return 1, nil
}
cr.inRead = true
cr.unlock()
n, err = cr.conn.rwc.Read(p)
cr.lock()
cr.inRead = false
if err != nil {
cr.handleReadError(err)
}
cr.remain -= int64(n)
cr.unlock()
cr.cond.Broadcast()
return n, err
}
var (
bufioReaderPool sync.Pool
bufioWriter2kPool sync.Pool
bufioWriter4kPool sync.Pool
)
const copyBufPoolSize = 32 * 1024
var copyBufPool = sync.Pool{New: func() any { return new([copyBufPoolSize]byte) }}
func getCopyBuf() []byte {
return copyBufPool.Get().(*[copyBufPoolSize]byte)[:]
}
func putCopyBuf(b []byte) {
if len(b) != copyBufPoolSize {
panic("trying to put back buffer of the wrong size in the copyBufPool")
}
copyBufPool.Put((*[copyBufPoolSize]byte)(b))
}
func bufioWriterPool(size int) *sync.Pool {
switch size {
case 2 << 10:
return &bufioWriter2kPool
case 4 << 10:
return &bufioWriter4kPool
}
return nil
}
// newBufioReader should be an internal detail,
// but widely used packages access it using linkname.
// Notable members of the hall of shame include:
// - github.com/gobwas/ws
//
// Do not remove or change the type signature.
// See go.dev/issue/67401.
//
//go:linkname newBufioReader
func newBufioReader(r io.Reader) *bufio.Reader {
if v := bufioReaderPool.Get(); v != nil {
br := v.(*bufio.Reader)
br.Reset(r)
return br
}
// Note: if this reader size is ever changed, update
// TestHandlerBodyClose's assumptions.
return bufio.NewReader(r)
}
// putBufioReader should be an internal detail,
// but widely used packages access it using linkname.
// Notable members of the hall of shame include:
// - github.com/gobwas/ws
//
// Do not remove or change the type signature.
// See go.dev/issue/67401.
//
//go:linkname putBufioReader
func putBufioReader(br *bufio.Reader) {
br.Reset(nil)
bufioReaderPool.Put(br)
}
// newBufioWriterSize should be an internal detail,
// but widely used packages access it using linkname.
// Notable members of the hall of shame include:
// - github.com/gobwas/ws
//
// Do not remove or change the type signature.
// See go.dev/issue/67401.
//
//go:linkname newBufioWriterSize
func newBufioWriterSize(w io.Writer, size int) *bufio.Writer {
pool := bufioWriterPool(size)
if pool != nil {
if v := pool.Get(); v != nil {
bw := v.(*bufio.Writer)
bw.Reset(w)
return bw
}
}
return bufio.NewWriterSize(w, size)
}
// putBufioWriter should be an internal detail,
// but widely used packages access it using linkname.
// Notable members of the hall of shame include:
// - github.com/gobwas/ws
//
// Do not remove or change the type signature.
// See go.dev/issue/67401.
//
//go:linkname putBufioWriter
func putBufioWriter(bw *bufio.Writer) {
bw.Reset(nil)
if pool := bufioWriterPool(bw.Available()); pool != nil {
pool.Put(bw)
}
}
// DefaultMaxHeaderBytes is the maximum permitted size of the headers
// in an HTTP request.
// This can be overridden by setting [Server.MaxHeaderBytes].
const DefaultMaxHeaderBytes = 1 << 20 // 1 MB
func (srv *Server) maxHeaderBytes() int {
if srv.MaxHeaderBytes > 0 {
return srv.MaxHeaderBytes
}
return DefaultMaxHeaderBytes
}
func (srv *Server) initialReadLimitSize() int64 {
return int64(srv.maxHeaderBytes()) + 4096 // bufio slop
}
// tlsHandshakeTimeout returns the time limit permitted for the TLS
// handshake, or zero for unlimited.
//
// It returns the minimum of any positive ReadHeaderTimeout,
// ReadTimeout, or WriteTimeout.
func (srv *Server) tlsHandshakeTimeout() time.Duration {
var ret time.Duration
for _, v := range [...]time.Duration{
srv.ReadHeaderTimeout,
srv.ReadTimeout,
srv.WriteTimeout,
} {
if v <= 0 {
continue
}
if ret == 0 || v < ret {
ret = v
}
}
return ret
}
// wrapper around io.ReadCloser which on first read, sends an
// HTTP/1.1 100 Continue header
type expectContinueReader struct {
resp *response
readCloser io.ReadCloser
closed atomic.Bool
sawEOF atomic.Bool
}
func (ecr *expectContinueReader) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if ecr.closed.Load() {
return 0, ErrBodyReadAfterClose
}
w := ecr.resp
if w.canWriteContinue.Load() {
w.writeContinueMu.Lock()
if w.canWriteContinue.Load() {
w.conn.bufw.WriteString("HTTP/1.1 100 Continue\r\n\r\n")
w.conn.bufw.Flush()
w.canWriteContinue.Store(false)
}
w.writeContinueMu.Unlock()
}
n, err = ecr.readCloser.Read(p)
if err == io.EOF {
ecr.sawEOF.Store(true)
}
return
}
func (ecr *expectContinueReader) Close() error {
ecr.closed.Store(true)
return ecr.readCloser.Close()
}
// TimeFormat is the time format to use when generating times in HTTP
// headers. It is like [time.RFC1123] but hard-codes GMT as the time
// zone. The time being formatted must be in UTC for Format to
// generate the correct format.
//
// For parsing this time format, see [ParseTime].
const TimeFormat = "Mon, 02 Jan 2006 15:04:05 GMT"
// appendTime is a non-allocating version of []byte(t.UTC().Format(TimeFormat))
func appendTime(b []byte, t time.Time) []byte {
const days = "SunMonTueWedThuFriSat"
const months = "JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec"
t = t.UTC()
yy, mm, dd := t.Date()
hh, mn, ss := t.Clock()
day := days[3*t.Weekday():]
mon := months[3*(mm-1):]
return append(b,
day[0], day[1], day[2], ',', ' ',
byte('0'+dd/10), byte('0'+dd%10), ' ',
mon[0], mon[1], mon[2], ' ',
byte('0'+yy/1000), byte('0'+(yy/100)%10), byte('0'+(yy/10)%10), byte('0'+yy%10), ' ',
byte('0'+hh/10), byte('0'+hh%10), ':',
byte('0'+mn/10), byte('0'+mn%10), ':',
byte('0'+ss/10), byte('0'+ss%10), ' ',
'G', 'M', 'T')
}
var errTooLarge = errors.New("http: request too large")
// Read next request from connection.
func (c *conn) readRequest(ctx context.Context) (w *response, err error) {
if c.hijacked() {
return nil, ErrHijacked
}
var (
wholeReqDeadline time.Time // or zero if none
hdrDeadline time.Time // or zero if none
)
t0 := time.Now()
if d := c.server.readHeaderTimeout(); d > 0 {
hdrDeadline = t0.Add(d)
}
if d := c.server.ReadTimeout; d > 0 {
wholeReqDeadline = t0.Add(d)
}
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(hdrDeadline)
if d := c.server.WriteTimeout; d > 0 {
defer func() {
c.rwc.SetWriteDeadline(time.Now().Add(d))
}()
}
c.r.setReadLimit(c.server.initialReadLimitSize())
if c.lastMethod == "POST" {
// RFC 7230 section 3 tolerance for old buggy clients.
peek, _ := c.bufr.Peek(4) // ReadRequest will get err below
c.bufr.Discard(numLeadingCRorLF(peek))
}
req, err := readRequest(c.bufr)
if err != nil {
if c.r.hitReadLimit() {
return nil, errTooLarge
}
return nil, err
}
if !http1ServerSupportsRequest(req) {
return nil, statusError{StatusHTTPVersionNotSupported, "unsupported protocol version"}
}
c.lastMethod = req.Method
c.r.setInfiniteReadLimit()
hosts, haveHost := req.Header["Host"]
isH2Upgrade := req.isH2Upgrade()
if req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) && (!haveHost || len(hosts) == 0) && !isH2Upgrade && req.Method != "CONNECT" {
return nil, badRequestError("missing required Host header")
}
if len(hosts) == 1 && !httpguts.ValidHostHeader(hosts[0]) {
return nil, badRequestError("malformed Host header")
}
for k, vv := range req.Header {
if !httpguts.ValidHeaderFieldName(k) {
return nil, badRequestError("invalid header name")
}
for _, v := range vv {
if !httpguts.ValidHeaderFieldValue(v) {
return nil, badRequestError("invalid header value")
}
}
}
delete(req.Header, "Host")
ctx, cancelCtx := context.WithCancel(ctx)
req.ctx = ctx
req.RemoteAddr = c.remoteAddr
req.TLS = c.tlsState
if body, ok := req.Body.(*body); ok {
body.doEarlyClose = true
}
// Adjust the read deadline if necessary.
if !hdrDeadline.Equal(wholeReqDeadline) {
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(wholeReqDeadline)
}
w = &response{
conn: c,
cancelCtx: cancelCtx,
req: req,
reqBody: req.Body,
handlerHeader: make(Header),
contentLength: -1,
closeNotifyCh: make(chan bool, 1),
// We populate these ahead of time so we're not
// reading from req.Header after their Handler starts
// and maybe mutates it (Issue 14940)
wants10KeepAlive: req.wantsHttp10KeepAlive(),
wantsClose: req.wantsClose(),
}
if isH2Upgrade {
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
w.cw.res = w
w.w = newBufioWriterSize(&w.cw, bufferBeforeChunkingSize)
return w, nil
}
// http1ServerSupportsRequest reports whether Go's HTTP/1.x server
// supports the given request.
func http1ServerSupportsRequest(req *Request) bool {
if req.ProtoMajor == 1 {
return true
}
// Accept "PRI * HTTP/2.0" upgrade requests, so Handlers can
// wire up their own HTTP/2 upgrades.
if req.ProtoMajor == 2 && req.ProtoMinor == 0 &&
req.Method == "PRI" && req.RequestURI == "*" {
return true
}
// Reject HTTP/0.x, and all other HTTP/2+ requests (which
// aren't encoded in ASCII anyway).
return false
}
func (w *response) Header() Header {
if w.cw.header == nil && w.wroteHeader && !w.cw.wroteHeader {
// Accessing the header between logically writing it
// and physically writing it means we need to allocate
// a clone to snapshot the logically written state.
w.cw.header = w.handlerHeader.Clone()
}
w.calledHeader = true
return w.handlerHeader
}
// maxPostHandlerReadBytes is the max number of Request.Body bytes not
// consumed by a handler that the server will read from the client
// in order to keep a connection alive. If there are more bytes
// than this, the server, to be paranoid, instead sends a
// "Connection close" response.
//
// This number is approximately what a typical machine's TCP buffer
// size is anyway. (if we have the bytes on the machine, we might as
// well read them)
const maxPostHandlerReadBytes = 256 << 10
func checkWriteHeaderCode(code int) {
// Issue 22880: require valid WriteHeader status codes.
// For now we only enforce that it's three digits.
// In the future we might block things over 599 (600 and above aren't defined
// at https://httpwg.org/specs/rfc7231.html#status.codes).
// But for now any three digits.
//
// We used to send "HTTP/1.1 000 0" on the wire in responses but there's
// no equivalent bogus thing we can realistically send in HTTP/2,
// so we'll consistently panic instead and help people find their bugs
// early. (We can't return an error from WriteHeader even if we wanted to.)
if code < 100 || code > 999 {
panic(fmt.Sprintf("invalid WriteHeader code %v", code))
}
}
// relevantCaller searches the call stack for the first function outside of net/http.
// The purpose of this function is to provide more helpful error messages.
func relevantCaller() runtime.Frame {
pc := make([]uintptr, 16)
n := runtime.Callers(1, pc)
frames := runtime.CallersFrames(pc[:n])
var frame runtime.Frame
for {
frame, more := frames.Next()
if !strings.HasPrefix(frame.Function, "net/http.") {
return frame
}
if !more {
break
}
}
return frame
}
func (w *response) WriteHeader(code int) {
if w.conn.hijacked() {
caller := relevantCaller()
w.conn.server.logf("http: response.WriteHeader on hijacked connection from %s (%s:%d)", caller.Function, path.Base(caller.File), caller.Line)
return
}
if w.wroteHeader {
caller := relevantCaller()
w.conn.server.logf("http: superfluous response.WriteHeader call from %s (%s:%d)", caller.Function, path.Base(caller.File), caller.Line)
return
}
checkWriteHeaderCode(code)
if code < 101 || code > 199 {
// Sending a 100 Continue or any non-1xx header disables the
// automatically-sent 100 Continue from Request.Body.Read.
w.disableWriteContinue()
}
// Handle informational headers.
