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// Copyright 2011 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 client implementation. See RFC 7230 through 7235.
//
// This is the low-level Transport implementation of RoundTripper.
// The high-level interface is in client.go.
package http
import (
"bufio"
"compress/gzip"
"container/list"
"context"
"crypto/tls"
"errors"
"fmt"
"internal/godebug"
"io"
"log"
"net"
"net/http/httptrace"
"net/http/internal/ascii"
"net/textproto"
"net/url"
"reflect"
"strings"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
"golang.org/x/net/http/httpguts"
"golang.org/x/net/http/httpproxy"
)
// DefaultTransport is the default implementation of Transport and is
// used by DefaultClient. It establishes network connections as needed
// and caches them for reuse by subsequent calls. It uses HTTP proxies
// as directed by the $HTTP_PROXY and $NO_PROXY (or $http_proxy and
// $no_proxy) environment variables.
var DefaultTransport RoundTripper = &Transport{
Proxy: ProxyFromEnvironment,
DialContext: defaultTransportDialContext(&net.Dialer{
Timeout: 30 * time.Second,
KeepAlive: 30 * time.Second,
}),
ForceAttemptHTTP2: true,
MaxIdleConns: 100,
IdleConnTimeout: 90 * time.Second,
TLSHandshakeTimeout: 10 * time.Second,
ExpectContinueTimeout: 1 * time.Second,
}
// DefaultMaxIdleConnsPerHost is the default value of Transport's
// MaxIdleConnsPerHost.
const DefaultMaxIdleConnsPerHost = 2
// Transport is an implementation of RoundTripper that supports HTTP,
// HTTPS, and HTTP proxies (for either HTTP or HTTPS with CONNECT).
//
// By default, Transport caches connections for future re-use.
// This may leave many open connections when accessing many hosts.
// This behavior can be managed using Transport's CloseIdleConnections method
// and the MaxIdleConnsPerHost and DisableKeepAlives fields.
//
// Transports should be reused instead of created as needed.
// Transports are safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines.
//
// A Transport is a low-level primitive for making HTTP and HTTPS requests.
// For high-level functionality, such as cookies and redirects, see Client.
//
// Transport uses HTTP/1.1 for HTTP URLs and either HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/2
// for HTTPS URLs, depending on whether the server supports HTTP/2,
// and how the Transport is configured. The DefaultTransport supports HTTP/2.
// To explicitly enable HTTP/2 on a transport, use golang.org/x/net/http2
// and call ConfigureTransport. See the package docs for more about HTTP/2.
//
// Responses with status codes in the 1xx range are either handled
// automatically (100 expect-continue) or ignored. The one
// exception is HTTP status code 101 (Switching Protocols), which is
// considered a terminal status and returned by RoundTrip. To see the
// ignored 1xx responses, use the httptrace trace package's
// ClientTrace.Got1xxResponse.
//
// Transport only retries a request upon encountering a network error
// if the request is idempotent and either has no body or has its
// Request.GetBody defined. HTTP requests are considered idempotent if
// they have HTTP methods GET, HEAD, OPTIONS, or TRACE; or if their
// Header map contains an "Idempotency-Key" or "X-Idempotency-Key"
// entry. If the idempotency key value is a zero-length slice, the
// request is treated as idempotent but the header is not sent on the
// wire.
type Transport struct {
idleMu sync.Mutex
closeIdle bool // user has requested to close all idle conns
idleConn map[connectMethodKey][]*persistConn // most recently used at end
idleConnWait map[connectMethodKey]wantConnQueue // waiting getConns
idleLRU connLRU
reqMu sync.Mutex
reqCanceler map[cancelKey]func(error)
altMu sync.Mutex // guards changing altProto only
altProto atomic.Value // of nil or map[string]RoundTripper, key is URI scheme
connsPerHostMu sync.Mutex
connsPerHost map[connectMethodKey]int
connsPerHostWait map[connectMethodKey]wantConnQueue // waiting getConns
// Proxy specifies a function to return a proxy for a given
// Request. If the function returns a non-nil error, the
// request is aborted with the provided error.
//
// The proxy type is determined by the URL scheme. "http",
// "https", and "socks5" are supported. If the scheme is empty,
// "http" is assumed.
//
// If Proxy is nil or returns a nil *URL, no proxy is used.
Proxy func(*Request) (*url.URL, error)
// DialContext specifies the dial function for creating unencrypted TCP connections.
// If DialContext is nil (and the deprecated Dial below is also nil),
// then the transport dials using package net.
//
// DialContext runs concurrently with calls to RoundTrip.
// A RoundTrip call that initiates a dial may end up using
// a connection dialed previously when the earlier connection
// becomes idle before the later DialContext completes.
DialContext func(ctx context.Context, network, addr string) (net.Conn, error)
// Dial specifies the dial function for creating unencrypted TCP connections.
//
// Dial runs concurrently with calls to RoundTrip.
// A RoundTrip call that initiates a dial may end up using
// a connection dialed previously when the earlier connection
// becomes idle before the later Dial completes.
//
// Deprecated: Use DialContext instead, which allows the transport
// to cancel dials as soon as they are no longer needed.
// If both are set, DialContext takes priority.
Dial func(network, addr string) (net.Conn, error)
// DialTLSContext specifies an optional dial function for creating
// TLS connections for non-proxied HTTPS requests.
//
// If DialTLSContext is nil (and the deprecated DialTLS below is also nil),
// DialContext and TLSClientConfig are used.
//
// If DialTLSContext is set, the Dial and DialContext hooks are not used for HTTPS
// requests and the TLSClientConfig and TLSHandshakeTimeout
// are ignored. The returned net.Conn is assumed to already be
// past the TLS handshake.
DialTLSContext func(ctx context.Context, network, addr string) (net.Conn, error)
// DialTLS specifies an optional dial function for creating
// TLS connections for non-proxied HTTPS requests.
//
// Deprecated: Use DialTLSContext instead, which allows the transport
// to cancel dials as soon as they are no longer needed.
// If both are set, DialTLSContext takes priority.
DialTLS func(network, addr string) (net.Conn, error)
// TLSClientConfig specifies the TLS configuration to use with
// tls.Client.
// If nil, the default configuration is used.
// If non-nil, HTTP/2 support may not be enabled by default.
TLSClientConfig *tls.Config
// TLSHandshakeTimeout specifies the maximum amount of time waiting to
// wait for a TLS handshake. Zero means no timeout.
TLSHandshakeTimeout time.Duration
// DisableKeepAlives, if true, disables HTTP keep-alives and
// will only use the connection to the server for a single
// HTTP request.
//
// This is unrelated to the similarly named TCP keep-alives.
DisableKeepAlives bool
// DisableCompression, if true, prevents the Transport from
// requesting compression with an "Accept-Encoding: gzip"
// request header when the Request contains no existing
// Accept-Encoding value. If the Transport requests gzip on
// its own and gets a gzipped response, it's transparently
// decoded in the Response.Body. However, if the user
// explicitly requested gzip it is not automatically
// uncompressed.
DisableCompression bool
// MaxIdleConns controls the maximum number of idle (keep-alive)
// connections across all hosts. Zero means no limit.
MaxIdleConns int
// MaxIdleConnsPerHost, if non-zero, controls the maximum idle
// (keep-alive) connections to keep per-host. If zero,
// DefaultMaxIdleConnsPerHost is used.
MaxIdleConnsPerHost int
// MaxConnsPerHost optionally limits the total number of
// connections per host, including connections in the dialing,
// active, and idle states. On limit violation, dials will block.
//
// Zero means no limit.
MaxConnsPerHost int
// IdleConnTimeout is the maximum amount of time an idle
// (keep-alive) connection will remain idle before closing
// itself.
// Zero means no limit.
IdleConnTimeout time.Duration
// ResponseHeaderTimeout, if non-zero, specifies the amount of
// time to wait for a server's response headers after fully
// writing the request (including its body, if any). This
// time does not include the time to read the response body.
ResponseHeaderTimeout time.Duration
// ExpectContinueTimeout, if non-zero, specifies the amount of
// time to wait for a server's first response headers after fully
// writing the request headers if the request has an
// "Expect: 100-continue" header. Zero means no timeout and
// causes the body to be sent immediately, without
// waiting for the server to approve.
// This time does not include the time to send the request header.
ExpectContinueTimeout time.Duration
// TLSNextProto specifies how the Transport switches to an
// alternate protocol (such as HTTP/2) after a TLS ALPN
// protocol negotiation. If Transport dials an TLS connection
// with a non-empty protocol name and TLSNextProto contains a
// map entry for that key (such as "h2"), then the func is
// called with the request's authority (such as "example.com"
// or "example.com:1234") and the TLS connection. The function
// must return a RoundTripper that then handles the request.
// If TLSNextProto is not nil, HTTP/2 support is not enabled
// automatically.
TLSNextProto map[string]func(authority string, c *tls.Conn) RoundTripper
// ProxyConnectHeader optionally specifies headers to send to
// proxies during CONNECT requests.
// To set the header dynamically, see GetProxyConnectHeader.
ProxyConnectHeader Header
// GetProxyConnectHeader optionally specifies a func to return
// headers to send to proxyURL during a CONNECT request to the
// ip:port target.
// If it returns an error, the Transport's RoundTrip fails with
// that error. It can return (nil, nil) to not add headers.
// If GetProxyConnectHeader is non-nil, ProxyConnectHeader is
// ignored.
GetProxyConnectHeader func(ctx context.Context, proxyURL *url.URL, target string) (Header, error)
// MaxResponseHeaderBytes specifies a limit on how many
// response bytes are allowed in the server's response
// header.
//
// Zero means to use a default limit.
MaxResponseHeaderBytes int64
// WriteBufferSize specifies the size of the write buffer used
// when writing to the transport.
// If zero, a default (currently 4KB) is used.
WriteBufferSize int
// ReadBufferSize specifies the size of the read buffer used
// when reading from the transport.
// If zero, a default (currently 4KB) is used.
ReadBufferSize int
// nextProtoOnce guards initialization of TLSNextProto and
// h2transport (via onceSetNextProtoDefaults)
nextProtoOnce sync.Once
h2transport h2Transport // non-nil if http2 wired up
tlsNextProtoWasNil bool // whether TLSNextProto was nil when the Once fired
// ForceAttemptHTTP2 controls whether HTTP/2 is enabled when a non-zero
// Dial, DialTLS, or DialContext func or TLSClientConfig is provided.
// By default, use of any those fields conservatively disables HTTP/2.
// To use a custom dialer or TLS config and still attempt HTTP/2
// upgrades, set this to true.
ForceAttemptHTTP2 bool
}
// A cancelKey is the key of the reqCanceler map.
