📄 util_filter.h
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/* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
#ifndef AP_FILTER_H
#define AP_FILTER_H
#include "apr.h"
#include "apr_buckets.h"
#include "httpd.h"
#if APR_HAVE_STDARG_H
#include <stdarg.h>
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/**
* @file util_filter.h
* @brief Apache filter library
*/
/** Returned by the bottom-most filter if no data was written.
* @see ap_pass_brigade(). */
#define AP_NOBODY_WROTE -1
/** Returned by the bottom-most filter if no data was read.
* @see ap_get_brigade(). */
#define AP_NOBODY_READ -2
/** Returned when?? @bug find out when! */
#define AP_FILTER_ERROR -3
/**
* input filtering modes
*/
typedef enum {
/** The filter should return at most readbytes data. */
AP_MODE_READBYTES,
/** The filter should return at most one line of CRLF data.
* (If a potential line is too long or no CRLF is found, the
* filter may return partial data).
*/
AP_MODE_GETLINE,
/** The filter should implicitly eat any CRLF pairs that it sees. */
AP_MODE_EATCRLF,
/** The filter read should be treated as speculative and any returned
* data should be stored for later retrieval in another mode. */
AP_MODE_SPECULATIVE,
/** The filter read should be exhaustive and read until it can not
* read any more.
* Use this mode with extreme caution.
*/
AP_MODE_EXHAUSTIVE,
/** The filter should initialize the connection if needed,
* NNTP or FTP over SSL for example.
*/
AP_MODE_INIT
} ap_input_mode_t;
/**
* @defgroup filter FILTER CHAIN
*
* Filters operate using a "chaining" mechanism. The filters are chained
* together into a sequence. When output is generated, it is passed through
* each of the filters on this chain, until it reaches the end (or "bottom")
* and is placed onto the network.
*
* The top of the chain, the code generating the output, is typically called
* a "content generator." The content generator's output is fed into the
* filter chain using the standard Apache output mechanisms: ap_rputs(),
* ap_rprintf(), ap_rwrite(), etc.
*
* Each filter is defined by a callback. This callback takes the output from
* the previous filter (or the content generator if there is no previous
* filter), operates on it, and passes the result to the next filter in the
* chain. This pass-off is performed using the ap_fc_* functions, such as
* ap_fc_puts(), ap_fc_printf(), ap_fc_write(), etc.
*
* When content generation is complete, the system will pass an "end of
* stream" marker into the filter chain. The filters will use this to flush
* out any internal state and to detect incomplete syntax (for example, an
* unterminated SSI directive).
*/
/* forward declare the filter type */
typedef struct ap_filter_t ap_filter_t;
/**
* @name Filter callbacks
*
* This function type is used for filter callbacks. It will be passed a
* pointer to "this" filter, and a "bucket" containing the content to be
* filtered.
*
* In filter->ctx, the callback will find its context. This context is
* provided here, so that a filter may be installed multiple times, each
* receiving its own per-install context pointer.
*
* Callbacks are associated with a filter definition, which is specified
* by name. See ap_register_input_filter() and ap_register_output_filter()
* for setting the association between a name for a filter and its
* associated callback (and other information).
*
* If the initialization function argument passed to the registration
* functions is non-NULL, it will be called iff the filter is in the input
* or output filter chains and before any data is generated to allow the
* filter to prepare for processing.
*
* The *bucket structure (and all those referenced by ->next and ->prev)
* should be considered "const". The filter is allowed to modify the
* next/prev to insert/remove/replace elements in the bucket list, but
* the types and values of the individual buckets should not be altered.
*
* For the input and output filters, the return value of a filter should be
* an APR status value. For the init function, the return value should
* be an HTTP error code or OK if it was successful.