//
// We shouldn't send any further headers after 101 Switching Protocols,
// so it takes the non-informational path.
if code >= 100 && code <= 199 && code != StatusSwitchingProtocols {
writeStatusLine(w.conn.bufw, w.req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1), code, w.statusBuf[:])
// Per RFC 8297 we must not clear the current header map
w.handlerHeader.WriteSubset(w.conn.bufw, excludedHeadersNoBody)
w.conn.bufw.Write(crlf)
w.conn.bufw.Flush()
return
}
w.wroteHeader = true
w.status = code
if w.calledHeader && w.cw.header == nil {
w.cw.header = w.handlerHeader.Clone()
}
if cl := w.handlerHeader.get("Content-Length"); cl != "" {
v, err := strconv.ParseInt(cl, 10, 64)
if err == nil && v >= 0 {
w.contentLength = v
} else {
w.conn.server.logf("http: invalid Content-Length of %q", cl)
w.handlerHeader.Del("Content-Length")
}
}
}
// extraHeader is the set of headers sometimes added by chunkWriter.writeHeader.
// This type is used to avoid extra allocations from cloning and/or populating
// the response Header map and all its 1-element slices.
type extraHeader struct {
contentType string
connection string
transferEncoding string
date []byte // written if not nil
contentLength []byte // written if not nil
}
// Sorted the same as extraHeader.Write's loop.
var extraHeaderKeys = [][]byte{
[]byte("Content-Type"),
[]byte("Connection"),
[]byte("Transfer-Encoding"),
}
var (
headerContentLength = []byte("Content-Length: ")
headerDate = []byte("Date: ")
)
// Write writes the headers described in h to w.
//
// This method has a value receiver, despite the somewhat large size
// of h, because it prevents an allocation. The escape analysis isn't
// smart enough to realize this function doesn't mutate h.
func (h extraHeader) Write(w *bufio.Writer) {
if h.date != nil {
w.Write(headerDate)
w.Write(h.date)
w.Write(crlf)
}
if h.contentLength != nil {
w.Write(headerContentLength)
w.Write(h.contentLength)
w.Write(crlf)
}
for i, v := range []string{h.contentType, h.connection, h.transferEncoding} {
if v != "" {
w.Write(extraHeaderKeys[i])
w.Write(colonSpace)
w.WriteString(v)
w.Write(crlf)
}
}
}
// writeHeader finalizes the header sent to the client and writes it
// to cw.res.conn.bufw.
//
// p is not written by writeHeader, but is the first chunk of the body
// that will be written. It is sniffed for a Content-Type if none is
// set explicitly. It's also used to set the Content-Length, if the
// total body size was small and the handler has already finished
// running.
func (cw *chunkWriter) writeHeader(p []byte) {
if cw.wroteHeader {
return
}
cw.wroteHeader = true
w := cw.res
keepAlivesEnabled := w.conn.server.doKeepAlives()
isHEAD := w.req.Method == "HEAD"
// header is written out to w.conn.buf below. Depending on the
// state of the handler, we either own the map or not. If we
// don't own it, the exclude map is created lazily for
// WriteSubset to remove headers. The setHeader struct holds
// headers we need to add.
header := cw.header
owned := header != nil
if !owned {
header = w.handlerHeader
}
var excludeHeader map[string]bool
delHeader := func(key string) {
if owned {
header.Del(key)
return
}
if _, ok := header[key]; !ok {
return
}
if excludeHeader == nil {
excludeHeader = make(map[string]bool)
}
excludeHeader[key] = true
}
var setHeader extraHeader
// Don't write out the fake "Trailer:foo" keys. See TrailerPrefix.
trailers := false
for k := range cw.header {
if strings.HasPrefix(k, TrailerPrefix) {
if excludeHeader == nil {
excludeHeader = make(map[string]bool)
}
excludeHeader[k] = true
trailers = true
}
}
for _, v := range cw.header["Trailer"] {
trailers = true
foreachHeaderElement(v, cw.res.declareTrailer)
}
te := header.get("Transfer-Encoding")
hasTE := te != ""
// If the handler is done but never sent a Content-Length
// response header and this is our first (and last) write, set
// it, even to zero. This helps HTTP/1.0 clients keep their
// "keep-alive" connections alive.
// Exceptions: 304/204/1xx responses never get Content-Length, and if
// it was a HEAD request, we don't know the difference between
// 0 actual bytes and 0 bytes because the handler noticed it
// was a HEAD request and chose not to write anything. So for
// HEAD, the handler should either write the Content-Length or
// write non-zero bytes. If it's actually 0 bytes and the
// handler never looked at the Request.Method, we just don't
// send a Content-Length header.
// Further, we don't send an automatic Content-Length if they
// set a Transfer-Encoding, because they're generally incompatible.
if w.handlerDone.Load() && !trailers && !hasTE && bodyAllowedForStatus(w.status) && !header.has("Content-Length") && (!isHEAD || len(p) > 0) {
w.contentLength = int64(len(p))
setHeader.contentLength = strconv.AppendInt(cw.res.clenBuf[:0], int64(len(p)), 10)
}
// If this was an HTTP/1.0 request with keep-alive and we sent a
// Content-Length back, we can make this a keep-alive response ...
if w.wants10KeepAlive && keepAlivesEnabled {
sentLength := header.get("Content-Length") != ""
if sentLength && header.get("Connection") == "keep-alive" {
w.closeAfterReply = false
}
}
// Check for an explicit (and valid) Content-Length header.
hasCL := w.contentLength != -1
if w.wants10KeepAlive && (isHEAD || hasCL || !bodyAllowedForStatus(w.status)) {
_, connectionHeaderSet := header["Connection"]
if !connectionHeaderSet {
setHeader.connection = "keep-alive"
}
} else if !w.req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) || w.wantsClose {
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
if header.get("Connection") == "close" || !keepAlivesEnabled {
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
// If the client wanted a 100-continue but we never sent it to
// them (or, more strictly: we never finished reading their
// request body), don't reuse this connection.
//
// This behavior was first added on the theory that we don't know
// if the next bytes on the wire are going to be the remainder of
// the request body or the subsequent request (see issue 11549),
// but that's not correct: If we keep using the connection,
// the client is required to send the request body whether we
// asked for it or not.
//
// We probably do want to skip reusing the connection in most cases,
// however. If the client is offering a large request body that we
// don't intend to use, then it's better to close the connection
// than to read the body. For now, assume that if we're sending
// headers, the handler is done reading the body and we should
// drop the connection if we haven't seen EOF.
if ecr, ok := w.req.Body.(*expectContinueReader); ok && !ecr.sawEOF.Load() {
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
// We do this by default because there are a number of clients that
// send a full request before starting to read the response, and they
// can deadlock if we start writing the response with unconsumed body
// remaining. See Issue 15527 for some history.
//
// If full duplex mode has been enabled with ResponseController.EnableFullDuplex,
// then leave the request body alone.
//
// We don't take this path when w.closeAfterReply is set.
// We may not need to consume the request to get ready for the next one
// (since we're closing the conn), but a client which sends a full request
// before reading a response may deadlock in this case.
// This behavior has been present since CL 5268043 (2011), however,
// so it doesn't seem to be causing problems.
if w.req.ContentLength != 0 && !w.closeAfterReply && !w.fullDuplex {
var discard, tooBig bool
switch bdy := w.req.Body.(type) {
case *expectContinueReader:
// We only get here if we have already fully consumed the request body
// (see above).
case *body:
bdy.mu.Lock()
switch {
case bdy.closed:
if !bdy.sawEOF {
// Body was closed in handler with non-EOF error.
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
case bdy.unreadDataSizeLocked() >= maxPostHandlerReadBytes:
tooBig = true
default:
discard = true
}
bdy.mu.Unlock()
default:
discard = true
}
if discard {
_, err := io.CopyN(io.Discard, w.reqBody, maxPostHandlerReadBytes+1)
switch err {
case nil:
// There must be even more data left over.
tooBig = true
case ErrBodyReadAfterClose:
// Body was already consumed and closed.
case io.EOF:
// The remaining body was just consumed, close it.
err = w.reqBody.Close()
if err != nil {
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
default:
// Some other kind of error occurred, like a read timeout, or
// corrupt chunked encoding. In any case, whatever remains
// on the wire must not be parsed as another HTTP request.
w.closeAfterReply = true
}
}
if tooBig {
w.requestTooLarge()
delHeader("Connection")
setHeader.connection = "close"
}
}
code := w.status
if bodyAllowedForStatus(code) {
// If no content type, apply sniffing algorithm to body.
_, haveType := header["Content-Type"]
// If the Content-Encoding was set and is non-blank,
// we shouldn't sniff the body. See Issue 31753.
ce := header.Get("Content-Encoding")
hasCE := len(ce) > 0
if !hasCE && !haveType && !hasTE && len(p) > 0 {
setHeader.contentType = DetectContentType(p)
}
} else {
for _, k := range suppressedHeaders(code) {
delHeader(k)
}
}
if !header.has("Date") {
setHeader.date = appendTime(cw.res.dateBuf[:0], time.Now())
}
if hasCL && hasTE && te != "identity" {
// TODO: return an error if WriteHeader gets a return parameter
// For now just ignore the Content-Length.
w.conn.server.logf("http: WriteHeader called with both Transfer-Encoding of %q and a Content-Length of %d",
te, w.contentLength)
delHeader("Content-Length")
hasCL = false
}
if w.req.Method == "HEAD" || !bodyAllowedForStatus(code) || code == StatusNoContent {
// Response has no body.
delHeader("Transfer-Encoding")
} else if hasCL {
// Content-Length has been provided, so no chunking is to be done.
delHeader("Transfer-Encoding")
} else if w.req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) {
// HTTP/1.1 or greater: Transfer-Encoding has been set to identity, and no
// content-length has been provided. The connection must be closed after the
// reply is written, and no chunking is to be done. This is the setup
// recommended in the Server-Sent Events candidate recommendation 11,
// section 8.
if hasTE && te == "identity" {
cw.chunking = false
w.closeAfterReply = true
delHeader("Transfer-Encoding")
} else {
// HTTP/1.1 or greater: use chunked transfer encoding
// to avoid closing the connection at EOF.
cw.chunking = true
setHeader.transferEncoding = "chunked"
if hasTE && te == "chunked" {
// We will send the chunked Transfer-Encoding header later.
delHeader("Transfer-Encoding")
}
}
} else {
// HTTP version < 1.1: cannot do chunked transfer
// encoding and we don't know the Content-Length so
// signal EOF by closing connection.
w.closeAfterReply = true
delHeader("Transfer-Encoding") // in case already set
}
// Cannot use Content-Length with non-identity Transfer-Encoding.
if cw.chunking {
delHeader("Content-Length")
}
if !w.req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 0) {
return
}
// Only override the Connection header if it is not a successful
// protocol switch response and if KeepAlives are not enabled.
// See https://golang.org/issue/36381.
delConnectionHeader := w.closeAfterReply &&
(!keepAlivesEnabled || !hasToken(cw.header.get("Connection"), "close")) &&
!isProtocolSwitchResponse(w.status, header)
if delConnectionHeader {
delHeader("Connection")
if w.req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) {
setHeader.connection = "close"
}
}
writeStatusLine(w.conn.bufw, w.req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1), code, w.statusBuf[:])
cw.header.WriteSubset(w.conn.bufw, excludeHeader)
setHeader.Write(w.conn.bufw)
w.conn.bufw.Write(crlf)
}
// foreachHeaderElement splits v according to the "#rule" construction
// in RFC 7230 section 7 and calls fn for each non-empty element.
func foreachHeaderElement(v string, fn func(string)) {
v = textproto.TrimString(v)
if v == "" {
return
}
if !strings.Contains(v, ",") {
fn(v)
return
}
for _, f := range strings.Split(v, ",") {
if f = textproto.TrimString(f); f != "" {
fn(f)
}
}
}
// writeStatusLine writes an HTTP/1.x Status-Line (RFC 7230 Section 3.1.2)
// to bw. is11 is whether the HTTP request is HTTP/1.1. false means HTTP/1.0.
// code is the response status code.