// We wrap the *Request in this type since we want to use the original request,
// not any transient one created by roundTrip.
type cancelKey struct {
req *Request
}
func (t *Transport) writeBufferSize() int {
if t.WriteBufferSize > 0 {
return t.WriteBufferSize
}
return 4 << 10
}
func (t *Transport) readBufferSize() int {
if t.ReadBufferSize > 0 {
return t.ReadBufferSize
}
return 4 << 10
}
// Clone returns a deep copy of t's exported fields.
func (t *Transport) Clone() *Transport {
t.nextProtoOnce.Do(t.onceSetNextProtoDefaults)
t2 := &Transport{
Proxy: t.Proxy,
DialContext: t.DialContext,
Dial: t.Dial,
DialTLS: t.DialTLS,
DialTLSContext: t.DialTLSContext,
TLSHandshakeTimeout: t.TLSHandshakeTimeout,
DisableKeepAlives: t.DisableKeepAlives,
DisableCompression: t.DisableCompression,
MaxIdleConns: t.MaxIdleConns,
MaxIdleConnsPerHost: t.MaxIdleConnsPerHost,
MaxConnsPerHost: t.MaxConnsPerHost,
IdleConnTimeout: t.IdleConnTimeout,
ResponseHeaderTimeout: t.ResponseHeaderTimeout,
ExpectContinueTimeout: t.ExpectContinueTimeout,
ProxyConnectHeader: t.ProxyConnectHeader.Clone(),
GetProxyConnectHeader: t.GetProxyConnectHeader,
MaxResponseHeaderBytes: t.MaxResponseHeaderBytes,
ForceAttemptHTTP2: t.ForceAttemptHTTP2,
WriteBufferSize: t.WriteBufferSize,
ReadBufferSize: t.ReadBufferSize,
}
if t.TLSClientConfig != nil {
t2.TLSClientConfig = t.TLSClientConfig.Clone()
}
if !t.tlsNextProtoWasNil {
npm := map[string]func(authority string, c *tls.Conn) RoundTripper{}
for k, v := range t.TLSNextProto {
npm[k] = v
}
t2.TLSNextProto = npm
}
return t2
}
// h2Transport is the interface we expect to be able to call from
// net/http against an *http2.Transport that's either bundled into
// h2_bundle.go or supplied by the user via x/net/http2.
//
// We name it with the "h2" prefix to stay out of the "http2" prefix
// namespace used by x/tools/cmd/bundle for h2_bundle.go.
type h2Transport interface {
CloseIdleConnections()
}
func (t *Transport) hasCustomTLSDialer() bool {
return t.DialTLS != nil || t.DialTLSContext != nil
}
// onceSetNextProtoDefaults initializes TLSNextProto.
// It must be called via t.nextProtoOnce.Do.
func (t *Transport) onceSetNextProtoDefaults() {
t.tlsNextProtoWasNil = (t.TLSNextProto == nil)
if godebug.Get("http2client") == "0" {
return
}
// If they've already configured http2 with
// golang.org/x/net/http2 instead of the bundled copy, try to
// get at its http2.Transport value (via the "https"
// altproto map) so we can call CloseIdleConnections on it if
// requested. (Issue 22891)
altProto, _ := t.altProto.Load().(map[string]RoundTripper)
if rv := reflect.ValueOf(altProto["https"]); rv.IsValid() && rv.Type().Kind() == reflect.Struct && rv.Type().NumField() == 1 {
if v := rv.Field(0); v.CanInterface() {
if h2i, ok := v.Interface().(h2Transport); ok {
t.h2transport = h2i
return
}
}
}
if t.TLSNextProto != nil {
// This is the documented way to disable http2 on a
// Transport.
return
}
if !t.ForceAttemptHTTP2 && (t.TLSClientConfig != nil || t.Dial != nil || t.DialContext != nil || t.hasCustomTLSDialer()) {
// Be conservative and don't automatically enable
// http2 if they've specified a custom TLS config or
// custom dialers. Let them opt-in themselves via
// http2.ConfigureTransport so we don't surprise them
// by modifying their tls.Config. Issue 14275.
// However, if ForceAttemptHTTP2 is true, it overrides the above checks.
return
}
if omitBundledHTTP2 {
return
}
t2, err := http2configureTransports(t)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("Error enabling Transport HTTP/2 support: %v", err)
return
}
t.h2transport = t2
// Auto-configure the http2.Transport's MaxHeaderListSize from
// the http.Transport's MaxResponseHeaderBytes. They don't
// exactly mean the same thing, but they're close.
//
// TODO: also add this to x/net/http2.Configure Transport, behind
// a +build go1.7 build tag:
if limit1 := t.MaxResponseHeaderBytes; limit1 != 0 && t2.MaxHeaderListSize == 0 {
const h2max = 1<<32 - 1
if limit1 >= h2max {
t2.MaxHeaderListSize = h2max
} else {
t2.MaxHeaderListSize = uint32(limit1)
}
}
}
// ProxyFromEnvironment returns the URL of the proxy to use for a
// given request, as indicated by the environment variables
// HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY and NO_PROXY (or the lowercase versions
// thereof). HTTPS_PROXY takes precedence over HTTP_PROXY for https
// requests.
//
// The environment values may be either a complete URL or a
// "host[:port]", in which case the "http" scheme is assumed.
// The schemes "http", "https", and "socks5" are supported.
// An error is returned if the value is a different form.
//
// A nil URL and nil error are returned if no proxy is defined in the
// environment, or a proxy should not be used for the given request,
// as defined by NO_PROXY.
//
// As a special case, if req.URL.Host is "localhost" (with or without
// a port number), then a nil URL and nil error will be returned.
func ProxyFromEnvironment(req *Request) (*url.URL, error) {
return envProxyFunc()(req.URL)
}
// ProxyURL returns a proxy function (for use in a Transport)
// that always returns the same URL.
func ProxyURL(fixedURL *url.URL) func(*Request) (*url.URL, error) {
return func(*Request) (*url.URL, error) {
return fixedURL, nil
}
}
// transportRequest is a wrapper around a *Request that adds
// optional extra headers to write and stores any error to return
// from roundTrip.
type transportRequest struct {
*Request // original request, not to be mutated
extra Header // extra headers to write, or nil
trace *httptrace.ClientTrace // optional
cancelKey cancelKey
mu sync.Mutex // guards err
err error // first setError value for mapRoundTripError to consider
}
func (tr *transportRequest) extraHeaders() Header {
if tr.extra == nil {
tr.extra = make(Header)
}
return tr.extra
}
func (tr *transportRequest) setError(err error) {
tr.mu.Lock()
if tr.err == nil {
tr.err = err
}
tr.mu.Unlock()
}
// useRegisteredProtocol reports whether an alternate protocol (as registered
// with Transport.RegisterProtocol) should be respected for this request.
func (t *Transport) useRegisteredProtocol(req *Request) bool {
if req.URL.Scheme == "https" && req.requiresHTTP1() {
// If this request requires HTTP/1, don't use the
// "https" alternate protocol, which is used by the
// HTTP/2 code to take over requests if there's an
// existing cached HTTP/2 connection.
return false
}
return true
}
// alternateRoundTripper returns the alternate RoundTripper to use
// for this request if the Request's URL scheme requires one,
// or nil for the normal case of using the Transport.
func (t *Transport) alternateRoundTripper(req *Request) RoundTripper {
if !t.useRegisteredProtocol(req) {
return nil
}
altProto, _ := t.altProto.Load().(map[string]RoundTripper)
return altProto[req.URL.Scheme]
}
// roundTrip implements a RoundTripper over HTTP.
func (t *Transport) roundTrip(req *Request) (*Response, error) {
t.nextProtoOnce.Do(t.onceSetNextProtoDefaults)
ctx := req.Context()
trace := httptrace.ContextClientTrace(ctx)
if req.URL == nil {
req.closeBody()
return nil, errors.New("http: nil Request.URL")
}
if req.Header == nil {
req.closeBody()
return nil, errors.New("http: nil Request.Header")
}
scheme := req.URL.Scheme
isHTTP := scheme == "http" || scheme == "https"
if isHTTP {
for k, vv := range req.Header {
if !httpguts.ValidHeaderFieldName(k) {
req.closeBody()
return nil, fmt.Errorf("net/http: invalid header field name %q", k)
}
for _, v := range vv {
if !httpguts.ValidHeaderFieldValue(v) {
req.closeBody()
return nil, fmt.Errorf("net/http: invalid header field value %q for key %v", v, k)
}
}
}
}
origReq := req
cancelKey := cancelKey{origReq}
req = setupRewindBody(req)
if altRT := t.alternateRoundTripper(req); altRT != nil {
if resp, err := altRT.RoundTrip(req); err != ErrSkipAltProtocol {
return resp, err
}
var err error
req, err = rewindBody(req)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
if !isHTTP {
req.closeBody()
return nil, badStringError("unsupported protocol scheme", scheme)
}
if req.Method != "" && !validMethod(req.Method) {
req.closeBody()
return nil, fmt.Errorf("net/http: invalid method %q", req.Method)
}
if req.URL.Host == "" {
req.closeBody()
return nil, errors.New("http: no Host in request URL")
}
for {
select {
case <-ctx.Done():
req.closeBody()
return nil, ctx.Err()
default:
}
// treq gets modified by roundTrip, so we need to recreate for each retry.
treq := &transportRequest{Request: req, trace: trace, cancelKey: cancelKey}
cm, err := t.connectMethodForRequest(treq)
if err != nil {
req.closeBody()
return nil, err
}
// Get the cached or newly-created connection to either the
// host (for http or https), the http proxy, or the http proxy
// pre-CONNECTed to https server. In any case, we'll be ready
// to send it requests.
pconn, err := t.getConn(treq, cm)
if err != nil {
t.setReqCanceler(cancelKey, nil)
req.closeBody()
return nil, err
}
var resp *Response
if pconn.alt != nil {
// HTTP/2 path.
t.setReqCanceler(cancelKey, nil) // not cancelable with CancelRequest
resp, err = pconn.alt.RoundTrip(req)
} else {
resp, err = pconn.roundTrip(treq)
}
if err == nil {
resp.Request = origReq
return resp, nil
}
// Failed. Clean up and determine whether to retry.
if http2isNoCachedConnError(err) {
if t.removeIdleConn(pconn) {
t.decConnsPerHost(pconn.cacheKey)
}
} else if !pconn.shouldRetryRequest(req, err) {
// Issue 16465: return underlying net.Conn.Read error from peek,
// as we've historically done.
if e, ok := err.(nothingWrittenError); ok {
err = e.error
}
if e, ok := err.(transportReadFromServerError); ok {
err = e.err
}
return nil, err
}
testHookRoundTripRetried()
// Rewind the body if we're able to.
req, err = rewindBody(req)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
}
var errCannotRewind = errors.New("net/http: cannot rewind body after connection loss")
type readTrackingBody struct {
io.ReadCloser
didRead bool
didClose bool
}
func (r *readTrackingBody) Read(data []byte) (int, error) {
r.didRead = true
return r.ReadCloser.Read(data)
}
func (r *readTrackingBody) Close() error {
r.didClose = true
return r.ReadCloser.Close()
}
// setupRewindBody returns a new request with a custom body wrapper
// that can report whether the body needs rewinding.
// This lets rewindBody avoid an error result when the request
// does not have GetBody but the body hasn't been read at all yet.
func setupRewindBody(req *Request) *Request {
if req.Body == nil || req.Body == NoBody {
return req
}
newReq := *req
newReq.Body = &readTrackingBody{ReadCloser: req.Body}
return &newReq
}
// rewindBody returns a new request with the body rewound.
// It returns req unmodified if the body does not need rewinding.
