2 Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
3 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 Free Software Foundation,
6 This file is part of GNU Wget.
8 GNU Wget is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
11 (at your option) any later version.
13 GNU Wget is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with Wget. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
21 Additional permission under GNU GPL version 3 section 7
23 If you modify this program, or any covered work, by linking or
24 combining it with the OpenSSL project's OpenSSL library (or a
25 modified version of that library), containing parts covered by the
26 terms of the OpenSSL or SSLeay licenses, the Free Software Foundation
27 grants you additional permission to convey the resulting work.
28 Corresponding Source for a non-source form of such a combination
29 shall include the source code for the parts of OpenSSL used as well
30 as that of the covered work. */
55 # include "http-ntlm.h"
69 #endif /* def __VMS */
71 extern char *version_string;
75 static char *create_authorization_line (const char *, const char *,
76 const char *, const char *,
77 const char *, bool *);
78 static char *basic_authentication_encode (const char *, const char *);
79 static bool known_authentication_scheme_p (const char *, const char *);
80 static void ensure_extension (struct http_stat *, const char *, int *);
81 static void load_cookies (void);
84 # define MIN(x, y) ((x) > (y) ? (y) : (x))
88 static bool cookies_loaded_p;
89 static struct cookie_jar *wget_cookie_jar;
91 #define TEXTHTML_S "text/html"
92 #define TEXTXHTML_S "application/xhtml+xml"
93 #define TEXTCSS_S "text/css"
95 /* Some status code validation macros: */
96 #define H_10X(x) (((x) >= 100) && ((x) < 200))
97 #define H_20X(x) (((x) >= 200) && ((x) < 300))
98 #define H_PARTIAL(x) ((x) == HTTP_STATUS_PARTIAL_CONTENTS)
99 #define H_REDIRECTED(x) ((x) == HTTP_STATUS_MOVED_PERMANENTLY \
100 || (x) == HTTP_STATUS_MOVED_TEMPORARILY \
101 || (x) == HTTP_STATUS_SEE_OTHER \
102 || (x) == HTTP_STATUS_TEMPORARY_REDIRECT)
104 /* HTTP/1.0 status codes from RFC1945, provided for reference. */
105 /* Successful 2xx. */
106 #define HTTP_STATUS_OK 200
107 #define HTTP_STATUS_CREATED 201
108 #define HTTP_STATUS_ACCEPTED 202
109 #define HTTP_STATUS_NO_CONTENT 204
110 #define HTTP_STATUS_PARTIAL_CONTENTS 206
112 /* Redirection 3xx. */
113 #define HTTP_STATUS_MULTIPLE_CHOICES 300
114 #define HTTP_STATUS_MOVED_PERMANENTLY 301
115 #define HTTP_STATUS_MOVED_TEMPORARILY 302
116 #define HTTP_STATUS_SEE_OTHER 303 /* from HTTP/1.1 */
117 #define HTTP_STATUS_NOT_MODIFIED 304
118 #define HTTP_STATUS_TEMPORARY_REDIRECT 307 /* from HTTP/1.1 */
120 /* Client error 4xx. */
121 #define HTTP_STATUS_BAD_REQUEST 400
122 #define HTTP_STATUS_UNAUTHORIZED 401
123 #define HTTP_STATUS_FORBIDDEN 403
124 #define HTTP_STATUS_NOT_FOUND 404
125 #define HTTP_STATUS_RANGE_NOT_SATISFIABLE 416
127 /* Server errors 5xx. */
128 #define HTTP_STATUS_INTERNAL 500
129 #define HTTP_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED 501
130 #define HTTP_STATUS_BAD_GATEWAY 502
131 #define HTTP_STATUS_UNAVAILABLE 503
134 rel_none, rel_name, rel_value, rel_both
141 struct request_header {
143 enum rp release_policy;
145 int hcount, hcapacity;
150 /* Create a new, empty request. Set the request's method and its
151 arguments. METHOD should be a literal string (or it should outlive
152 the request) because it will not be freed. ARG will be freed by
155 static struct request *
156 request_new (const char *method, char *arg)
158 struct request *req = xnew0 (struct request);
160 req->headers = xnew_array (struct request_header, req->hcapacity);
161 req->method = method;
166 /* Return the method string passed with the last call to
167 request_set_method. */
170 request_method (const struct request *req)
175 /* Free one header according to the release policy specified with
176 request_set_header. */
179 release_header (struct request_header *hdr)
181 switch (hdr->release_policy)
198 /* Set the request named NAME to VALUE. Specifically, this means that
199 a "NAME: VALUE\r\n" header line will be used in the request. If a
200 header with the same name previously existed in the request, its
201 value will be replaced by this one. A NULL value means do nothing.
203 RELEASE_POLICY determines whether NAME and VALUE should be released
204 (freed) with request_free. Allowed values are:
206 - rel_none - don't free NAME or VALUE
207 - rel_name - free NAME when done
208 - rel_value - free VALUE when done
209 - rel_both - free both NAME and VALUE when done
211 Setting release policy is useful when arguments come from different
212 sources. For example:
214 // Don't free literal strings!
215 request_set_header (req, "Pragma", "no-cache", rel_none);
217 // Don't free a global variable, we'll need it later.
218 request_set_header (req, "Referer", opt.referer, rel_none);
220 // Value freshly allocated, free it when done.
221 request_set_header (req, "Range",
222 aprintf ("bytes=%s-", number_to_static_string (hs->restval)),
227 request_set_header (struct request *req, const char *name, const char *value,
228 enum rp release_policy)
230 struct request_header *hdr;
235 /* A NULL value is a no-op; if freeing the name is requested,
236 free it now to avoid leaks. */
237 if (release_policy == rel_name || release_policy == rel_both)
238 xfree ((void *)name);
242 for (i = 0; i < req->hcount; i++)
244 hdr = &req->headers[i];
245 if (0 == strcasecmp (name, hdr->name))
247 /* Replace existing header. */
248 release_header (hdr);
249 hdr->name = (void *)name;
250 hdr->value = (void *)value;
251 hdr->release_policy = release_policy;
256 /* Install new header. */
258 if (req->hcount >= req->hcapacity)
260 req->hcapacity <<= 1;
261 req->headers = xrealloc (req->headers, req->hcapacity * sizeof (*hdr));
263 hdr = &req->headers[req->hcount++];
264 hdr->name = (void *)name;
265 hdr->value = (void *)value;
266 hdr->release_policy = release_policy;
269 /* Like request_set_header, but sets the whole header line, as
270 provided by the user using the `--header' option. For example,
271 request_set_user_header (req, "Foo: bar") works just like
272 request_set_header (req, "Foo", "bar"). */
275 request_set_user_header (struct request *req, const char *header)
278 const char *p = strchr (header, ':');
281 BOUNDED_TO_ALLOCA (header, p, name);
283 while (c_isspace (*p))
285 request_set_header (req, xstrdup (name), (char *) p, rel_name);
288 /* Remove the header with specified name from REQ. Returns true if
289 the header was actually removed, false otherwise. */
292 request_remove_header (struct request *req, const char *name)
295 for (i = 0; i < req->hcount; i++)
297 struct request_header *hdr = &req->headers[i];
298 if (0 == strcasecmp (name, hdr->name))
300 release_header (hdr);
301 /* Move the remaining headers by one. */
302 if (i < req->hcount - 1)
303 memmove (hdr, hdr + 1, (req->hcount - i - 1) * sizeof (*hdr));
311 #define APPEND(p, str) do { \
312 int A_len = strlen (str); \
313 memcpy (p, str, A_len); \
317 /* Construct the request and write it to FD using fd_write.
318 If warc_tmp is set to a file pointer, the request string will
319 also be written to that file. */
322 request_send (const struct request *req, int fd, FILE *warc_tmp)
324 char *request_string, *p;
325 int i, size, write_error;
327 /* Count the request size. */
330 /* METHOD " " ARG " " "HTTP/1.0" "\r\n" */
331 size += strlen (req->method) + 1 + strlen (req->arg) + 1 + 8 + 2;
333 for (i = 0; i < req->hcount; i++)
335 struct request_header *hdr = &req->headers[i];
336 /* NAME ": " VALUE "\r\n" */
337 size += strlen (hdr->name) + 2 + strlen (hdr->value) + 2;
343 p = request_string = alloca_array (char, size);
345 /* Generate the request. */
347 APPEND (p, req->method); *p++ = ' ';
348 APPEND (p, req->arg); *p++ = ' ';
349 memcpy (p, "HTTP/1.1\r\n", 10); p += 10;
351 for (i = 0; i < req->hcount; i++)
353 struct request_header *hdr = &req->headers[i];
354 APPEND (p, hdr->name);
355 *p++ = ':', *p++ = ' ';
356 APPEND (p, hdr->value);
357 *p++ = '\r', *p++ = '\n';
360 *p++ = '\r', *p++ = '\n', *p++ = '\0';
361 assert (p - request_string == size);
365 DEBUGP (("\n---request begin---\n%s---request end---\n", request_string));
367 /* Send the request to the server. */
369 write_error = fd_write (fd, request_string, size - 1, -1);
371 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Failed writing HTTP request: %s.\n"),
373 else if (warc_tmp != NULL)
375 /* Write a copy of the data to the WARC record. */
376 int warc_tmp_written = fwrite (request_string, 1, size - 1, warc_tmp);
377 if (warc_tmp_written != size - 1)
383 /* Release the resources used by REQ. */
386 request_free (struct request *req)
389 xfree_null (req->arg);
390 for (i = 0; i < req->hcount; i++)
391 release_header (&req->headers[i]);
392 xfree_null (req->headers);
396 static struct hash_table *basic_authed_hosts;
398 /* Find out if this host has issued a Basic challenge yet; if so, give
399 * it the username, password. A temporary measure until we can get
400 * proper authentication in place. */
403 maybe_send_basic_creds (const char *hostname, const char *user,
404 const char *passwd, struct request *req)
406 bool do_challenge = false;
408 if (opt.auth_without_challenge)
410 DEBUGP (("Auth-without-challenge set, sending Basic credentials.\n"));
413 else if (basic_authed_hosts
414 && hash_table_contains(basic_authed_hosts, hostname))
416 DEBUGP (("Found %s in basic_authed_hosts.\n", quote (hostname)));
421 DEBUGP (("Host %s has not issued a general basic challenge.\n",
426 request_set_header (req, "Authorization",
427 basic_authentication_encode (user, passwd),
434 register_basic_auth_host (const char *hostname)
436 if (!basic_authed_hosts)
438 basic_authed_hosts = make_nocase_string_hash_table (1);
440 if (!hash_table_contains(basic_authed_hosts, hostname))
442 hash_table_put (basic_authed_hosts, xstrdup(hostname), NULL);
443 DEBUGP (("Inserted %s into basic_authed_hosts\n", quote (hostname)));
448 /* Send the contents of FILE_NAME to SOCK. Make sure that exactly
449 PROMISED_SIZE bytes are sent over the wire -- if the file is
450 longer, read only that much; if the file is shorter, report an error.
451 If warc_tmp is set to a file pointer, the post data will
452 also be written to that file. */
455 body_file_send (int sock, const char *file_name, wgint promised_size, FILE *warc_tmp)
457 static char chunk[8192];
462 DEBUGP (("[writing BODY file %s ... ", file_name));
464 fp = fopen (file_name, "rb");
467 while (!feof (fp) && written < promised_size)
470 int length = fread (chunk, 1, sizeof (chunk), fp);
473 towrite = MIN (promised_size - written, length);
474 write_error = fd_write (sock, chunk, towrite, -1);
480 if (warc_tmp != NULL)
482 /* Write a copy of the data to the WARC record. */
483 int warc_tmp_written = fwrite (chunk, 1, towrite, warc_tmp);
484 if (warc_tmp_written != towrite)
494 /* If we've written less than was promised, report a (probably
495 nonsensical) error rather than break the promise. */
496 if (written < promised_size)
502 assert (written == promised_size);
503 DEBUGP (("done]\n"));
507 /* Determine whether [START, PEEKED + PEEKLEN) contains an empty line.
508 If so, return the pointer to the position after the line, otherwise
509 return NULL. This is used as callback to fd_read_hunk. The data
510 between START and PEEKED has been read and cannot be "unread"; the
511 data after PEEKED has only been peeked. */
514 response_head_terminator (const char *start, const char *peeked, int peeklen)
518 /* If at first peek, verify whether HUNK starts with "HTTP". If
519 not, this is a HTTP/0.9 request and we must bail out without
521 if (start == peeked && 0 != memcmp (start, "HTTP", MIN (peeklen, 4)))
524 /* Look for "\n[\r]\n", and return the following position if found.