// scratch is an optional scratch buffer. If it has at least capacity 3, it's used.
func writeStatusLine(bw *bufio.Writer, is11 bool, code int, scratch []byte) {
if is11 {
bw.WriteString("HTTP/1.1 ")
} else {
bw.WriteString("HTTP/1.0 ")
}
if text := StatusText(code); text != "" {
bw.Write(strconv.AppendInt(scratch[:0], int64(code), 10))
bw.WriteByte(' ')
bw.WriteString(text)
bw.WriteString("\r\n")
} else {
// don't worry about performance
fmt.Fprintf(bw, "%03d status code %d\r\n", code, code)
}
}
// bodyAllowed reports whether a Write is allowed for this response type.
// It's illegal to call this before the header has been flushed.
func (w *response) bodyAllowed() bool {
if !w.wroteHeader {
panic("")
}
return bodyAllowedForStatus(w.status)
}
// The Life Of A Write is like this:
//
// Handler starts. No header has been sent. The handler can either
// write a header, or just start writing. Writing before sending a header
// sends an implicitly empty 200 OK header.
//
// If the handler didn't declare a Content-Length up front, we either
// go into chunking mode or, if the handler finishes running before
// the chunking buffer size, we compute a Content-Length and send that
// in the header instead.
//
// Likewise, if the handler didn't set a Content-Type, we sniff that
// from the initial chunk of output.
//
// The Writers are wired together like:
//
// 1. *response (the ResponseWriter) ->
// 2. (*response).w, a [*bufio.Writer] of bufferBeforeChunkingSize bytes ->
// 3. chunkWriter.Writer (whose writeHeader finalizes Content-Length/Type)
// and which writes the chunk headers, if needed ->
// 4. conn.bufw, a *bufio.Writer of default (4kB) bytes, writing to ->
// 5. checkConnErrorWriter{c}, which notes any non-nil error on Write
// and populates c.werr with it if so, but otherwise writes to ->
// 6. the rwc, the [net.Conn].
//
// TODO(bradfitz): short-circuit some of the buffering when the
// initial header contains both a Content-Type and Content-Length.
// Also short-circuit in (1) when the header's been sent and not in
// chunking mode, writing directly to (4) instead, if (2) has no
// buffered data. More generally, we could short-circuit from (1) to
// (3) even in chunking mode if the write size from (1) is over some
// threshold and nothing is in (2). The answer might be mostly making
// bufferBeforeChunkingSize smaller and having bufio's fast-paths deal
// with this instead.
func (w *response) Write(data []byte) (n int, err error) {
return w.write(len(data), data, "")
}
func (w *response) WriteString(data string) (n int, err error) {
return w.write(len(data), nil, data)
}
// either dataB or dataS is non-zero.
func (w *response) write(lenData int, dataB []byte, dataS string) (n int, err error) {
if w.conn.hijacked() {
if lenData > 0 {
caller := relevantCaller()
w.conn.server.logf("http: response.Write on hijacked connection from %s (%s:%d)", caller.Function, path.Base(caller.File), caller.Line)
}
return 0, ErrHijacked
}
if w.canWriteContinue.Load() {
// Body reader wants to write 100 Continue but hasn't yet. Tell it not to.
w.disableWriteContinue()
}
if !w.wroteHeader {
w.WriteHeader(StatusOK)
}
if lenData == 0 {
return 0, nil
}
if !w.bodyAllowed() {
return 0, ErrBodyNotAllowed
}
w.written += int64(lenData) // ignoring errors, for errorKludge
if w.contentLength != -1 && w.written > w.contentLength {
return 0, ErrContentLength
}
if dataB != nil {
return w.w.Write(dataB)
} else {
return w.w.WriteString(dataS)
}
}
func (w *response) finishRequest() {
w.handlerDone.Store(true)
if !w.wroteHeader {
w.WriteHeader(StatusOK)
}
w.w.Flush()
putBufioWriter(w.w)
w.cw.close()
w.conn.bufw.Flush()
w.conn.r.abortPendingRead()
// Close the body (regardless of w.closeAfterReply) so we can
// re-use its bufio.Reader later safely.
w.reqBody.Close()
if w.req.MultipartForm != nil {
w.req.MultipartForm.RemoveAll()
}
}
// shouldReuseConnection reports whether the underlying TCP connection can be reused.
// It must only be called after the handler is done executing.
func (w *response) shouldReuseConnection() bool {
if w.closeAfterReply {
// The request or something set while executing the
// handler indicated we shouldn't reuse this
// connection.
return false
}
if w.req.Method != "HEAD" && w.contentLength != -1 && w.bodyAllowed() && w.contentLength != w.written {
// Did not write enough. Avoid getting out of sync.
return false
}
// There was some error writing to the underlying connection
// during the request, so don't re-use this conn.
if w.conn.werr != nil {
return false
}
if w.closedRequestBodyEarly() {
return false
}
return true
}
func (w *response) closedRequestBodyEarly() bool {
body, ok := w.req.Body.(*body)
return ok && body.didEarlyClose()
}
func (w *response) Flush() {
w.FlushError()
}
func (w *response) FlushError() error {
if !w.wroteHeader {
w.WriteHeader(StatusOK)
}
err := w.w.Flush()
e2 := w.cw.flush()
if err == nil {
err = e2
}
return err
}
func (c *conn) finalFlush() {
if c.bufr != nil {
// Steal the bufio.Reader (~4KB worth of memory) and its associated
// reader for a future connection.
putBufioReader(c.bufr)
c.bufr = nil
}
if c.bufw != nil {
c.bufw.Flush()
// Steal the bufio.Writer (~4KB worth of memory) and its associated
// writer for a future connection.
putBufioWriter(c.bufw)
c.bufw = nil
}
}
// Close the connection.
func (c *conn) close() {
c.finalFlush()
c.rwc.Close()
}
// rstAvoidanceDelay is the amount of time we sleep after closing the
// write side of a TCP connection before closing the entire socket.
// By sleeping, we increase the chances that the client sees our FIN
// and processes its final data before they process the subsequent RST
// from closing a connection with known unread data.
// This RST seems to occur mostly on BSD systems. (And Windows?)
// This timeout is somewhat arbitrary (~latency around the planet),
// and may be modified by tests.
//
// TODO(bcmills): This should arguably be a server configuration parameter,
// not a hard-coded value.
var rstAvoidanceDelay = 500 * time.Millisecond
type closeWriter interface {
CloseWrite() error
}
var _ closeWriter = (*net.TCPConn)(nil)
// closeWriteAndWait flushes any outstanding data and sends a FIN packet (if
// client is connected via TCP), signaling that we're done. We then
// pause for a bit, hoping the client processes it before any
// subsequent RST.
//
// See https://golang.org/issue/3595
func (c *conn) closeWriteAndWait() {
c.finalFlush()
if tcp, ok := c.rwc.(closeWriter); ok {
tcp.CloseWrite()
}
// When we return from closeWriteAndWait, the caller will fully close the
// connection. If client is still writing to the connection, this will cause
// the write to fail with ECONNRESET or similar. Unfortunately, many TCP
// implementations will also drop unread packets from the client's read buffer
// when a write fails, causing our final response to be truncated away too.
//
// As a result, https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7230#section-6.6 recommends
// that “[t]he server … continues to read from the connection until it
// receives a corresponding close by the client, or until the server is
// reasonably certain that its own TCP stack has received the client's
// acknowledgement of the packet(s) containing the server's last response.”
//
// Unfortunately, we have no straightforward way to be “reasonably certain”
// that we have received the client's ACK, and at any rate we don't want to
// allow a misbehaving client to soak up server connections indefinitely by
// withholding an ACK, nor do we want to go through the complexity or overhead
// of using low-level APIs to figure out when a TCP round-trip has completed.
//
// Instead, we declare that we are “reasonably certain” that we received the
// ACK if maxRSTAvoidanceDelay has elapsed.
time.Sleep(rstAvoidanceDelay)
}
// validNextProto reports whether the proto is a valid ALPN protocol name.
// Everything is valid except the empty string and built-in protocol types,
// so that those can't be overridden with alternate implementations.
func validNextProto(proto string) bool {
switch proto {
case "", "http/1.1", "http/1.0":
return false
}
return true
}
const (
runHooks = true
skipHooks = false
)
func (c *conn) setState(nc net.Conn, state ConnState, runHook bool) {
srv := c.server
switch state {
case StateNew:
srv.trackConn(c, true)
case StateHijacked, StateClosed:
srv.trackConn(c, false)
}
if state > 0xff || state < 0 {
panic("internal error")
}
packedState := uint64(time.Now().Unix()<<8) | uint64(state)
c.curState.Store(packedState)
if !runHook {
return
}
if hook := srv.ConnState; hook != nil {
hook(nc, state)
}
}
func (c *conn) getState() (state ConnState, unixSec int64) {
packedState := c.curState.Load()
return ConnState(packedState & 0xff), int64(packedState >> 8)
}
// badRequestError is a literal string (used by in the server in HTML,
// unescaped) to tell the user why their request was bad. It should
// be plain text without user info or other embedded errors.
func badRequestError(e string) error { return statusError{StatusBadRequest, e} }
// statusError is an error used to respond to a request with an HTTP status.
// The text should be plain text without user info or other embedded errors.
type statusError struct {
code int
text string
}
func (e statusError) Error() string { return StatusText(e.code) + ": " + e.text }
// ErrAbortHandler is a sentinel panic value to abort a handler.
// While any panic from ServeHTTP aborts the response to the client,
// panicking with ErrAbortHandler also suppresses logging of a stack
// trace to the server's error log.
var ErrAbortHandler = errors.New("net/http: abort Handler")
// isCommonNetReadError reports whether err is a common error
// encountered during reading a request off the network when the
// client has gone away or had its read fail somehow. This is used to
// determine which logs are interesting enough to log about.
func isCommonNetReadError(err error) bool {
if err == io.EOF {
return true
}
if neterr, ok := err.(net.Error); ok && neterr.Timeout() {
return true
}
if oe, ok := err.(*net.OpError); ok && oe.Op == "read" {
return true
}
return false
}
// Serve a new connection.
func (c *conn) serve(ctx context.Context) {
if ra := c.rwc.RemoteAddr(); ra != nil {
c.remoteAddr = ra.String()
}
ctx = context.WithValue(ctx, LocalAddrContextKey, c.rwc.LocalAddr())
var inFlightResponse *response
defer func() {
if err := recover(); err != nil && err != ErrAbortHandler {
const size = 64 << 10
buf := make([]byte, size)
buf = buf[:runtime.Stack(buf, false)]
c.server.logf("http: panic serving %v: %v\n%s", c.remoteAddr, err, buf)
}
if inFlightResponse != nil {
inFlightResponse.cancelCtx()
inFlightResponse.disableWriteContinue()
}
if !c.hijacked() {
if inFlightResponse != nil {
inFlightResponse.conn.r.abortPendingRead()
inFlightResponse.reqBody.Close()
}
c.close()
c.setState(c.rwc, StateClosed, runHooks)
}
}()
if tlsConn, ok := c.rwc.(*tls.Conn); ok {
tlsTO := c.server.tlsHandshakeTimeout()
if tlsTO > 0 {
dl := time.Now().Add(tlsTO)
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(dl)
c.rwc.SetWriteDeadline(dl)
}
if err := tlsConn.HandshakeContext(ctx); err != nil {
// If the handshake failed due to the client not speaking
// TLS, assume they're speaking plaintext HTTP and write a
// 400 response on the TLS conn's underlying net.Conn.
var reason string
if re, ok := err.(tls.RecordHeaderError); ok && re.Conn != nil && tlsRecordHeaderLooksLikeHTTP(re.RecordHeader) {
io.WriteString(re.Conn, "HTTP/1.0 400 Bad Request\r\n\r\nClient sent an HTTP request to an HTTPS server.\n")
re.Conn.Close()
reason = "client sent an HTTP request to an HTTPS server"
} else {
reason = err.Error()
}
c.server.logf("http: TLS handshake error from %s: %v", c.rwc.RemoteAddr(), reason)
return
}
// Restore Conn-level deadlines.
if tlsTO > 0 {
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(time.Time{})
c.rwc.SetWriteDeadline(time.Time{})
}
c.tlsState = new(tls.ConnectionState)
*c.tlsState = tlsConn.ConnectionState()
if proto := c.tlsState.NegotiatedProtocol; validNextProto(proto) {
if fn := c.server.TLSNextProto[proto]; fn != nil {
h := initALPNRequest{ctx, tlsConn, serverHandler{c.server}}
// Mark freshly created HTTP/2 as active and prevent any server state hooks
// from being run on these connections. This prevents closeIdleConns from
// closing such connections. See issue https://golang.org/issue/39776.