// rewindBody takes care of closing req.Body when appropriate
// (in all cases except when rewindBody returns req unmodified).
func rewindBody(req *Request) (rewound *Request, err error) {
if req.Body == nil || req.Body == NoBody || (!req.Body.(*readTrackingBody).didRead && !req.Body.(*readTrackingBody).didClose) {
return req, nil // nothing to rewind
}
if !req.Body.(*readTrackingBody).didClose {
req.closeBody()
}
if req.GetBody == nil {
return nil, errCannotRewind
}
body, err := req.GetBody()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
newReq := *req
newReq.Body = &readTrackingBody{ReadCloser: body}
return &newReq, nil
}
// shouldRetryRequest reports whether we should retry sending a failed
// HTTP request on a new connection. The non-nil input error is the
// error from roundTrip.
func (pc *persistConn) shouldRetryRequest(req *Request, err error) bool {
if http2isNoCachedConnError(err) {
// Issue 16582: if the user started a bunch of
// requests at once, they can all pick the same conn
// and violate the server's max concurrent streams.
// Instead, match the HTTP/1 behavior for now and dial
// again to get a new TCP connection, rather than failing
// this request.
return true
}
if err == errMissingHost {
// User error.
return false
}
if !pc.isReused() {
// This was a fresh connection. There's no reason the server
// should've hung up on us.
//
// Also, if we retried now, we could loop forever
// creating new connections and retrying if the server
// is just hanging up on us because it doesn't like
// our request (as opposed to sending an error).
return false
}
if _, ok := err.(nothingWrittenError); ok {
// We never wrote anything, so it's safe to retry, if there's no body or we
// can "rewind" the body with GetBody.
return req.outgoingLength() == 0 || req.GetBody != nil
}
if !req.isReplayable() {
// Don't retry non-idempotent requests.
return false
}
if _, ok := err.(transportReadFromServerError); ok {
// We got some non-EOF net.Conn.Read failure reading
// the 1st response byte from the server.
return true
}
if err == errServerClosedIdle {
// The server replied with io.EOF while we were trying to
// read the response. Probably an unfortunately keep-alive
// timeout, just as the client was writing a request.
return true
}
return false // conservatively
}
// ErrSkipAltProtocol is a sentinel error value defined by Transport.RegisterProtocol.
var ErrSkipAltProtocol = errors.New("net/http: skip alternate protocol")
// RegisterProtocol registers a new protocol with scheme.
// The Transport will pass requests using the given scheme to rt.
// It is rt's responsibility to simulate HTTP request semantics.
//
// RegisterProtocol can be used by other packages to provide
// implementations of protocol schemes like "ftp" or "file".
//
// If rt.RoundTrip returns ErrSkipAltProtocol, the Transport will
// handle the RoundTrip itself for that one request, as if the
// protocol were not registered.
func (t *Transport) RegisterProtocol(scheme string, rt RoundTripper) {
t.altMu.Lock()
defer t.altMu.Unlock()
oldMap, _ := t.altProto.Load().(map[string]RoundTripper)
if _, exists := oldMap[scheme]; exists {
panic("protocol " + scheme + " already registered")
}
newMap := make(map[string]RoundTripper)
for k, v := range oldMap {
newMap[k] = v
}
newMap[scheme] = rt
t.altProto.Store(newMap)
}
// CloseIdleConnections closes any connections which were previously
// connected from previous requests but are now sitting idle in
// a "keep-alive" state. It does not interrupt any connections currently
// in use.
func (t *Transport) CloseIdleConnections() {
t.nextProtoOnce.Do(t.onceSetNextProtoDefaults)
t.idleMu.Lock()
m := t.idleConn
t.idleConn = nil
t.closeIdle = true // close newly idle connections
t.idleLRU = connLRU{}
t.idleMu.Unlock()
for _, conns := range m {
for _, pconn := range conns {
pconn.close(errCloseIdleConns)
}
}
if t2 := t.h2transport; t2 != nil {
t2.CloseIdleConnections()
}
}
// CancelRequest cancels an in-flight request by closing its connection.
// CancelRequest should only be called after RoundTrip has returned.
//
// Deprecated: Use Request.WithContext to create a request with a
// cancelable context instead. CancelRequest cannot cancel HTTP/2
// requests.
func (t *Transport) CancelRequest(req *Request) {
t.cancelRequest(cancelKey{req}, errRequestCanceled)
}
// Cancel an in-flight request, recording the error value.
// Returns whether the request was canceled.
func (t *Transport) cancelRequest(key cancelKey, err error) bool {
// This function must not return until the cancel func has completed.
// See: https://golang.org/issue/34658
t.reqMu.Lock()
defer t.reqMu.Unlock()
cancel := t.reqCanceler[key]
delete(t.reqCanceler, key)
if cancel != nil {
cancel(err)
}
return cancel != nil
}
//
// Private implementation past this point.
//
var (
// proxyConfigOnce guards proxyConfig
envProxyOnce sync.Once
envProxyFuncValue func(*url.URL) (*url.URL, error)
)
// defaultProxyConfig returns a ProxyConfig value looked up
// from the environment. This mitigates expensive lookups
// on some platforms (e.g. Windows).
func envProxyFunc() func(*url.URL) (*url.URL, error) {
envProxyOnce.Do(func() {
envProxyFuncValue = httpproxy.FromEnvironment().ProxyFunc()
})
return envProxyFuncValue
}
// resetProxyConfig is used by tests.
func resetProxyConfig() {
envProxyOnce = sync.Once{}
envProxyFuncValue = nil
}
func (t *Transport) connectMethodForRequest(treq *transportRequest) (cm connectMethod, err error) {
cm.targetScheme = treq.URL.Scheme
cm.targetAddr = canonicalAddr(treq.URL)
if t.Proxy != nil {
cm.proxyURL, err = t.Proxy(treq.Request)
}
cm.onlyH1 = treq.requiresHTTP1()
return cm, err
}
// proxyAuth returns the Proxy-Authorization header to set
// on requests, if applicable.
func (cm *connectMethod) proxyAuth() string {
if cm.proxyURL == nil {
return ""
}
if u := cm.proxyURL.User; u != nil {
username := u.Username()
password, _ := u.Password()
return "Basic " + basicAuth(username, password)
}
return ""
}
// error values for debugging and testing, not seen by users.
var (
errKeepAlivesDisabled = errors.New("http: putIdleConn: keep alives disabled")
errConnBroken = errors.New("http: putIdleConn: connection is in bad state")
errCloseIdle = errors.New("http: putIdleConn: CloseIdleConnections was called")
errTooManyIdle = errors.New("http: putIdleConn: too many idle connections")
errTooManyIdleHost = errors.New("http: putIdleConn: too many idle connections for host")
errCloseIdleConns = errors.New("http: CloseIdleConnections called")
errReadLoopExiting = errors.New("http: persistConn.readLoop exiting")
errIdleConnTimeout = errors.New("http: idle connection timeout")
// errServerClosedIdle is not seen by users for idempotent requests, but may be
// seen by a user if the server shuts down an idle connection and sends its FIN
// in flight with already-written POST body bytes from the client.
// See https://github.com/golang/go/issues/19943#issuecomment-355607646
errServerClosedIdle = errors.New("http: server closed idle connection")
)
// transportReadFromServerError is used by Transport.readLoop when the
// 1 byte peek read fails and we're actually anticipating a response.
// Usually this is just due to the inherent keep-alive shut down race,
// where the server closed the connection at the same time the client
// wrote. The underlying err field is usually io.EOF or some
// ECONNRESET sort of thing which varies by platform. But it might be
// the user's custom net.Conn.Read error too, so we carry it along for
// them to return from Transport.RoundTrip.
type transportReadFromServerError struct {
err error
}
func (e transportReadFromServerError) Unwrap() error { return e.err }
func (e transportReadFromServerError) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("net/http: Transport failed to read from server: %v", e.err)
}
func (t *Transport) putOrCloseIdleConn(pconn *persistConn) {
if err := t.tryPutIdleConn(pconn); err != nil {
pconn.close(err)
}
}
func (t *Transport) maxIdleConnsPerHost() int {
if v := t.MaxIdleConnsPerHost; v != 0 {
return v
}
return DefaultMaxIdleConnsPerHost
}
// tryPutIdleConn adds pconn to the list of idle persistent connections awaiting
// a new request.
// If pconn is no longer needed or not in a good state, tryPutIdleConn returns
// an error explaining why it wasn't registered.
// tryPutIdleConn does not close pconn. Use putOrCloseIdleConn instead for that.
func (t *Transport) tryPutIdleConn(pconn *persistConn) error {
if t.DisableKeepAlives || t.MaxIdleConnsPerHost < 0 {
return errKeepAlivesDisabled
}
if pconn.isBroken() {
return errConnBroken
}
pconn.markReused()
t.idleMu.Lock()
defer t.idleMu.Unlock()
// HTTP/2 (pconn.alt != nil) connections do not come out of the idle list,
// because multiple goroutines can use them simultaneously.
// If this is an HTTP/2 connection being “returned,” we're done.
if pconn.alt != nil && t.idleLRU.m[pconn] != nil {
return nil
}
// Deliver pconn to goroutine waiting for idle connection, if any.
// (They may be actively dialing, but this conn is ready first.
// Chrome calls this socket late binding.
// See https://www.chromium.org/developers/design-documents/network-stack#TOC-Connection-Management.)
key := pconn.cacheKey
if q, ok := t.idleConnWait[key]; ok {
done := false
if pconn.alt == nil {
// HTTP/1.
// Loop over the waiting list until we find a w that isn't done already, and hand it pconn.
for q.len() > 0 {
w := q.popFront()
if w.tryDeliver(pconn, nil) {
done = true
break
}
}
} else {
// HTTP/2.
// Can hand the same pconn to everyone in the waiting list,
// and we still won't be done: we want to put it in the idle
// list unconditionally, for any future clients too.
for q.len() > 0 {
w := q.popFront()
w.tryDeliver(pconn, nil)
}
}
if q.len() == 0 {
delete(t.idleConnWait, key)
} else {
t.idleConnWait[key] = q
}
if done {
return nil
}
}
if t.closeIdle {
return errCloseIdle
}
if t.idleConn == nil {
t.idleConn = make(map[connectMethodKey][]*persistConn)
}
idles := t.idleConn[key]
if len(idles) >= t.maxIdleConnsPerHost() {
return errTooManyIdleHost
}
for _, exist := range idles {
if exist == pconn {
log.Fatalf("dup idle pconn %p in freelist", pconn)
}
}
t.idleConn[key] = append(idles, pconn)
t.idleLRU.add(pconn)
if t.MaxIdleConns != 0 && t.idleLRU.len() > t.MaxIdleConns {
oldest := t.idleLRU.removeOldest()
oldest.close(errTooManyIdle)
t.removeIdleConnLocked(oldest)
}
// Set idle timer, but only for HTTP/1 (pconn.alt == nil).
// The HTTP/2 implementation manages the idle timer itself
// (see idleConnTimeout in h2_bundle.go).
if t.IdleConnTimeout > 0 && pconn.alt == nil {
if pconn.idleTimer != nil {
pconn.idleTimer.Reset(t.IdleConnTimeout)
} else {
pconn.idleTimer = time.AfterFunc(t.IdleConnTimeout, pconn.closeConnIfStillIdle)
}
}
pconn.idleAt = time.Now()
return nil
}
// queueForIdleConn queues w to receive the next idle connection for w.cm.