*
* @ingroup filter
* @{
*/
typedef apr_status_t (*ap_out_filter_func)(ap_filter_t *f,
apr_bucket_brigade *b);
typedef apr_status_t (*ap_in_filter_func)(ap_filter_t *f,
apr_bucket_brigade *b,
ap_input_mode_t mode,
apr_read_type_e block,
apr_off_t readbytes);
typedef int (*ap_init_filter_func)(ap_filter_t *f);
typedef union ap_filter_func {
ap_out_filter_func out_func;
ap_in_filter_func in_func;
} ap_filter_func;
/** @} */
/**
* Filters have different types/classifications. These are used to group
* and sort the filters to properly sequence their operation.
*
* The types have a particular sort order, which allows us to insert them
* into the filter chain in a determistic order. Within a particular grouping,
* the ordering is equivalent to the order of calls to ap_add_*_filter().
*/
typedef enum {
/** These filters are used to alter the content that is passed through
* them. Examples are SSI or PHP. */
AP_FTYPE_RESOURCE = 10,
/** These filters are used to alter the content as a whole, but after all
* AP_FTYPE_RESOURCE filters are executed. These filters should not
* change the content-type. An example is deflate. */
AP_FTYPE_CONTENT_SET = 20,
/** These filters are used to handle the protocol between server and
* client. Examples are HTTP and POP. */
AP_FTYPE_PROTOCOL = 30,
/** These filters implement transport encodings (e.g., chunking). */
AP_FTYPE_TRANSCODE = 40,
/** These filters will alter the content, but in ways that are
* more strongly associated with the connection. Examples are
* splitting an HTTP connection into multiple requests and
* buffering HTTP responses across multiple requests.
*
* It is important to note that these types of filters are not
* allowed in a sub-request. A sub-request's output can certainly
* be filtered by ::AP_FTYPE_RESOURCE filters, but all of the "final
* processing" is determined by the main request. */
AP_FTYPE_CONNECTION = 50,
/** These filters don't alter the content. They are responsible for
* sending/receiving data to/from the client. */
AP_FTYPE_NETWORK = 60
} ap_filter_type;
/**
* This is the request-time context structure for an installed filter (in
* the output filter chain). It provides the callback to use for filtering,
* the request this filter is associated with (which is important when
* an output chain also includes sub-request filters), the context for this
* installed filter, and the filter ordering/chaining fields.
*
* Filter callbacks are free to use ->ctx as they please, to store context
* during the filter process. Generally, this is superior over associating
* the state directly with the request. A callback should not change any of
* the other fields.
*/
typedef struct ap_filter_rec_t ap_filter_rec_t;
/**
* This structure is used for recording information about the
* registered filters. It associates a name with the filter's callback
* and filter type.
*
* At the moment, these are simply linked in a chain, so a ->next pointer
* is available.
*/
struct ap_filter_rec_t {
/** The registered name for this filter */
const char *name;
/** The function to call when this filter is invoked. */
ap_filter_func filter_func;
/** The function to call before the handlers are invoked. Notice
* that this function is called only for filters participating in
* the http protocol. Filters for other protocols are to be
* initiliazed by the protocols themselves. */
ap_init_filter_func filter_init_func;
/** The type of filter, either AP_FTYPE_CONTENT or AP_FTYPE_CONNECTION.
* An AP_FTYPE_CONTENT filter modifies the data based on information
* found in the content. An AP_FTYPE_CONNECTION filter modifies the
* data based on the type of connection.
*/
ap_filter_type ftype;
/** The next filter_rec in the list */
struct ap_filter_rec_t *next;
};
/**
* The representation of a filter chain. Each request has a list
* of these structures which are called in turn to filter the data. Sub
* requests get an exact copy of the main requests filter chain.
*/
struct ap_filter_t {
/** The internal representation of this filter. This includes
* the filter's name, type, and the actual function pointer.
*/
ap_filter_rec_t *frec;
/** A place to store any data associated with the current filter */
void *ctx;
/** The next filter in the chain */
ap_filter_t *next;
/** The request_rec associated with the current filter. If a sub-request
* adds filters, then the sub-request is the request associated with the
* filter.
*/
request_rec *r;
/** The conn_rec associated with the current filter. This is analogous
* to the request_rec, except that it is used for input filtering.
*/
conn_rec *c;
};
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