mitmproxy/doc-src/pathod.html

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<div class="page-header">
<h1>
pathod
<small>A pathological web daemon.</small>
</h1>
</div>
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At pathod's heart is a small, terse language for crafting HTTP responses,
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designed to be easy to specify in a request URL. The simplest way to use
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pathod is to fire up the daemon, and specify the response behaviour you
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want using this language in the request URL. Here's a minimal example:
http://localhost:9999/p/200
Everything after the "/p/" path component is a response specifier - in this
case just a vanilla 200 OK response. See the docs below to get (much) fancier.
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You can also add anchors to the pathod server that serve a fixed response
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whenever a matching URL is requested:
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pathod -a "/foo=200"
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Here, "/foo" a regex specifying the anchor path, and the part after the "=" is
a response specifier.
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pathod also has a nifty built-in web interface, which lets you play with
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the language by previewing responses, exposes activity logs, online help and
various other goodies. Try it by visiting the server root:
http://localhost:9999
<div class="page-header">
<h1>Specifying Responses</h1>
</div>
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The general form of a response is as follows:
code[MESSAGE]:[colon-separated list of features]
Here's the simplest possible response specification, returning just an HTTP 200
OK message with no headers and no content:
200
We can embellish this a bit by specifying an optional custom HTTP response
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message (if we don't, pathod automatically creates an appropriate one). By
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default for a 200 response code the message is "OK", but we can change it like
this:
200"YAY"
The quoted string here is an example of a <a href=#valuespec>Value
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Specifier</a>, a syntax that is used throughout the pathod response
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specification language. In this case, the quotes mean we're specifying a
literal string, but there are many other fun things we can do. For example, we
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can tell pathod to generate 100k of random ASCII letters instead:
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200@100k,ascii_letters
Full documentation on the value specification syntax can be found in the next
section.
Following the response code specifier is a colon-separated list of features.
For instance, this specifies a response with a body consisting of 1 megabyte of
random data:
200:b@1m
And this is the same response with an ETag header added:
200:b@1m:h"Etag"="foo"
Both the header name and the header value are full value specifiers. Here's the
same response again, but with a 1k randomly generated header name:
200:b@1m:h@1k,ascii_letters="foo"
A few specific headers have shortcuts, because they're used so often. The
shortcut for the content-type header is "c":
200:b@1m:c"text/json"
That's it for the basic response definition. Now we can start mucking with the
responses to break clients. One common hard-to-test circumstance is hangs or
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slow responses. pathod has a pause operator that you can use to define
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precisely when and how long the server should hang. Here, for instance, we hang
for 120 seconds after sending 50 bytes (counted from the first byte of the HTTP
response):
200:b@1m:p120,50
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If that's not long enough, we can tell pathod to hang forever:
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200:b@1m:p120,f
Or to send all data, and then hang without disconnecting:
200:b@1m:p120,a
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We can also ask pathod to hang randomly:
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200:b@1m:pr,a
There is a similar mechanism for dropping connections mid-response. So, we can
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tell pathod to disconnect after sending 50 bytes:
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200:b@1m:d50
Or randomly:
200:b@1m:dr
All of these features can be combined. Here's a response that pauses twice,
once at 10 bytes and once at 20, then disconnects at 5000:
200:b@1m:p10,10:p20,10:d5000
## Response Features
<table class="table table-bordered table-condensed">
<tbody >
<tr>
<td>
hKEY=VALUE
</td>
<td>
Set a header. Both KEY and VALUE are full <a href=#valuespec>Value Specifiers</a>.
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
bVALUE
</td>
<td>
Set the body. VALUE is a <a href=#valuespec>Value
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Specifier</a>. When the body is set, pathod will
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automatically set the appropriate Content-Length header.
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
cVALUE
</td>
<td>
A shortcut for setting the Content-Type header. Equivalent to:
<pre>h"Content-Type"=VALUE</pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
lVALUE
</td>
<td>
A shortcut for setting the Location header. Equivalent to:
<pre>h"Content-Type"=VALUE</pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
dOFFSET
</td>
<td>
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Disconnect after OFFSET bytes. The offset can also be "r", in which case pathod
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will disconnect at a random point in the response.
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
pSECONDS,OFFSET
</td>
<td>
Pause for SECONDS seconds after OFFSET bytes. SECONDS can also be "f" to pause
forever. OFFSET can also be "r" to generate a random offset, or "a" for an
offset just after all data has been sent.
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<a id="valuespec"></a>
## VALUE Specifiers
There are three different flavours of value specification.
### Literal
Literal values are specified as a quoted strings:
"foo"
Either single or double quotes are accepted, and quotes can be escaped with
backslashes within the string:
'fo\'o'
### Files
You can load a value from a specified file path. To do so, you have to specify
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a _staticdir_ option to pathod on the command-line, like so:
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pathod -d ~/myassets
All paths are relative paths under this directory. File loads are indicated by
starting the value specifier with the left angle bracket:
<my/path
The path value can also be a quoted string, with the same syntax as literals:
<"my/path"
### Generated values
An @-symbol lead-in specifies that generated data should be used. There are two
components to a generator specification - a size, and a data type. By default
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pathod assumes a data type of "bytes".
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Here's a value specifier for generating 100 bytes:
@100
You can use standard suffixes to indicate larger values. Here, for instance, is
a specifier for generating 100 megabytes:
@100m
Data is generated and served efficiently - if you really want to send a
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terabyte of data to a client, pathod can do it. The supported suffixes are:
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<table class="table table-bordered table-condensed">
<tbody >
<tr>
<td>b</td> <td>1024**0 (bytes)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>k</td> <td>1024**1 (kilobytes)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>m</td> <td>1024**2 (megabytes)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>g</td> <td>1024**3 (gigabytes)</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>t</td> <td>1024**4 (terabytes)</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
Data types are separated from the size specification by a comma. This
specification generates 100mb of ASCII:
@100m,ascii
Supported data types are:
- ascii_letters
- ascii_lowercase
- ascii_uppercase
- digits
- hexdigits
- letters
- lowercase
- octdigits
- printable
- punctuation
- uppercase
- whitespace
- ascii
- bytes
<div class="page-header">
<h1>API</h1>
</div>
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pathod exposes a simple API, intended to make it possible to drive and
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inspect the daemon remotely for use in unit testing and the like.
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<table class="table table-bordered table-condensed">
<tbody >
<tr>
<td>
/api/clear_log
</td>
<td>
A POST to this URL clears the log buffer.
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
/api/info
</td>
<td>
Basic version and configuration info.
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
/api/log
</td>
<td>
Returns the current log buffer. At the moment the buffer size is 500 entries -
when the log grows larger than this, older entries are discarded. The returned
data is a JSON dictionary, with the form:
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<pre>{ 'log': [ ENTRIES ] } </pre>
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You can preview the JSON data returned for a log entry through the built-in web
interface.
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<div class="page-header">
<h1>Error Responses</h1>
</div>
To let users distinguish crafted responses from internal pathod responses,
pathod uses the non-standard 800 response code to indicate errors. For example,
a request to:
http://localhost:9999/p/foo
... will return an 800 response, because "foo" is not a valid page specifier.