// As an optimization hint to the caller, queueForIdleConn reports whether
// it successfully delivered an already-idle connection.
func (t *Transport) queueForIdleConn(w *wantConn) (delivered bool) {
if t.DisableKeepAlives {
return false
}
t.idleMu.Lock()
defer t.idleMu.Unlock()
// Stop closing connections that become idle - we might want one.
// (That is, undo the effect of t.CloseIdleConnections.)
t.closeIdle = false
if w == nil {
// Happens in test hook.
return false
}
// If IdleConnTimeout is set, calculate the oldest
// persistConn.idleAt time we're willing to use a cached idle
// conn.
var oldTime time.Time
if t.IdleConnTimeout > 0 {
oldTime = time.Now().Add(-t.IdleConnTimeout)
}
// Look for most recently-used idle connection.
if list, ok := t.idleConn[w.key]; ok {
stop := false
delivered := false
for len(list) > 0 && !stop {
pconn := list[len(list)-1]
// See whether this connection has been idle too long, considering
// only the wall time (the Round(0)), in case this is a laptop or VM
// coming out of suspend with previously cached idle connections.
tooOld := !oldTime.IsZero() && pconn.idleAt.Round(0).Before(oldTime)
if tooOld {
// Async cleanup. Launch in its own goroutine (as if a
// time.AfterFunc called it); it acquires idleMu, which we're
// holding, and does a synchronous net.Conn.Close.
go pconn.closeConnIfStillIdle()
}
if pconn.isBroken() || tooOld {
// If either persistConn.readLoop has marked the connection
// broken, but Transport.removeIdleConn has not yet removed it
// from the idle list, or if this persistConn is too old (it was
// idle too long), then ignore it and look for another. In both
// cases it's already in the process of being closed.
list = list[:len(list)-1]
continue
}
delivered = w.tryDeliver(pconn, nil)
if delivered {
if pconn.alt != nil {
// HTTP/2: multiple clients can share pconn.
// Leave it in the list.
} else {
// HTTP/1: only one client can use pconn.
// Remove it from the list.
t.idleLRU.remove(pconn)
list = list[:len(list)-1]
}
}
stop = true
}
if len(list) > 0 {
t.idleConn[w.key] = list
} else {
delete(t.idleConn, w.key)
}
if stop {
return delivered
}
}
// Register to receive next connection that becomes idle.
if t.idleConnWait == nil {
t.idleConnWait = make(map[connectMethodKey]wantConnQueue)
}
q := t.idleConnWait[w.key]
q.cleanFront()
q.pushBack(w)
t.idleConnWait[w.key] = q
return false
}
// removeIdleConn marks pconn as dead.
func (t *Transport) removeIdleConn(pconn *persistConn) bool {
t.idleMu.Lock()
defer t.idleMu.Unlock()
return t.removeIdleConnLocked(pconn)
}
// t.idleMu must be held.
func (t *Transport) removeIdleConnLocked(pconn *persistConn) bool {
if pconn.idleTimer != nil {
pconn.idleTimer.Stop()
}
t.idleLRU.remove(pconn)
key := pconn.cacheKey
pconns := t.idleConn[key]
var removed bool
switch len(pconns) {
case 0:
// Nothing
case 1:
if pconns[0] == pconn {
delete(t.idleConn, key)
removed = true
}
default:
for i, v := range pconns {
if v != pconn {
continue
}
// Slide down, keeping most recently-used
// conns at the end.
copy(pconns[i:], pconns[i+1:])
t.idleConn[key] = pconns[:len(pconns)-1]
removed = true
break
}
}
return removed
}
func (t *Transport) setReqCanceler(key cancelKey, fn func(error)) {
t.reqMu.Lock()
defer t.reqMu.Unlock()
if t.reqCanceler == nil {
t.reqCanceler = make(map[cancelKey]func(error))
}
if fn != nil {
t.reqCanceler[key] = fn
} else {
delete(t.reqCanceler, key)
}
}
// replaceReqCanceler replaces an existing cancel function. If there is no cancel function
// for the request, we don't set the function and return false.
// Since CancelRequest will clear the canceler, we can use the return value to detect if
// the request was canceled since the last setReqCancel call.
func (t *Transport) replaceReqCanceler(key cancelKey, fn func(error)) bool {
t.reqMu.Lock()
defer t.reqMu.Unlock()
_, ok := t.reqCanceler[key]
if !ok {
return false
}
if fn != nil {
t.reqCanceler[key] = fn
} else {
delete(t.reqCanceler, key)
}
return true
}
var zeroDialer net.Dialer
func (t *Transport) dial(ctx context.Context, network, addr string) (net.Conn, error) {
if t.DialContext != nil {
return t.DialContext(ctx, network, addr)
}
if t.Dial != nil {
c, err := t.Dial(network, addr)
if c == nil && err == nil {
err = errors.New("net/http: Transport.Dial hook returned (nil, nil)")
}
return c, err
}
return zeroDialer.DialContext(ctx, network, addr)
}
// A wantConn records state about a wanted connection
// (that is, an active call to getConn).
// The conn may be gotten by dialing or by finding an idle connection,
// or a cancellation may make the conn no longer wanted.
// These three options are racing against each other and use
// wantConn to coordinate and agree about the winning outcome.
type wantConn struct {
cm connectMethod
key connectMethodKey // cm.key()
ctx context.Context // context for dial
ready chan struct{} // closed when pc, err pair is delivered
// hooks for testing to know when dials are done
// beforeDial is called in the getConn goroutine when the dial is queued.
// afterDial is called when the dial is completed or canceled.
beforeDial func()
afterDial func()
mu sync.Mutex // protects pc, err, close(ready)
pc *persistConn
err error
}
// waiting reports whether w is still waiting for an answer (connection or error).
func (w *wantConn) waiting() bool {
select {
case <-w.ready:
return false
default:
return true
}
}
// tryDeliver attempts to deliver pc, err to w and reports whether it succeeded.
func (w *wantConn) tryDeliver(pc *persistConn, err error) bool {
w.mu.Lock()
defer w.mu.Unlock()
if w.pc != nil || w.err != nil {
return false
}
w.pc = pc
w.err = err
if w.pc == nil && w.err == nil {
panic("net/http: internal error: misuse of tryDeliver")
}
close(w.ready)
return true
}
// cancel marks w as no longer wanting a result (for example, due to cancellation).
// If a connection has been delivered already, cancel returns it with t.putOrCloseIdleConn.
func (w *wantConn) cancel(t *Transport, err error) {
w.mu.Lock()
if w.pc == nil && w.err == nil {
close(w.ready) // catch misbehavior in future delivery
}
pc := w.pc
w.pc = nil
w.err = err
w.mu.Unlock()
if pc != nil {
t.putOrCloseIdleConn(pc)
}
}
// A wantConnQueue is a queue of wantConns.
type wantConnQueue struct {
// This is a queue, not a deque.
// It is split into two stages - head[headPos:] and tail.
// popFront is trivial (headPos++) on the first stage, and
// pushBack is trivial (append) on the second stage.
// If the first stage is empty, popFront can swap the
// first and second stages to remedy the situation.
//
// This two-stage split is analogous to the use of two lists
// in Okasaki's purely functional queue but without the
// overhead of reversing the list when swapping stages.
head []*wantConn
headPos int
tail []*wantConn
}
// len returns the number of items in the queue.
func (q *wantConnQueue) len() int {
return len(q.head) - q.headPos + len(q.tail)
}
// pushBack adds w to the back of the queue.
func (q *wantConnQueue) pushBack(w *wantConn) {
q.tail = append(q.tail, w)
}
// popFront removes and returns the wantConn at the front of the queue.
func (q *wantConnQueue) popFront() *wantConn {
if q.headPos >= len(q.head) {
if len(q.tail) == 0 {
return nil
}
// Pick up tail as new head, clear tail.
q.head, q.headPos, q.tail = q.tail, 0, q.head[:0]
}
w := q.head[q.headPos]
q.head[q.headPos] = nil
q.headPos++
return w
}
// peekFront returns the wantConn at the front of the queue without removing it.
func (q *wantConnQueue) peekFront() *wantConn {
if q.headPos < len(q.head) {
return q.head[q.headPos]
}
if len(q.tail) > 0 {
return q.tail[0]
}
return nil
}
// cleanFront pops any wantConns that are no longer waiting from the head of the
// queue, reporting whether any were popped.
func (q *wantConnQueue) cleanFront() (cleaned bool) {
for {
w := q.peekFront()
if w == nil || w.waiting() {
return cleaned
}
q.popFront()
cleaned = true
}
}
func (t *Transport) customDialTLS(ctx context.Context, network, addr string) (conn net.Conn, err error) {
if t.DialTLSContext != nil {
conn, err = t.DialTLSContext(ctx, network, addr)
} else {
conn, err = t.DialTLS(network, addr)
}
if conn == nil && err == nil {
err = errors.New("net/http: Transport.DialTLS or DialTLSContext returned (nil, nil)")
}
return
}
// getConn dials and creates a new persistConn to the target as
// specified in the connectMethod. This includes doing a proxy CONNECT
// and/or setting up TLS. If this doesn't return an error, the persistConn
// is ready to write requests to.
func (t *Transport) getConn(treq *transportRequest, cm connectMethod) (pc *persistConn, err error) {
req := treq.Request
trace := treq.trace
ctx := req.Context()
if trace != nil && trace.GetConn != nil {
trace.GetConn(cm.addr())
}
w := &wantConn{
cm: cm,
key: cm.key(),
ctx: ctx,
ready: make(chan struct{}, 1),
beforeDial: testHookPrePendingDial,
afterDial: testHookPostPendingDial,
}
defer func() {
if err != nil {
w.cancel(t, err)
}
}()
// Queue for idle connection.
if delivered := t.queueForIdleConn(w); delivered {
pc := w.pc
// Trace only for HTTP/1.
// HTTP/2 calls trace.GotConn itself.
if pc.alt == nil && trace != nil && trace.GotConn != nil {
trace.GotConn(pc.gotIdleConnTrace(pc.idleAt))
}
// set request canceler to some non-nil function so we
// can detect whether it was cleared between now and when
// we enter roundTrip
t.setReqCanceler(treq.cancelKey, func(error) {})
return pc, nil
}
cancelc := make(chan error, 1)
t.setReqCanceler(treq.cancelKey, func(err error) { cancelc <- err })
// Queue for permission to dial.
t.queueForDial(w)
// Wait for completion or cancellation.
select {
case <-w.ready:
// Trace success but only for HTTP/1.
