import urllib, urllib2, unittest import time import libpathod.test, requests from netlib import tcp, http import tutils """ Note that the choice of response code in these tests matters more than you might think. libcurl treats a 304 response code differently from, say, a 200 response code - it will correctly terminate a 304 response with no content-length header, whereas it will block forever waiting for content for a 200 response. """ class SanityMixin: def test_http(self): assert self.pathod("304").status_code == 304 assert self.master.state.view def test_large(self): assert len(self.pathod("200:b@50k").content) == 1024*50 def test_replay(self): assert self.pathod("304").status_code == 304 assert len(self.master.state.view) == 1 l = self.master.state.view[0] assert l.response.code == 304 l.request.path = "/p/305" rt = self.master.replay_request(l, block=True) assert l.response.code == 305 # Disconnect error l.request.path = "/p/305:d0" rt = self.master.replay_request(l, block=True) assert l.error # Port error l.request.port = 1 rt = self.master.replay_request(l, block=True) assert l.error class TestHTTP(tutils.HTTPProxTest, SanityMixin): def test_invalid_http(self): t = tcp.TCPClient("127.0.0.1", self.proxy.port) t.connect() t.wfile.write("invalid\n\n") t.wfile.flush() assert "Bad Request" in t.rfile.readline() def test_invalid_connect(self): t = tcp.TCPClient("127.0.0.1", self.proxy.port) t.connect() t.wfile.write("CONNECT invalid\n\n") t.wfile.flush() assert "Bad Request" in t.rfile.readline() class TestHTTPS(tutils.HTTPProxTest, SanityMixin): ssl = True class TestReverse(tutils.ReverseProxTest, SanityMixin): reverse = True class TestTransparent(tutils.TransparentProxTest, SanityMixin): transparent = True class TestProxy(tutils.HTTPProxTest): def test_http(self): f = self.pathod("304") assert f.status_code == 304 l = self.master.state.view[0] assert l.request.client_conn.address assert "host" in l.request.headers assert l.response.code == 304