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610 lines
22 KiB
Python
610 lines
22 KiB
Python
"""Exception classes for CherryPy.
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CherryPy provides (and uses) exceptions for declaring that the HTTP response
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should be a status other than the default "200 OK". You can ``raise`` them like
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normal Python exceptions. You can also call them and they will raise
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themselves; this means you can set an
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:class:`HTTPError<cherrypy._cperror.HTTPError>`
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or :class:`HTTPRedirect<cherrypy._cperror.HTTPRedirect>` as the
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:attr:`request.handler<cherrypy._cprequest.Request.handler>`.
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.. _redirectingpost:
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Redirecting POST
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================
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When you GET a resource and are redirected by the server to another Location,
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there's generally no problem since GET is both a "safe method" (there should
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be no side-effects) and an "idempotent method" (multiple calls are no different
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than a single call).
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POST, however, is neither safe nor idempotent--if you
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charge a credit card, you don't want to be charged twice by a redirect!
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For this reason, *none* of the 3xx responses permit a user-agent (browser) to
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resubmit a POST on redirection without first confirming the action with the
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user:
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===== ================================= ===========
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300 Multiple Choices Confirm with the user
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301 Moved Permanently Confirm with the user
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302 Found (Object moved temporarily) Confirm with the user
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303 See Other GET the new URI--no confirmation
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304 Not modified (for conditional GET only--POST should not raise this error)
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305 Use Proxy Confirm with the user
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307 Temporary Redirect Confirm with the user
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===== ================================= ===========
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However, browsers have historically implemented these restrictions poorly;
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in particular, many browsers do not force the user to confirm 301, 302
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or 307 when redirecting POST. For this reason, CherryPy defaults to 303,
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which most user-agents appear to have implemented correctly. Therefore, if
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you raise HTTPRedirect for a POST request, the user-agent will most likely
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attempt to GET the new URI (without asking for confirmation from the user).
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We realize this is confusing for developers, but it's the safest thing we
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could do. You are of course free to raise ``HTTPRedirect(uri, status=302)``
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or any other 3xx status if you know what you're doing, but given the
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environment, we couldn't let any of those be the default.
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Custom Error Handling
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=====================
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.. image:: /refman/cperrors.gif
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Anticipated HTTP responses
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--------------------------
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The 'error_page' config namespace can be used to provide custom HTML output for
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expected responses (like 404 Not Found). Supply a filename from which the
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output will be read. The contents will be interpolated with the values
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%(status)s, %(message)s, %(traceback)s, and %(version)s using plain old Python
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`string formatting <http://docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html#string-formatting-operations>`_.
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::
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_cp_config = {
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'error_page.404': os.path.join(localDir, "static/index.html")
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}
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Beginning in version 3.1, you may also provide a function or other callable as
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an error_page entry. It will be passed the same status, message, traceback and
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version arguments that are interpolated into templates::
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def error_page_402(status, message, traceback, version):
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return "Error %s - Well, I'm very sorry but you haven't paid!" % status
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cherrypy.config.update({'error_page.402': error_page_402})
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Also in 3.1, in addition to the numbered error codes, you may also supply
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"error_page.default" to handle all codes which do not have their own error_page
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entry.
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Unanticipated errors
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--------------------
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CherryPy also has a generic error handling mechanism: whenever an unanticipated
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error occurs in your code, it will call
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:func:`Request.error_response<cherrypy._cprequest.Request.error_response>` to
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set the response status, headers, and body. By default, this is the same
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output as
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:class:`HTTPError(500) <cherrypy._cperror.HTTPError>`. If you want to provide
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some other behavior, you generally replace "request.error_response".
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Here is some sample code that shows how to display a custom error message and
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send an e-mail containing the error::
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from cherrypy import _cperror
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def handle_error():
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cherrypy.response.status = 500
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cherrypy.response.body = [
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"<html><body>Sorry, an error occured</body></html>"
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]
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sendMail('error@domain.com',
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'Error in your web app',
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_cperror.format_exc())
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class Root:
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_cp_config = {'request.error_response': handle_error}
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Note that you have to explicitly set
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:attr:`response.body <cherrypy._cprequest.Response.body>`
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and not simply return an error message as a result.
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"""
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from cgi import escape as _escape
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from sys import exc_info as _exc_info
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from traceback import format_exception as _format_exception
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from cherrypy._cpcompat import str, bytestr, iteritems, ntob
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from cherrypy._cpcompat import tonative, urljoin as _urljoin
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from cherrypy.lib import httputil as _httputil
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class CherryPyException(Exception):
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"""A base class for CherryPy exceptions."""
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pass
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class TimeoutError(CherryPyException):
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"""Exception raised when Response.timed_out is detected."""
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pass
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class InternalRedirect(CherryPyException):
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"""Exception raised to switch to the handler for a different URL.
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This exception will redirect processing to another path within the site
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(without informing the client). Provide the new path as an argument when
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raising the exception. Provide any params in the querystring for the new
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URL.
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"""
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def __init__(self, path, query_string=""):
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import cherrypy
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self.request = cherrypy.serving.request
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self.query_string = query_string
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if "?" in path:
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# Separate any params included in the path
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path, self.query_string = path.split("?", 1)
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# Note that urljoin will "do the right thing" whether url is:
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# 1. a URL relative to root (e.g. "/dummy")
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# 2. a URL relative to the current path
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# Note that any query string will be discarded.