// HTTP/2 calls trace.GotConn itself.
if w.pc != nil && w.pc.alt == nil && trace != nil && trace.GotConn != nil {
trace.GotConn(httptrace.GotConnInfo{Conn: w.pc.conn, Reused: w.pc.isReused()})
}
if w.err != nil {
// If the request has been canceled, that's probably
// what caused w.err; if so, prefer to return the
// cancellation error (see golang.org/issue/16049).
select {
case <-req.Cancel:
return nil, errRequestCanceledConn
case <-req.Context().Done():
return nil, req.Context().Err()
case err := <-cancelc:
if err == errRequestCanceled {
err = errRequestCanceledConn
}
return nil, err
default:
// return below
}
}
return w.pc, w.err
case <-req.Cancel:
return nil, errRequestCanceledConn
case <-req.Context().Done():
return nil, req.Context().Err()
case err := <-cancelc:
if err == errRequestCanceled {
err = errRequestCanceledConn
}
return nil, err
}
}
// queueForDial queues w to wait for permission to begin dialing.
// Once w receives permission to dial, it will do so in a separate goroutine.
func (t *Transport) queueForDial(w *wantConn) {
w.beforeDial()
if t.MaxConnsPerHost <= 0 {
go t.dialConnFor(w)
return
}
t.connsPerHostMu.Lock()
defer t.connsPerHostMu.Unlock()
if n := t.connsPerHost[w.key]; n < t.MaxConnsPerHost {
if t.connsPerHost == nil {
t.connsPerHost = make(map[connectMethodKey]int)
}
t.connsPerHost[w.key] = n + 1
go t.dialConnFor(w)
return
}
if t.connsPerHostWait == nil {
t.connsPerHostWait = make(map[connectMethodKey]wantConnQueue)
}
q := t.connsPerHostWait[w.key]
q.cleanFront()
q.pushBack(w)
t.connsPerHostWait[w.key] = q
}
// dialConnFor dials on behalf of w and delivers the result to w.
// dialConnFor has received permission to dial w.cm and is counted in t.connCount[w.cm.key()].
// If the dial is canceled or unsuccessful, dialConnFor decrements t.connCount[w.cm.key()].
func (t *Transport) dialConnFor(w *wantConn) {
defer w.afterDial()
pc, err := t.dialConn(w.ctx, w.cm)
delivered := w.tryDeliver(pc, err)
if err == nil && (!delivered || pc.alt != nil) {
// pconn was not passed to w,
// or it is HTTP/2 and can be shared.
// Add to the idle connection pool.
t.putOrCloseIdleConn(pc)
}
if err != nil {
t.decConnsPerHost(w.key)
}
}
// decConnsPerHost decrements the per-host connection count for key,
// which may in turn give a different waiting goroutine permission to dial.
func (t *Transport) decConnsPerHost(key connectMethodKey) {
if t.MaxConnsPerHost <= 0 {
return
}
t.connsPerHostMu.Lock()
defer t.connsPerHostMu.Unlock()
n := t.connsPerHost[key]
if n == 0 {
// Shouldn't happen, but if it does, the counting is buggy and could
// easily lead to a silent deadlock, so report the problem loudly.
panic("net/http: internal error: connCount underflow")
}
// Can we hand this count to a goroutine still waiting to dial?
// (Some goroutines on the wait list may have timed out or
// gotten a connection another way. If they're all gone,
// we don't want to kick off any spurious dial operations.)
if q := t.connsPerHostWait[key]; q.len() > 0 {
done := false
for q.len() > 0 {
w := q.popFront()
if w.waiting() {
go t.dialConnFor(w)
done = true
break
}
}
if q.len() == 0 {
delete(t.connsPerHostWait, key)
} else {
// q is a value (like a slice), so we have to store
// the updated q back into the map.
t.connsPerHostWait[key] = q
}
if done {
return
}
}
// Otherwise, decrement the recorded count.
if n--; n == 0 {
delete(t.connsPerHost, key)
} else {
t.connsPerHost[key] = n
}
}
// Add TLS to a persistent connection, i.e. negotiate a TLS session. If pconn is already a TLS
// tunnel, this function establishes a nested TLS session inside the encrypted channel.
// The remote endpoint's name may be overridden by TLSClientConfig.ServerName.
func (pconn *persistConn) addTLS(ctx context.Context, name string, trace *httptrace.ClientTrace) error {
// Initiate TLS and check remote host name against certificate.
cfg := cloneTLSConfig(pconn.t.TLSClientConfig)
if cfg.ServerName == "" {
cfg.ServerName = name
}
if pconn.cacheKey.onlyH1 {
cfg.NextProtos = nil
}
plainConn := pconn.conn
tlsConn := tls.Client(plainConn, cfg)
errc := make(chan error, 2)
var timer *time.Timer // for canceling TLS handshake
if d := pconn.t.TLSHandshakeTimeout; d != 0 {
timer = time.AfterFunc(d, func() {
errc <- tlsHandshakeTimeoutError{}
})
}
go func() {
if trace != nil && trace.TLSHandshakeStart != nil {
trace.TLSHandshakeStart()
}
err := tlsConn.HandshakeContext(ctx)
if timer != nil {
timer.Stop()
}
errc <- err
}()
if err := <-errc; err != nil {
plainConn.Close()
if trace != nil && trace.TLSHandshakeDone != nil {
trace.TLSHandshakeDone(tls.ConnectionState{}, err)
}
return err
}
cs := tlsConn.ConnectionState()
if trace != nil && trace.TLSHandshakeDone != nil {
trace.TLSHandshakeDone(cs, nil)
}
pconn.tlsState = &cs
pconn.conn = tlsConn
return nil
}
type erringRoundTripper interface {
RoundTripErr() error
}
func (t *Transport) dialConn(ctx context.Context, cm connectMethod) (pconn *persistConn, err error) {
pconn = &persistConn{
t: t,
cacheKey: cm.key(),
reqch: make(chan requestAndChan, 1),
writech: make(chan writeRequest, 1),
closech: make(chan struct{}),
writeErrCh: make(chan error, 1),
writeLoopDone: make(chan struct{}),
}
trace := httptrace.ContextClientTrace(ctx)
wrapErr := func(err error) error {
if cm.proxyURL != nil {
// Return a typed error, per Issue 16997
return &net.OpError{Op: "proxyconnect", Net: "tcp", Err: err}
}
return err
}
if cm.scheme() == "https" && t.hasCustomTLSDialer() {
var err error
pconn.conn, err = t.customDialTLS(ctx, "tcp", cm.addr())
if err != nil {
return nil, wrapErr(err)
}
if tc, ok := pconn.conn.(*tls.Conn); ok {
// Handshake here, in case DialTLS didn't. TLSNextProto below
// depends on it for knowing the connection state.
if trace != nil && trace.TLSHandshakeStart != nil {
trace.TLSHandshakeStart()
}
if err := tc.HandshakeContext(ctx); err != nil {
go pconn.conn.Close()
if trace != nil && trace.TLSHandshakeDone != nil {
trace.TLSHandshakeDone(tls.ConnectionState{}, err)
}
return nil, err
}
cs := tc.ConnectionState()
if trace != nil && trace.TLSHandshakeDone != nil {
trace.TLSHandshakeDone(cs, nil)
}
pconn.tlsState = &cs
}
} else {
conn, err := t.dial(ctx, "tcp", cm.addr())
if err != nil {
return nil, wrapErr(err)
}
pconn.conn = conn
if cm.scheme() == "https" {
var firstTLSHost string
if firstTLSHost, _, err = net.SplitHostPort(cm.addr()); err != nil {
return nil, wrapErr(err)
}
if err = pconn.addTLS(ctx, firstTLSHost, trace); err != nil {
return nil, wrapErr(err)
}
}
}
// Proxy setup.
switch {
case cm.proxyURL == nil:
// Do nothing. Not using a proxy.
case cm.proxyURL.Scheme == "socks5":
conn := pconn.conn
d := socksNewDialer("tcp", conn.RemoteAddr().String())
if u := cm.proxyURL.User; u != nil {
auth := &socksUsernamePassword{
Username: u.Username(),
}
auth.Password, _ = u.Password()
d.AuthMethods = []socksAuthMethod{
socksAuthMethodNotRequired,
socksAuthMethodUsernamePassword,
}
d.Authenticate = auth.Authenticate
}
if _, err := d.DialWithConn(ctx, conn, "tcp", cm.targetAddr); err != nil {
conn.Close()
return nil, err
}
case cm.targetScheme == "http":
pconn.isProxy = true
if pa := cm.proxyAuth(); pa != "" {
pconn.mutateHeaderFunc = func(h Header) {
h.Set("Proxy-Authorization", pa)
}
}
case cm.targetScheme == "https":
conn := pconn.conn
var hdr Header
if t.GetProxyConnectHeader != nil {
var err error
hdr, err = t.GetProxyConnectHeader(ctx, cm.proxyURL, cm.targetAddr)
if err != nil {
conn.Close()
return nil, err
}
} else {
hdr = t.ProxyConnectHeader
}
if hdr == nil {
hdr = make(Header)
}
if pa := cm.proxyAuth(); pa != "" {
hdr = hdr.Clone()
hdr.Set("Proxy-Authorization", pa)
}
connectReq := &Request{
Method: "CONNECT",
URL: &url.URL{Opaque: cm.targetAddr},
Host: cm.targetAddr,
Header: hdr,
}
// If there's no done channel (no deadline or cancellation
// from the caller possible), at least set some (long)
// timeout here. This will make sure we don't block forever
// and leak a goroutine if the connection stops replying
// after the TCP connect.
connectCtx := ctx
if ctx.Done() == nil {
newCtx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(ctx, 1*time.Minute)
defer cancel()
connectCtx = newCtx
}
didReadResponse := make(chan struct{}) // closed after CONNECT write+read is done or fails
var (
resp *Response
err error // write or read error
)
// Write the CONNECT request & read the response.
go func() {
defer close(didReadResponse)
err = connectReq.Write(conn)
if err != nil {
return
}
// Okay to use and discard buffered reader here, because
// TLS server will not speak until spoken to.
br := bufio.NewReader(conn)
resp, err = ReadResponse(br, connectReq)
}()
select {
case <-connectCtx.Done():
conn.Close()
<-didReadResponse
return nil, connectCtx.Err()
case <-didReadResponse:
// resp or err now set
}
if err != nil {
conn.Close()
return nil, err
}
if resp.StatusCode != 200 {
_, text, ok := strings.Cut(resp.Status, " ")
conn.Close()
if !ok {
return nil, errors.New("unknown status code")
}
return nil, errors.New(text)
}
}
if cm.proxyURL != nil && cm.targetScheme == "https" {
if err := pconn.addTLS(ctx, cm.tlsHost(), trace); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
if s := pconn.tlsState; s != nil && s.NegotiatedProtocolIsMutual && s.NegotiatedProtocol != "" {
if next, ok := t.TLSNextProto[s.NegotiatedProtocol]; ok {
alt := next(cm.targetAddr, pconn.conn.(*tls.Conn))
if e, ok := alt.(erringRoundTripper); ok {
// pconn.conn was closed by next (http2configureTransports.upgradeFn).
return nil, e.RoundTripErr()
}
return &persistConn{t: t, cacheKey: pconn.cacheKey, alt: alt}, nil
}
}
pconn.br = bufio.NewReaderSize(pconn, t.readBufferSize())
pconn.bw = bufio.NewWriterSize(persistConnWriter{pconn}, t.writeBufferSize())
go pconn.readLoop()
go pconn.writeLoop()
return pconn, nil
}
// persistConnWriter is the io.Writer written to by pc.bw.