c.setState(c.rwc, StateActive, skipHooks)
fn(c.server, tlsConn, h)
}
return
}
}
// HTTP/1.x from here on.
ctx, cancelCtx := context.WithCancel(ctx)
c.cancelCtx = cancelCtx
defer cancelCtx()
c.r = &connReader{conn: c}
c.bufr = newBufioReader(c.r)
c.bufw = newBufioWriterSize(checkConnErrorWriter{c}, 4<<10)
for {
w, err := c.readRequest(ctx)
if c.r.remain != c.server.initialReadLimitSize() {
// If we read any bytes off the wire, we're active.
c.setState(c.rwc, StateActive, runHooks)
}
if err != nil {
const errorHeaders = "\r\nContent-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8\r\nConnection: close\r\n\r\n"
switch {
case err == errTooLarge:
// Their HTTP client may or may not be
// able to read this if we're
// responding to them and hanging up
// while they're still writing their
// request. Undefined behavior.
const publicErr = "431 Request Header Fields Too Large"
fmt.Fprintf(c.rwc, "HTTP/1.1 "+publicErr+errorHeaders+publicErr)
c.closeWriteAndWait()
return
case isUnsupportedTEError(err):
// Respond as per RFC 7230 Section 3.3.1 which says,
// A server that receives a request message with a
// transfer coding it does not understand SHOULD
// respond with 501 (Unimplemented).
code := StatusNotImplemented
// We purposefully aren't echoing back the transfer-encoding's value,
// so as to mitigate the risk of cross side scripting by an attacker.
fmt.Fprintf(c.rwc, "HTTP/1.1 %d %s%sUnsupported transfer encoding", code, StatusText(code), errorHeaders)
return
case isCommonNetReadError(err):
return // don't reply
default:
if v, ok := err.(statusError); ok {
fmt.Fprintf(c.rwc, "HTTP/1.1 %d %s: %s%s%d %s: %s", v.code, StatusText(v.code), v.text, errorHeaders, v.code, StatusText(v.code), v.text)
return
}
const publicErr = "400 Bad Request"
fmt.Fprintf(c.rwc, "HTTP/1.1 "+publicErr+errorHeaders+publicErr)
return
}
}
// Expect 100 Continue support
req := w.req
if req.expectsContinue() {
if req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) && req.ContentLength != 0 {
// Wrap the Body reader with one that replies on the connection
req.Body = &expectContinueReader{readCloser: req.Body, resp: w}
w.canWriteContinue.Store(true)
}
} else if req.Header.get("Expect") != "" {
w.sendExpectationFailed()
return
}
c.curReq.Store(w)
if requestBodyRemains(req.Body) {
registerOnHitEOF(req.Body, w.conn.r.startBackgroundRead)
} else {
w.conn.r.startBackgroundRead()
}
// HTTP cannot have multiple simultaneous active requests.[*]
// Until the server replies to this request, it can't read another,
// so we might as well run the handler in this goroutine.
// [*] Not strictly true: HTTP pipelining. We could let them all process
// in parallel even if their responses need to be serialized.
// But we're not going to implement HTTP pipelining because it
// was never deployed in the wild and the answer is HTTP/2.
inFlightResponse = w
serverHandler{c.server}.ServeHTTP(w, w.req)
inFlightResponse = nil
w.cancelCtx()
if c.hijacked() {
return
}
w.finishRequest()
c.rwc.SetWriteDeadline(time.Time{})
if !w.shouldReuseConnection() {
if w.requestBodyLimitHit || w.closedRequestBodyEarly() {
c.closeWriteAndWait()
}
return
}
c.setState(c.rwc, StateIdle, runHooks)
c.curReq.Store(nil)
if !w.conn.server.doKeepAlives() {
// We're in shutdown mode. We might've replied
// to the user without "Connection: close" and
// they might think they can send another
// request, but such is life with HTTP/1.1.
return
}
if d := c.server.idleTimeout(); d > 0 {
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(time.Now().Add(d))
} else {
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(time.Time{})
}
// Wait for the connection to become readable again before trying to
// read the next request. This prevents a ReadHeaderTimeout or
// ReadTimeout from starting until the first bytes of the next request
// have been received.
if _, err := c.bufr.Peek(4); err != nil {
return
}
c.rwc.SetReadDeadline(time.Time{})
}
}
func (w *response) sendExpectationFailed() {
// TODO(bradfitz): let ServeHTTP handlers handle
// requests with non-standard expectation[s]? Seems
// theoretical at best, and doesn't fit into the
// current ServeHTTP model anyway. We'd need to
// make the ResponseWriter an optional
// "ExpectReplier" interface or something.
//
// For now we'll just obey RFC 7231 5.1.1 which says
// "A server that receives an Expect field-value other
// than 100-continue MAY respond with a 417 (Expectation
// Failed) status code to indicate that the unexpected
// expectation cannot be met."
w.Header().Set("Connection", "close")
w.WriteHeader(StatusExpectationFailed)
w.finishRequest()
}
// Hijack implements the [Hijacker.Hijack] method. Our response is both a [ResponseWriter]
// and a [Hijacker].
func (w *response) Hijack() (rwc net.Conn, buf *bufio.ReadWriter, err error) {
if w.handlerDone.Load() {
panic("net/http: Hijack called after ServeHTTP finished")
}
w.disableWriteContinue()
if w.wroteHeader {
w.cw.flush()
}
c := w.conn
c.mu.Lock()
defer c.mu.Unlock()
// Release the bufioWriter that writes to the chunk writer, it is not
// used after a connection has been hijacked.
rwc, buf, err = c.hijackLocked()
if err == nil {
putBufioWriter(w.w)
w.w = nil
}
return rwc, buf, err
}
func (w *response) CloseNotify() <-chan bool {
if w.handlerDone.Load() {
panic("net/http: CloseNotify called after ServeHTTP finished")
}
return w.closeNotifyCh
}
func registerOnHitEOF(rc io.ReadCloser, fn func()) {
switch v := rc.(type) {
case *expectContinueReader:
registerOnHitEOF(v.readCloser, fn)
case *body:
v.registerOnHitEOF(fn)
default:
panic("unexpected type " + fmt.Sprintf("%T", rc))
}
}
// requestBodyRemains reports whether future calls to Read
// on rc might yield more data.
func requestBodyRemains(rc io.ReadCloser) bool {
if rc == NoBody {
return false
}
switch v := rc.(type) {
case *expectContinueReader:
return requestBodyRemains(v.readCloser)
case *body:
return v.bodyRemains()
default:
panic("unexpected type " + fmt.Sprintf("%T", rc))
}
}
// The HandlerFunc type is an adapter to allow the use of
// ordinary functions as HTTP handlers. If f is a function
// with the appropriate signature, HandlerFunc(f) is a
// [Handler] that calls f.
type HandlerFunc func(ResponseWriter, *Request)
// ServeHTTP calls f(w, r).
func (f HandlerFunc) ServeHTTP(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
f(w, r)
}
// Helper handlers
// Error replies to the request with the specified error message and HTTP code.
// It does not otherwise end the request; the caller should ensure no further
// writes are done to w.
// The error message should be plain text.
//
// Error deletes the Content-Length header,
// sets Content-Type to “text/plain; charset=utf-8”,
// and sets X-Content-Type-Options to “nosniff”.
// This configures the header properly for the error message,
// in case the caller had set it up expecting a successful output.
func Error(w ResponseWriter, error string, code int) {
h := w.Header()
// Delete the Content-Length header, which might be for some other content.
// Assuming the error string fits in the writer's buffer, we'll figure
// out the correct Content-Length for it later.
//
// We don't delete Content-Encoding, because some middleware sets
// Content-Encoding: gzip and wraps the ResponseWriter to compress on-the-fly.
// See https://go.dev/issue/66343.
h.Del("Content-Length")
// There might be content type already set, but we reset it to
// text/plain for the error message.
h.Set("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
h.Set("X-Content-Type-Options", "nosniff")
w.WriteHeader(code)
fmt.Fprintln(w, error)
}
// NotFound replies to the request with an HTTP 404 not found error.
func NotFound(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) { Error(w, "404 page not found", StatusNotFound) }
// NotFoundHandler returns a simple request handler
// that replies to each request with a “404 page not found” reply.
func NotFoundHandler() Handler { return HandlerFunc(NotFound) }
// StripPrefix returns a handler that serves HTTP requests by removing the
// given prefix from the request URL's Path (and RawPath if set) and invoking
// the handler h. StripPrefix handles a request for a path that doesn't begin
// with prefix by replying with an HTTP 404 not found error. The prefix must
// match exactly: if the prefix in the request contains escaped characters
// the reply is also an HTTP 404 not found error.
func StripPrefix(prefix string, h Handler) Handler {
if prefix == "" {
return h
}
return HandlerFunc(func(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
p := strings.TrimPrefix(r.URL.Path, prefix)
rp := strings.TrimPrefix(r.URL.RawPath, prefix)
if len(p) < len(r.URL.Path) && (r.URL.RawPath == "" || len(rp) < len(r.URL.RawPath)) {
r2 := new(Request)
*r2 = *r
r2.URL = new(url.URL)
*r2.URL = *r.URL
r2.URL.Path = p
r2.URL.RawPath = rp
h.ServeHTTP(w, r2)
} else {
NotFound(w, r)
}
})
}
// Redirect replies to the request with a redirect to url,
// which may be a path relative to the request path.
//
// The provided code should be in the 3xx range and is usually
// [StatusMovedPermanently], [StatusFound] or [StatusSeeOther].
//
// If the Content-Type header has not been set, [Redirect] sets it
// to "text/html; charset=utf-8" and writes a small HTML body.
// Setting the Content-Type header to any value, including nil,
// disables that behavior.
func Redirect(w ResponseWriter, r *Request, url string, code int) {
if u, err := urlpkg.Parse(url); err == nil {
// If url was relative, make its path absolute by
// combining with request path.
// The client would probably do this for us,
// but doing it ourselves is more reliable.
// See RFC 7231, section 7.1.2
if u.Scheme == "" && u.Host == "" {
oldpath := r.URL.Path
if oldpath == "" { // should not happen, but avoid a crash if it does
oldpath = "/"
}
// no leading http://server
if url == "" || url[0] != '/' {
// make relative path absolute
olddir, _ := path.Split(oldpath)
url = olddir + url
}
var query string
if i := strings.Index(url, "?"); i != -1 {
url, query = url[:i], url[i:]
}
// clean up but preserve trailing slash
trailing := strings.HasSuffix(url, "/")
url = path.Clean(url)
if trailing && !strings.HasSuffix(url, "/") {
url += "/"
}
url += query
}
}
h := w.Header()
// RFC 7231 notes that a short HTML body is usually included in
// the response because older user agents may not understand 301/307.
// Do it only if the request didn't already have a Content-Type header.
_, hadCT := h["Content-Type"]
h.Set("Location", hexEscapeNonASCII(url))
if !hadCT && (r.Method == "GET" || r.Method == "HEAD") {
h.Set("Content-Type", "text/html; charset=utf-8")
}
w.WriteHeader(code)
// Shouldn't send the body for POST or HEAD; that leaves GET.
if !hadCT && r.Method == "GET" {
body := "" + StatusText(code) + ".\n"
fmt.Fprintln(w, body)
}
}
var htmlReplacer = strings.NewReplacer(
"&", "&",
"<", "<",
">", ">",
// """ is shorter than """.
`"`, """,
// "'" is shorter than "'" and apos was not in HTML until HTML5.
"'", "'",
)
func htmlEscape(s string) string {
return htmlReplacer.Replace(s)
}
// Redirect to a fixed URL
type redirectHandler struct {
url string
code int
}
func (rh *redirectHandler) ServeHTTP(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
Redirect(w, r, rh.url, rh.code)
}
// RedirectHandler returns a request handler that redirects
// each request it receives to the given url using the given
// status code.
//
// The provided code should be in the 3xx range and is usually
// [StatusMovedPermanently], [StatusFound] or [StatusSeeOther].
func RedirectHandler(url string, code int) Handler {
return &redirectHandler{url, code}
}
// ServeMux is an HTTP request multiplexer.
// It matches the URL of each incoming request against a list of registered
// patterns and calls the handler for the pattern that
// most closely matches the URL.
//
// # Patterns
//
// Patterns can match the method, host and path of a request.