525 Start two chars before the current to cover the possibility that
526 part of the terminator (e.g. "\n\r") arrived in the previous
528 p = peeked - start < 2 ? start : peeked - 2;
529 end = peeked + peeklen;
531 /* Check for \n\r\n or \n\n anywhere in [p, end-2). */
532 for (; p < end - 2; p++)
535 if (p[1] == '\r' && p[2] == '\n')
537 else if (p[1] == '\n')
540 /* p==end-2: check for \n\n directly preceding END. */
541 if (p[0] == '\n' && p[1] == '\n')
547 /* The maximum size of a single HTTP response we care to read. Rather
548 than being a limit of the reader implementation, this limit
549 prevents Wget from slurping all available memory upon encountering
550 malicious or buggy server output, thus protecting the user. Define
551 it to 0 to remove the limit. */
553 #define HTTP_RESPONSE_MAX_SIZE 65536
555 /* Read the HTTP request head from FD and return it. The error
556 conditions are the same as with fd_read_hunk.
558 To support HTTP/0.9 responses, this function tries to make sure
559 that the data begins with "HTTP". If this is not the case, no data
560 is read and an empty request is returned, so that the remaining
561 data can be treated as body. */
564 read_http_response_head (int fd)
566 return fd_read_hunk (fd, response_head_terminator, 512,
567 HTTP_RESPONSE_MAX_SIZE);
571 /* The response data. */
574 /* The array of pointers that indicate where each header starts.
575 For example, given this HTTP response:
582 The headers are located like this:
584 "HTTP/1.0 200 Ok\r\nDescription: some\r\n text\r\nEtag: x\r\n\r\n"
586 headers[0] headers[1] headers[2] headers[3]
588 I.e. headers[0] points to the beginning of the request,
589 headers[1] points to the end of the first header and the
590 beginning of the second one, etc. */
592 const char **headers;
595 /* Create a new response object from the text of the HTTP response,
596 available in HEAD. That text is automatically split into
597 constituent header lines for fast retrieval using
600 static struct response *
601 resp_new (const char *head)
606 struct response *resp = xnew0 (struct response);
611 /* Empty head means that we're dealing with a headerless
612 (HTTP/0.9) response. In that case, don't set HEADERS at
617 /* Split HEAD into header lines, so that resp_header_* functions
618 don't need to do this over and over again. */
624 DO_REALLOC (resp->headers, size, count + 1, const char *);
625 resp->headers[count++] = hdr;
627 /* Break upon encountering an empty line. */
628 if (!hdr[0] || (hdr[0] == '\r' && hdr[1] == '\n') || hdr[0] == '\n')
631 /* Find the end of HDR, including continuations. */
634 const char *end = strchr (hdr, '\n');
640 while (*hdr == ' ' || *hdr == '\t');
642 DO_REALLOC (resp->headers, size, count + 1, const char *);
643 resp->headers[count] = NULL;
648 /* Locate the header named NAME in the request data, starting with
649 position START. This allows the code to loop through the request
650 data, filtering for all requests of a given name. Returns the
651 found position, or -1 for failure. The code that uses this
652 function typically looks like this:
654 for (pos = 0; (pos = resp_header_locate (...)) != -1; pos++)
655 ... do something with header ...
657 If you only care about one header, use resp_header_get instead of
661 resp_header_locate (const struct response *resp, const char *name, int start,
662 const char **begptr, const char **endptr)
665 const char **headers = resp->headers;
668 if (!headers || !headers[1])
671 name_len = strlen (name);
677 for (; headers[i + 1]; i++)
679 const char *b = headers[i];
680 const char *e = headers[i + 1];
682 && b[name_len] == ':'
683 && 0 == strncasecmp (b, name, name_len))
686 while (b < e && c_isspace (*b))
688 while (b < e && c_isspace (e[-1]))
698 /* Find and retrieve the header named NAME in the request data. If
699 found, set *BEGPTR to its starting, and *ENDPTR to its ending
700 position, and return true. Otherwise return false.
702 This function is used as a building block for resp_header_copy
703 and resp_header_strdup. */
706 resp_header_get (const struct response *resp, const char *name,
707 const char **begptr, const char **endptr)
709 int pos = resp_header_locate (resp, name, 0, begptr, endptr);
713 /* Copy the response header named NAME to buffer BUF, no longer than
714 BUFSIZE (BUFSIZE includes the terminating 0). If the header
715 exists, true is returned, false otherwise. If there should be no
716 limit on the size of the header, use resp_header_strdup instead.
718 If BUFSIZE is 0, no data is copied, but the boolean indication of
719 whether the header is present is still returned. */
722 resp_header_copy (const struct response *resp, const char *name,
723 char *buf, int bufsize)
726 if (!resp_header_get (resp, name, &b, &e))
730 int len = MIN (e - b, bufsize - 1);
731 memcpy (buf, b, len);
737 /* Return the value of header named NAME in RESP, allocated with
738 malloc. If such a header does not exist in RESP, return NULL. */
741 resp_header_strdup (const struct response *resp, const char *name)
744 if (!resp_header_get (resp, name, &b, &e))
746 return strdupdelim (b, e);
749 /* Parse the HTTP status line, which is of format:
751 HTTP-Version SP Status-Code SP Reason-Phrase
753 The function returns the status-code, or -1 if the status line
754 appears malformed. The pointer to "reason-phrase" message is
755 returned in *MESSAGE. */
758 resp_status (const struct response *resp, char **message)
765 /* For a HTTP/0.9 response, assume status 200. */
767 *message = xstrdup (_("No headers, assuming HTTP/0.9"));
771 p = resp->headers[0];
772 end = resp->headers[1];
778 if (end - p < 4 || 0 != strncmp (p, "HTTP", 4))
782 /* Match the HTTP version. This is optional because Gnutella
783 servers have been reported to not specify HTTP version. */
784 if (p < end && *p == '/')
787 while (p < end && c_isdigit (*p))
789 if (p < end && *p == '.')
791 while (p < end && c_isdigit (*p))
795 while (p < end && c_isspace (*p))
797 if (end - p < 3 || !c_isdigit (p[0]) || !c_isdigit (p[1]) || !c_isdigit (p[2]))
800 status = 100 * (p[0] - '0') + 10 * (p[1] - '0') + (p[2] - '0');
805 while (p < end && c_isspace (*p))
807 while (p < end && c_isspace (end[-1]))
809 *message = strdupdelim (p, end);
815 /* Release the resources used by RESP. */
818 resp_free (struct response *resp)
820 xfree_null (resp->headers);
824 /* Print a single line of response, the characters [b, e). We tried
826 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, "%s%.*s\n", prefix, (int) (e - b), b);
827 but that failed to escape the non-printable characters and, in fact,
828 caused crashes in UTF-8 locales. */
831 print_response_line(const char *prefix, const char *b, const char *e)
834 BOUNDED_TO_ALLOCA(b, e, copy);
835 logprintf (LOG_ALWAYS, "%s%s\n", prefix,
836 quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, copy));
839 /* Print the server response, line by line, omitting the trailing CRLF
840 from individual header lines, and prefixed with PREFIX. */
843 print_server_response (const struct response *resp, const char *prefix)
848 for (i = 0; resp->headers[i + 1]; i++)
850 const char *b = resp->headers[i];
851 const char *e = resp->headers[i + 1];
853 if (b < e && e[-1] == '\n')
855 if (b < e && e[-1] == '\r')
857 print_response_line(prefix, b, e);
861 /* Parse the `Content-Range' header and extract the information it
862 contains. Returns true if successful, false otherwise. */
864 parse_content_range (const char *hdr, wgint *first_byte_ptr,
865 wgint *last_byte_ptr, wgint *entity_length_ptr)
869 /* Ancient versions of Netscape proxy server, presumably predating
870 rfc2068, sent out `Content-Range' without the "bytes"
872 if (0 == strncasecmp (hdr, "bytes", 5))
875 /* "JavaWebServer/1.1.1" sends "bytes: x-y/z", contrary to the
879 while (c_isspace (*hdr))
884 if (!c_isdigit (*hdr))
886 for (num = 0; c_isdigit (*hdr); hdr++)
887 num = 10 * num + (*hdr - '0');
888 if (*hdr != '-' || !c_isdigit (*(hdr + 1)))
890 *first_byte_ptr = num;
892 for (num = 0; c_isdigit (*hdr); hdr++)
893 num = 10 * num + (*hdr - '0');
894 if (*hdr != '/' || !c_isdigit (*(hdr + 1)))
896 *last_byte_ptr = num;
901 for (num = 0; c_isdigit (*hdr); hdr++)
902 num = 10 * num + (*hdr - '0');
903 *entity_length_ptr = num;
907 /* Read the body of the request, but don't store it anywhere and don't
908 display a progress gauge. This is useful for reading the bodies of
909 administrative responses to which we will soon issue another
910 request. The response is not useful to the user, but reading it
911 allows us to continue using the same connection to the server.
913 If reading fails, false is returned, true otherwise. In debug
914 mode, the body is displayed for debugging purposes. */
917 skip_short_body (int fd, wgint contlen, bool chunked)
920 SKIP_SIZE = 512, /* size of the download buffer */
921 SKIP_THRESHOLD = 4096 /* the largest size we read */
923 wgint remaining_chunk_size = 0;
924 char dlbuf[SKIP_SIZE + 1];
925 dlbuf[SKIP_SIZE] = '\0'; /* so DEBUGP can safely print it */
927 assert (contlen != -1 || contlen);
929 /* If the body is too large, it makes more sense to simply close the
930 connection than to try to read the body. */
931 if (contlen > SKIP_THRESHOLD)
934 while (contlen > 0 || chunked)
939 if (remaining_chunk_size == 0)
941 char *line = fd_read_line (fd);
946 remaining_chunk_size = strtol (line, &endl, 16);
949 if (remaining_chunk_size == 0)
951 line = fd_read_line (fd);
957 contlen = MIN (remaining_chunk_size, SKIP_SIZE);
960 DEBUGP (("Skipping %s bytes of body: [", number_to_static_string (contlen)));
962 ret = fd_read (fd, dlbuf, MIN (contlen, SKIP_SIZE), -1);
965 /* Don't normally report the error since this is an
966 optimization that should be invisible to the user. */
967 DEBUGP (("] aborting (%s).\n",
968 ret < 0 ? fd_errstr (fd) : "EOF received"));
975 remaining_chunk_size -= ret;
976 if (remaining_chunk_size == 0)
978 char *line = fd_read_line (fd);
986 /* Safe even if %.*s bogusly expects terminating \0 because
987 we've zero-terminated dlbuf above. */
988 DEBUGP (("%.*s", ret, dlbuf));
991 DEBUGP (("] done.\n"));
995 #define NOT_RFC2231 0
996 #define RFC2231_NOENCODING 1
997 #define RFC2231_ENCODING 2
999 /* extract_param extracts the parameter name into NAME.
1000 However, if the parameter name is in RFC2231 format then
1001 this function adjusts NAME by stripping of the trailing
1002 characters that are not part of the name but are present to
1003 indicate the presence of encoding information in the value
1004 or a fragment of a long parameter value
1007 modify_param_name(param_token *name)
1009 const char *delim1 = memchr (name->b, '*', name->e - name->b);
1010 const char *delim2 = memrchr (name->b, '*', name->e - name->b);
1016 result = NOT_RFC2231;
1018 else if(delim1 == delim2)
1020 if ((name->e - 1) == delim1)
1022 result = RFC2231_ENCODING;
1026 result = RFC2231_NOENCODING;
1033 result = RFC2231_ENCODING;
1038 /* extract_param extract the paramater value into VALUE.
1039 Like modify_param_name this function modifies VALUE by
1040 stripping off the encoding information from the actual value
1043 modify_param_value (param_token *value, int encoding_type )
1045 if (RFC2231_ENCODING == encoding_type)
1047 const char *delim = memrchr (value->b, '\'', value->e - value->b);
1048 if ( delim != NULL )
1050 value->b = (delim+1);
1055 /* Extract a parameter from the string (typically an HTTP header) at
1056 **SOURCE and advance SOURCE to the next parameter. Return false
1057 when there are no more parameters to extract. The name of the
1058 parameter is returned in NAME, and the value in VALUE. If the
1059 parameter has no value, the token's value is zeroed out.