// It accumulates the number of bytes written to the underlying conn,
// so the retry logic can determine whether any bytes made it across
// the wire.
// This is exactly 1 pointer field wide so it can go into an interface
// without allocation.
type persistConnWriter struct {
pc *persistConn
}
func (w persistConnWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
n, err = w.pc.conn.Write(p)
w.pc.nwrite += int64(n)
return
}
// ReadFrom exposes persistConnWriter's underlying Conn to io.Copy and if
// the Conn implements io.ReaderFrom, it can take advantage of optimizations
// such as sendfile.
func (w persistConnWriter) ReadFrom(r io.Reader) (n int64, err error) {
n, err = io.Copy(w.pc.conn, r)
w.pc.nwrite += n
return
}
var _ io.ReaderFrom = (*persistConnWriter)(nil)
// connectMethod is the map key (in its String form) for keeping persistent
// TCP connections alive for subsequent HTTP requests.
//
// A connect method may be of the following types:
//
// connectMethod.key().String() Description
// ------------------------------ -------------------------
// |http|foo.com http directly to server, no proxy
// |https|foo.com https directly to server, no proxy
// |https,h1|foo.com https directly to server w/o HTTP/2, no proxy
// http://proxy.com|https|foo.com http to proxy, then CONNECT to foo.com
// http://proxy.com|http http to proxy, http to anywhere after that
// socks5://proxy.com|http|foo.com socks5 to proxy, then http to foo.com
// socks5://proxy.com|https|foo.com socks5 to proxy, then https to foo.com
// https://proxy.com|https|foo.com https to proxy, then CONNECT to foo.com
// https://proxy.com|http https to proxy, http to anywhere after that
//
type connectMethod struct {
_ incomparable
proxyURL *url.URL // nil for no proxy, else full proxy URL
targetScheme string // "http" or "https"
// If proxyURL specifies an http or https proxy, and targetScheme is http (not https),
// then targetAddr is not included in the connect method key, because the socket can
// be reused for different targetAddr values.
targetAddr string
onlyH1 bool // whether to disable HTTP/2 and force HTTP/1
}
func (cm *connectMethod) key() connectMethodKey {
proxyStr := ""
targetAddr := cm.targetAddr
if cm.proxyURL != nil {
proxyStr = cm.proxyURL.String()
if (cm.proxyURL.Scheme == "http" || cm.proxyURL.Scheme == "https") && cm.targetScheme == "http" {
targetAddr = ""
}
}
return connectMethodKey{
proxy: proxyStr,
scheme: cm.targetScheme,
addr: targetAddr,
onlyH1: cm.onlyH1,
}
}
// scheme returns the first hop scheme: http, https, or socks5
func (cm *connectMethod) scheme() string {
if cm.proxyURL != nil {
return cm.proxyURL.Scheme
}
return cm.targetScheme
}
// addr returns the first hop "host:port" to which we need to TCP connect.
func (cm *connectMethod) addr() string {
if cm.proxyURL != nil {
return canonicalAddr(cm.proxyURL)
}
return cm.targetAddr
}
// tlsHost returns the host name to match against the peer's
// TLS certificate.
func (cm *connectMethod) tlsHost() string {
h := cm.targetAddr
if hasPort(h) {
h = h[:strings.LastIndex(h, ":")]
}
return h
}
// connectMethodKey is the map key version of connectMethod, with a
// stringified proxy URL (or the empty string) instead of a pointer to
// a URL.
type connectMethodKey struct {
proxy, scheme, addr string
onlyH1 bool
}
func (k connectMethodKey) String() string {
// Only used by tests.
var h1 string
if k.onlyH1 {
h1 = ",h1"
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%s|%s%s|%s", k.proxy, k.scheme, h1, k.addr)
}
// persistConn wraps a connection, usually a persistent one
// (but may be used for non-keep-alive requests as well)
type persistConn struct {
// alt optionally specifies the TLS NextProto RoundTripper.
// This is used for HTTP/2 today and future protocols later.
// If it's non-nil, the rest of the fields are unused.
alt RoundTripper
t *Transport
cacheKey connectMethodKey
conn net.Conn
tlsState *tls.ConnectionState
br *bufio.Reader // from conn
bw *bufio.Writer // to conn
nwrite int64 // bytes written
reqch chan requestAndChan // written by roundTrip; read by readLoop
writech chan writeRequest // written by roundTrip; read by writeLoop
closech chan struct{} // closed when conn closed
isProxy bool
sawEOF bool // whether we've seen EOF from conn; owned by readLoop
readLimit int64 // bytes allowed to be read; owned by readLoop
// writeErrCh passes the request write error (usually nil)
// from the writeLoop goroutine to the readLoop which passes
// it off to the res.Body reader, which then uses it to decide
// whether or not a connection can be reused. Issue 7569.
writeErrCh chan error
writeLoopDone chan struct{} // closed when write loop ends
// Both guarded by Transport.idleMu:
idleAt time.Time // time it last become idle
idleTimer *time.Timer // holding an AfterFunc to close it
mu sync.Mutex // guards following fields
numExpectedResponses int
closed error // set non-nil when conn is closed, before closech is closed
canceledErr error // set non-nil if conn is canceled
broken bool // an error has happened on this connection; marked broken so it's not reused.
reused bool // whether conn has had successful request/response and is being reused.
// mutateHeaderFunc is an optional func to modify extra
// headers on each outbound request before it's written. (the
// original Request given to RoundTrip is not modified)
mutateHeaderFunc func(Header)
}
func (pc *persistConn) maxHeaderResponseSize() int64 {
if v := pc.t.MaxResponseHeaderBytes; v != 0 {
return v
}
return 10 << 20 // conservative default; same as http2
}
func (pc *persistConn) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if pc.readLimit <= 0 {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("read limit of %d bytes exhausted", pc.maxHeaderResponseSize())
}
if int64(len(p)) > pc.readLimit {
p = p[:pc.readLimit]
}
n, err = pc.conn.Read(p)
if err == io.EOF {
pc.sawEOF = true
}
pc.readLimit -= int64(n)
return
}
// isBroken reports whether this connection is in a known broken state.
func (pc *persistConn) isBroken() bool {
pc.mu.Lock()
b := pc.closed != nil
pc.mu.Unlock()
return b
}
// canceled returns non-nil if the connection was closed due to
// CancelRequest or due to context cancellation.
func (pc *persistConn) canceled() error {
pc.mu.Lock()
defer pc.mu.Unlock()
return pc.canceledErr
}
// isReused reports whether this connection has been used before.
func (pc *persistConn) isReused() bool {
pc.mu.Lock()
r := pc.reused
pc.mu.Unlock()
return r
}
func (pc *persistConn) gotIdleConnTrace(idleAt time.Time) (t httptrace.GotConnInfo) {
pc.mu.Lock()
defer pc.mu.Unlock()
t.Reused = pc.reused
t.Conn = pc.conn
t.WasIdle = true
if !idleAt.IsZero() {
t.IdleTime = time.Since(idleAt)
}
return
}
func (pc *persistConn) cancelRequest(err error) {
pc.mu.Lock()
defer pc.mu.Unlock()
pc.canceledErr = err
pc.closeLocked(errRequestCanceled)
}
// closeConnIfStillIdle closes the connection if it's still sitting idle.
// This is what's called by the persistConn's idleTimer, and is run in its
// own goroutine.
func (pc *persistConn) closeConnIfStillIdle() {
t := pc.t
t.idleMu.Lock()
defer t.idleMu.Unlock()
if _, ok := t.idleLRU.m[pc]; !ok {
// Not idle.
return
}
t.removeIdleConnLocked(pc)
pc.close(errIdleConnTimeout)
}
// mapRoundTripError returns the appropriate error value for
// persistConn.roundTrip.
//
// The provided err is the first error that (*persistConn).roundTrip
// happened to receive from its select statement.
//
// The startBytesWritten value should be the value of pc.nwrite before the roundTrip
// started writing the request.
func (pc *persistConn) mapRoundTripError(req *transportRequest, startBytesWritten int64, err error) error {
if err == nil {
return nil
}
// Wait for the writeLoop goroutine to terminate to avoid data
// races on callers who mutate the request on failure.
//
// When resc in pc.roundTrip and hence rc.ch receives a responseAndError
// with a non-nil error it implies that the persistConn is either closed
// or closing. Waiting on pc.writeLoopDone is hence safe as all callers
// close closech which in turn ensures writeLoop returns.
<-pc.writeLoopDone
// If the request was canceled, that's better than network
// failures that were likely the result of tearing down the
// connection.
if cerr := pc.canceled(); cerr != nil {
return cerr
}
// See if an error was set explicitly.
req.mu.Lock()
reqErr := req.err
req.mu.Unlock()
if reqErr != nil {
return reqErr
}
if err == errServerClosedIdle {
// Don't decorate
return err
}
if _, ok := err.(transportReadFromServerError); ok {
if pc.nwrite == startBytesWritten {
return nothingWrittenError{err}
}
// Don't decorate
return err
}
if pc.isBroken() {
if pc.nwrite == startBytesWritten {
return nothingWrittenError{err}
}
return fmt.Errorf("net/http: HTTP/1.x transport connection broken: %v", err)
}
return err
}
// errCallerOwnsConn is an internal sentinel error used when we hand
// off a writable response.Body to the caller. We use this to prevent
// closing a net.Conn that is now owned by the caller.
var errCallerOwnsConn = errors.New("read loop ending; caller owns writable underlying conn")
func (pc *persistConn) readLoop() {
closeErr := errReadLoopExiting // default value, if not changed below
defer func() {
pc.close(closeErr)
pc.t.removeIdleConn(pc)
}()
tryPutIdleConn := func(trace *httptrace.ClientTrace) bool {
if err := pc.t.tryPutIdleConn(pc); err != nil {
closeErr = err
if trace != nil && trace.PutIdleConn != nil && err != errKeepAlivesDisabled {
trace.PutIdleConn(err)
}
return false
}
if trace != nil && trace.PutIdleConn != nil {
trace.PutIdleConn(nil)
}
return true
}
// eofc is used to block caller goroutines reading from Response.Body
// at EOF until this goroutines has (potentially) added the connection
// back to the idle pool.
eofc := make(chan struct{})
defer close(eofc) // unblock reader on errors
// Read this once, before loop starts. (to avoid races in tests)
testHookMu.Lock()
testHookReadLoopBeforeNextRead := testHookReadLoopBeforeNextRead
testHookMu.Unlock()
alive := true
for alive {
pc.readLimit = pc.maxHeaderResponseSize()
_, err := pc.br.Peek(1)
pc.mu.Lock()
if pc.numExpectedResponses == 0 {
pc.readLoopPeekFailLocked(err)
pc.mu.Unlock()
return
}
pc.mu.Unlock()
rc := <-pc.reqch
trace := httptrace.ContextClientTrace(rc.req.Context())
var resp *Response
if err == nil {
resp, err = pc.readResponse(rc, trace)
} else {
err = transportReadFromServerError{err}
closeErr = err
}
if err != nil {
if pc.readLimit <= 0 {
err = fmt.Errorf("net/http: server response headers exceeded %d bytes; aborted", pc.maxHeaderResponseSize())
}
select {
case rc.ch <- responseAndError{err: err}:
case <-rc.callerGone:
return
}
return
}
pc.readLimit = maxInt64 // effectively no limit for response bodies
pc.mu.Lock()
pc.numExpectedResponses--
pc.mu.Unlock()
bodyWritable := resp.bodyIsWritable()
hasBody := rc.req.Method != "HEAD" && resp.ContentLength != 0
if resp.Close || rc.req.Close || resp.StatusCode <= 199 || bodyWritable {
// Don't do keep-alive on error if either party requested a close
// or we get an unexpected informational (1xx) response.
