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caddy/caddyhttp/httpserver/server.go
Matthew Holt fbd6412359
Don't modify request URL values from Caddyfile (fixes #1528)
HTTP redirects can use host-relative URLs. See discussion in #1497.
2017-03-20 21:05:11 -06:00

560 lines
17 KiB
Go

// Package httpserver implements an HTTP server on top of Caddy.
package httpserver
import (
"context"
"crypto/tls"
"fmt"
"io"
"log"
"net"
"net/http"
"os"
"runtime"
"strings"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/lucas-clemente/quic-go/h2quic"
"github.com/mholt/caddy"
"github.com/mholt/caddy/caddyhttp/staticfiles"
"github.com/mholt/caddy/caddytls"
)
// Server is the HTTP server implementation.
type Server struct {
Server *http.Server
quicServer *h2quic.Server
listener net.Listener
listenerMu sync.Mutex
sites []*SiteConfig
connTimeout time.Duration // max time to wait for a connection before force stop
tlsGovChan chan struct{} // close to stop the TLS maintenance goroutine
vhosts *vhostTrie
}
// ensure it satisfies the interface
var _ caddy.GracefulServer = new(Server)
var defaultALPN = []string{"h2", "http/1.1"}
// makeTLSConfig extracts TLS settings from each site config to
// build a tls.Config usable in Caddy HTTP servers. The returned
// config will be nil if TLS is disabled for these sites.
func makeTLSConfig(group []*SiteConfig) (*tls.Config, error) {
var tlsConfigs []*caddytls.Config
for i := range group {
if HTTP2 && len(group[i].TLS.ALPN) == 0 {
// if no application-level protocol was configured up to now,
// default to HTTP/2, then HTTP/1.1 if necessary
group[i].TLS.ALPN = defaultALPN
}
tlsConfigs = append(tlsConfigs, group[i].TLS)
}
return caddytls.MakeTLSConfig(tlsConfigs)
}
// NewServer creates a new Server instance that will listen on addr
// and will serve the sites configured in group.
func NewServer(addr string, group []*SiteConfig) (*Server, error) {
s := &Server{
Server: makeHTTPServerWithTimeouts(addr, group),
vhosts: newVHostTrie(),
sites: group,
connTimeout: GracefulTimeout,
}
s.Server.Handler = s // this is weird, but whatever
// extract TLS settings from each site config to build
// a tls.Config, which will not be nil if TLS is enabled
tlsConfig, err := makeTLSConfig(group)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
s.Server.TLSConfig = tlsConfig
// Enable QUIC if desired
if QUIC {
s.quicServer = &h2quic.Server{Server: s.Server}
s.Server.Handler = s.wrapWithSvcHeaders(s.Server.Handler)
}
// if TLS is enabled, make sure we prepare the Server accordingly
if s.Server.TLSConfig != nil {
// wrap the HTTP handler with a handler that does MITM detection
tlsh := &tlsHandler{next: s.Server.Handler}
s.Server.Handler = tlsh // this needs to be the "outer" handler when Serve() is called, for type assertion
// when Serve() creates the TLS listener later, that listener should
// be adding a reference the ClientHello info to a map; this callback
// will be sure to clear out that entry when the connection closes.
s.Server.ConnState = func(c net.Conn, cs http.ConnState) {
// when a connection closes or is hijacked, delete its entry
// in the map, because we are done with it.
if tlsh.listener != nil {
if cs == http.StateHijacked || cs == http.StateClosed {
tlsh.listener.helloInfosMu.Lock()
delete(tlsh.listener.helloInfos, c.RemoteAddr().String())
tlsh.listener.helloInfosMu.Unlock()
}
}
}
// As of Go 1.7, if the Server's TLSConfig is not nil, HTTP/2 is enabled only
// if TLSConfig.NextProtos includes the string "h2"
if HTTP2 && len(s.Server.TLSConfig.NextProtos) == 0 {
// some experimenting shows that this NextProtos must have at least
// one value that overlaps with the NextProtos of any other tls.Config
// that is returned from GetConfigForClient; if there is no overlap,
// the connection will fail (as of Go 1.8, Feb. 2017).
s.Server.TLSConfig.NextProtos = defaultALPN
}
}
// Compile custom middleware for every site (enables virtual hosting)
for _, site := range group {
stack := Handler(staticfiles.FileServer{Root: http.Dir(site.Root), Hide: site.HiddenFiles})
for i := len(site.middleware) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
stack = site.middleware[i](stack)
}
site.middlewareChain = stack
s.vhosts.Insert(site.Addr.VHost(), site)
}
return s, nil
}
// makeHTTPServerWithTimeouts makes an http.Server from the group of
// configs in a way that configures timeouts (or, if not set, it uses
// the default timeouts) by combining the configuration of each
// SiteConfig in the group. (Timeouts are important for mitigating
// slowloris attacks.)
