from __future__ import absolute_import import copy import uuid import netlib.tcp from .. import stateobject, utils, version from ..proxy.connection import ClientConnection, ServerConnection KILL = 0 # const for killed requests class Error(stateobject.StateObject): """ An Error. This is distinct from an protocol error response (say, a HTTP code 500), which is represented by a normal HTTPResponse object. This class is responsible for indicating errors that fall outside of normal protocol communications, like interrupted connections, timeouts, protocol errors. Exposes the following attributes: flow: Flow object msg: Message describing the error timestamp: Seconds since the epoch """ def __init__(self, msg, timestamp=None): """ @type msg: str @type timestamp: float """ self.flow = None # will usually be set by the flow backref mixin self.msg = msg self.timestamp = timestamp or utils.timestamp() _stateobject_attributes = dict( msg=str, timestamp=float ) def __str__(self): return self.msg @classmethod def from_state(cls, state): # the default implementation assumes an empty constructor. Override # accordingly. f = cls(None) f.load_state(state) return f def copy(self): c = copy.copy(self) return c class Flow(stateobject.StateObject): """ A Flow is a collection of objects representing a single transaction. This class is usually subclassed for each protocol, e.g. HTTPFlow. """ def __init__(self, type, client_conn, server_conn, live=None): self.type = type self.id = str(uuid.uuid4()) self.client_conn = client_conn """@type: ClientConnection""" self.server_conn = server_conn """@type: ServerConnection""" self.live = live """@type: LiveConnection""" self.error = None """@type: Error""" self._backup = None _stateobject_attributes = dict( id=str, error=Error, client_conn=ClientConnection, server_conn=ServerConnection, type=str ) def get_state(self, short=False): d = super(Flow, self).get_state(short) d.update(version=version.IVERSION) return d def __eq__(self, other): return self is other def copy(self): f = copy.copy(self) f.client_conn = self.client_conn.copy() f.server_conn = self.server_conn.copy() if self.error: f.error = self.error.copy() return f def modified(self): """ Has this Flow been modified? """ if self._backup: return self._backup != self.get_state() else: return False def backup(self, force=False): """ Save a backup of this Flow, which can be reverted to using a call to .revert(). """ if not self._backup: self._backup = self.get_state() def revert(self): """ Revert to the last backed up state. """ if self._backup: self.load_state(self._backup) self._backup = None class ProtocolHandler(object): """ A ProtocolHandler implements an application-layer protocol, e.g. HTTP. See: libmproxy.protocol.http.HTTPHandler """ def __init__(self, c): self.c = c """@type: libmproxy.proxy.server.ConnectionHandler""" self.live = LiveConnection(c) """@type: LiveConnection""" def handle_messages(self): """ This method gets called if a client connection has been made. Depending on the proxy settings, a server connection might already exist as well. """ raise NotImplementedError # pragma: nocover def handle_server_reconnect(self, state): """ This method gets called if a server connection needs to reconnect and there's a state associated with the server connection (e.g. a previously-sent CONNECT request or a SOCKS proxy request). This method gets called after the connection has been restablished but before SSL is established. """ raise NotImplementedError # pragma: nocover def handle_error(self, error): """ This method gets called should there be an uncaught exception during the connection. This might happen outside of handle_messages, e.g. if the initial SSL handshake fails in transparent mode. """ raise error # pragma: nocover class LiveConnection(object): """ This facade allows interested parties (FlowMaster, inline scripts) to interface with a live connection, without exposing the internals of the ConnectionHandler. """ def __init__(self, c): self.c = c """@type: libmproxy.proxy.server.ConnectionHandler""" self._backup_server_conn = None """@type: libmproxy.proxy.connection.ServerConnection""" def change_server(self, address, ssl=None, force=False, persistent_change=False): """ Change the server connection to the specified address. @returns: True, if a new connection has been established, False, if an existing connection has been used """ address = netlib.tcp.Address.wrap(address) ssl_mismatch = (ssl is not None and ssl != self.c.server_conn.ssl_established) address_mismatch = (address != self.c.server_conn.address) if persistent_change: self._backup_server_conn = None if ssl_mismatch or address_mismatch or force: self.c.log( "Change server connection: %s:%s -> %s:%s [persistent: %s]" % ( self.c.server_conn.address.host, self.c.server_conn.address.port, address.host, address.port, persistent_change ), "debug" ) if not self._backup_server_conn and not persistent_change: self._backup_server_conn = self.c.server_conn self.c.server_conn = None else: # This is at least the second temporary change. We can kill the # current connection. self.c.del_server_connection() self.c.set_server_address(address) self.c.establish_server_connection(ask=False) if ssl: self.c.establish_ssl(server=True) return True return False def restore_server(self): # TODO: Similar to _backup_server_conn, introduce _cache_server_conn, # which keeps the changed connection open This may be beneficial if a # user is rewriting all requests from http to https or similar. if not self._backup_server_conn: return self.c.log("Restore original server connection: %s:%s -> %s:%s" % ( self.c.server_conn.address.host, self.c.server_conn.address.port, self._backup_server_conn.address.host, self._backup_server_conn.address.port ), "debug") self.c.del_server_connection() self.c.server_conn = self._backup_server_conn self._backup_server_conn = None