// StatusCode 100 is already handled above.
alive = false
}
if !hasBody || bodyWritable {
replaced := pc.t.replaceReqCanceler(rc.cancelKey, nil)
// Put the idle conn back into the pool before we send the response
// so if they process it quickly and make another request, they'll
// get this same conn. But we use the unbuffered channel 'rc'
// to guarantee that persistConn.roundTrip got out of its select
// potentially waiting for this persistConn to close.
alive = alive &&
!pc.sawEOF &&
pc.wroteRequest() &&
replaced && tryPutIdleConn(trace)
if bodyWritable {
closeErr = errCallerOwnsConn
}
select {
case rc.ch <- responseAndError{res: resp}:
case <-rc.callerGone:
return
}
// Now that they've read from the unbuffered channel, they're safely
// out of the select that also waits on this goroutine to die, so
// we're allowed to exit now if needed (if alive is false)
testHookReadLoopBeforeNextRead()
continue
}
waitForBodyRead := make(chan bool, 2)
body := &bodyEOFSignal{
body: resp.Body,
earlyCloseFn: func() error {
waitForBodyRead <- false
<-eofc // will be closed by deferred call at the end of the function
return nil
},
fn: func(err error) error {
isEOF := err == io.EOF
waitForBodyRead <- isEOF
if isEOF {
<-eofc // see comment above eofc declaration
} else if err != nil {
if cerr := pc.canceled(); cerr != nil {
return cerr
}
}
return err
},
}
resp.Body = body
if rc.addedGzip && ascii.EqualFold(resp.Header.Get("Content-Encoding"), "gzip") {
resp.Body = &gzipReader{body: body}
resp.Header.Del("Content-Encoding")
resp.Header.Del("Content-Length")
resp.ContentLength = -1
resp.Uncompressed = true
}
select {
case rc.ch <- responseAndError{res: resp}:
case <-rc.callerGone:
return
}
// Before looping back to the top of this function and peeking on
// the bufio.Reader, wait for the caller goroutine to finish
// reading the response body. (or for cancellation or death)
select {
case bodyEOF := <-waitForBodyRead:
replaced := pc.t.replaceReqCanceler(rc.cancelKey, nil) // before pc might return to idle pool
alive = alive &&
bodyEOF &&
!pc.sawEOF &&
pc.wroteRequest() &&
replaced && tryPutIdleConn(trace)
if bodyEOF {
eofc <- struct{}{}
}
case <-rc.req.Cancel:
alive = false
pc.t.CancelRequest(rc.req)
case <-rc.req.Context().Done():
alive = false
pc.t.cancelRequest(rc.cancelKey, rc.req.Context().Err())
case <-pc.closech:
alive = false
}
testHookReadLoopBeforeNextRead()
}
}
func (pc *persistConn) readLoopPeekFailLocked(peekErr error) {
if pc.closed != nil {
return
}
if n := pc.br.Buffered(); n > 0 {
buf, _ := pc.br.Peek(n)
if is408Message(buf) {
pc.closeLocked(errServerClosedIdle)
return
} else {
log.Printf("Unsolicited response received on idle HTTP channel starting with %q; err=%v", buf, peekErr)
}
}
if peekErr == io.EOF {
// common case.
pc.closeLocked(errServerClosedIdle)
} else {
pc.closeLocked(fmt.Errorf("readLoopPeekFailLocked: %v", peekErr))
}
}
// is408Message reports whether buf has the prefix of an
// HTTP 408 Request Timeout response.
// See golang.org/issue/32310.
func is408Message(buf []byte) bool {
if len(buf) < len("HTTP/1.x 408") {
return false
}
if string(buf[:7]) != "HTTP/1." {
return false
}
return string(buf[8:12]) == " 408"
}
// readResponse reads an HTTP response (or two, in the case of "Expect:
// 100-continue") from the server. It returns the final non-100 one.
// trace is optional.
func (pc *persistConn) readResponse(rc requestAndChan, trace *httptrace.ClientTrace) (resp *Response, err error) {
if trace != nil && trace.GotFirstResponseByte != nil {
if peek, err := pc.br.Peek(1); err == nil && len(peek) == 1 {
trace.GotFirstResponseByte()
}
}
num1xx := 0 // number of informational 1xx headers received
const max1xxResponses = 5 // arbitrary bound on number of informational responses
continueCh := rc.continueCh
for {
resp, err = ReadResponse(pc.br, rc.req)
if err != nil {
return
}
resCode := resp.StatusCode
if continueCh != nil {
if resCode == 100 {
if trace != nil && trace.Got100Continue != nil {
trace.Got100Continue()
}
continueCh <- struct{}{}
continueCh = nil
} else if resCode >= 200 {
close(continueCh)
continueCh = nil
}
}
is1xx := 100 <= resCode && resCode <= 199
// treat 101 as a terminal status, see issue 26161
is1xxNonTerminal := is1xx && resCode != StatusSwitchingProtocols
if is1xxNonTerminal {
num1xx++
if num1xx > max1xxResponses {
return nil, errors.New("net/http: too many 1xx informational responses")
}
pc.readLimit = pc.maxHeaderResponseSize() // reset the limit
if trace != nil && trace.Got1xxResponse != nil {
if err := trace.Got1xxResponse(resCode, textproto.MIMEHeader(resp.Header)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
continue
}
break
}
if resp.isProtocolSwitch() {
resp.Body = newReadWriteCloserBody(pc.br, pc.conn)
}
resp.TLS = pc.tlsState
return
}
// waitForContinue returns the function to block until
// any response, timeout or connection close. After any of them,
// the function returns a bool which indicates if the body should be sent.
func (pc *persistConn) waitForContinue(continueCh <-chan struct{}) func() bool {
if continueCh == nil {
return nil
}
return func() bool {
timer := time.NewTimer(pc.t.ExpectContinueTimeout)
defer timer.Stop()
select {
case _, ok := <-continueCh:
return ok
case <-timer.C:
return true
case <-pc.closech:
return false
}
}
}
func newReadWriteCloserBody(br *bufio.Reader, rwc io.ReadWriteCloser) io.ReadWriteCloser {
body := &readWriteCloserBody{ReadWriteCloser: rwc}
if br.Buffered() != 0 {
body.br = br
}
return body
}
// readWriteCloserBody is the Response.Body type used when we want to
// give users write access to the Body through the underlying
// connection (TCP, unless using custom dialers). This is then
// the concrete type for a Response.Body on the 101 Switching
// Protocols response, as used by WebSockets, h2c, etc.
type readWriteCloserBody struct {
_ incomparable
br *bufio.Reader // used until empty
io.ReadWriteCloser
}
func (b *readWriteCloserBody) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if b.br != nil {
if n := b.br.Buffered(); len(p) > n {
p = p[:n]
}
n, err = b.br.Read(p)
if b.br.Buffered() == 0 {
b.br = nil
}
return n, err
}
return b.ReadWriteCloser.Read(p)
}
// nothingWrittenError wraps a write errors which ended up writing zero bytes.
type nothingWrittenError struct {
error
}
func (pc *persistConn) writeLoop() {
defer close(pc.writeLoopDone)
for {
select {
case wr := <-pc.writech:
startBytesWritten := pc.nwrite
err := wr.req.Request.write(pc.bw, pc.isProxy, wr.req.extra, pc.waitForContinue(wr.continueCh))
if bre, ok := err.(requestBodyReadError); ok {
err = bre.error
// Errors reading from the user's
// Request.Body are high priority.
// Set it here before sending on the
// channels below or calling
// pc.close() which tears down
// connections and causes other
// errors.
wr.req.setError(err)
}
if err == nil {
err = pc.bw.Flush()
}
if err != nil {
if pc.nwrite == startBytesWritten {
err = nothingWrittenError{err}
}
}
pc.writeErrCh <- err // to the body reader, which might recycle us
wr.ch <- err // to the roundTrip function
if err != nil {
pc.close(err)
return
}
case <-pc.closech:
return
}
}
}
// maxWriteWaitBeforeConnReuse is how long the a Transport RoundTrip
// will wait to see the Request's Body.Write result after getting a
// response from the server. See comments in (*persistConn).wroteRequest.
const maxWriteWaitBeforeConnReuse = 50 * time.Millisecond
// wroteRequest is a check before recycling a connection that the previous write
// (from writeLoop above) happened and was successful.
func (pc *persistConn) wroteRequest() bool {
select {
case err := <-pc.writeErrCh:
// Common case: the write happened well before the response, so
// avoid creating a timer.
return err == nil
default:
// Rare case: the request was written in writeLoop above but
// before it could send to pc.writeErrCh, the reader read it
// all, processed it, and called us here. In this case, give the
// write goroutine a bit of time to finish its send.
//
// Less rare case: We also get here in the legitimate case of
// Issue 7569, where the writer is still writing (or stalled),
// but the server has already replied. In this case, we don't
// want to wait too long, and we want to return false so this
// connection isn't re-used.
t := time.NewTimer(maxWriteWaitBeforeConnReuse)
defer t.Stop()
select {
case err := <-pc.writeErrCh:
return err == nil
case <-t.C:
return false
}
}
}
// responseAndError is how the goroutine reading from an HTTP/1 server
// communicates with the goroutine doing the RoundTrip.
type responseAndError struct {
_ incomparable
res *Response // else use this response (see res method)
err error
}
type requestAndChan struct {
_ incomparable
req *Request
cancelKey cancelKey
ch chan responseAndError // unbuffered; always send in select on callerGone
// whether the Transport (as opposed to the user client code)
// added the Accept-Encoding gzip header. If the Transport
// set it, only then do we transparently decode the gzip.
addedGzip bool
// Optional blocking chan for Expect: 100-continue (for send).
// If the request has an "Expect: 100-continue" header and
// the server responds 100 Continue, readLoop send a value
// to writeLoop via this chan.
continueCh chan<- struct{}
callerGone <-chan struct{} // closed when roundTrip caller has returned
}
// A writeRequest is sent by the caller's goroutine to the
// writeLoop's goroutine to write a request while the read loop
// concurrently waits on both the write response and the server's
// reply.
type writeRequest struct {
req *transportRequest
ch chan<- error
// Optional blocking chan for Expect: 100-continue (for receive).