1061 For example, if *SOURCE points to the string "attachment;
1062 filename=\"foo bar\"", the first call to this function will return
1063 the token named "attachment" and no value, and the second call will
1064 return the token named "filename" and value "foo bar". The third
1065 call will return false, indicating no more valid tokens. */
1068 extract_param (const char **source, param_token *name, param_token *value,
1071 const char *p = *source;
1073 while (c_isspace (*p)) ++p;
1077 return false; /* no error; nothing more to extract */
1082 while (*p && !c_isspace (*p) && *p != '=' && *p != separator) ++p;
1084 if (name->b == name->e)
1085 return false; /* empty name: error */
1086 while (c_isspace (*p)) ++p;
1087 if (*p == separator || !*p) /* no value */
1090 if (*p == separator) ++p;
1095 return false; /* error */
1097 /* *p is '=', extract value */
1099 while (c_isspace (*p)) ++p;
1100 if (*p == '"') /* quoted */
1103 while (*p && *p != '"') ++p;
1107 /* Currently at closing quote; find the end of param. */
1108 while (c_isspace (*p)) ++p;
1109 while (*p && *p != separator) ++p;
1110 if (*p == separator)
1113 /* garbage after closed quote, e.g. foo="bar"baz */
1119 while (*p && *p != separator) ++p;
1121 while (value->e != value->b && c_isspace (value->e[-1]))
1123 if (*p == separator) ++p;
1127 int param_type = modify_param_name(name);
1128 if (NOT_RFC2231 != param_type)
1130 modify_param_value(value, param_type);
1136 #undef RFC2231_NOENCODING
1137 #undef RFC2231_ENCODING
1139 /* Appends the string represented by VALUE to FILENAME */
1142 append_value_to_filename (char **filename, param_token const * const value)
1144 int original_length = strlen(*filename);
1145 int new_length = strlen(*filename) + (value->e - value->b);
1146 *filename = xrealloc (*filename, new_length+1);
1147 memcpy (*filename + original_length, value->b, (value->e - value->b));
1148 (*filename)[new_length] = '\0';
1152 #define MAX(p, q) ((p) > (q) ? (p) : (q))
1154 /* Parse the contents of the `Content-Disposition' header, extracting
1155 the information useful to Wget. Content-Disposition is a header
1156 borrowed from MIME; when used in HTTP, it typically serves for
1157 specifying the desired file name of the resource. For example:
1159 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="flora.jpg"
1161 Wget will skip the tokens it doesn't care about, such as
1162 "attachment" in the previous example; it will also skip other
1163 unrecognized params. If the header is syntactically correct and
1164 contains a file name, a copy of the file name is stored in
1165 *filename and true is returned. Otherwise, the function returns
1168 The file name is stripped of directory components and must not be
1171 Historically, this function returned filename prefixed with opt.dir_prefix,
1172 now that logic is handled by the caller, new code should pay attention,
1173 changed by crq, Sep 2010.
1177 parse_content_disposition (const char *hdr, char **filename)
1179 param_token name, value;
1181 while (extract_param (&hdr, &name, &value, ';'))
1183 int isFilename = BOUNDED_EQUAL_NO_CASE ( name.b, name.e, "filename" );
1184 if ( isFilename && value.b != NULL)
1186 /* Make the file name begin at the last slash or backslash. */
1187 const char *last_slash = memrchr (value.b, '/', value.e - value.b);
1188 const char *last_bs = memrchr (value.b, '\\', value.e - value.b);
1189 if (last_slash && last_bs)
1190 value.b = 1 + MAX (last_slash, last_bs);
1191 else if (last_slash || last_bs)
1192 value.b = 1 + (last_slash ? last_slash : last_bs);
1193 if (value.b == value.e)
1197 append_value_to_filename (filename, &value);
1199 *filename = strdupdelim (value.b, value.e);
1210 /* Persistent connections. Currently, we cache the most recently used
1211 connection as persistent, provided that the HTTP server agrees to
1212 make it such. The persistence data is stored in the variables
1213 below. Ideally, it should be possible to cache an arbitrary fixed
1214 number of these connections. */
1216 /* Whether a persistent connection is active. */
1217 static bool pconn_active;
1220 /* The socket of the connection. */
1223 /* Host and port of the currently active persistent connection. */
1227 /* Whether a ssl handshake has occoured on this connection. */
1230 /* Whether the connection was authorized. This is only done by
1231 NTLM, which authorizes *connections* rather than individual
1232 requests. (That practice is peculiar for HTTP, but it is a
1233 useful optimization.) */
1237 /* NTLM data of the current connection. */
1238 struct ntlmdata ntlm;
1242 /* Mark the persistent connection as invalid and free the resources it
1243 uses. This is used by the CLOSE_* macros after they forcefully
1244 close a registered persistent connection. */
1247 invalidate_persistent (void)
1249 DEBUGP (("Disabling further reuse of socket %d.\n", pconn.socket));
1250 pconn_active = false;
1251 fd_close (pconn.socket);
1256 /* Register FD, which should be a TCP/IP connection to HOST:PORT, as
1257 persistent. This will enable someone to use the same connection
1258 later. In the context of HTTP, this must be called only AFTER the
1259 response has been received and the server has promised that the
1260 connection will remain alive.
1262 If a previous connection was persistent, it is closed. */
1265 register_persistent (const char *host, int port, int fd, bool ssl)
1269 if (pconn.socket == fd)
1271 /* The connection FD is already registered. */
1276 /* The old persistent connection is still active; close it
1277 first. This situation arises whenever a persistent
1278 connection exists, but we then connect to a different
1279 host, and try to register a persistent connection to that
1281 invalidate_persistent ();
1285 pconn_active = true;
1287 pconn.host = xstrdup (host);
1290 pconn.authorized = false;
1292 DEBUGP (("Registered socket %d for persistent reuse.\n", fd));
1295 /* Return true if a persistent connection is available for connecting
1299 persistent_available_p (const char *host, int port, bool ssl,
1300 bool *host_lookup_failed)
1302 /* First, check whether a persistent connection is active at all. */
1306 /* If we want SSL and the last connection wasn't or vice versa,
1307 don't use it. Checking for host and port is not enough because
1308 HTTP and HTTPS can apparently coexist on the same port. */
1309 if (ssl != pconn.ssl)
1312 /* If we're not connecting to the same port, we're not interested. */
1313 if (port != pconn.port)
1316 /* If the host is the same, we're in business. If not, there is
1317 still hope -- read below. */
1318 if (0 != strcasecmp (host, pconn.host))
1320 /* Check if pconn.socket is talking to HOST under another name.
1321 This happens often when both sites are virtual hosts
1322 distinguished only by name and served by the same network
1323 interface, and hence the same web server (possibly set up by
1324 the ISP and serving many different web sites). This
1325 admittedly unconventional optimization does not contradict
1326 HTTP and works well with popular server software. */
1330 struct address_list *al;
1333 /* Don't try to talk to two different SSL sites over the same
1334 secure connection! (Besides, it's not clear that
1335 name-based virtual hosting is even possible with SSL.) */
1338 /* If pconn.socket's peer is one of the IP addresses HOST
1339 resolves to, pconn.socket is for all intents and purposes
1340 already talking to HOST. */
1342 if (!socket_ip_address (pconn.socket, &ip, ENDPOINT_PEER))
1344 /* Can't get the peer's address -- something must be very
1345 wrong with the connection. */
1346 invalidate_persistent ();
1349 al = lookup_host (host, 0);
1352 *host_lookup_failed = true;
1356 found = address_list_contains (al, &ip);
1357 address_list_release (al);
1362 /* The persistent connection's peer address was found among the
1363 addresses HOST resolved to; therefore, pconn.sock is in fact
1364 already talking to HOST -- no need to reconnect. */
1367 /* Finally, check whether the connection is still open. This is
1368 important because most servers implement liberal (short) timeout
1369 on persistent connections. Wget can of course always reconnect
1370 if the connection doesn't work out, but it's nicer to know in
1371 advance. This test is a logical followup of the first test, but
1372 is "expensive" and therefore placed at the end of the list.
1374 (Current implementation of test_socket_open has a nice side
1375 effect that it treats sockets with pending data as "closed".
1376 This is exactly what we want: if a broken server sends message
1377 body in response to HEAD, or if it sends more than conent-length
1378 data, we won't reuse the corrupted connection.) */
1380 if (!test_socket_open (pconn.socket))
1382 /* Oops, the socket is no longer open. Now that we know that,
1383 let's invalidate the persistent connection before returning
1385 invalidate_persistent ();
1392 /* The idea behind these two CLOSE macros is to distinguish between
1393 two cases: one when the job we've been doing is finished, and we
1394 want to close the connection and leave, and two when something is
1395 seriously wrong and we're closing the connection as part of
1398 In case of keep_alive, CLOSE_FINISH should leave the connection
1399 open, while CLOSE_INVALIDATE should still close it.
1401 Note that the semantics of the flag `keep_alive' is "this
1402 connection *will* be reused (the server has promised not to close
1403 the connection once we're done)", while the semantics of
1404 `pc_active_p && (fd) == pc_last_fd' is "we're *now* using an
1405 active, registered connection". */
1407 #define CLOSE_FINISH(fd) do { \
1410 if (pconn_active && (fd) == pconn.socket) \
1411 invalidate_persistent (); \
1420 #define CLOSE_INVALIDATE(fd) do { \
1421 if (pconn_active && (fd) == pconn.socket) \
1422 invalidate_persistent (); \
1430 wgint len; /* received length */
1431 wgint contlen; /* expected length */
1432 wgint restval; /* the restart value */
1433 int res; /* the result of last read */
1434 char *rderrmsg; /* error message from read error */
1435 char *newloc; /* new location (redirection) */
1436 char *remote_time; /* remote time-stamp string */
1437 char *error; /* textual HTTP error */
1438 int statcode; /* status code */
1439 char *message; /* status message */
1440 wgint rd_size; /* amount of data read from socket */
1441 double dltime; /* time it took to download the data */
1442 const char *referer; /* value of the referer header. */
1443 char *local_file; /* local file name. */
1444 bool existence_checked; /* true if we already checked for a file's
1445 existence after having begun to download
1446 (needed in gethttp for when connection is
1447 interrupted/restarted. */
1448 bool timestamp_checked; /* true if pre-download time-stamping checks
1449 * have already been performed */
1450 char *orig_file_name; /* name of file to compare for time-stamping
1451 * (might be != local_file if -K is set) */
1452 wgint orig_file_size; /* size of file to compare for time-stamping */
1453 time_t orig_file_tstamp; /* time-stamp of file to compare for
1458 free_hstat (struct http_stat *hs)
1460 xfree_null (hs->newloc);
1461 xfree_null (hs->remote_time);
1462 xfree_null (hs->error);
1463 xfree_null (hs->rderrmsg);
1464 xfree_null (hs->local_file);
1465 xfree_null (hs->orig_file_name);
1466 xfree_null (hs->message);
1468 /* Guard against being called twice. */
1470 hs->remote_time = NULL;
1475 get_file_flags (const char *filename, int *dt)
1477 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
1478 File %s already there; not retrieving.\n\n"), quote (filename));
1479 /* If the file is there, we suppose it's retrieved OK. */
1482 /* #### Bogusness alert. */
1483 /* If its suffix is "html" or "htm" or similar, assume text/html. */
1484 if (has_html_suffix_p (filename))
1488 /* Download the response body from the socket and writes it to
1489 an output file. The headers have already been read from the
1490 socket. If WARC is enabled, the response body will also be
1491 written to a WARC response record.
1493 hs, contlen, contrange, chunked_transfer_encoding and url are
1494 parameters from the gethttp method. fp is a pointer to the
1497 url, warc_timestamp_str, warc_request_uuid, warc_ip, type
1498 and statcode will be saved in the headers of the WARC record.
1499 The head parameter contains the HTTP headers of the response.
1501 If fp is NULL and WARC is enabled, the response body will be
1502 written only to the WARC file. If WARC is disabled and fp
1503 is a file pointer, the data will be written to the file.
1504 If fp is a file pointer and WARC is enabled, the body will
1505 be written to both destinations.
1507 Returns the error code. */
1509 read_response_body (struct http_stat *hs, int sock, FILE *fp, wgint contlen,
1510 wgint contrange, bool chunked_transfer_encoding,
1511 char *url, char *warc_timestamp_str, char *warc_request_uuid,
1512 ip_address *warc_ip, char *type, int statcode, char *head)
1514 int warc_payload_offset = 0;
1515 FILE *warc_tmp = NULL;
1518 if (opt.warc_filename != NULL)
1520 /* Open a temporary file where we can write the response before we
1521 add it to the WARC record. */
1522 warc_tmp = warc_tempfile ();
1523 if (warc_tmp == NULL)
1524 warcerr = WARC_TMP_FOPENERR;
1528 /* We should keep the response headers for the WARC record. */
1529 int head_len = strlen (head);
1530 int warc_tmp_written = fwrite (head, 1, head_len, warc_tmp);
1531 if (warc_tmp_written != head_len)
1532 warcerr = WARC_TMP_FWRITEERR;
1533 warc_payload_offset = head_len;
1538 if (warc_tmp != NULL)
1546 /* This confuses the timestamping code that checks for file size.
1547 #### The timestamping code should be smarter about file size. */
1548 if (opt.save_headers && hs->restval == 0)
1549 fwrite (head, 1, strlen (head), fp);
1552 /* Read the response body. */
1555 /* If content-length is present, read that much; otherwise, read
1556 until EOF. The HTTP spec doesn't require the server to
1557 actually close the connection when it's done sending data. */
1558 flags |= rb_read_exactly;
1559 if (fp != NULL && hs->restval > 0 && contrange == 0)
1560 /* If the server ignored our range request, instruct fd_read_body
1561 to skip the first RESTVAL bytes of body. */
1562 flags |= rb_skip_startpos;
1563 if (chunked_transfer_encoding)
1564 flags |= rb_chunked_transfer_encoding;
1566 hs->len = hs->restval;
1568 /* Download the response body and write it to fp.
1569 If we are working on a WARC file, we simultaneously write the
1570 response body to warc_tmp. */
1571 hs->res = fd_read_body (sock, fp, contlen != -1 ? contlen : 0,
1572 hs->restval, &hs->rd_size, &hs->len, &hs->dltime,
1576 if (warc_tmp != NULL)
1578 /* Create a response record and write it to the WARC file.