// Some examples:
//
// - "/index.html" matches the path "/index.html" for any host and method.
// - "GET /static/" matches a GET request whose path begins with "/static/".
// - "example.com/" matches any request to the host "example.com".
// - "example.com/{$}" matches requests with host "example.com" and path "/".
// - "/b/{bucket}/o/{objectname...}" matches paths whose first segment is "b"
// and whose third segment is "o". The name "bucket" denotes the second
// segment and "objectname" denotes the remainder of the path.
//
// In general, a pattern looks like
//
// [METHOD ][HOST]/[PATH]
//
// All three parts are optional; "/" is a valid pattern.
// If METHOD is present, it must be followed by at least one space or tab.
//
// Literal (that is, non-wildcard) parts of a pattern match
// the corresponding parts of a request case-sensitively.
//
// A pattern with no method matches every method. A pattern
// with the method GET matches both GET and HEAD requests.
// Otherwise, the method must match exactly.
//
// A pattern with no host matches every host.
// A pattern with a host matches URLs on that host only.
//
// A path can include wildcard segments of the form {NAME} or {NAME...}.
// For example, "/b/{bucket}/o/{objectname...}".
// The wildcard name must be a valid Go identifier.
// Wildcards must be full path segments: they must be preceded by a slash and followed by
// either a slash or the end of the string.
// For example, "/b_{bucket}" is not a valid pattern.
//
// Normally a wildcard matches only a single path segment,
// ending at the next literal slash (not %2F) in the request URL.
// But if the "..." is present, then the wildcard matches the remainder of the URL path, including slashes.
// (Therefore it is invalid for a "..." wildcard to appear anywhere but at the end of a pattern.)
// The match for a wildcard can be obtained by calling [Request.PathValue] with the wildcard's name.
// A trailing slash in a path acts as an anonymous "..." wildcard.
//
// The special wildcard {$} matches only the end of the URL.
// For example, the pattern "/{$}" matches only the path "/",
// whereas the pattern "/" matches every path.
//
// For matching, both pattern paths and incoming request paths are unescaped segment by segment.
// So, for example, the path "/a%2Fb/100%25" is treated as having two segments, "a/b" and "100%".
// The pattern "/a%2fb/" matches it, but the pattern "/a/b/" does not.
//
// # Precedence
//
// If two or more patterns match a request, then the most specific pattern takes precedence.
// A pattern P1 is more specific than P2 if P1 matches a strict subset of P2’s requests;
// that is, if P2 matches all the requests of P1 and more.
// If neither is more specific, then the patterns conflict.
// There is one exception to this rule, for backwards compatibility:
// if two patterns would otherwise conflict and one has a host while the other does not,
// then the pattern with the host takes precedence.
// If a pattern passed to [ServeMux.Handle] or [ServeMux.HandleFunc] conflicts with
// another pattern that is already registered, those functions panic.
//
// As an example of the general rule, "/images/thumbnails/" is more specific than "/images/",
// so both can be registered.
// The former matches paths beginning with "/images/thumbnails/"
// and the latter will match any other path in the "/images/" subtree.
//
// As another example, consider the patterns "GET /" and "/index.html":
// both match a GET request for "/index.html", but the former pattern
// matches all other GET and HEAD requests, while the latter matches any
// request for "/index.html" that uses a different method.
// The patterns conflict.
//
// # Trailing-slash redirection
//
// Consider a [ServeMux] with a handler for a subtree, registered using a trailing slash or "..." wildcard.
// If the ServeMux receives a request for the subtree root without a trailing slash,
// it redirects the request by adding the trailing slash.
// This behavior can be overridden with a separate registration for the path without
// the trailing slash or "..." wildcard. For example, registering "/images/" causes ServeMux
// to redirect a request for "/images" to "/images/", unless "/images" has
// been registered separately.
//
// # Request sanitizing
//
// ServeMux also takes care of sanitizing the URL request path and the Host
// header, stripping the port number and redirecting any request containing . or
// .. segments or repeated slashes to an equivalent, cleaner URL.
//
// # Compatibility
//
// The pattern syntax and matching behavior of ServeMux changed significantly
// in Go 1.22. To restore the old behavior, set the GODEBUG environment variable
// to "httpmuxgo121=1". This setting is read once, at program startup; changes
// during execution will be ignored.
//
// The backwards-incompatible changes include:
// - Wildcards are just ordinary literal path segments in 1.21.
// For example, the pattern "/{x}" will match only that path in 1.21,
// but will match any one-segment path in 1.22.
// - In 1.21, no pattern was rejected, unless it was empty or conflicted with an existing pattern.
// In 1.22, syntactically invalid patterns will cause [ServeMux.Handle] and [ServeMux.HandleFunc] to panic.
// For example, in 1.21, the patterns "/{" and "/a{x}" match themselves,
// but in 1.22 they are invalid and will cause a panic when registered.
// - In 1.22, each segment of a pattern is unescaped; this was not done in 1.21.
// For example, in 1.22 the pattern "/%61" matches the path "/a" ("%61" being the URL escape sequence for "a"),
// but in 1.21 it would match only the path "/%2561" (where "%25" is the escape for the percent sign).
// - When matching patterns to paths, in 1.22 each segment of the path is unescaped; in 1.21, the entire path is unescaped.
// This change mostly affects how paths with %2F escapes adjacent to slashes are treated.
// See https://go.dev/issue/21955 for details.
type ServeMux struct {
mu sync.RWMutex
tree routingNode
index routingIndex
patterns []*pattern // TODO(jba): remove if possible
mux121 serveMux121 // used only when GODEBUG=httpmuxgo121=1
}
// NewServeMux allocates and returns a new [ServeMux].
func NewServeMux() *ServeMux {
return &ServeMux{}
}
// DefaultServeMux is the default [ServeMux] used by [Serve].
var DefaultServeMux = &defaultServeMux
var defaultServeMux ServeMux
// cleanPath returns the canonical path for p, eliminating . and .. elements.
func cleanPath(p string) string {
if p == "" {
return "/"
}
if p[0] != '/' {
p = "/" + p
}
np := path.Clean(p)
// path.Clean removes trailing slash except for root;
// put the trailing slash back if necessary.
if p[len(p)-1] == '/' && np != "/" {
// Fast path for common case of p being the string we want:
if len(p) == len(np)+1 && strings.HasPrefix(p, np) {
np = p
} else {
np += "/"
}
}
return np
}
// stripHostPort returns h without any trailing ":".
func stripHostPort(h string) string {
// If no port on host, return unchanged
if !strings.Contains(h, ":") {
return h
}
host, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(h)
if err != nil {
return h // on error, return unchanged
}
return host
}
// Handler returns the handler to use for the given request,
// consulting r.Method, r.Host, and r.URL.Path. It always returns
// a non-nil handler. If the path is not in its canonical form, the
// handler will be an internally-generated handler that redirects
// to the canonical path. If the host contains a port, it is ignored
// when matching handlers.
//
// The path and host are used unchanged for CONNECT requests.
//
// Handler also returns the registered pattern that matches the
// request or, in the case of internally-generated redirects,
// the path that will match after following the redirect.
//
// If there is no registered handler that applies to the request,
// Handler returns a “page not found” handler and an empty pattern.
func (mux *ServeMux) Handler(r *Request) (h Handler, pattern string) {
if use121 {
return mux.mux121.findHandler(r)
}
h, p, _, _ := mux.findHandler(r)
return h, p
}
// findHandler finds a handler for a request.
// If there is a matching handler, it returns it and the pattern that matched.
// Otherwise it returns a Redirect or NotFound handler with the path that would match
// after the redirect.
func (mux *ServeMux) findHandler(r *Request) (h Handler, patStr string, _ *pattern, matches []string) {
var n *routingNode
host := r.URL.Host
escapedPath := r.URL.EscapedPath()
path := escapedPath
// CONNECT requests are not canonicalized.
if r.Method == "CONNECT" {
// If r.URL.Path is /tree and its handler is not registered,
// the /tree -> /tree/ redirect applies to CONNECT requests
// but the path canonicalization does not.
_, _, u := mux.matchOrRedirect(host, r.Method, path, r.URL)
if u != nil {
return RedirectHandler(u.String(), StatusMovedPermanently), u.Path, nil, nil
}
// Redo the match, this time with r.Host instead of r.URL.Host.
// Pass a nil URL to skip the trailing-slash redirect logic.
n, matches, _ = mux.matchOrRedirect(r.Host, r.Method, path, nil)
} else {
// All other requests have any port stripped and path cleaned
// before passing to mux.handler.
host = stripHostPort(r.Host)
path = cleanPath(path)
// If the given path is /tree and its handler is not registered,
// redirect for /tree/.
var u *url.URL
n, matches, u = mux.matchOrRedirect(host, r.Method, path, r.URL)
if u != nil {
return RedirectHandler(u.String(), StatusMovedPermanently), u.Path, nil, nil
}
if path != escapedPath {
// Redirect to cleaned path.
patStr := ""
if n != nil {
patStr = n.pattern.String()
}
u := &url.URL{Path: path, RawQuery: r.URL.RawQuery}
return RedirectHandler(u.String(), StatusMovedPermanently), patStr, nil, nil
}
}
if n == nil {
// We didn't find a match with the request method. To distinguish between
// Not Found and Method Not Allowed, see if there is another pattern that
// matches except for the method.
allowedMethods := mux.matchingMethods(host, path)
if len(allowedMethods) > 0 {
return HandlerFunc(func(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
w.Header().Set("Allow", strings.Join(allowedMethods, ", "))
Error(w, StatusText(StatusMethodNotAllowed), StatusMethodNotAllowed)
}), "", nil, nil
}
return NotFoundHandler(), "", nil, nil
}
return n.handler, n.pattern.String(), n.pattern, matches
}
// matchOrRedirect looks up a node in the tree that matches the host, method and path.
//
// If the url argument is non-nil, handler also deals with trailing-slash
// redirection: when a path doesn't match exactly, the match is tried again
// after appending "/" to the path. If that second match succeeds, the last
// return value is the URL to redirect to.
func (mux *ServeMux) matchOrRedirect(host, method, path string, u *url.URL) (_ *routingNode, matches []string, redirectTo *url.URL) {
mux.mu.RLock()
defer mux.mu.RUnlock()
n, matches := mux.tree.match(host, method, path)
// If we have an exact match, or we were asked not to try trailing-slash redirection,
// or the URL already has a trailing slash, then we're done.
if !exactMatch(n, path) && u != nil && !strings.HasSuffix(path, "/") {
// If there is an exact match with a trailing slash, then redirect.
path += "/"
n2, _ := mux.tree.match(host, method, path)
if exactMatch(n2, path) {
return nil, nil, &url.URL{Path: cleanPath(u.Path) + "/", RawQuery: u.RawQuery}
}
}
return n, matches, nil
}
// exactMatch reports whether the node's pattern exactly matches the path.
// As a special case, if the node is nil, exactMatch return false.
//
// Before wildcards were introduced, it was clear that an exact match meant
// that the pattern and path were the same string. The only other possibility
// was that a trailing-slash pattern, like "/", matched a path longer than
// it, like "/a".
//
// With wildcards, we define an inexact match as any one where a multi wildcard
// matches a non-empty string. All other matches are exact.
// For example, these are all exact matches:
//
// pattern path
// /a /a
// /{x} /a
// /a/{$} /a/
// /a/ /a/
//
// The last case has a multi wildcard (implicitly), but the match is exact because
// the wildcard matches the empty string.
//
// Examples of matches that are not exact:
//
// pattern path
// / /a
// /a/{x...} /a/b
func exactMatch(n *routingNode, path string) bool {
if n == nil {
return false
}
// We can't directly implement the definition (empty match for multi
// wildcard) because we don't record a match for anonymous multis.
// If there is no multi, the match is exact.
if !n.pattern.lastSegment().multi {
return true
}
// If the path doesn't end in a trailing slash, then the multi match
// is non-empty.
if len(path) > 0 && path[len(path)-1] != '/' {
return false
}
// Only patterns ending in {$} or a multi wildcard can
// match a path with a trailing slash.
// For the match to be exact, the number of pattern
// segments should be the same as the number of slashes in the path.
