mitmproxy/test/test_server.py
2013-01-17 17:36:18 +02:00

119 lines
3.9 KiB
Python

from netlib import tcp
from time import sleep
import tutils, socket
"""
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
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
def test_response_timestamps(self):
# test that we notice at least 2 sec delay between timestamps
# in response object
f = self.pathod("304:b@1k:p50,2")
assert f.status_code == 304
response = self.master.state.view[0].response
assert 2 <= response.timestamp_end - response.timestamp_start <= 2.2
def test_request_timestamps(self):
# test that we notice at least 2 sec delay between timestamps
# in request object
connection = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
connection.connect(("127.0.0.1", self.proxy.port))
# call pathod server, wait a second to complete the request
connection.send("GET http://localhost:%d/p/304:b@1k HTTP/1.1\r\n"%self.server.port)
sleep(2.1)
connection.send("\r\n");
connection.recv(50000)
connection.close()
request, response = self.master.state.view[0].request, self.master.state.view[0].response
assert response.code == 304 # sanity test for our low level request
assert 2 <= request.timestamp_end - request.timestamp_start <= 2.2
def test_request_timestamps_not_affected_by_client_time(self):
# test that don't include user wait time in request's timestamps
f = self.pathod("304:b@10k")
assert f.status_code == 304
sleep(1)
f = self.pathod("304:b@10k")
assert f.status_code == 304
request = self.master.state.view[0].request
assert request.timestamp_end - request.timestamp_start <= 0.1
request = self.master.state.view[1].request
assert request.timestamp_end - request.timestamp_start <= 0.1