1579 Note: per the WARC standard, the request and response should share
1580 the same date header. We re-use the timestamp of the request.
1581 The response record should also refer to the uuid of the request. */
1582 bool r = warc_write_response_record (url, warc_timestamp_str,
1583 warc_request_uuid, warc_ip,
1584 warc_tmp, warc_payload_offset,
1585 type, statcode, hs->newloc);
1587 /* warc_write_response_record has closed warc_tmp. */
1593 return RETRFINISHED;
1596 if (warc_tmp != NULL)
1601 /* Error while writing to fd. */
1604 else if (hs->res == -3)
1606 /* Error while writing to warc_tmp. */
1607 return WARC_TMP_FWRITEERR;
1612 hs->rderrmsg = xstrdup (fd_errstr (sock));
1613 return RETRFINISHED;
1617 #define BEGINS_WITH(line, string_constant) \
1618 (!strncasecmp (line, string_constant, sizeof (string_constant) - 1) \
1619 && (c_isspace (line[sizeof (string_constant) - 1]) \
1620 || !line[sizeof (string_constant) - 1]))
1623 #define SET_USER_AGENT(req) do { \
1624 if (!opt.useragent) \
1625 request_set_header (req, "User-Agent", \
1626 aprintf ("Wget/%s (VMS %s %s)", \
1627 version_string, vms_arch(), vms_vers()), \
1629 else if (*opt.useragent) \
1630 request_set_header (req, "User-Agent", opt.useragent, rel_none); \
1632 #else /* def __VMS */
1633 #define SET_USER_AGENT(req) do { \
1634 if (!opt.useragent) \
1635 request_set_header (req, "User-Agent", \
1636 aprintf ("Wget/%s (%s)", \
1637 version_string, OS_TYPE), \
1639 else if (*opt.useragent) \
1640 request_set_header (req, "User-Agent", opt.useragent, rel_none); \
1642 #endif /* def __VMS [else] */
1644 /* The flags that allow clobbering the file (opening with "wb").
1645 Defined here to avoid repetition later. #### This will require
1647 #define ALLOW_CLOBBER (opt.noclobber || opt.always_rest || opt.timestamping \
1648 || opt.dirstruct || opt.output_document)
1650 /* Retrieve a document through HTTP protocol. It recognizes status
1651 code, and correctly handles redirections. It closes the network
1652 socket. If it receives an error from the functions below it, it
1653 will print it if there is enough information to do so (almost
1654 always), returning the error to the caller (i.e. http_loop).
1656 Various HTTP parameters are stored to hs.
1658 If PROXY is non-NULL, the connection will be made to the proxy
1659 server, and u->url will be requested. */
1661 gethttp (struct url *u, struct http_stat *hs, int *dt, struct url *proxy,
1662 struct iri *iri, int count)
1664 struct request *req;
1667 char *user, *passwd;
1671 wgint contlen, contrange;
1678 /* Set to 1 when the authorization has already been sent and should
1679 not be tried again. */
1680 bool auth_finished = false;
1682 /* Set to 1 when just globally-set Basic authorization has been sent;
1683 * should prevent further Basic negotiations, but not other
1685 bool basic_auth_finished = false;
1687 /* Whether NTLM authentication is used for this request. */
1688 bool ntlm_seen = false;
1690 /* Whether our connection to the remote host is through SSL. */
1691 bool using_ssl = false;
1693 /* Whether a HEAD request will be issued (as opposed to GET or
1695 bool head_only = !!(*dt & HEAD_ONLY);
1698 struct response *resp;
1702 /* Declare WARC variables. */
1703 bool warc_enabled = (opt.warc_filename != NULL);
1704 FILE *warc_tmp = NULL;
1705 char warc_timestamp_str [21];
1706 char warc_request_uuid [48];
1707 ip_address *warc_ip = NULL;
1708 off_t warc_payload_offset = -1;
1710 /* Whether this connection will be kept alive after the HTTP request
1714 /* Is the server using the chunked transfer encoding? */
1715 bool chunked_transfer_encoding = false;
1717 /* Whether keep-alive should be inhibited. */
1718 bool inhibit_keep_alive =
1719 !opt.http_keep_alive || opt.ignore_length;
1721 /* Headers sent when using POST. */
1722 wgint body_data_size = 0;
1724 bool host_lookup_failed = false;
1727 if (u->scheme == SCHEME_HTTPS)
1729 /* Initialize the SSL context. After this has once been done,
1730 it becomes a no-op. */
1733 scheme_disable (SCHEME_HTTPS);
1734 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET,
1735 _("Disabling SSL due to encountered errors.\n"));
1736 return SSLINITFAILED;
1739 #endif /* HAVE_SSL */
1741 /* Initialize certain elements of struct http_stat. */
1745 hs->rderrmsg = NULL;
1747 hs->remote_time = NULL;
1753 /* Prepare the request to send. */
1756 const char *meth = "GET";
1759 else if (opt.method)
1761 /* Use the full path, i.e. one that includes the leading slash and
1762 the query string. E.g. if u->path is "foo/bar" and u->query is
1763 "param=value", full_path will be "/foo/bar?param=value". */
1766 /* When using SSL over proxy, CONNECT establishes a direct
1767 connection to the HTTPS server. Therefore use the same
1768 argument as when talking to the server directly. */
1769 && u->scheme != SCHEME_HTTPS
1772 meth_arg = xstrdup (u->url);
1774 meth_arg = url_full_path (u);
1775 req = request_new (meth, meth_arg);
1778 request_set_header (req, "Referer", (char *) hs->referer, rel_none);
1779 if (*dt & SEND_NOCACHE)
1781 /* Cache-Control MUST be obeyed by all HTTP/1.1 caching mechanisms... */
1782 request_set_header (req, "Cache-Control", "no-cache, must-revalidate", rel_none);
1784 /* ... but some HTTP/1.0 caches doesn't implement Cache-Control. */
1785 request_set_header (req, "Pragma", "no-cache", rel_none);
1788 request_set_header (req, "Range",
1789 aprintf ("bytes=%s-",
1790 number_to_static_string (hs->restval)),
1792 SET_USER_AGENT (req);
1793 request_set_header (req, "Accept", "*/*", rel_none);
1795 /* Find the username and password for authentication. */
1798 search_netrc (u->host, (const char **)&user, (const char **)&passwd, 0);
1799 user = user ? user : (opt.http_user ? opt.http_user : opt.user);
1800 passwd = passwd ? passwd : (opt.http_passwd ? opt.http_passwd : opt.passwd);
1802 /* We only do "site-wide" authentication with "global" user/password
1803 * values unless --auth-no-challange has been requested; URL user/password
1804 * info overrides. */
1805 if (user && passwd && (!u->user || opt.auth_without_challenge))
1807 /* If this is a host for which we've already received a Basic
1808 * challenge, we'll go ahead and send Basic authentication creds. */
1809 basic_auth_finished = maybe_send_basic_creds(u->host, user, passwd, req);
1812 /* Generate the Host header, HOST:PORT. Take into account that:
1814 - Broken server-side software often doesn't recognize the PORT
1815 argument, so we must generate "Host: www.server.com" instead of
1816 "Host: www.server.com:80" (and likewise for https port).
1818 - IPv6 addresses contain ":", so "Host: 3ffe:8100:200:2::2:1234"
1819 becomes ambiguous and needs to be rewritten as "Host:
1820 [3ffe:8100:200:2::2]:1234". */
1822 /* Formats arranged for hfmt[add_port][add_squares]. */
1823 static const char *hfmt[][2] = {
1824 { "%s", "[%s]" }, { "%s:%d", "[%s]:%d" }
1826 int add_port = u->port != scheme_default_port (u->scheme);
1827 int add_squares = strchr (u->host, ':') != NULL;
1828 request_set_header (req, "Host",
1829 aprintf (hfmt[add_port][add_squares], u->host, u->port),
1833 if (inhibit_keep_alive)
1834 request_set_header (req, "Connection", "Close", rel_none);
1838 request_set_header (req, "Connection", "Keep-Alive", rel_none);
1841 request_set_header (req, "Connection", "Close", rel_none);
1842 request_set_header (req, "Proxy-Connection", "Keep-Alive", rel_none);
1849 if (opt.body_data || opt.body_file)
1851 request_set_header (req, "Content-Type",
1852 "application/x-www-form-urlencoded", rel_none);
1855 body_data_size = strlen (opt.body_data);
1858 body_data_size = file_size (opt.body_file);
1859 if (body_data_size == -1)
1861 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("BODY data file %s missing: %s\n"),
1862 quote (opt.body_file), strerror (errno));
1866 request_set_header (req, "Content-Length",
1867 xstrdup (number_to_static_string (body_data_size)),
1873 /* We need to come back here when the initial attempt to retrieve
1874 without authorization header fails. (Expected to happen at least
1875 for the Digest authorization scheme.) */
1878 request_set_header (req, "Cookie",
1879 cookie_header (wget_cookie_jar,
1880 u->host, u->port, u->path,
1882 u->scheme == SCHEME_HTTPS
1889 /* Add the user headers. */
1890 if (opt.user_headers)
1893 for (i = 0; opt.user_headers[i]; i++)
1894 request_set_user_header (req, opt.user_headers[i]);
1900 char *proxy_user, *proxy_passwd;
1901 /* For normal username and password, URL components override
1902 command-line/wgetrc parameters. With proxy
1903 authentication, it's the reverse, because proxy URLs are
1904 normally the "permanent" ones, so command-line args
1905 should take precedence. */
1906 if (opt.proxy_user && opt.proxy_passwd)
1908 proxy_user = opt.proxy_user;
1909 proxy_passwd = opt.proxy_passwd;
1913 proxy_user = proxy->user;
1914 proxy_passwd = proxy->passwd;
1916 /* #### This does not appear right. Can't the proxy request,
1917 say, `Digest' authentication? */
1918 if (proxy_user && proxy_passwd)
1919 proxyauth = basic_authentication_encode (proxy_user, proxy_passwd);
1921 /* If we're using a proxy, we will be connecting to the proxy
1925 /* Proxy authorization over SSL is handled below. */
1927 if (u->scheme != SCHEME_HTTPS)
1929 request_set_header (req, "Proxy-Authorization", proxyauth, rel_value);
1934 /* Establish the connection. */
1936 if (inhibit_keep_alive)
1940 /* Look for a persistent connection to target host, unless a
1941 proxy is used. The exception is when SSL is in use, in which
1942 case the proxy is nothing but a passthrough to the target
1943 host, registered as a connection to the latter. */
1944 struct url *relevant = conn;
1946 if (u->scheme == SCHEME_HTTPS)
1950 if (persistent_available_p (relevant->host, relevant->port,
1952 relevant->scheme == SCHEME_HTTPS,
1956 &host_lookup_failed))
1958 int family = socket_family (pconn.socket, ENDPOINT_PEER);
1959 sock = pconn.socket;
1960 using_ssl = pconn.ssl;
1962 if (family == AF_INET6)
1963 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Reusing existing connection to [%s]:%d.\n"),
1964 quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, pconn.host),
1968 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Reusing existing connection to %s:%d.\n"),
1969 quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, pconn.host),
1971 DEBUGP (("Reusing fd %d.\n", sock));
1972 if (pconn.authorized)
1973 /* If the connection is already authorized, the "Basic"
1974 authorization added by code above is unnecessary and
1976 request_remove_header (req, "Authorization");
1978 else if (host_lookup_failed)
1981 logprintf(LOG_NOTQUIET,
1982 _("%s: unable to resolve host address %s\n"),
1983 exec_name, quote (relevant->host));
1990 sock = connect_to_host (conn->host, conn->port);
1999 return (retryable_socket_connect_error (errno)
2000 ? CONERROR : CONIMPOSSIBLE);
2004 if (proxy && u->scheme == SCHEME_HTTPS)
2006 /* When requesting SSL URLs through proxies, use the
2007 CONNECT method to request passthrough. */
2008 struct request *connreq = request_new ("CONNECT",
2009 aprintf ("%s:%d", u->host, u->port));
2010 SET_USER_AGENT (connreq);
2013 request_set_header (connreq, "Proxy-Authorization",
2014 proxyauth, rel_value);
2015 /* Now that PROXYAUTH is part of the CONNECT request,
2016 zero it out so we don't send proxy authorization with
2017 the regular request below. */
2020 /* Examples in rfc2817 use the Host header in CONNECT
2021 requests. I don't see how that gains anything, given
2022 that the contents of Host would be exactly the same as
2023 the contents of CONNECT. */
2025 write_error = request_send (connreq, sock, 0);
2026 request_free (connreq);
2027 if (write_error < 0)
2029 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2034 head = read_http_response_head (sock);
2037 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Failed reading proxy response: %s\n"),
2039 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2049 DEBUGP (("proxy responded with: [%s]\n", head));
2051 resp = resp_new (head);
2052 statcode = resp_status (resp, &message);
2055 char *tms = datetime_str (time (NULL));
2056 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, "%d\n", statcode);
2057 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("%s ERROR %d: %s.\n"), tms, statcode,
2058 quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style,
2059 _("Malformed status line")));
2064 hs->message = xstrdup (message);
2067 if (statcode != 200)
2070 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Proxy tunneling failed: %s"),
2071 message ? quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, message) : "?");
2072 xfree_null (message);
2076 xfree_null (message);
2078 /* SOCK is now *really* connected to u->host, so update CONN
2079 to reflect this. That way register_persistent will
2080 register SOCK as being connected to u->host:u->port. */
2084 if (conn->scheme == SCHEME_HTTPS)
2086 if (!ssl_connect_wget (sock, u->host))
2092 else if (!ssl_check_certificate (sock, u->host))
2096 return VERIFCERTERR;
