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	Most of the Windows test failures are due to the path separator not being "/". The general approach I took here was to keep paths in "URL form" (ie using "/" separators) as much as possible, and only convert to native paths when we attempt to open a file. This will allow the most consistency between different host OS. For example, data structures that store paths still store them with "/" delimiters. Functions that accepted paths as input and return them as outputs still use "/". There are still a few test failures that need to be sorted out. - config/setup/TestRoot (I hear this has already been fixed by someone else) - middleware/basicauth/TestBrowseTemplate and middleware/templates/Test (a line endings issue that I'm still working through)
		
			
				
	
	
		
			81 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Go
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			81 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Go
		
	
	
	
	
	
// Package middleware provides some types and functions common among middleware.
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package middleware
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import (
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	"net/http"
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	"path"
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)
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type (
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	// Middleware is the middle layer which represents the traditional
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	// idea of middleware: it chains one Handler to the next by being
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	// passed the next Handler in the chain.
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	Middleware func(Handler) Handler
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	// Handler is like http.Handler except ServeHTTP returns a status code
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	// and an error. The status code is for the client's benefit; the error
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	// value is for the server's benefit. The status code will be sent to
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	// the client while the error value will be logged privately. Sometimes,
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	// an error status code (4xx or 5xx) may be returned with a nil error
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	// when there is no reason to log the error on the server.
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	//
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	// If a HandlerFunc returns an error (status >= 400), it should NOT
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	// write to the response. This philosophy makes middleware.Handler
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	// different from http.Handler: error handling should happen at the
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	// application layer or in dedicated error-handling middleware only
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	// rather than with an "every middleware for itself" paradigm.
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	//
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	// The application or error-handling middleware should incorporate logic
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	// to ensure that the client always gets a proper response according to
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	// the status code. For security reasons, it should probably not reveal
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	// the actual error message. (Instead it should be logged, for example.)
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	//
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	// Handlers which do write to the response should return a status value
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	// < 400 as a signal that a response has been written. In other words,
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	// only error-handling middleware or the application will write to the
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	// response for a status code >= 400. When ANY handler writes to the
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	// response, it should return a status code < 400 to signal others to
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	// NOT write to the response again, which would be erroneous.
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	Handler interface {
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		ServeHTTP(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request) (int, error)
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	}
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	// HandlerFunc is a convenience type like http.HandlerFunc, except
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	// ServeHTTP returns a status code and an error. See Handler
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	// documentation for more information.
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	HandlerFunc func(http.ResponseWriter, *http.Request) (int, error)
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)
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// ServeHTTP implements the Handler interface.
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func (f HandlerFunc) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) (int, error) {
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	return f(w, r)
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}
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// IndexFile looks for a file in /root/fpath/indexFile for each string
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// in indexFiles. If an index file is found, it returns the root-relative
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// path to the file and true. If no index file is found, empty string
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// and false is returned. fpath must end in a forward slash '/'
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// otherwise no index files will be tried (directory paths must end
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// in a forward slash according to HTTP).
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//
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// All paths passed into and returned from this function use '/' as the
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// path separator, just like URLs.  IndexFle handles path manipulation
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// internally for systems that use different path separators.
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func IndexFile(root http.FileSystem, fpath string, indexFiles []string) (string, bool) {
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	if fpath[len(fpath)-1] != '/' || root == nil {
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		return "", false
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	}
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	for _, indexFile := range indexFiles {
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		// func (http.FileSystem).Open wants all paths separated by "/",
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		// regardless of operating system convention, so use
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		// path.Join instead of filepath.Join
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		fp := path.Join(fpath, indexFile)
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		f, err := root.Open(fp)
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		if err == nil {
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			f.Close()
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			return fp, true
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		}
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	}
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	return "", false
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}
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