func makeHTTPServerWithTimeouts(addr string, group []*SiteConfig) *http.Server {
// find the minimum duration configured for each timeout
var min Timeouts
for _, cfg := range group {
if cfg.Timeouts.ReadTimeoutSet &&
(!min.ReadTimeoutSet || cfg.Timeouts.ReadTimeout < min.ReadTimeout) {
min.ReadTimeoutSet = true
min.ReadTimeout = cfg.Timeouts.ReadTimeout
}
if cfg.Timeouts.ReadHeaderTimeoutSet &&
(!min.ReadHeaderTimeoutSet || cfg.Timeouts.ReadHeaderTimeout < min.ReadHeaderTimeout) {
min.ReadHeaderTimeoutSet = true
min.ReadHeaderTimeout = cfg.Timeouts.ReadHeaderTimeout
}
if cfg.Timeouts.WriteTimeoutSet &&
(!min.WriteTimeoutSet || cfg.Timeouts.WriteTimeout < min.WriteTimeout) {
min.WriteTimeoutSet = true
min.WriteTimeout = cfg.Timeouts.WriteTimeout
}
if cfg.Timeouts.IdleTimeoutSet &&
(!min.IdleTimeoutSet || cfg.Timeouts.IdleTimeout < min.IdleTimeout) {
min.IdleTimeoutSet = true
min.IdleTimeout = cfg.Timeouts.IdleTimeout
}
}
// for the values that were not set, use defaults
if !min.ReadTimeoutSet {
min.ReadTimeout = defaultTimeouts.ReadTimeout
}
if !min.ReadHeaderTimeoutSet {
min.ReadHeaderTimeout = defaultTimeouts.ReadHeaderTimeout
}
if !min.WriteTimeoutSet {
min.WriteTimeout = defaultTimeouts.WriteTimeout
}
if !min.IdleTimeoutSet {
min.IdleTimeout = defaultTimeouts.IdleTimeout
}
// set the final values on the server and return it
return &http.Server{
Addr: addr,
ReadTimeout: min.ReadTimeout,
ReadHeaderTimeout: min.ReadHeaderTimeout,
WriteTimeout: min.WriteTimeout,
IdleTimeout: min.IdleTimeout,
}
}
func (s *Server) wrapWithSvcHeaders(previousHandler http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
return func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
s.quicServer.SetQuicHeaders(w.Header())
previousHandler.ServeHTTP(w, r)
}
}
// Listen creates an active listener for s that can be
// used to serve requests.
func (s *Server) Listen() (net.Listener, error) {
if s.Server == nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Server field is nil")
}
ln, err := net.Listen("tcp", s.Server.Addr)
if err != nil {
var succeeded bool
if runtime.GOOS == "windows" {
// Windows has been known to keep sockets open even after closing the listeners.
// Tests reveal this error case easily because they call Start() then Stop()
// in succession. TODO: Better way to handle this? And why limit this to Windows?
for i := 0; i < 20; i++ {
time.Sleep(100 * time.Millisecond)
ln, err = net.Listen("tcp", s.Server.Addr)
if err == nil {
succeeded = true
break
}
}
}
if !succeeded {
return nil, err
}
}
if tcpLn, ok := ln.(*net.TCPListener); ok {
ln = tcpKeepAliveListener{TCPListener: tcpLn}
}
cln := ln.(caddy.Listener)
for _, site := range s.sites {
for _, m := range site.listenerMiddleware {
cln = m(cln)
}
}
// Very important to return a concrete caddy.Listener
// implementation for graceful restarts.
return cln.(caddy.Listener), nil
}
// ListenPacket creates udp connection for QUIC if it is enabled,
func (s *Server) ListenPacket() (net.PacketConn, error) {
if QUIC {
udpAddr, err := net.ResolveUDPAddr("udp", s.Server.Addr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return net.ListenUDP("udp", udpAddr)
}
return nil, nil
}
// Serve serves requests on ln. It blocks until ln is closed.
func (s *Server) Serve(ln net.Listener) error {
s.listenerMu.Lock()
s.listener = ln
s.listenerMu.Unlock()
if s.Server.TLSConfig != nil {
// Create TLS listener - note that we do not replace s.listener
// with this TLS listener; tls.listener is unexported and does
// not implement the File() method we need for graceful restarts
// on POSIX systems.