// E.g. "/a/b/{$}" and "/a/b/{...}" exactly match "/a/b/", but "/a/" does not.
return len(n.pattern.segments) == strings.Count(path, "/")
}
// matchingMethods return a sorted list of all methods that would match with the given host and path.
func (mux *ServeMux) matchingMethods(host, path string) []string {
// Hold the read lock for the entire method so that the two matches are done
// on the same set of registered patterns.
mux.mu.RLock()
defer mux.mu.RUnlock()
ms := map[string]bool{}
mux.tree.matchingMethods(host, path, ms)
// matchOrRedirect will try appending a trailing slash if there is no match.
if !strings.HasSuffix(path, "/") {
mux.tree.matchingMethods(host, path+"/", ms)
}
return slices.Sorted(maps.Keys(ms))
}
// ServeHTTP dispatches the request to the handler whose
// pattern most closely matches the request URL.
func (mux *ServeMux) ServeHTTP(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
if r.RequestURI == "*" {
if r.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) {
w.Header().Set("Connection", "close")
}
w.WriteHeader(StatusBadRequest)
return
}
var h Handler
if use121 {
h, _ = mux.mux121.findHandler(r)
} else {
h, r.Pattern, r.pat, r.matches = mux.findHandler(r)
}
h.ServeHTTP(w, r)
}
// The four functions below all call ServeMux.register so that callerLocation
// always refers to user code.
// Handle registers the handler for the given pattern.
// If the given pattern conflicts, with one that is already registered, Handle
// panics.
func (mux *ServeMux) Handle(pattern string, handler Handler) {
if use121 {
mux.mux121.handle(pattern, handler)
} else {
mux.register(pattern, handler)
}
}
// HandleFunc registers the handler function for the given pattern.
// If the given pattern conflicts, with one that is already registered, HandleFunc
// panics.
func (mux *ServeMux) HandleFunc(pattern string, handler func(ResponseWriter, *Request)) {
if use121 {
mux.mux121.handleFunc(pattern, handler)
} else {
mux.register(pattern, HandlerFunc(handler))
}
}
// Handle registers the handler for the given pattern in [DefaultServeMux].
// The documentation for [ServeMux] explains how patterns are matched.
func Handle(pattern string, handler Handler) {
if use121 {
DefaultServeMux.mux121.handle(pattern, handler)
} else {
DefaultServeMux.register(pattern, handler)
}
}
// HandleFunc registers the handler function for the given pattern in [DefaultServeMux].
// The documentation for [ServeMux] explains how patterns are matched.
func HandleFunc(pattern string, handler func(ResponseWriter, *Request)) {
if use121 {
DefaultServeMux.mux121.handleFunc(pattern, handler)
} else {
DefaultServeMux.register(pattern, HandlerFunc(handler))
}
}
func (mux *ServeMux) register(pattern string, handler Handler) {
if err := mux.registerErr(pattern, handler); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
func (mux *ServeMux) registerErr(patstr string, handler Handler) error {
if patstr == "" {
return errors.New("http: invalid pattern")
}
if handler == nil {
return errors.New("http: nil handler")
}
if f, ok := handler.(HandlerFunc); ok && f == nil {
return errors.New("http: nil handler")
}
pat, err := parsePattern(patstr)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("parsing %q: %w", patstr, err)
}
// Get the caller's location, for better conflict error messages.
// Skip register and whatever calls it.
_, file, line, ok := runtime.Caller(3)
if !ok {
pat.loc = "unknown location"
} else {
pat.loc = fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d", file, line)
}
mux.mu.Lock()
defer mux.mu.Unlock()
// Check for conflict.
if err := mux.index.possiblyConflictingPatterns(pat, func(pat2 *pattern) error {
if pat.conflictsWith(pat2) {
d := describeConflict(pat, pat2)
return fmt.Errorf("pattern %q (registered at %s) conflicts with pattern %q (registered at %s):\n%s",
pat, pat.loc, pat2, pat2.loc, d)
}
return nil
}); err != nil {
return err
}
mux.tree.addPattern(pat, handler)
mux.index.addPattern(pat)
mux.patterns = append(mux.patterns, pat)
return nil
}
// Serve accepts incoming HTTP connections on the listener l,
// creating a new service goroutine for each. The service goroutines
// read requests and then call handler to reply to them.
//
// The handler is typically nil, in which case [DefaultServeMux] is used.
//
// HTTP/2 support is only enabled if the Listener returns [*tls.Conn]
// connections and they were configured with "h2" in the TLS
// Config.NextProtos.
//
// Serve always returns a non-nil error.
func Serve(l net.Listener, handler Handler) error {
srv := &Server{Handler: handler}
return srv.Serve(l)
}
// ServeTLS accepts incoming HTTPS connections on the listener l,
// creating a new service goroutine for each. The service goroutines
// read requests and then call handler to reply to them.
//
// The handler is typically nil, in which case [DefaultServeMux] is used.
//
// Additionally, files containing a certificate and matching private key
// for the server must be provided. If the certificate is signed by a
// certificate authority, the certFile should be the concatenation
// of the server's certificate, any intermediates, and the CA's certificate.
//
// ServeTLS always returns a non-nil error.
func ServeTLS(l net.Listener, handler Handler, certFile, keyFile string) error {
srv := &Server{Handler: handler}
return srv.ServeTLS(l, certFile, keyFile)
}
// A Server defines parameters for running an HTTP server.
// The zero value for Server is a valid configuration.
type Server struct {
// Addr optionally specifies the TCP address for the server to listen on,
// in the form "host:port". If empty, ":http" (port 80) is used.
// The service names are defined in RFC 6335 and assigned by IANA.
// See net.Dial for details of the address format.
Addr string
Handler Handler // handler to invoke, http.DefaultServeMux if nil
// DisableGeneralOptionsHandler, if true, passes "OPTIONS *" requests to the Handler,
// otherwise responds with 200 OK and Content-Length: 0.
DisableGeneralOptionsHandler bool
// TLSConfig optionally provides a TLS configuration for use
// by ServeTLS and ListenAndServeTLS. Note that this value is
// cloned by ServeTLS and ListenAndServeTLS, so it's not
// possible to modify the configuration with methods like
// tls.Config.SetSessionTicketKeys. To use
// SetSessionTicketKeys, use Server.Serve with a TLS Listener
// instead.
TLSConfig *tls.Config
// ReadTimeout is the maximum duration for reading the entire
// request, including the body. A zero or negative value means
// there will be no timeout.
//
// Because ReadTimeout does not let Handlers make per-request
// decisions on each request body's acceptable deadline or
// upload rate, most users will prefer to use
// ReadHeaderTimeout. It is valid to use them both.
ReadTimeout time.Duration
// ReadHeaderTimeout is the amount of time allowed to read
// request headers. The connection's read deadline is reset
// after reading the headers and the Handler can decide what
// is considered too slow for the body. If zero, the value of
// ReadTimeout is used. If negative, or if zero and ReadTimeout
// is zero or negative, there is no timeout.
ReadHeaderTimeout time.Duration
// WriteTimeout is the maximum duration before timing out
// writes of the response. It is reset whenever a new
// request's header is read. Like ReadTimeout, it does not
// let Handlers make decisions on a per-request basis.
// A zero or negative value means there will be no timeout.
WriteTimeout time.Duration
// IdleTimeout is the maximum amount of time to wait for the
// next request when keep-alives are enabled. If zero, the value
// of ReadTimeout is used. If negative, or if zero and ReadTimeout
// is zero or negative, there is no timeout.
IdleTimeout time.Duration
// MaxHeaderBytes controls the maximum number of bytes the
// server will read parsing the request header's keys and
// values, including the request line. It does not limit the
// size of the request body.
// If zero, DefaultMaxHeaderBytes is used.
MaxHeaderBytes int
// TLSNextProto optionally specifies a function to take over
// ownership of the provided TLS connection when an ALPN
// protocol upgrade has occurred. The map key is the protocol
// name negotiated. The Handler argument should be used to
// handle HTTP requests and will initialize the Request's TLS
// and RemoteAddr if not already set. The connection is
// automatically closed when the function returns.
// If TLSNextProto is not nil, HTTP/2 support is not enabled
// automatically.
TLSNextProto map[string]func(*Server, *tls.Conn, Handler)
// ConnState specifies an optional callback function that is
// called when a client connection changes state. See the
// ConnState type and associated constants for details.
ConnState func(net.Conn, ConnState)
// ErrorLog specifies an optional logger for errors accepting
// connections, unexpected behavior from handlers, and
// underlying FileSystem errors.
// If nil, logging is done via the log package's standard logger.
ErrorLog *log.Logger
// BaseContext optionally specifies a function that returns
// the base context for incoming requests on this server.
// The provided Listener is the specific Listener that's
// about to start accepting requests.
// If BaseContext is nil, the default is context.Background().
// If non-nil, it must return a non-nil context.
BaseContext func(net.Listener) context.Context
// ConnContext optionally specifies a function that modifies
// the context used for a new connection c. The provided ctx
// is derived from the base context and has a ServerContextKey
// value.
ConnContext func(ctx context.Context, c net.Conn) context.Context
inShutdown atomic.Bool // true when server is in shutdown
disableKeepAlives atomic.Bool
nextProtoOnce sync.Once // guards setupHTTP2_* init
nextProtoErr error // result of http2.ConfigureServer if used
mu sync.Mutex
listeners map[*net.Listener]struct{}
activeConn map[*conn]struct{}
onShutdown []func()
listenerGroup sync.WaitGroup
}
// Close immediately closes all active net.Listeners and any
// connections in state [StateNew], [StateActive], or [StateIdle]. For a
// graceful shutdown, use [Server.Shutdown].
//
// Close does not attempt to close (and does not even know about)
// any hijacked connections, such as WebSockets.
//
// Close returns any error returned from closing the [Server]'s
// underlying Listener(s).
func (srv *Server) Close() error {
srv.inShutdown.Store(true)
srv.mu.Lock()
defer srv.mu.Unlock()
err := srv.closeListenersLocked()
// Unlock srv.mu while waiting for listenerGroup.
// The group Add and Done calls are made with srv.mu held,
// to avoid adding a new listener in the window between
// us setting inShutdown above and waiting here.
srv.mu.Unlock()
srv.listenerGroup.Wait()
srv.mu.Lock()
for c := range srv.activeConn {
c.rwc.Close()
delete(srv.activeConn, c)
}
return err
}
// shutdownPollIntervalMax is the max polling interval when checking
// quiescence during Server.Shutdown. Polling starts with a small
// interval and backs off to the max.
// Ideally we could find a solution that doesn't involve polling,
// but which also doesn't have a high runtime cost (and doesn't
// involve any contentious mutexes), but that is left as an
// exercise for the reader.
const shutdownPollIntervalMax = 500 * time.Millisecond
// Shutdown gracefully shuts down the server without interrupting any
// active connections. Shutdown works by first closing all open
// listeners, then closing all idle connections, and then waiting
// indefinitely for connections to return to idle and then shut down.
// If the provided context expires before the shutdown is complete,
// Shutdown returns the context's error, otherwise it returns any
// error returned from closing the [Server]'s underlying Listener(s).
//
// When Shutdown is called, [Serve], [ListenAndServe], and
// [ListenAndServeTLS] immediately return [ErrServerClosed]. Make sure the
// program doesn't exit and waits instead for Shutdown to return.
//
// Shutdown does not attempt to close nor wait for hijacked
// connections such as WebSockets. The caller of Shutdown should
// separately notify such long-lived connections of shutdown and wait
// for them to close, if desired. See [Server.RegisterOnShutdown] for a way to
// register shutdown notification functions.
//
// Once Shutdown has been called on a server, it may not be reused;
// future calls to methods such as Serve will return ErrServerClosed.
func (srv *Server) Shutdown(ctx context.Context) error {
srv.inShutdown.Store(true)
srv.mu.Lock()
lnerr := srv.closeListenersLocked()
for _, f := range srv.onShutdown {
go f()
}
srv.mu.Unlock()
srv.listenerGroup.Wait()
pollIntervalBase := time.Millisecond
nextPollInterval := func() time.Duration {
// Add 10% jitter.
interval := pollIntervalBase + time.Duration(rand.Intn(int(pollIntervalBase/10)))
// Double and clamp for next time.
pollIntervalBase *= 2
if pollIntervalBase > shutdownPollIntervalMax {
pollIntervalBase = shutdownPollIntervalMax
}
return interval
}
timer := time.NewTimer(nextPollInterval())
defer timer.Stop()
for {
if srv.closeIdleConns() {
return lnerr
}
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
return ctx.Err()
case <-timer.C:
timer.Reset(nextPollInterval())
}
}
}
// RegisterOnShutdown registers a function to call on [Server.Shutdown].
// This can be used to gracefully shutdown connections that have
// undergone ALPN protocol upgrade or that have been hijacked.