2100 #endif /* HAVE_SSL */
2103 /* Open the temporary file where we will write the request. */
2106 warc_tmp = warc_tempfile ();
2107 if (warc_tmp == NULL)
2109 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2111 return WARC_TMP_FOPENERR;
2116 warc_ip = (ip_address *) alloca (sizeof (ip_address));
2117 socket_ip_address (sock, warc_ip, ENDPOINT_PEER);
2121 /* Send the request to server. */
2122 write_error = request_send (req, sock, warc_tmp);
2124 if (write_error >= 0)
2128 DEBUGP (("[BODY data: %s]\n", opt.body_data));
2129 write_error = fd_write (sock, opt.body_data, body_data_size, -1);
2130 if (write_error >= 0 && warc_tmp != NULL)
2132 /* Remember end of headers / start of payload. */
2133 warc_payload_offset = ftello (warc_tmp);
2135 /* Write a copy of the data to the WARC record. */
2136 int warc_tmp_written = fwrite (opt.body_data, 1, body_data_size, warc_tmp);
2137 if (warc_tmp_written != body_data_size)
2141 else if (opt.body_file && body_data_size != 0)
2143 if (warc_tmp != NULL)
2144 /* Remember end of headers / start of payload */
2145 warc_payload_offset = ftello (warc_tmp);
2147 write_error = body_file_send (sock, opt.body_file, body_data_size, warc_tmp);
2151 if (write_error < 0)
2153 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2156 if (warc_tmp != NULL)
2159 if (write_error == -2)
2160 return WARC_TMP_FWRITEERR;
2164 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("%s request sent, awaiting response... "),
2165 proxy ? "Proxy" : "HTTP");
2174 /* Generate a timestamp and uuid for this request. */
2175 warc_timestamp (warc_timestamp_str);
2176 warc_uuid_str (warc_request_uuid);
2178 /* Create a request record and store it in the WARC file. */
2179 warc_result = warc_write_request_record (u->url, warc_timestamp_str,
2180 warc_request_uuid, warc_ip,
2181 warc_tmp, warc_payload_offset);
2184 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2189 /* warc_write_request_record has also closed warc_tmp. */
2194 head = read_http_response_head (sock);
2199 logputs (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("No data received.\n"));
2200 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2206 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Read error (%s) in headers.\n"),
2208 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2213 DEBUGP (("\n---response begin---\n%s---response end---\n", head));
2215 resp = resp_new (head);
2217 /* Check for status line. */
2219 statcode = resp_status (resp, &message);
2222 char *tms = datetime_str (time (NULL));
2223 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, "%d\n", statcode);
2224 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("%s ERROR %d: %s.\n"), tms, statcode,
2225 quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style,
2226 _("Malformed status line")));
2227 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2234 if (H_10X (statcode))
2236 DEBUGP (("Ignoring response\n"));
2242 hs->message = xstrdup (message);
2243 if (!opt.server_response)
2244 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, "%2d %s\n", statcode,
2245 message ? quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, message) : "");
2248 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
2249 print_server_response (resp, " ");
2252 if (!opt.ignore_length
2253 && resp_header_copy (resp, "Content-Length", hdrval, sizeof (hdrval)))
2257 parsed = str_to_wgint (hdrval, NULL, 10);
2258 if (parsed == WGINT_MAX && errno == ERANGE)
2261 #### If Content-Length is out of range, it most likely
2262 means that the file is larger than 2G and that we're
2263 compiled without LFS. In that case we should probably
2264 refuse to even attempt to download the file. */
2267 else if (parsed < 0)
2269 /* Negative Content-Length; nonsensical, so we can't
2270 assume any information about the content to receive. */
2277 /* Check for keep-alive related responses. */
2278 if (!inhibit_keep_alive && contlen != -1)
2280 if (resp_header_copy (resp, "Connection", hdrval, sizeof (hdrval)))
2282 if (0 == strcasecmp (hdrval, "Close"))
2287 chunked_transfer_encoding = false;
2288 if (resp_header_copy (resp, "Transfer-Encoding", hdrval, sizeof (hdrval))
2289 && 0 == strcasecmp (hdrval, "chunked"))
2290 chunked_transfer_encoding = true;
2292 /* Handle (possibly multiple instances of) the Set-Cookie header. */
2296 const char *scbeg, *scend;
2297 /* The jar should have been created by now. */
2298 assert (wget_cookie_jar != NULL);
2300 (scpos = resp_header_locate (resp, "Set-Cookie", scpos,
2301 &scbeg, &scend)) != -1;
2304 char *set_cookie; BOUNDED_TO_ALLOCA (scbeg, scend, set_cookie);
2305 cookie_handle_set_cookie (wget_cookie_jar, u->host, u->port,
2306 u->path, set_cookie);
2311 /* The server has promised that it will not close the connection
2312 when we're done. This means that we can register it. */
2313 register_persistent (conn->host, conn->port, sock, using_ssl);
2315 if (statcode == HTTP_STATUS_UNAUTHORIZED)
2317 /* Authorization is required. */
2319 /* Normally we are not interested in the response body.
2320 But if we are writing a WARC file we are: we like to keep everyting. */
2324 type = resp_header_strdup (resp, "Content-Type");
2325 err = read_response_body (hs, sock, NULL, contlen, 0,
2326 chunked_transfer_encoding,
2327 u->url, warc_timestamp_str,
2328 warc_request_uuid, warc_ip, type,
2332 if (err != RETRFINISHED || hs->res < 0)
2334 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2336 xfree_null (message);
2342 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2346 /* Since WARC is disabled, we are not interested in the response body. */
2347 if (keep_alive && !head_only
2348 && skip_short_body (sock, contlen, chunked_transfer_encoding))
2349 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2351 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2354 pconn.authorized = false;
2355 if (!auth_finished && (user && passwd))
2357 /* IIS sends multiple copies of WWW-Authenticate, one with
2358 the value "negotiate", and other(s) with data. Loop over
2359 all the occurrences and pick the one we recognize. */
2361 const char *wabeg, *waend;
2362 char *www_authenticate = NULL;
2364 (wapos = resp_header_locate (resp, "WWW-Authenticate", wapos,
2365 &wabeg, &waend)) != -1;
2367 if (known_authentication_scheme_p (wabeg, waend))
2369 BOUNDED_TO_ALLOCA (wabeg, waend, www_authenticate);
2373 if (!www_authenticate)
2375 /* If the authentication header is missing or
2376 unrecognized, there's no sense in retrying. */
2377 logputs (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Unknown authentication scheme.\n"));
2379 else if (!basic_auth_finished
2380 || !BEGINS_WITH (www_authenticate, "Basic"))
2383 pth = url_full_path (u);
2384 request_set_header (req, "Authorization",
2385 create_authorization_line (www_authenticate,
2387 request_method (req),
2391 if (BEGINS_WITH (www_authenticate, "NTLM"))
2393 else if (!u->user && BEGINS_WITH (www_authenticate, "Basic"))
2395 /* Need to register this host as using basic auth,
2396 * so we automatically send creds next time. */
2397 register_basic_auth_host (u->host);
2400 xfree_null (message);
2403 goto retry_with_auth;
2407 /* We already did Basic auth, and it failed. Gotta
2411 logputs (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Authorization failed.\n"));
2413 xfree_null (message);
2418 else /* statcode != HTTP_STATUS_UNAUTHORIZED */
2420 /* Kludge: if NTLM is used, mark the TCP connection as authorized. */
2422 pconn.authorized = true;
2425 /* Determine the local filename if needed. Notice that if -O is used
2426 * hstat.local_file is set by http_loop to the argument of -O. */
2427 if (!hs->local_file)
2429 char *local_file = NULL;
2431 /* Honor Content-Disposition whether possible. */
2432 if (!opt.content_disposition
2433 || !resp_header_copy (resp, "Content-Disposition",
2434 hdrval, sizeof (hdrval))
2435 || !parse_content_disposition (hdrval, &local_file))
2437 /* The Content-Disposition header is missing or broken.
2438 * Choose unique file name according to given URL. */
2439 hs->local_file = url_file_name (u, NULL);
2443 DEBUGP (("Parsed filename from Content-Disposition: %s\n",
2445 hs->local_file = url_file_name (u, local_file);
2449 /* TODO: perform this check only once. */
2450 if (!hs->existence_checked && file_exists_p (hs->local_file))
2452 if (opt.noclobber && !opt.output_document)
2454 /* If opt.noclobber is turned on and file already exists, do not
2455 retrieve the file. But if the output_document was given, then this
2456 test was already done and the file didn't exist. Hence the !opt.output_document */
2457 get_file_flags (hs->local_file, dt);
2461 xfree_null (message);
2462 return RETRUNNEEDED;
2464 else if (!ALLOW_CLOBBER)
2466 char *unique = unique_name (hs->local_file, true);
2467 if (unique != hs->local_file)
2468 xfree (hs->local_file);
2469 hs->local_file = unique;
2472 hs->existence_checked = true;
2474 /* Support timestamping */
2475 /* TODO: move this code out of gethttp. */
2476 if (opt.timestamping && !hs->timestamp_checked)
2478 size_t filename_len = strlen (hs->local_file);
2479 char *filename_plus_orig_suffix = alloca (filename_len + sizeof (ORIG_SFX));
2480 bool local_dot_orig_file_exists = false;
2481 char *local_filename = NULL;
2484 if (opt.backup_converted)
2485 /* If -K is specified, we'll act on the assumption that it was specified
2486 last time these files were downloaded as well, and instead of just
2487 comparing local file X against server file X, we'll compare local
2488 file X.orig (if extant, else X) against server file X. If -K
2489 _wasn't_ specified last time, or the server contains files called
2490 *.orig, -N will be back to not operating correctly with -k. */
2492 /* Would a single s[n]printf() call be faster? --dan
2494 Definitely not. sprintf() is horribly slow. It's a
2495 different question whether the difference between the two
2496 affects a program. Usually I'd say "no", but at one
2497 point I profiled Wget, and found that a measurable and
2498 non-negligible amount of time was lost calling sprintf()
2499 in url.c. Replacing sprintf with inline calls to
2500 strcpy() and number_to_string() made a difference.
2502 memcpy (filename_plus_orig_suffix, hs->local_file, filename_len);
2503 memcpy (filename_plus_orig_suffix + filename_len,
2504 ORIG_SFX, sizeof (ORIG_SFX));
2506 /* Try to stat() the .orig file. */
2507 if (stat (filename_plus_orig_suffix, &st) == 0)
2509 local_dot_orig_file_exists = true;
2510 local_filename = filename_plus_orig_suffix;
2514 if (!local_dot_orig_file_exists)
2515 /* Couldn't stat() <file>.orig, so try to stat() <file>. */
2516 if (stat (hs->local_file, &st) == 0)
2517 local_filename = hs->local_file;
2519 if (local_filename != NULL)
2520 /* There was a local file, so we'll check later to see if the version
2521 the server has is the same version we already have, allowing us to
2524 hs->orig_file_name = xstrdup (local_filename);
2525 hs->orig_file_size = st.st_size;
2526 hs->orig_file_tstamp = st.st_mtime;
2528 /* Modification time granularity is 2 seconds for Windows, so
2529 increase local time by 1 second for later comparison. */
2530 ++hs->orig_file_tstamp;
2537 hs->statcode = statcode;
2539 hs->error = xstrdup (_("Malformed status line"));
2541 hs->error = xstrdup (_("(no description)"));
2543 hs->error = xstrdup (message);
2544 xfree_null (message);
2546 type = resp_header_strdup (resp, "Content-Type");
2549 char *tmp = strchr (type, ';');
2552 /* sXXXav: only needed if IRI support is enabled */
2553 char *tmp2 = tmp + 1;
2555 while (tmp > type && c_isspace (tmp[-1]))
2559 /* Try to get remote encoding if needed */
2560 if (opt.enable_iri && !opt.encoding_remote)
2562 tmp = parse_charset (tmp2);
2564 set_content_encoding (iri, tmp);
2568 hs->newloc = resp_header_strdup (resp, "Location");
2569 hs->remote_time = resp_header_strdup (resp, "Last-Modified");
2571 if (resp_header_copy (resp, "Content-Range", hdrval, sizeof (hdrval)))
2573 wgint first_byte_pos, last_byte_pos, entity_length;
2574 if (parse_content_range (hdrval, &first_byte_pos, &last_byte_pos,
2577 contrange = first_byte_pos;
2578 contlen = last_byte_pos - first_byte_pos + 1;
2583 /* 20x responses are counted among successful by default. */
2584 if (H_20X (statcode))
2587 /* Return if redirected. */
2588 if (H_REDIRECTED (statcode) || statcode == HTTP_STATUS_MULTIPLE_CHOICES)
2590 /* RFC2068 says that in case of the 300 (multiple choices)
2591 response, the server can output a preferred URL through
2592 `Location' header; otherwise, the request should be treated
2593 like GET. So, if the location is set, it will be a
2594 redirection; otherwise, just proceed normally. */
2595 if (statcode == HTTP_STATUS_MULTIPLE_CHOICES && !hs->newloc)
2599 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE,
2600 _("Location: %s%s\n"),
2601 hs->newloc ? escnonprint_uri (hs->newloc) : _("unspecified"),
2602 hs->newloc ? _(" [following]") : "");
2604 /* In case the caller cares to look... */
2609 /* Normally we are not interested in the response body of a redirect.