// If not nil, writeLoop blocks sending request body until
// it receives from this chan.
continueCh <-chan struct{}
}
type httpError struct {
err string
timeout bool
}
func (e *httpError) Error() string { return e.err }
func (e *httpError) Timeout() bool { return e.timeout }
func (e *httpError) Temporary() bool { return true }
var errTimeout error = &httpError{err: "net/http: timeout awaiting response headers", timeout: true}
// errRequestCanceled is set to be identical to the one from h2 to facilitate
// testing.
var errRequestCanceled = http2errRequestCanceled
var errRequestCanceledConn = errors.New("net/http: request canceled while waiting for connection") // TODO: unify?
func nop() {}
// testHooks. Always non-nil.
var (
testHookEnterRoundTrip = nop
testHookWaitResLoop = nop
testHookRoundTripRetried = nop
testHookPrePendingDial = nop
testHookPostPendingDial = nop
testHookMu sync.Locker = fakeLocker{} // guards following
testHookReadLoopBeforeNextRead = nop
)
func (pc *persistConn) roundTrip(req *transportRequest) (resp *Response, err error) {
testHookEnterRoundTrip()
if !pc.t.replaceReqCanceler(req.cancelKey, pc.cancelRequest) {
pc.t.putOrCloseIdleConn(pc)
return nil, errRequestCanceled
}
pc.mu.Lock()
pc.numExpectedResponses++
headerFn := pc.mutateHeaderFunc
pc.mu.Unlock()
if headerFn != nil {
headerFn(req.extraHeaders())
}
// Ask for a compressed version if the caller didn't set their
// own value for Accept-Encoding. We only attempt to
// uncompress the gzip stream if we were the layer that
// requested it.
requestedGzip := false
if !pc.t.DisableCompression &&
req.Header.Get("Accept-Encoding") == "" &&
req.Header.Get("Range") == "" &&
req.Method != "HEAD" {
// Request gzip only, not deflate. Deflate is ambiguous and
// not as universally supported anyway.
// See: https://zlib.net/zlib_faq.html#faq39
//
// Note that we don't request this for HEAD requests,
// due to a bug in nginx:
// https://trac.nginx.org/nginx/ticket/358
// https://golang.org/issue/5522
//
// We don't request gzip if the request is for a range, since
// auto-decoding a portion of a gzipped document will just fail
// anyway. See https://golang.org/issue/8923
requestedGzip = true
req.extraHeaders().Set("Accept-Encoding", "gzip")
}
var continueCh chan struct{}
if req.ProtoAtLeast(1, 1) && req.Body != nil && req.expectsContinue() {
continueCh = make(chan struct{}, 1)
}
if pc.t.DisableKeepAlives &&
!req.wantsClose() &&
!isProtocolSwitchHeader(req.Header) {
req.extraHeaders().Set("Connection", "close")
}
gone := make(chan struct{})
defer close(gone)
defer func() {
if err != nil {
pc.t.setReqCanceler(req.cancelKey, nil)
}
}()
const debugRoundTrip = false
// Write the request concurrently with waiting for a response,
// in case the server decides to reply before reading our full
// request body.
startBytesWritten := pc.nwrite
writeErrCh := make(chan error, 1)
pc.writech <- writeRequest{req, writeErrCh, continueCh}
resc := make(chan responseAndError)
pc.reqch <- requestAndChan{
req: req.Request,
cancelKey: req.cancelKey,
ch: resc,
addedGzip: requestedGzip,
continueCh: continueCh,
callerGone: gone,
}
var respHeaderTimer <-chan time.Time
cancelChan := req.Request.Cancel
ctxDoneChan := req.Context().Done()
pcClosed := pc.closech
canceled := false
for {
testHookWaitResLoop()
select {
case err := <-writeErrCh:
if debugRoundTrip {
req.logf("writeErrCh resv: %T/%#v", err, err)
}
if err != nil {
pc.close(fmt.Errorf("write error: %v", err))
return nil, pc.mapRoundTripError(req, startBytesWritten, err)
}
if d := pc.t.ResponseHeaderTimeout; d > 0 {
if debugRoundTrip {
req.logf("starting timer for %v", d)
}
timer := time.NewTimer(d)
defer timer.Stop() // prevent leaks
respHeaderTimer = timer.C
}
case <-pcClosed:
pcClosed = nil
if canceled || pc.t.replaceReqCanceler(req.cancelKey, nil) {
if debugRoundTrip {
req.logf("closech recv: %T %#v", pc.closed, pc.closed)
}
return nil, pc.mapRoundTripError(req, startBytesWritten, pc.closed)
}
case <-respHeaderTimer:
if debugRoundTrip {
req.logf("timeout waiting for response headers.")
}
pc.close(errTimeout)
return nil, errTimeout
case re := <-resc:
if (re.res == nil) == (re.err == nil) {
panic(fmt.Sprintf("internal error: exactly one of res or err should be set; nil=%v", re.res == nil))
}
if debugRoundTrip {
req.logf("resc recv: %p, %T/%#v", re.res, re.err, re.err)
}
if re.err != nil {
return nil, pc.mapRoundTripError(req, startBytesWritten, re.err)
}
return re.res, nil
case <-cancelChan:
canceled = pc.t.cancelRequest(req.cancelKey, errRequestCanceled)
cancelChan = nil
case <-ctxDoneChan:
canceled = pc.t.cancelRequest(req.cancelKey, req.Context().Err())
cancelChan = nil
ctxDoneChan = nil
}
}
}
// tLogKey is a context WithValue key for test debugging contexts containing
// a t.Logf func. See export_test.go's Request.WithT method.
type tLogKey struct{}
func (tr *transportRequest) logf(format string, args ...any) {
if logf, ok := tr.Request.Context().Value(tLogKey{}).(func(string, ...any)); ok {
logf(time.Now().Format(time.RFC3339Nano)+": "+format, args...)
}
}
// markReused marks this connection as having been successfully used for a
// request and response.
func (pc *persistConn) markReused() {
pc.mu.Lock()
pc.reused = true
pc.mu.Unlock()
}
// close closes the underlying TCP connection and closes
// the pc.closech channel.
//
// The provided err is only for testing and debugging; in normal
// circumstances it should never be seen by users.
func (pc *persistConn) close(err error) {
pc.mu.Lock()
defer pc.mu.Unlock()
pc.closeLocked(err)
}
func (pc *persistConn) closeLocked(err error) {
if err == nil {
panic("nil error")
}
pc.broken = true
if pc.closed == nil {
pc.closed = err
pc.t.decConnsPerHost(pc.cacheKey)
// Close HTTP/1 (pc.alt == nil) connection.
// HTTP/2 closes its connection itself.
if pc.alt == nil {
if err != errCallerOwnsConn {
pc.conn.Close()
}
close(pc.closech)
}
}
pc.mutateHeaderFunc = nil
}
var portMap = map[string]string{
"http": "80",
"https": "443",
"socks5": "1080",
}
// canonicalAddr returns url.Host but always with a ":port" suffix
func canonicalAddr(url *url.URL) string {
addr := url.Hostname()
if v, err := idnaASCII(addr); err == nil {
addr = v
}
port := url.Port()
if port == "" {
port = portMap[url.Scheme]
}
return net.JoinHostPort(addr, port)
}
// bodyEOFSignal is used by the HTTP/1 transport when reading response
// bodies to make sure we see the end of a response body before
// proceeding and reading on the connection again.
//
// It wraps a ReadCloser but runs fn (if non-nil) at most
// once, right before its final (error-producing) Read or Close call
// returns. fn should return the new error to return from Read or Close.
//
// If earlyCloseFn is non-nil and Close is called before io.EOF is
// seen, earlyCloseFn is called instead of fn, and its return value is
// the return value from Close.
type bodyEOFSignal struct {
body io.ReadCloser
mu sync.Mutex // guards following 4 fields
closed bool // whether Close has been called
rerr error // sticky Read error
fn func(error) error // err will be nil on Read io.EOF
earlyCloseFn func() error // optional alt Close func used if io.EOF not seen
}
var errReadOnClosedResBody = errors.New("http: read on closed response body")
func (es *bodyEOFSignal) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
es.mu.Lock()
closed, rerr := es.closed, es.rerr
es.mu.Unlock()
if closed {
return 0, errReadOnClosedResBody
}
if rerr != nil {
return 0, rerr
}
n, err = es.body.Read(p)
if err != nil {
es.mu.Lock()
defer es.mu.Unlock()
if es.rerr == nil {
es.rerr = err
}
err = es.condfn(err)
}
return
}
func (es *bodyEOFSignal) Close() error {
es.mu.Lock()
defer es.mu.Unlock()
if es.closed {
return nil
}
es.closed = true
if es.earlyCloseFn != nil && es.rerr != io.EOF {
return es.earlyCloseFn()
}
err := es.body.Close()
return es.condfn(err)
}
// caller must hold es.mu.
func (es *bodyEOFSignal) condfn(err error) error {
if es.fn == nil {
return err
}
err = es.fn(err)
es.fn = nil
return err
}
// gzipReader wraps a response body so it can lazily
// call gzip.NewReader on the first call to Read
type gzipReader struct {
_ incomparable
body *bodyEOFSignal // underlying HTTP/1 response body framing
zr *gzip.Reader // lazily-initialized gzip reader
zerr error // any error from gzip.NewReader; sticky
}
func (gz *gzipReader) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if gz.zr == nil {
if gz.zerr == nil {
gz.zr, gz.zerr = gzip.NewReader(gz.body)
}
if gz.zerr != nil {
return 0, gz.zerr
}
}
gz.body.mu.Lock()
if gz.body.closed {
err = errReadOnClosedResBody
}
gz.body.mu.Unlock()
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
return gz.zr.Read(p)
}
func (gz *gzipReader) Close() error {
return gz.body.Close()
}
type tlsHandshakeTimeoutError struct{}
func (tlsHandshakeTimeoutError) Timeout() bool { return true }
func (tlsHandshakeTimeoutError) Temporary() bool { return true }
func (tlsHandshakeTimeoutError) Error() string { return "net/http: TLS handshake timeout" }
// fakeLocker is a sync.Locker which does nothing. It's used to guard
// test-only fields when not under test, to avoid runtime atomic
// overhead.
type fakeLocker struct{}
func (fakeLocker) Lock() {}
func (fakeLocker) Unlock() {}
// cloneTLSConfig returns a shallow clone of cfg, or a new zero tls.Config if
// cfg is nil. This is safe to call even if cfg is in active use by a TLS
// client or server.
func cloneTLSConfig(cfg *tls.Config) *tls.Config {
if cfg == nil {
return &tls.Config{}
}
return cfg.Clone()
}
type connLRU struct {
ll *list.List // list.Element.Value type is of *persistConn
m map[*persistConn]*list.Element
}
// add adds pc to the head of the linked list.
func (cl *connLRU) add(pc *persistConn) {
if cl.ll == nil {
cl.ll = list.New()
cl.m = make(map[*persistConn]*list.Element)
}
ele := cl.ll.PushFront(pc)
if _, ok := cl.m[pc]; ok {
panic("persistConn was already in LRU")
}
cl.m[pc] = ele
}
func (cl *connLRU) removeOldest() *persistConn {
ele := cl.ll.Back()
pc := ele.Value.(*persistConn)
cl.ll.Remove(ele)
delete(cl.m, pc)
return pc
}
// remove removes pc from cl.
func (cl *connLRU) remove(pc *persistConn) {
if ele, ok := cl.m[pc]; ok {
cl.ll.Remove(ele)
delete(cl.m, pc)
}
}
// len returns the number of items in the cache.
func (cl *connLRU) len() int {
return len(cl.m)
}