// This function should start protocol-specific graceful shutdown,
// but should not wait for shutdown to complete.
func (srv *Server) RegisterOnShutdown(f func()) {
srv.mu.Lock()
srv.onShutdown = append(srv.onShutdown, f)
srv.mu.Unlock()
}
// closeIdleConns closes all idle connections and reports whether the
// server is quiescent.
func (s *Server) closeIdleConns() bool {
s.mu.Lock()
defer s.mu.Unlock()
quiescent := true
for c := range s.activeConn {
st, unixSec := c.getState()
// Issue 22682: treat StateNew connections as if
// they're idle if we haven't read the first request's
// header in over 5 seconds.
if st == StateNew && unixSec < time.Now().Unix()-5 {
st = StateIdle
}
if st != StateIdle || unixSec == 0 {
// Assume unixSec == 0 means it's a very new
// connection, without state set yet.
quiescent = false
continue
}
c.rwc.Close()
delete(s.activeConn, c)
}
return quiescent
}
func (s *Server) closeListenersLocked() error {
var err error
for ln := range s.listeners {
if cerr := (*ln).Close(); cerr != nil && err == nil {
err = cerr
}
}
return err
}
// A ConnState represents the state of a client connection to a server.
// It's used by the optional [Server.ConnState] hook.
type ConnState int
const (
// StateNew represents a new connection that is expected to
// send a request immediately. Connections begin at this
// state and then transition to either StateActive or
// StateClosed.
StateNew ConnState = iota
// StateActive represents a connection that has read 1 or more
// bytes of a request. The Server.ConnState hook for
// StateActive fires before the request has entered a handler
// and doesn't fire again until the request has been
// handled. After the request is handled, the state
// transitions to StateClosed, StateHijacked, or StateIdle.
// For HTTP/2, StateActive fires on the transition from zero
// to one active request, and only transitions away once all
// active requests are complete. That means that ConnState
// cannot be used to do per-request work; ConnState only notes
// the overall state of the connection.
StateActive
// StateIdle represents a connection that has finished
// handling a request and is in the keep-alive state, waiting
// for a new request. Connections transition from StateIdle
// to either StateActive or StateClosed.
StateIdle
// StateHijacked represents a hijacked connection.
// This is a terminal state. It does not transition to StateClosed.
StateHijacked
// StateClosed represents a closed connection.
// This is a terminal state. Hijacked connections do not
// transition to StateClosed.
StateClosed
)
var stateName = map[ConnState]string{
StateNew: "new",
StateActive: "active",
StateIdle: "idle",
StateHijacked: "hijacked",
StateClosed: "closed",
}
func (c ConnState) String() string {
return stateName[c]
}
// serverHandler delegates to either the server's Handler or
// DefaultServeMux and also handles "OPTIONS *" requests.
type serverHandler struct {
srv *Server
}
// ServeHTTP should be an internal detail,
// but widely used packages access it using linkname.
// Notable members of the hall of shame include:
// - github.com/erda-project/erda-infra
//
// Do not remove or change the type signature.
// See go.dev/issue/67401.
//
//go:linkname badServeHTTP net/http.serverHandler.ServeHTTP
func (sh serverHandler) ServeHTTP(rw ResponseWriter, req *Request) {
handler := sh.srv.Handler
if handler == nil {
handler = DefaultServeMux
}
if !sh.srv.DisableGeneralOptionsHandler && req.RequestURI == "*" && req.Method == "OPTIONS" {
handler = globalOptionsHandler{}
}
handler.ServeHTTP(rw, req)
}
func badServeHTTP(serverHandler, ResponseWriter, *Request)
// AllowQuerySemicolons returns a handler that serves requests by converting any
// unescaped semicolons in the URL query to ampersands, and invoking the handler h.
//
// This restores the pre-Go 1.17 behavior of splitting query parameters on both
// semicolons and ampersands. (See golang.org/issue/25192). Note that this
// behavior doesn't match that of many proxies, and the mismatch can lead to
// security issues.
//
// AllowQuerySemicolons should be invoked before [Request.ParseForm] is called.
func AllowQuerySemicolons(h Handler) Handler {
return HandlerFunc(func(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
if strings.Contains(r.URL.RawQuery, ";") {
r2 := new(Request)
*r2 = *r
r2.URL = new(url.URL)
*r2.URL = *r.URL
r2.URL.RawQuery = strings.ReplaceAll(r.URL.RawQuery, ";", "&")
h.ServeHTTP(w, r2)
} else {
h.ServeHTTP(w, r)
}
})
}
// ListenAndServe listens on the TCP network address srv.Addr and then
// calls [Serve] to handle requests on incoming connections.
// Accepted connections are configured to enable TCP keep-alives.
//
// If srv.Addr is blank, ":http" is used.
//
// ListenAndServe always returns a non-nil error. After [Server.Shutdown] or [Server.Close],
// the returned error is [ErrServerClosed].
func (srv *Server) ListenAndServe() error {
if srv.shuttingDown() {
return ErrServerClosed
}
addr := srv.Addr
if addr == "" {
addr = ":http"
}
ln, err := net.Listen("tcp", addr)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return srv.Serve(ln)
}
var testHookServerServe func(*Server, net.Listener) // used if non-nil
// shouldConfigureHTTP2ForServe reports whether Server.Serve should configure
// automatic HTTP/2. (which sets up the srv.TLSNextProto map)
func (srv *Server) shouldConfigureHTTP2ForServe() bool {
if srv.TLSConfig == nil {
// Compatibility with Go 1.6:
// If there's no TLSConfig, it's possible that the user just
// didn't set it on the http.Server, but did pass it to
// tls.NewListener and passed that listener to Serve.
// So we should configure HTTP/2 (to set up srv.TLSNextProto)
// in case the listener returns an "h2" *tls.Conn.
return true
}
// The user specified a TLSConfig on their http.Server.
// In this, case, only configure HTTP/2 if their tls.Config
// explicitly mentions "h2". Otherwise http2.ConfigureServer
// would modify the tls.Config to add it, but they probably already
// passed this tls.Config to tls.NewListener. And if they did,
// it's too late anyway to fix it. It would only be potentially racy.
// See Issue 15908.
return slices.Contains(srv.TLSConfig.NextProtos, http2NextProtoTLS)
}
// ErrServerClosed is returned by the [Server.Serve], [ServeTLS], [ListenAndServe],
// and [ListenAndServeTLS] methods after a call to [Server.Shutdown] or [Server.Close].
var ErrServerClosed = errors.New("http: Server closed")
// Serve accepts incoming connections on the Listener l, creating a
// new service goroutine for each. The service goroutines read requests and
// then call srv.Handler to reply to them.
//
// HTTP/2 support is only enabled if the Listener returns [*tls.Conn]
// connections and they were configured with "h2" in the TLS
// Config.NextProtos.
//
// Serve always returns a non-nil error and closes l.
// After [Server.Shutdown] or [Server.Close], the returned error is [ErrServerClosed].
func (srv *Server) Serve(l net.Listener) error {
if fn := testHookServerServe; fn != nil {
fn(srv, l) // call hook with unwrapped listener
}
origListener := l
l = &onceCloseListener{Listener: l}
defer l.Close()
if err := srv.setupHTTP2_Serve(); err != nil {
return err
}
if !srv.trackListener(&l, true) {
return ErrServerClosed
}
defer srv.trackListener(&l, false)
baseCtx := context.Background()
if srv.BaseContext != nil {
baseCtx = srv.BaseContext(origListener)
if baseCtx == nil {
panic("BaseContext returned a nil context")
}
}
var tempDelay time.Duration // how long to sleep on accept failure
ctx := context.WithValue(baseCtx, ServerContextKey, srv)
for {
rw, err := l.Accept()
if err != nil {
if srv.shuttingDown() {
return ErrServerClosed
}
if ne, ok := err.(net.Error); ok && ne.Temporary() {
if tempDelay == 0 {
tempDelay = 5 * time.Millisecond
} else {
tempDelay *= 2
}
if max := 1 * time.Second; tempDelay > max {
tempDelay = max
}
srv.logf("http: Accept error: %v; retrying in %v", err, tempDelay)
time.Sleep(tempDelay)
continue
}
return err
}
connCtx := ctx
if cc := srv.ConnContext; cc != nil {
connCtx = cc(connCtx, rw)
if connCtx == nil {
panic("ConnContext returned nil")
}
}
tempDelay = 0
c := srv.newConn(rw)
c.setState(c.rwc, StateNew, runHooks) // before Serve can return
go c.serve(connCtx)
}
}
// ServeTLS accepts incoming connections on the Listener l, creating a
// new service goroutine for each. The service goroutines perform TLS
// setup and then read requests, calling srv.Handler to reply to them.
//
// Files containing a certificate and matching private key for the
// server must be provided if neither the [Server]'s
// TLSConfig.Certificates, TLSConfig.GetCertificate nor
// config.GetConfigForClient are populated.
// If the certificate is signed by a certificate authority, the
// certFile should be the concatenation of the server's certificate,
// any intermediates, and the CA's certificate.
//
// ServeTLS always returns a non-nil error. After [Server.Shutdown] or [Server.Close], the
// returned error is [ErrServerClosed].
func (srv *Server) ServeTLS(l net.Listener, certFile, keyFile string) error {
// Setup HTTP/2 before srv.Serve, to initialize srv.TLSConfig
// before we clone it and create the TLS Listener.
if err := srv.setupHTTP2_ServeTLS(); err != nil {
return err
}
config := cloneTLSConfig(srv.TLSConfig)
if !slices.Contains(config.NextProtos, "http/1.1") {
config.NextProtos = append(config.NextProtos, "http/1.1")
}
configHasCert := len(config.Certificates) > 0 || config.GetCertificate != nil || config.GetConfigForClient != nil
if !configHasCert || certFile != "" || keyFile != "" {
var err error
config.Certificates = make([]tls.Certificate, 1)
config.Certificates[0], err = tls.LoadX509KeyPair(certFile, keyFile)
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
tlsListener := tls.NewListener(l, config)
return srv.Serve(tlsListener)
}
// trackListener adds or removes a net.Listener to the set of tracked
// listeners.
//
// We store a pointer to interface in the map set, in case the
// net.Listener is not comparable. This is safe because we only call
// trackListener via Serve and can track+defer untrack the same
// pointer to local variable there. We never need to compare a
// Listener from another caller.
//
// It reports whether the server is still up (not Shutdown or Closed).
func (s *Server) trackListener(ln *net.Listener, add bool) bool {
s.mu.Lock()
defer s.mu.Unlock()
if s.listeners == nil {
s.listeners = make(map[*net.Listener]struct{})
}
if add {
if s.shuttingDown() {
return false
}
s.listeners[ln] = struct{}{}
s.listenerGroup.Add(1)
} else {
delete(s.listeners, ln)
s.listenerGroup.Done()
}
return true
}
func (s *Server) trackConn(c *conn, add bool) {
s.mu.Lock()
defer s.mu.Unlock()
if s.activeConn == nil {
s.activeConn = make(map[*conn]struct{})
}
if add {
s.activeConn[c] = struct{}{}
} else {
delete(s.activeConn, c)
}
}
func (s *Server) idleTimeout() time.Duration {
if s.IdleTimeout != 0 {
return s.IdleTimeout
}
return s.ReadTimeout
}
func (s *Server) readHeaderTimeout() time.Duration {
if s.ReadHeaderTimeout != 0 {
return s.ReadHeaderTimeout
}
return s.ReadTimeout
}
func (s *Server) doKeepAlives() bool {
return !s.disableKeepAlives.Load() && !s.shuttingDown()
}
func (s *Server) shuttingDown() bool {
return s.inShutdown.Load()
}
// SetKeepAlivesEnabled controls whether HTTP keep-alives are enabled.
// By default, keep-alives are always enabled. Only very
// resource-constrained environments or servers in the process of
// shutting down should disable them.
func (srv *Server) SetKeepAlivesEnabled(v bool) {
if v {
srv.disableKeepAlives.Store(false)
return
}
srv.disableKeepAlives.Store(true)
// Close idle HTTP/1 conns:
srv.closeIdleConns()
// TODO: Issue 26303: close HTTP/2 conns as soon as they become idle.
}
func (s *Server) logf(format string, args ...any) {
if s.ErrorLog != nil {
s.ErrorLog.Printf(format, args...)
} else {
log.Printf(format, args...)