2610 But if we are writing a WARC file we are: we like to keep everyting. */
2613 int err = read_response_body (hs, sock, NULL, contlen, 0,
2614 chunked_transfer_encoding,
2615 u->url, warc_timestamp_str,
2616 warc_request_uuid, warc_ip, type,
2619 if (err != RETRFINISHED || hs->res < 0)
2621 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2627 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2631 /* Since WARC is disabled, we are not interested in the response body. */
2632 if (keep_alive && !head_only
2633 && skip_short_body (sock, contlen, chunked_transfer_encoding))
2634 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2636 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2641 /* From RFC2616: The status codes 303 and 307 have
2642 been added for servers that wish to make unambiguously
2643 clear which kind of reaction is expected of the client.
2645 A 307 should be redirected using the same method,
2646 in other words, a POST should be preserved and not
2647 converted to a GET in that case.
2649 With strict adherence to RFC2616, POST requests are not
2650 converted to a GET request on 301 Permanent Redirect
2651 or 302 Temporary Redirect.
2653 A switch may be provided later based on the HTTPbis draft
2654 that allows clients to convert POST requests to GET
2655 requests on 301 and 302 response codes. */
2658 case HTTP_STATUS_TEMPORARY_REDIRECT:
2659 return NEWLOCATION_KEEP_POST;
2661 case HTTP_STATUS_MOVED_PERMANENTLY:
2662 if (opt.method && strcasecmp (opt.method, "post") != 0)
2663 return NEWLOCATION_KEEP_POST;
2665 case HTTP_STATUS_MOVED_TEMPORARILY:
2666 if (opt.method && strcasecmp (opt.method, "post") != 0)
2667 return NEWLOCATION_KEEP_POST;
2677 /* If content-type is not given, assume text/html. This is because
2678 of the multitude of broken CGI's that "forget" to generate the
2681 0 == strncasecmp (type, TEXTHTML_S, strlen (TEXTHTML_S)) ||
2682 0 == strncasecmp (type, TEXTXHTML_S, strlen (TEXTXHTML_S)))
2688 0 == strncasecmp (type, TEXTCSS_S, strlen (TEXTCSS_S)))
2693 if (opt.adjust_extension)
2696 /* -E / --adjust-extension / adjust_extension = on was specified,
2697 and this is a text/html file. If some case-insensitive
2698 variation on ".htm[l]" isn't already the file's suffix,
2701 ensure_extension (hs, ".html", dt);
2703 else if (*dt & TEXTCSS)
2705 ensure_extension (hs, ".css", dt);
2709 if (statcode == HTTP_STATUS_RANGE_NOT_SATISFIABLE
2710 || (!opt.timestamping && hs->restval > 0 && statcode == HTTP_STATUS_OK
2711 && contrange == 0 && contlen >= 0 && hs->restval >= contlen))
2713 /* If `-c' is in use and the file has been fully downloaded (or
2714 the remote file has shrunk), Wget effectively requests bytes
2715 after the end of file and the server response with 416
2716 (or 200 with a <= Content-Length. */
2717 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
2718 \n The file is already fully retrieved; nothing to do.\n\n"));
2719 /* In case the caller inspects. */
2722 /* Mark as successfully retrieved. */
2725 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock); /* would be CLOSE_FINISH, but there
2726 might be more bytes in the body. */
2728 return RETRUNNEEDED;
2730 if ((contrange != 0 && contrange != hs->restval)
2731 || (H_PARTIAL (statcode) && !contrange))
2733 /* The Range request was somehow misunderstood by the server.
2736 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2743 hs->contlen = contlen + contrange;
2749 /* No need to print this output if the body won't be
2750 downloaded at all, or if the original server response is
2752 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Length: "));
2755 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, number_to_static_string (contlen + contrange));
2756 if (contlen + contrange >= 1024)
2757 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, " (%s)",
2758 human_readable (contlen + contrange));
2761 if (contlen >= 1024)
2762 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _(", %s (%s) remaining"),
2763 number_to_static_string (contlen),
2764 human_readable (contlen));
2766 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _(", %s remaining"),
2767 number_to_static_string (contlen));
2771 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE,
2772 opt.ignore_length ? _("ignored") : _("unspecified"));
2774 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, " [%s]\n", quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, type));
2776 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
2780 /* Return if we have no intention of further downloading. */
2781 if ((!(*dt & RETROKF) && !opt.content_on_error) || head_only
2782 || (opt.method && strcasecmp (opt.method, "get") != 0))
2784 /* In case the caller cares to look... */
2789 /* Normally we are not interested in the response body of a error responses.
2790 But if we are writing a WARC file we are: we like to keep everyting. */
2793 int err = read_response_body (hs, sock, NULL, contlen, 0,
2794 chunked_transfer_encoding,
2795 u->url, warc_timestamp_str,
2796 warc_request_uuid, warc_ip, type,
2799 if (err != RETRFINISHED || hs->res < 0)
2801 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2807 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2811 /* Since WARC is disabled, we are not interested in the response body. */
2813 /* Pre-1.10 Wget used CLOSE_INVALIDATE here. Now we trust the
2814 servers not to send body in response to a HEAD request, and
2815 those that do will likely be caught by test_socket_open.
2816 If not, they can be worked around using
2817 `--no-http-keep-alive'. */
2818 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2820 && skip_short_body (sock, contlen, chunked_transfer_encoding))
2821 /* Successfully skipped the body; also keep using the socket. */
2822 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2824 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2829 return RETRFINISHED;
2833 For VMS, define common fopen() optional arguments.
2836 # define FOPEN_OPT_ARGS "fop=sqo", "acc", acc_cb, &open_id
2837 # define FOPEN_BIN_FLAG 3
2838 #else /* def __VMS */
2839 # define FOPEN_BIN_FLAG true
2840 #endif /* def __VMS [else] */
2842 /* Open the local file. */
2845 mkalldirs (hs->local_file);
2847 rotate_backups (hs->local_file);
2854 fp = fopen (hs->local_file, "ab", FOPEN_OPT_ARGS);
2855 #else /* def __VMS */
2856 fp = fopen (hs->local_file, "ab");
2857 #endif /* def __VMS [else] */
2859 else if (ALLOW_CLOBBER || count > 0)
2861 if (opt.unlink && file_exists_p (hs->local_file))
2863 int res = unlink (hs->local_file);
2866 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "%s: %s\n", hs->local_file,
2868 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2879 fp = fopen (hs->local_file, "wb", FOPEN_OPT_ARGS);
2880 #else /* def __VMS */
2881 fp = fopen (hs->local_file, "wb");
2882 #endif /* def __VMS [else] */
2886 fp = fopen_excl (hs->local_file, FOPEN_BIN_FLAG);
2887 if (!fp && errno == EEXIST)
2889 /* We cannot just invent a new name and use it (which is
2890 what functions like unique_create typically do)
2891 because we told the user we'd use this name.
2892 Instead, return and retry the download. */
2893 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET,
2894 _("%s has sprung into existence.\n"),
2896 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2899 return FOPEN_EXCL_ERR;
2904 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "%s: %s\n", hs->local_file, strerror (errno));
2905 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2914 /* Print fetch message, if opt.verbose. */
2917 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Saving to: %s\n"),
2918 HYPHENP (hs->local_file) ? quote ("STDOUT") : quote (hs->local_file));
2922 err = read_response_body (hs, sock, fp, contlen, contrange,
2923 chunked_transfer_encoding,
2924 u->url, warc_timestamp_str,
2925 warc_request_uuid, warc_ip, type,
2928 /* Now we no longer need to store the response header. */
2933 CLOSE_FINISH (sock);
2935 CLOSE_INVALIDATE (sock);
2943 /* The genuine HTTP loop! This is the part where the retrieval is
2944 retried, and retried, and retried, and... */
2946 http_loop (struct url *u, struct url *original_url, char **newloc,
2947 char **local_file, const char *referer, int *dt, struct url *proxy,
2951 bool got_head = false; /* used for time-stamping and filename detection */
2952 bool time_came_from_head = false;
2953 bool got_name = false;
2956 uerr_t err, ret = TRYLIMEXC;
2957 time_t tmr = -1; /* remote time-stamp */
2958 struct http_stat hstat; /* HTTP status */
2960 bool send_head_first = true;
2962 bool force_full_retrieve = false;
2965 /* If we are writing to a WARC file: always retrieve the whole file. */
2966 if (opt.warc_filename != NULL)
2967 force_full_retrieve = true;
2970 /* Assert that no value for *LOCAL_FILE was passed. */
2971 assert (local_file == NULL || *local_file == NULL);
2973 /* Set LOCAL_FILE parameter. */
2974 if (local_file && opt.output_document)
2975 *local_file = HYPHENP (opt.output_document) ? NULL : xstrdup (opt.output_document);
2977 /* Reset NEWLOC parameter. */
2980 /* This used to be done in main(), but it's a better idea to do it
2981 here so that we don't go through the hoops if we're just using
2986 /* Warn on (likely bogus) wildcard usage in HTTP. */
2987 if (opt.ftp_glob && has_wildcards_p (u->path))
2988 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, _("Warning: wildcards not supported in HTTP.\n"));
2990 /* Setup hstat struct. */
2992 hstat.referer = referer;
2994 if (opt.output_document)
2996 hstat.local_file = xstrdup (opt.output_document);
2999 else if (!opt.content_disposition)
3002 url_file_name (opt.trustservernames ? u : original_url, NULL);
3006 if (got_name && file_exists_p (hstat.local_file) && opt.noclobber && !opt.output_document)
3008 /* If opt.noclobber is turned on and file already exists, do not
3009 retrieve the file. But if the output_document was given, then this
3010 test was already done and the file didn't exist. Hence the !opt.output_document */
3011 get_file_flags (hstat.local_file, dt);
3016 /* Reset the counter. */
3019 /* Reset the document type. */
3022 /* Skip preliminary HEAD request if we're not in spider mode. */
3024 send_head_first = false;
3026 /* Send preliminary HEAD request if --content-disposition and -c are used
3028 if (opt.content_disposition && opt.always_rest)
3029 send_head_first = true;
3031 /* Send preliminary HEAD request if -N is given and we have an existing
3032 * destination file. */
3033 file_name = url_file_name (opt.trustservernames ? u : original_url, NULL);
3034 if (opt.timestamping && (file_exists_p (file_name)
3035 || opt.content_disposition))
3036 send_head_first = true;
3042 /* Increment the pass counter. */
3044 sleep_between_retrievals (count);
3046 /* Get the current time string. */
3047 tms = datetime_str (time (NULL));
3049 if (opt.spider && !got_head)
3050 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3051 Spider mode enabled. Check if remote file exists.\n"));
3053 /* Print fetch message, if opt.verbose. */
3056 char *hurl = url_string (u, URL_AUTH_HIDE_PASSWD);
3061 sprintf (tmp, _("(try:%2d)"), count);
3062 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "--%s-- %s %s\n",
3067 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, "--%s-- %s\n",
3072 ws_changetitle (hurl);
3077 /* Default document type is empty. However, if spider mode is
3078 on or time-stamping is employed, HEAD_ONLY commands is
3079 encoded within *dt. */
3080 if (send_head_first && !got_head)
3085 /* Decide whether or not to restart. */
3086 if (force_full_retrieve)
3087 hstat.restval = hstat.len;
3088 else if (opt.always_rest
3090 && stat (hstat.local_file, &st) == 0
3091 && S_ISREG (st.st_mode))
3092 /* When -c is used, continue from on-disk size. (Can't use
3093 hstat.len even if count>1 because we don't want a failed
3094 first attempt to clobber existing data.) */
3095 hstat.restval = st.st_size;
3097 /* otherwise, continue where the previous try left off */
3098 hstat.restval = hstat.len;
3102 /* Decide whether to send the no-cache directive. We send it in
3104 a) we're using a proxy, and we're past our first retrieval.
3105 Some proxies are notorious for caching incomplete data, so
3106 we require a fresh get.