// TODO: Is this ^ still relevant anymore? Maybe we can now that it's a net.Listener...
ln = newTLSListener(ln, s.Server.TLSConfig)
if handler, ok := s.Server.Handler.(*tlsHandler); ok {
handler.listener = ln.(*tlsHelloListener)
}
// Rotate TLS session ticket keys
s.tlsGovChan = caddytls.RotateSessionTicketKeys(s.Server.TLSConfig)
}
err := s.Server.Serve(ln)
if QUIC {
s.quicServer.Close()
}
return err
}
// ServePacket serves QUIC requests on pc until it is closed.
func (s *Server) ServePacket(pc net.PacketConn) error {
if QUIC {
err := s.quicServer.Serve(pc.(*net.UDPConn))
return fmt.Errorf("serving QUIC connections: %v", err)
}
return nil
}
// ServeHTTP is the entry point of all HTTP requests.
func (s *Server) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
defer func() {
// We absolutely need to be sure we stay alive up here,
// even though, in theory, the errors middleware does this.
if rec := recover(); rec != nil {
log.Printf("[PANIC] %v", rec)
DefaultErrorFunc(w, r, http.StatusInternalServerError)
}
}()
w.Header().Set("Server", "Caddy")
c := context.WithValue(r.Context(), staticfiles.URLPathCtxKey, r.URL.Path)
r = r.WithContext(c)
sanitizePath(r)
status, _ := s.serveHTTP(w, r)
// Fallback error response in case error handling wasn't chained in
if status >= 400 {
DefaultErrorFunc(w, r, status)
}
}
func (s *Server) serveHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) (int, error) {
// strip out the port because it's not used in virtual
// hosting; the port is irrelevant because each listener
// is on a different port.
hostname, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(r.Host)
if err != nil {
hostname = r.Host
}
// look up the virtualhost; if no match, serve error
vhost, pathPrefix := s.vhosts.Match(hostname + r.URL.Path)
if vhost == nil {
// check for ACME challenge even if vhost is nil;
// could be a new host coming online soon
if caddytls.HTTPChallengeHandler(w, r, "localhost", caddytls.DefaultHTTPAlternatePort) {
return 0, nil
}
// otherwise, log the error and write a message to the client
remoteHost, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(r.RemoteAddr)
if err != nil {
remoteHost = r.RemoteAddr
}
WriteTextResponse(w, http.StatusNotFound, "No such site at "+s.Server.Addr)
log.Printf("[INFO] %s - No such site at %s (Remote: %s, Referer: %s)",
hostname, s.Server.Addr, remoteHost, r.Header.Get("Referer"))
return 0, nil
}
// we still check for ACME challenge if the vhost exists,
// because we must apply its HTTP challenge config settings
if s.proxyHTTPChallenge(vhost, w, r) {
return 0, nil
}
// trim the path portion of the site address from the beginning of
// the URL path, so a request to example.com/foo/blog on the site
// defined as example.com/foo appears as /blog instead of /foo/blog.
if pathPrefix != "/" {
r.URL.Path = strings.TrimPrefix(r.URL.Path, pathPrefix)
if !strings.HasPrefix(r.URL.Path, "/") {
r.URL.Path = "/" + r.URL.Path
}
}
// Apply the path-based request body size limit
// The error returned by MaxBytesReader is meant to be handled
// by whichever middleware/plugin that receives it when calling
// .Read() or a similar method on the request body
if r.Body != nil {
for _, pathlimit := range vhost.MaxRequestBodySizes {
if Path(r.URL.Path).Matches(pathlimit.Path) {
r.Body = MaxBytesReader(w, r.Body, pathlimit.Limit)
break
}
}
}
return vhost.middlewareChain.ServeHTTP(w, r)
}
// proxyHTTPChallenge solves the ACME HTTP challenge if r is the HTTP
// request for the challenge. If it is, and if the request has been
// fulfilled (response written), true is returned; false otherwise.
// If you don't have a vhost, just call the challenge handler directly.
func (s *Server) proxyHTTPChallenge(vhost *SiteConfig, w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) bool {
if vhost.Addr.Port != caddytls.HTTPChallengePort {
return false
}
if vhost.TLS != nil && vhost.TLS.Manual {
return false
}
altPort := caddytls.DefaultHTTPAlternatePort
if vhost.TLS != nil && vhost.TLS.AltHTTPPort != "" {
altPort = vhost.TLS.AltHTTPPort
}
return caddytls.HTTPChallengeHandler(w, r, vhost.ListenHost, altPort)
}
// Address returns the address s was assigned to listen on.
func (s *Server) Address() string {
return s.Server.Addr
}
// Stop stops s gracefully (or forcefully after timeout) and
// closes its listener.