}
}
// logf prints to the ErrorLog of the *Server associated with request r
// via ServerContextKey. If there's no associated server, or if ErrorLog
// is nil, logging is done via the log package's standard logger.
func logf(r *Request, format string, args ...any) {
s, _ := r.Context().Value(ServerContextKey).(*Server)
if s != nil && s.ErrorLog != nil {
s.ErrorLog.Printf(format, args...)
} else {
log.Printf(format, args...)
}
}
// ListenAndServe listens on the TCP network address addr and then calls
// [Serve] with handler to handle requests on incoming connections.
// Accepted connections are configured to enable TCP keep-alives.
//
// The handler is typically nil, in which case [DefaultServeMux] is used.
//
// ListenAndServe always returns a non-nil error.
func ListenAndServe(addr string, handler Handler) error {
server := &Server{Addr: addr, Handler: handler}
return server.ListenAndServe()
}
// ListenAndServeTLS acts identically to [ListenAndServe], except that it
// expects HTTPS connections. Additionally, files containing a certificate and
// matching private key for the server must be provided. If the certificate
// is signed by a certificate authority, the certFile should be the concatenation
// of the server's certificate, any intermediates, and the CA's certificate.
func ListenAndServeTLS(addr, certFile, keyFile string, handler Handler) error {
server := &Server{Addr: addr, Handler: handler}
return server.ListenAndServeTLS(certFile, keyFile)
}
// ListenAndServeTLS listens on the TCP network address srv.Addr and
// then calls [ServeTLS] to handle requests on incoming TLS connections.
// Accepted connections are configured to enable TCP keep-alives.
//
// Filenames containing a certificate and matching private key for the
// server must be provided if neither the [Server]'s TLSConfig.Certificates
// nor TLSConfig.GetCertificate are populated. If the certificate is
// signed by a certificate authority, the certFile should be the
// concatenation of the server's certificate, any intermediates, and
// the CA's certificate.
//
// If srv.Addr is blank, ":https" is used.
//
// ListenAndServeTLS always returns a non-nil error. After [Server.Shutdown] or
// [Server.Close], the returned error is [ErrServerClosed].
func (srv *Server) ListenAndServeTLS(certFile, keyFile string) error {
if srv.shuttingDown() {
return ErrServerClosed
}
addr := srv.Addr
if addr == "" {
addr = ":https"
}
ln, err := net.Listen("tcp", addr)
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer ln.Close()
return srv.ServeTLS(ln, certFile, keyFile)
}
// setupHTTP2_ServeTLS conditionally configures HTTP/2 on
// srv and reports whether there was an error setting it up. If it is
// not configured for policy reasons, nil is returned.
func (srv *Server) setupHTTP2_ServeTLS() error {
srv.nextProtoOnce.Do(srv.onceSetNextProtoDefaults)
return srv.nextProtoErr
}
// setupHTTP2_Serve is called from (*Server).Serve and conditionally
// configures HTTP/2 on srv using a more conservative policy than
// setupHTTP2_ServeTLS because Serve is called after tls.Listen,
// and may be called concurrently. See shouldConfigureHTTP2ForServe.
//
// The tests named TestTransportAutomaticHTTP2* and
// TestConcurrentServerServe in server_test.go demonstrate some
// of the supported use cases and motivations.
func (srv *Server) setupHTTP2_Serve() error {
srv.nextProtoOnce.Do(srv.onceSetNextProtoDefaults_Serve)
return srv.nextProtoErr
}
func (srv *Server) onceSetNextProtoDefaults_Serve() {
if srv.shouldConfigureHTTP2ForServe() {
srv.onceSetNextProtoDefaults()
}
}
var http2server = godebug.New("http2server")
// onceSetNextProtoDefaults configures HTTP/2, if the user hasn't
// configured otherwise. (by setting srv.TLSNextProto non-nil)
// It must only be called via srv.nextProtoOnce (use srv.setupHTTP2_*).
func (srv *Server) onceSetNextProtoDefaults() {
if omitBundledHTTP2 {
return
}
if http2server.Value() == "0" {
http2server.IncNonDefault()
return
}
// Enable HTTP/2 by default if the user hasn't otherwise
// configured their TLSNextProto map.
if srv.TLSNextProto == nil {
conf := &http2Server{}
srv.nextProtoErr = http2ConfigureServer(srv, conf)
}
}
// TimeoutHandler returns a [Handler] that runs h with the given time limit.
//
// The new Handler calls h.ServeHTTP to handle each request, but if a
// call runs for longer than its time limit, the handler responds with
// a 503 Service Unavailable error and the given message in its body.
// (If msg is empty, a suitable default message will be sent.)
// After such a timeout, writes by h to its [ResponseWriter] will return
// [ErrHandlerTimeout].
//
// TimeoutHandler supports the [Pusher] interface but does not support
// the [Hijacker] or [Flusher] interfaces.
func TimeoutHandler(h Handler, dt time.Duration, msg string) Handler {
return &timeoutHandler{
handler: h,
body: msg,
dt: dt,
}
}
// ErrHandlerTimeout is returned on [ResponseWriter] Write calls
// in handlers which have timed out.
var ErrHandlerTimeout = errors.New("http: Handler timeout")
type timeoutHandler struct {
handler Handler
body string
dt time.Duration
// When set, no context will be created and this context will
// be used instead.
testContext context.Context
}
func (h *timeoutHandler) errorBody() string {
if h.body != "" {
return h.body
}
return "TimeoutTimeout
"
}
func (h *timeoutHandler) ServeHTTP(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
ctx := h.testContext
if ctx == nil {
var cancelCtx context.CancelFunc
ctx, cancelCtx = context.WithTimeout(r.Context(), h.dt)
defer cancelCtx()
}
r = r.WithContext(ctx)
done := make(chan struct{})
tw := &timeoutWriter{
w: w,
h: make(Header),
req: r,
}
panicChan := make(chan any, 1)
go func() {
defer func() {
if p := recover(); p != nil {
panicChan <- p
}
}()
h.handler.ServeHTTP(tw, r)
close(done)
}()
select {
case p := <-panicChan:
panic(p)
case <-done:
tw.mu.Lock()
defer tw.mu.Unlock()
dst := w.Header()
for k, vv := range tw.h {
dst[k] = vv
}
if !tw.wroteHeader {
tw.code = StatusOK
}
w.WriteHeader(tw.code)
w.Write(tw.wbuf.Bytes())
case <-ctx.Done():
tw.mu.Lock()
defer tw.mu.Unlock()
switch err := ctx.Err(); err {
case context.DeadlineExceeded:
w.WriteHeader(StatusServiceUnavailable)
io.WriteString(w, h.errorBody())
tw.err = ErrHandlerTimeout
default:
w.WriteHeader(StatusServiceUnavailable)
tw.err = err
}
}
}
type timeoutWriter struct {
w ResponseWriter
h Header
wbuf bytes.Buffer
req *Request
mu sync.Mutex
err error
wroteHeader bool
code int
}
var _ Pusher = (*timeoutWriter)(nil)
// Push implements the [Pusher] interface.
func (tw *timeoutWriter) Push(target string, opts *PushOptions) error {
if pusher, ok := tw.w.(Pusher); ok {
return pusher.Push(target, opts)
}
return ErrNotSupported
}
func (tw *timeoutWriter) Header() Header { return tw.h }
func (tw *timeoutWriter) Write(p []byte) (int, error) {
tw.mu.Lock()
defer tw.mu.Unlock()
if tw.err != nil {
return 0, tw.err
}
if !tw.wroteHeader {
tw.writeHeaderLocked(StatusOK)
}
return tw.wbuf.Write(p)
}
func (tw *timeoutWriter) writeHeaderLocked(code int) {
checkWriteHeaderCode(code)
switch {
case tw.err != nil:
return
case tw.wroteHeader:
if tw.req != nil {
caller := relevantCaller()
logf(tw.req, "http: superfluous response.WriteHeader call from %s (%s:%d)", caller.Function, path.Base(caller.File), caller.Line)
}
default:
tw.wroteHeader = true
tw.code = code
}
}
func (tw *timeoutWriter) WriteHeader(code int) {
tw.mu.Lock()
defer tw.mu.Unlock()
tw.writeHeaderLocked(code)
}
// onceCloseListener wraps a net.Listener, protecting it from
// multiple Close calls.
type onceCloseListener struct {
net.Listener
once sync.Once
closeErr error
}
func (oc *onceCloseListener) Close() error {
oc.once.Do(oc.close)
return oc.closeErr
}
func (oc *onceCloseListener) close() { oc.closeErr = oc.Listener.Close() }
// globalOptionsHandler responds to "OPTIONS *" requests.
type globalOptionsHandler struct{}
func (globalOptionsHandler) ServeHTTP(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
w.Header().Set("Content-Length", "0")
if r.ContentLength != 0 {
// Read up to 4KB of OPTIONS body (as mentioned in the
// spec as being reserved for future use), but anything
// over that is considered a waste of server resources
// (or an attack) and we abort and close the connection,
// courtesy of MaxBytesReader's EOF behavior.
mb := MaxBytesReader(w, r.Body, 4<<10)
io.Copy(io.Discard, mb)
}
}
// initALPNRequest is an HTTP handler that initializes certain
// uninitialized fields in its *Request. Such partially-initialized
// Requests come from ALPN protocol handlers.
type initALPNRequest struct {
ctx context.Context
c *tls.Conn
h serverHandler
}
// BaseContext is an exported but unadvertised [http.Handler] method
// recognized by x/net/http2 to pass down a context; the TLSNextProto
// API predates context support so we shoehorn through the only
// interface we have available.
func (h initALPNRequest) BaseContext() context.Context { return h.ctx }
func (h initALPNRequest) ServeHTTP(rw ResponseWriter, req *Request) {
if req.TLS == nil {
req.TLS = &tls.ConnectionState{}
*req.TLS = h.c.ConnectionState()
}
if req.Body == nil {
req.Body = NoBody
}
if req.RemoteAddr == "" {
req.RemoteAddr = h.c.RemoteAddr().String()
}
h.h.ServeHTTP(rw, req)
}
// loggingConn is used for debugging.
type loggingConn struct {
name string
net.Conn
}
var (
uniqNameMu sync.Mutex
uniqNameNext = make(map[string]int)
)
func newLoggingConn(baseName string, c net.Conn) net.Conn {
uniqNameMu.Lock()
defer uniqNameMu.Unlock()
uniqNameNext[baseName]++
return &loggingConn{
name: fmt.Sprintf("%s-%d", baseName, uniqNameNext[baseName]),
Conn: c,
}
}
func (c *loggingConn) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
log.Printf("%s.Write(%d) = ....", c.name, len(p))
n, err = c.Conn.Write(p)
log.Printf("%s.Write(%d) = %d, %v", c.name, len(p), n, err)
return
}
func (c *loggingConn) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
log.Printf("%s.Read(%d) = ....", c.name, len(p))
n, err = c.Conn.Read(p)
log.Printf("%s.Read(%d) = %d, %v", c.name, len(p), n, err)
return
}
func (c *loggingConn) Close() (err error) {
log.Printf("%s.Close() = ...", c.name)
err = c.Conn.Close()
log.Printf("%s.Close() = %v", c.name, err)
return
}
// checkConnErrorWriter writes to c.rwc and records any write errors to c.werr.
// It only contains one field (and a pointer field at that), so it
// fits in an interface value without an extra allocation.
type checkConnErrorWriter struct {
c *conn
}
func (w checkConnErrorWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
n, err = w.c.rwc.Write(p)
if err != nil && w.c.werr == nil {
w.c.werr = err
w.c.cancelCtx()
}
return
}
func numLeadingCRorLF(v []byte) (n int) {
for _, b := range v {
if b == '\r' || b == '\n' {
n++
continue
}
break
}
return
}
// tlsRecordHeaderLooksLikeHTTP reports whether a TLS record header
// looks like it might've been a misdirected plaintext HTTP request.
func tlsRecordHeaderLooksLikeHTTP(hdr [5]byte) bool {
switch string(hdr[:]) {
case "GET /", "HEAD ", "POST ", "PUT /", "OPTIO":
return true
}
return false
}
// MaxBytesHandler returns a [Handler] that runs h with its [ResponseWriter] and [Request.Body] wrapped by a MaxBytesReader.
func MaxBytesHandler(h Handler, n int64) Handler {
return HandlerFunc(func(w ResponseWriter, r *Request) {
r2 := *r
r2.Body = MaxBytesReader(w, r.Body, n)
h.ServeHTTP(w, &r2)
})
}