3107 b) caching is explicitly inhibited. */
3108 if ((proxy && count > 1) /* a */
3109 || !opt.allow_cache) /* b */
3110 *dt |= SEND_NOCACHE;
3112 *dt &= ~SEND_NOCACHE;
3114 /* Try fetching the document, or at least its head. */
3115 err = gethttp (u, &hstat, dt, proxy, iri, count);
3118 tms = datetime_str (time (NULL));
3120 /* Get the new location (with or without the redirection). */
3122 *newloc = xstrdup (hstat.newloc);
3126 case HERR: case HEOF: case CONSOCKERR: case CONCLOSED:
3127 case CONERROR: case READERR: case WRITEFAILED:
3128 case RANGEERR: case FOPEN_EXCL_ERR:
3129 /* Non-fatal errors continue executing the loop, which will
3130 bring them to "while" statement at the end, to judge
3131 whether the number of tries was exceeded. */
3132 printwhat (count, opt.ntry);
3134 case FWRITEERR: case FOPENERR:
3135 /* Another fatal error. */
3136 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
3137 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot write to %s (%s).\n"),
3138 quote (hstat.local_file), strerror (errno));
3139 case HOSTERR: case CONIMPOSSIBLE: case PROXERR: case AUTHFAILED:
3140 case SSLINITFAILED: case CONTNOTSUPPORTED: case VERIFCERTERR:
3142 /* Fatal errors just return from the function. */
3146 /* A fatal WARC error. */
3147 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
3148 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot write to WARC file.\n"));
3151 case WARC_TMP_FOPENERR: case WARC_TMP_FWRITEERR:
3152 /* A fatal WARC error. */
3153 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
3154 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot write to temporary WARC file.\n"));
3158 /* Another fatal error. */
3159 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Unable to establish SSL connection.\n"));
3163 /* Another fatal error. */
3164 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
3165 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Cannot unlink %s (%s).\n"),
3166 quote (hstat.local_file), strerror (errno));
3170 case NEWLOCATION_KEEP_POST:
3171 /* Return the new location to the caller. */
3174 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET,
3175 _("ERROR: Redirection (%d) without location.\n"),
3185 /* The file was already fully retrieved. */
3189 /* Deal with you later. */
3192 /* All possibilities should have been exhausted. */
3196 if (!(*dt & RETROKF))
3201 /* #### Ugly ugly ugly! */
3202 hurl = url_string (u, URL_AUTH_HIDE_PASSWD);
3203 logprintf (LOG_NONVERBOSE, "%s:\n", hurl);
3206 /* Fall back to GET if HEAD fails with a 500 or 501 error code. */
3208 && (hstat.statcode == 500 || hstat.statcode == 501))
3213 /* Maybe we should always keep track of broken links, not just in
3215 * Don't log error if it was UTF-8 encoded because we will try
3216 * once unencoded. */
3217 else if (opt.spider && !iri->utf8_encode)
3219 /* #### Again: ugly ugly ugly! */
3221 hurl = url_string (u, URL_AUTH_HIDE_PASSWD);
3222 nonexisting_url (hurl);
3223 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("\
3224 Remote file does not exist -- broken link!!!\n"));
3228 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("%s ERROR %d: %s.\n"),
3229 tms, hstat.statcode,
3230 quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, hstat.error));
3232 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
3238 /* Did we get the time-stamp? */
3241 got_head = true; /* no more time-stamping */
3243 if (opt.timestamping && !hstat.remote_time)
3245 logputs (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("\
3246 Last-modified header missing -- time-stamps turned off.\n"));
3248 else if (hstat.remote_time)
3250 /* Convert the date-string into struct tm. */
3251 tmr = http_atotm (hstat.remote_time);
3252 if (tmr == (time_t) (-1))
3253 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3254 Last-modified header invalid -- time-stamp ignored.\n"));
3255 if (*dt & HEAD_ONLY)
3256 time_came_from_head = true;
3259 if (send_head_first)
3261 /* The time-stamping section. */
3262 if (opt.timestamping)
3264 if (hstat.orig_file_name) /* Perform the following
3265 checks only if the file
3267 download already exists. */
3269 if (hstat.remote_time &&
3270 tmr != (time_t) (-1))
3272 /* Now time-stamping can be used validly.
3273 Time-stamping means that if the sizes of
3274 the local and remote file match, and local
3275 file is newer than the remote file, it will
3276 not be retrieved. Otherwise, the normal
3277 download procedure is resumed. */
3278 if (hstat.orig_file_tstamp >= tmr)
3280 if (hstat.contlen == -1
3281 || hstat.orig_file_size == hstat.contlen)
3283 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3284 Server file no newer than local file %s -- not retrieving.\n\n"),
3285 quote (hstat.orig_file_name));
3291 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3292 The sizes do not match (local %s) -- retrieving.\n"),
3293 number_to_static_string (hstat.orig_file_size));
3298 force_full_retrieve = true;
3299 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE,
3300 _("Remote file is newer, retrieving.\n"));
3303 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, "\n");
3307 /* free_hstat (&hstat); */
3308 hstat.timestamp_checked = true;
3313 bool finished = true;
3318 logputs (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3319 Remote file exists and could contain links to other resources -- retrieving.\n\n"));
3324 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3325 Remote file exists but does not contain any link -- not retrieving.\n\n"));
3326 ret = RETROK; /* RETRUNNEEDED is not for caller. */
3333 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3334 Remote file exists and could contain further links,\n\
3335 but recursion is disabled -- not retrieving.\n\n"));
3339 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE, _("\
3340 Remote file exists.\n\n"));
3342 ret = RETROK; /* RETRUNNEEDED is not for caller. */
3347 logprintf (LOG_NONVERBOSE,
3348 _("%s URL: %s %2d %s\n"),
3349 tms, u->url, hstat.statcode,
3350 hstat.message ? quotearg_style (escape_quoting_style, hstat.message) : "");
3357 count = 0; /* the retrieve count for HEAD is reset */
3359 } /* send_head_first */
3362 if (opt.useservertimestamps
3363 && (tmr != (time_t) (-1))
3364 && ((hstat.len == hstat.contlen) ||
3365 ((hstat.res == 0) && (hstat.contlen == -1))))
3367 const char *fl = NULL;
3368 set_local_file (&fl, hstat.local_file);
3372 /* Reparse time header, in case it's changed. */
3373 if (time_came_from_head
3374 && hstat.remote_time && hstat.remote_time[0])
3376 newtmr = http_atotm (hstat.remote_time);
3377 if (newtmr != (time_t)-1)
3383 /* End of time-stamping section. */
3385 tmrate = retr_rate (hstat.rd_size, hstat.dltime);
3386 total_download_time += hstat.dltime;
3388 if (hstat.len == hstat.contlen)
3392 bool write_to_stdout = (opt.output_document && HYPHENP (opt.output_document));
3394 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE,
3396 ? _("%s (%s) - written to stdout %s[%s/%s]\n\n")
3397 : _("%s (%s) - %s saved [%s/%s]\n\n"),
3399 write_to_stdout ? "" : quote (hstat.local_file),
3400 number_to_static_string (hstat.len),
3401 number_to_static_string (hstat.contlen));
3402 logprintf (LOG_NONVERBOSE,
3403 "%s URL:%s [%s/%s] -> \"%s\" [%d]\n",
3405 number_to_static_string (hstat.len),
3406 number_to_static_string (hstat.contlen),
3407 hstat.local_file, count);
3410 total_downloaded_bytes += hstat.rd_size;
3412 /* Remember that we downloaded the file for later ".orig" code. */
3413 if (*dt & ADDED_HTML_EXTENSION)
3414 downloaded_file (FILE_DOWNLOADED_AND_HTML_EXTENSION_ADDED, hstat.local_file);
3416 downloaded_file (FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY, hstat.local_file);
3421 else if (hstat.res == 0) /* No read error */
3423 if (hstat.contlen == -1) /* We don't know how much we were supposed
3424 to get, so assume we succeeded. */
3428 bool write_to_stdout = (opt.output_document && HYPHENP (opt.output_document));
3430 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE,
3432 ? _("%s (%s) - written to stdout %s[%s]\n\n")
3433 : _("%s (%s) - %s saved [%s]\n\n"),
3435 write_to_stdout ? "" : quote (hstat.local_file),
3436 number_to_static_string (hstat.len));
3437 logprintf (LOG_NONVERBOSE,
3438 "%s URL:%s [%s] -> \"%s\" [%d]\n",
3439 tms, u->url, number_to_static_string (hstat.len),
3440 hstat.local_file, count);
3443 total_downloaded_bytes += hstat.rd_size;
3445 /* Remember that we downloaded the file for later ".orig" code. */
3446 if (*dt & ADDED_HTML_EXTENSION)
3447 downloaded_file (FILE_DOWNLOADED_AND_HTML_EXTENSION_ADDED, hstat.local_file);
3449 downloaded_file (FILE_DOWNLOADED_NORMALLY, hstat.local_file);
3454 else if (hstat.len < hstat.contlen) /* meaning we lost the
3455 connection too soon */
3457 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE,
3458 _("%s (%s) - Connection closed at byte %s. "),
3459 tms, tmrate, number_to_static_string (hstat.len));
3460 printwhat (count, opt.ntry);
3463 else if (hstat.len != hstat.restval)
3464 /* Getting here would mean reading more data than
3465 requested with content-length, which we never do. */
3469 /* Getting here probably means that the content-length was
3470 * _less_ than the original, local size. We should probably
3471 * truncate or re-read, or something. FIXME */
3476 else /* from now on hstat.res can only be -1 */
3478 if (hstat.contlen == -1)
3480 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE,
3481 _("%s (%s) - Read error at byte %s (%s)."),
3482 tms, tmrate, number_to_static_string (hstat.len),
3484 printwhat (count, opt.ntry);
3487 else /* hstat.res == -1 and contlen is given */
3489 logprintf (LOG_VERBOSE,
3490 _("%s (%s) - Read error at byte %s/%s (%s). "),
3492 number_to_static_string (hstat.len),
3493 number_to_static_string (hstat.contlen),
3495 printwhat (count, opt.ntry);
3501 while (!opt.ntry || (count < opt.ntry));
3504 if (ret == RETROK && local_file)
3505 *local_file = xstrdup (hstat.local_file);
3506 free_hstat (&hstat);
3511 /* Check whether the result of strptime() indicates success.
3512 strptime() returns the pointer to how far it got to in the string.
3513 The processing has been successful if the string is at `GMT' or
3514 `+X', or at the end of the string.
3516 In extended regexp parlance, the function returns 1 if P matches
3517 "^ *(GMT|[+-][0-9]|$)", 0 otherwise. P being NULL (which strptime
3518 can return) is considered a failure and 0 is returned. */
3520 check_end (const char *p)
3524 while (c_isspace (*p))
3527 || (p[0] == 'G' && p[1] == 'M' && p[2] == 'T')
3528 || ((p[0] == '+' || p[0] == '-') && c_isdigit (p[1])))
3534 /* Convert the textual specification of time in TIME_STRING to the
3535 number of seconds since the Epoch.
3537 TIME_STRING can be in any of the three formats RFC2616 allows the
3538 HTTP servers to emit -- RFC1123-date, RFC850-date or asctime-date,
3539 as well as the time format used in the Set-Cookie header.
3540 Timezones are ignored, and should be GMT.
3542 Return the computed time_t representation, or -1 if the conversion
3545 This function uses strptime with various string formats for parsing
3546 TIME_STRING. This results in a parser that is not as lenient in
3547 interpreting TIME_STRING as I would like it to be. Being based on
3548 strptime, it always allows shortened months, one-digit days, etc.,
3549 but due to the multitude of formats in which time can be
3550 represented, an ideal HTTP time parser would be even more
3551 forgiving. It should completely ignore things like week days and
3552 concentrate only on the various forms of representing years,
3553 months, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. For example, it would
3554 be nice if it accepted ISO 8601 out of the box.