func (s *Server) Stop() error {
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), s.connTimeout)
defer cancel()
err := s.Server.Shutdown(ctx)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// signal any TLS governor goroutines to exit
if s.tlsGovChan != nil {
close(s.tlsGovChan)
}
return nil
}
// sanitizePath collapses any ./ ../ /// madness which helps prevent
// path traversal attacks. Note to middleware: use the value within the
// request's context at key caddy.URLPathContextKey to access the
// "original" URL.Path value.
func sanitizePath(r *http.Request) {
if r.URL.Path == "/" {
return
}
cleanedPath := CleanPath(r.URL.Path)
if cleanedPath == "." {
r.URL.Path = "/"
} else {
if !strings.HasPrefix(cleanedPath, "/") {
cleanedPath = "/" + cleanedPath
}
if strings.HasSuffix(r.URL.Path, "/") && !strings.HasSuffix(cleanedPath, "/") {
cleanedPath = cleanedPath + "/"
}
r.URL.Path = cleanedPath
}
}
// OnStartupComplete lists the sites served by this server
// and any relevant information, assuming caddy.Quiet == false.
func (s *Server) OnStartupComplete() {
if caddy.Quiet {
return
}
for _, site := range s.sites {
output := site.Addr.String()
if caddy.IsLoopback(s.Address()) && !caddy.IsLoopback(site.Addr.Host) {
output += " (only accessible on this machine)"
}
fmt.Println(output)
log.Println(output)
}
}
// defaultTimeouts stores the default timeout values to use
// if left unset by user configuration. NOTE: Default timeouts
// are disabled (see issue #1464).
var defaultTimeouts Timeouts
// tcpKeepAliveListener sets TCP keep-alive timeouts on accepted
// connections. It's used by ListenAndServe and ListenAndServeTLS so
// dead TCP connections (e.g. closing laptop mid-download) eventually
// go away.
//
// Borrowed from the Go standard library.
type tcpKeepAliveListener struct {
*net.TCPListener
}
// Accept accepts the connection with a keep-alive enabled.
func (ln tcpKeepAliveListener) Accept() (c net.Conn, err error) {
tc, err := ln.AcceptTCP()
if err != nil {
return
}
tc.SetKeepAlive(true)
tc.SetKeepAlivePeriod(3 * time.Minute)
return tc, nil
}
// File implements caddy.Listener; it returns the underlying file of the listener.
func (ln tcpKeepAliveListener) File() (*os.File, error) {
return ln.TCPListener.File()
}
// MaxBytesExceeded is the error type returned by MaxBytesReader
// when the request body exceeds the limit imposed
type MaxBytesExceeded struct{}
func (err MaxBytesExceeded) Error() string {
return "http: request body too large"
}
// MaxBytesReader and its associated methods are borrowed from the
// Go Standard library (comments intact). The only difference is that
// it returns a MaxBytesExceeded error instead of a generic error message
// when the request body has exceeded the requested limit
func MaxBytesReader(w http.ResponseWriter, r io.ReadCloser, n int64) io.ReadCloser {
return &maxBytesReader{w: w, r: r, n: n}
}
type maxBytesReader struct {
w http.ResponseWriter
r io.ReadCloser // underlying reader
n int64 // max bytes remaining
err error // sticky error
}
func (l *maxBytesReader) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
if l.err != nil {
return 0, l.err
}
if len(p) == 0 {
return 0, nil
}
// If they asked for a 32KB byte read but only 5 bytes are
// remaining, no need to read 32KB. 6 bytes will answer the
// question of the whether we hit the limit or go past it.
if int64(len(p)) > l.n+1 {
p = p[:l.n+1]
}
n, err = l.r.Read(p)
if int64(n) <= l.n {
l.n -= int64(n)
l.err = err
return n, err
}
n = int(l.n)
l.n = 0
// The server code and client code both use
// maxBytesReader. This "requestTooLarge" check is
// only used by the server code. To prevent binaries
// which only using the HTTP Client code (such as
// cmd/go) from also linking in the HTTP server, don't
// use a static type assertion to the server
// "*response" type. Check this interface instead:
type requestTooLarger interface {
requestTooLarge()
}
if res, ok := l.w.(requestTooLarger); ok {
res.requestTooLarge()
}
l.err = MaxBytesExceeded{}
return n, l.err
}
func (l *maxBytesReader) Close() error {
return l.r.Close()
}
// DefaultErrorFunc responds to an HTTP request with a simple description
// of the specified HTTP status code.
func DefaultErrorFunc(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, status int) {
WriteTextResponse(w, status, fmt.Sprintf("%d %s\n", status, http.StatusText(status)))
}
// WriteTextResponse writes body with code status to w. The body will
// be interpreted as plain text.
func WriteTextResponse(w http.ResponseWriter, status int, body string) {
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
w.Header().Set("X-Content-Type-Options", "nosniff")
w.WriteHeader(status)
w.Write([]byte(body))
}