3556 I've investigated free and PD code for this purpose, but none was
3557 usable. getdate was big and unwieldy, and had potential copyright
3558 issues, or so I was informed. Dr. Marcus Hennecke's atotm(),
3559 distributed with phttpd, is excellent, but we cannot use it because
3560 it is not assigned to the FSF. So I stuck it with strptime. */
3563 http_atotm (const char *time_string)
3565 /* NOTE: Solaris strptime man page claims that %n and %t match white
3566 space, but that's not universally available. Instead, we simply
3567 use ` ' to mean "skip all WS", which works under all strptime
3568 implementations I've tested. */
3570 static const char *time_formats[] = {
3571 "%a, %d %b %Y %T", /* rfc1123: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 22:12:57 */
3572 "%A, %d-%b-%y %T", /* rfc850: Thursday, 29-Jan-98 22:12:57 */
3573 "%a %b %d %T %Y", /* asctime: Thu Jan 29 22:12:57 1998 */
3574 "%a, %d-%b-%Y %T" /* cookies: Thu, 29-Jan-1998 22:12:57
3575 (used in Set-Cookie, defined in the
3576 Netscape cookie specification.) */
3578 const char *oldlocale;
3579 char savedlocale[256];
3581 time_t ret = (time_t) -1;
3583 /* Solaris strptime fails to recognize English month names in
3584 non-English locales, which we work around by temporarily setting
3585 locale to C before invoking strptime. */
3586 oldlocale = setlocale (LC_TIME, NULL);
3589 size_t l = strlen (oldlocale) + 1;
3590 if (l >= sizeof savedlocale)
3591 savedlocale[0] = '\0';
3593 memcpy (savedlocale, oldlocale, l);
3595 else savedlocale[0] = '\0';
3597 setlocale (LC_TIME, "C");
3599 for (i = 0; i < countof (time_formats); i++)
3603 /* Some versions of strptime use the existing contents of struct
3604 tm to recalculate the date according to format. Zero it out
3605 to prevent stack garbage from influencing strptime. */
3608 if (check_end (strptime (time_string, time_formats[i], &t)))
3615 /* Restore the previous locale. */
3617 setlocale (LC_TIME, savedlocale);
3622 /* Authorization support: We support three authorization schemes:
3624 * `Basic' scheme, consisting of base64-ing USER:PASSWORD string;
3626 * `Digest' scheme, added by Junio Hamano <junio@twinsun.com>,
3627 consisting of answering to the server's challenge with the proper
3630 * `NTLM' ("NT Lan Manager") scheme, based on code written by Daniel
3631 Stenberg for libcurl. Like digest, NTLM is based on a
3632 challenge-response mechanism, but unlike digest, it is non-standard
3633 (authenticates TCP connections rather than requests), undocumented
3634 and Microsoft-specific. */
3636 /* Create the authentication header contents for the `Basic' scheme.
3637 This is done by encoding the string "USER:PASS" to base64 and
3638 prepending the string "Basic " in front of it. */
3641 basic_authentication_encode (const char *user, const char *passwd)
3644 int len1 = strlen (user) + 1 + strlen (passwd);
3646 t1 = (char *)alloca (len1 + 1);
3647 sprintf (t1, "%s:%s", user, passwd);
3649 t2 = (char *)alloca (BASE64_LENGTH (len1) + 1);
3650 base64_encode (t1, len1, t2);
3652 return concat_strings ("Basic ", t2, (char *) 0);
3655 #define SKIP_WS(x) do { \
3656 while (c_isspace (*(x))) \
3660 #ifdef ENABLE_DIGEST
3661 /* Dump the hexadecimal representation of HASH to BUF. HASH should be
3662 an array of 16 bytes containing the hash keys, and BUF should be a
3663 buffer of 33 writable characters (32 for hex digits plus one for
3664 zero termination). */
3666 dump_hash (char *buf, const unsigned char *hash)
3670 for (i = 0; i < MD5_DIGEST_SIZE; i++, hash++)
3672 *buf++ = XNUM_TO_digit (*hash >> 4);
3673 *buf++ = XNUM_TO_digit (*hash & 0xf);
3678 /* Take the line apart to find the challenge, and compose a digest
3679 authorization header. See RFC2069 section 2.1.2. */
3681 digest_authentication_encode (const char *au, const char *user,
3682 const char *passwd, const char *method,
3685 static char *realm, *opaque, *nonce, *qop, *algorithm;
3690 { "realm", &realm },
3691 { "opaque", &opaque },
3692 { "nonce", &nonce },
3694 { "algorithm", &algorithm }
3696 char cnonce[16] = "";
3700 param_token name, value;
3703 realm = opaque = nonce = qop = algorithm = NULL;
3705 au += 6; /* skip over `Digest' */
3706 while (extract_param (&au, &name, &value, ','))
3709 size_t namelen = name.e - name.b;
3710 for (i = 0; i < countof (options); i++)
3711 if (namelen == strlen (options[i].name)
3712 && 0 == strncmp (name.b, options[i].name,
3715 *options[i].variable = strdupdelim (value.b, value.e);
3720 if (qop != NULL && strcmp(qop,"auth"))
3722 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Unsupported quality of protection '%s'.\n"), qop);
3723 user = NULL; /* force freeing mem and return */
3726 if (algorithm != NULL && strcmp (algorithm,"MD5") && strcmp (algorithm,"MD5-sess"))
3728 logprintf (LOG_NOTQUIET, _("Unsupported algorithm '%s'.\n"), algorithm);
3729 user = NULL; /* force freeing mem and return */
3732 if (!realm || !nonce || !user || !passwd || !path || !method)
3735 xfree_null (opaque);
3738 xfree_null (algorithm);
3742 /* Calculate the digest value. */
3745 unsigned char hash[MD5_DIGEST_SIZE];
3746 char a1buf[MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2 + 1], a2buf[MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2 + 1];
3747 char response_digest[MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2 + 1];
3749 /* A1BUF = H(user ":" realm ":" password) */
3750 md5_init_ctx (&ctx);
3751 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)user, strlen (user), &ctx);
3752 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3753 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)realm, strlen (realm), &ctx);
3754 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3755 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)passwd, strlen (passwd), &ctx);
3756 md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, hash);
3758 dump_hash (a1buf, hash);
3760 if (! strcmp (algorithm, "MD5-sess"))
3762 /* A1BUF = H( H(user ":" realm ":" password) ":" nonce ":" cnonce ) */
3763 snprintf (cnonce, sizeof (cnonce), "%08x", random_number(INT_MAX));
3765 md5_init_ctx (&ctx);
3766 // md5_process_bytes (hash, MD5_DIGEST_SIZE, &ctx);
3767 md5_process_bytes (a1buf, MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2, &ctx);
3768 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3769 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)nonce, strlen (nonce), &ctx);
3770 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3771 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)cnonce, strlen (cnonce), &ctx);
3772 md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, hash);
3774 dump_hash (a1buf, hash);
3777 /* A2BUF = H(method ":" path) */
3778 md5_init_ctx (&ctx);
3779 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)method, strlen (method), &ctx);
3780 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3781 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)path, strlen (path), &ctx);
3782 md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, hash);
3783 dump_hash (a2buf, hash);
3785 if (!strcmp(qop, "auth") || !strcmp (qop, "auth-int"))
3787 /* RFC 2617 Digest Access Authentication */
3788 /* generate random hex string */
3790 snprintf(cnonce, sizeof(cnonce), "%08x", random_number(INT_MAX));
3792 /* RESPONSE_DIGEST = H(A1BUF ":" nonce ":" noncecount ":" clientnonce ":" qop ": " A2BUF) */
3793 md5_init_ctx (&ctx);
3794 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)a1buf, MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2, &ctx);
3795 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3796 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)nonce, strlen (nonce), &ctx);
3797 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3798 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)"00000001", 8, &ctx); /* TODO: keep track of server nonce values */
3799 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3800 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)cnonce, strlen(cnonce), &ctx);
3801 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3802 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)qop, strlen(qop), &ctx);
3803 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3804 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)a2buf, MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2, &ctx);
3805 md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, hash);
3809 /* RFC 2069 Digest Access Authentication */
3810 /* RESPONSE_DIGEST = H(A1BUF ":" nonce ":" A2BUF) */
3811 md5_init_ctx (&ctx);
3812 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)a1buf, MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2, &ctx);
3813 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3814 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)nonce, strlen (nonce), &ctx);
3815 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)":", 1, &ctx);
3816 md5_process_bytes ((unsigned char *)a2buf, MD5_DIGEST_SIZE * 2, &ctx);
3817 md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, hash);
3820 dump_hash (response_digest, hash);
3822 res_size = strlen (user)
3826 + 2 * MD5_DIGEST_SIZE /*strlen (response_digest)*/
3827 + (opaque ? strlen (opaque) : 0)
3828 + (algorithm ? strlen (algorithm) : 0)
3833 res = xmalloc (res_size);
3835 if (!strcmp(qop,"auth"))
3837 res_len = snprintf (res, res_size, "Digest "\
3838 "username=\"%s\", realm=\"%s\", nonce=\"%s\", uri=\"%s\", response=\"%s\""\
3839 ", qop=auth, nc=00000001, cnonce=\"%s\"",
3840 user, realm, nonce, path, response_digest, cnonce);
3845 res_len = snprintf (res, res_size, "Digest "\
3846 "username=\"%s\", realm=\"%s\", nonce=\"%s\", uri=\"%s\", response=\"%s\"",
3847 user, realm, nonce, path, response_digest);
3852 res_len += snprintf(res + res_len, res_size - res_len, ", opaque=\"%s\"", opaque);
3857 snprintf(res + res_len, res_size - res_len, ", algorithm=\"%s\"", algorithm);
3862 #endif /* ENABLE_DIGEST */
3864 /* Computing the size of a string literal must take into account that
3865 value returned by sizeof includes the terminating \0. */
3866 #define STRSIZE(literal) (sizeof (literal) - 1)
3868 /* Whether chars in [b, e) begin with the literal string provided as
3869 first argument and are followed by whitespace or terminating \0.
3870 The comparison is case-insensitive. */
3871 #define STARTS(literal, b, e) \
3873 && ((size_t) ((e) - (b))) >= STRSIZE (literal) \
3874 && 0 == strncasecmp (b, literal, STRSIZE (literal)) \
3875 && ((size_t) ((e) - (b)) == STRSIZE (literal) \
3876 || c_isspace (b[STRSIZE (literal)])))
3879 known_authentication_scheme_p (const char *hdrbeg, const char *hdrend)
3881 return STARTS ("Basic", hdrbeg, hdrend)
3882 #ifdef ENABLE_DIGEST
3883 || STARTS ("Digest", hdrbeg, hdrend)
3886 || STARTS ("NTLM", hdrbeg, hdrend)
3893 /* Create the HTTP authorization request header. When the
3894 `WWW-Authenticate' response header is seen, according to the
3895 authorization scheme specified in that header (`Basic' and `Digest'
3896 are supported by the current implementation), produce an
3897 appropriate HTTP authorization request header. */
3899 create_authorization_line (const char *au, const char *user,
3900 const char *passwd, const char *method,
3901 const char *path, bool *finished)
3903 /* We are called only with known schemes, so we can dispatch on the
3905 switch (c_toupper (*au))
3907 case 'B': /* Basic */
3909 return basic_authentication_encode (user, passwd);
3910 #ifdef ENABLE_DIGEST
3911 case 'D': /* Digest */
3913 return digest_authentication_encode (au, user, passwd, method, path);
3916 case 'N': /* NTLM */
3917 if (!ntlm_input (&pconn.ntlm, au))
3922 return ntlm_output (&pconn.ntlm, user, passwd, finished);
3925 /* We shouldn't get here -- this function should be only called
3926 with values approved by known_authentication_scheme_p. */
3934 if (!wget_cookie_jar)
3935 wget_cookie_jar = cookie_jar_new ();
3936 if (opt.cookies_input && !cookies_loaded_p)
3938 cookie_jar_load (wget_cookie_jar, opt.cookies_input);
3939 cookies_loaded_p = true;
3946 if (wget_cookie_jar)
3947 cookie_jar_save (wget_cookie_jar, opt.cookies_output);
3953 xfree_null (pconn.host);
3954 if (wget_cookie_jar)
3955 cookie_jar_delete (wget_cookie_jar);
3959 ensure_extension (struct http_stat *hs, const char *ext, int *dt)
3961 char *last_period_in_local_filename = strrchr (hs->local_file, '.');
3963 int len = strlen (ext);
3966 strncpy (shortext, ext, len - 1);
3967 shortext[len - 1] = '\0';
3970 if (last_period_in_local_filename == NULL
3971 || !(0 == strcasecmp (last_period_in_local_filename, shortext)
3972 || 0 == strcasecmp (last_period_in_local_filename, ext)))
3974 int local_filename_len = strlen (hs->local_file);
3975 /* Resize the local file, allowing for ".html" preceded by
3976 optional ".NUMBER". */
3977 hs->local_file = xrealloc (hs->local_file,
3978 local_filename_len + 24 + len);
3979 strcpy (hs->local_file + local_filename_len, ext);
3980 /* If clobbering is not allowed and the file, as named,
3981 exists, tack on ".NUMBER.html" instead. */
3982 if (!ALLOW_CLOBBER && file_exists_p (hs->local_file))
3986 sprintf (hs->local_file + local_filename_len,
3987 ".%d%s", ext_num++, ext);
3988 while (file_exists_p (hs->local_file));
3990 *dt |= ADDED_HTML_EXTENSION;
3998 test_parse_content_disposition()
4006 { "filename=\"file.ext\"", "file.ext", true },
4007 { "attachment; filename=\"file.ext\"", "file.ext", true },
4008 { "attachment; filename=\"file.ext\"; dummy", "file.ext", true },
4009 { "attachment", NULL, false },
4010 { "attachement; filename*=UTF-8'en-US'hello.txt", "hello.txt", true },
4011 { "attachement; filename*0=\"hello\"; filename*1=\"world.txt\"", "helloworld.txt", true },
4014 for (i = 0; i < sizeof(test_array)/sizeof(test_array[0]); ++i)
4019 res = parse_content_disposition (test_array[i].hdrval, &filename);
4021 mu_assert ("test_parse_content_disposition: wrong result",
4022 res == test_array[i].result
4024 || 0 == strcmp (test_array[i].filename, filename)));
4030 #endif /* TESTING */
4033 * vim: et sts=2 sw=2 cino+={s