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path = _urljoin(self.request.path_info, path)
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# Set a 'path' member attribute so that code which traps this
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# error can have access to it.
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self.path = path
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CherryPyException.__init__(self, path, self.query_string)
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class HTTPRedirect(CherryPyException):
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"""Exception raised when the request should be redirected.
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This exception will force a HTTP redirect to the URL or URL's you give it.
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The new URL must be passed as the first argument to the Exception,
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e.g., HTTPRedirect(newUrl). Multiple URLs are allowed in a list.
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If a URL is absolute, it will be used as-is. If it is relative, it is
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assumed to be relative to the current cherrypy.request.path_info.
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If one of the provided URL is a unicode object, it will be encoded
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using the default encoding or the one passed in parameter.
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There are multiple types of redirect, from which you can select via the
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``status`` argument. If you do not provide a ``status`` arg, it defaults to
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303 (or 302 if responding with HTTP/1.0).
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Examples::
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raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect("")
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raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect("/abs/path", 307)
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raise cherrypy.HTTPRedirect(["path1", "path2?a=1&b=2"], 301)
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See :ref:`redirectingpost` for additional caveats.
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"""
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status = None
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"""The integer HTTP status code to emit."""
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urls = None
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"""The list of URL's to emit."""
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encoding = 'utf-8'
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"""The encoding when passed urls are not native strings"""
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def __init__(self, urls, status=None, encoding=None):
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import cherrypy
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request = cherrypy.serving.request
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if isinstance(urls, str):
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urls = [urls]
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abs_urls = []
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for url in urls:
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url = tonative(url, encoding or self.encoding)
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# Note that urljoin will "do the right thing" whether url is:
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# 1. a complete URL with host (e.g. "http://www.example.com/test")
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# 2. a URL relative to root (e.g. "/dummy")
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# 3. a URL relative to the current path
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# Note that any query string in cherrypy.request is discarded.
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url = _urljoin(cherrypy.url(), url)
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abs_urls.append(url)
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self.urls = abs_urls
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# RFC 2616 indicates a 301 response code fits our goal; however,
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# browser support for 301 is quite messy. Do 302/303 instead. See
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# http://www.alanflavell.org.uk/www/post-redirect.html
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if status is None:
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if request.protocol >= (1, 1):
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status = 303
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else:
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status = 302
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else:
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status = int(status)
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if status < 300 or status > 399:
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raise ValueError("status must be between 300 and 399.")
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self.status = status
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CherryPyException.__init__(self, abs_urls, status)
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def set_response(self):
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"""Modify cherrypy.response status, headers, and body to represent
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self.
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CherryPy uses this internally, but you can also use it to create an
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HTTPRedirect object and set its output without *raising* the exception.
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"""
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import cherrypy
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response = cherrypy.serving.response
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response.status = status = self.status
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if status in (300, 301, 302, 303, 307):
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response.headers['Content-Type'] = "text/html;charset=utf-8"
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# "The ... URI SHOULD be given by the Location field
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# in the response."
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response.headers['Location'] = self.urls[0]
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# "Unless the request method was HEAD, the entity of the response
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# SHOULD contain a short hypertext note with a hyperlink to the
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# new URI(s)."
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msg = {
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300: "This resource can be found at ",
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301: "This resource has permanently moved to ",
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302: "This resource resides temporarily at ",
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303: "This resource can be found at ",
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307: "This resource has moved temporarily to ",
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}[status]
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msg += '<a href=%s>%s</a>.'
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from xml.sax import saxutils
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msgs = [msg % (saxutils.quoteattr(u), u) for u in self.urls]
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response.body = ntob("<br />\n".join(msgs), 'utf-8')
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# Previous code may have set C-L, so we have to reset it
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# (allow finalize to set it).
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response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
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elif status == 304:
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# Not Modified.
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# "The response MUST include the following header fields:
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# Date, unless its omission is required by section 14.18.1"
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# The "Date" header should have been set in Response.__init__
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# "...the response SHOULD NOT include other entity-headers."
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for key in ('Allow', 'Content-Encoding', 'Content-Language',
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'Content-Length', 'Content-Location', 'Content-MD5',
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'Content-Range', 'Content-Type', 'Expires',
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'Last-Modified'):
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if key in response.headers:
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del response.headers[key]
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# "The 304 response MUST NOT contain a message-body."
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response.body = None
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# Previous code may have set C-L, so we have to reset it.
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response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
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elif status == 305:
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# Use Proxy.
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# self.urls[0] should be the URI of the proxy.
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response.headers['Location'] = self.urls[0]
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response.body = None
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# Previous code may have set C-L, so we have to reset it.
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response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
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else:
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raise ValueError("The %s status code is unknown." % status)
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def __call__(self):
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"""Use this exception as a request.handler (raise self)."""
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raise self
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def clean_headers(status):
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"""Remove any headers which should not apply to an error response."""
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import cherrypy
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response = cherrypy.serving.response
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# Remove headers which applied to the original content,
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# but do not apply to the error page.
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respheaders = response.headers
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for key in ["Accept-Ranges", "Age", "ETag", "Location", "Retry-After",
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"Vary", "Content-Encoding", "Content-Length", "Expires",
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"Content-Location", "Content-MD5", "Last-Modified"]:
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if key in respheaders:
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del respheaders[key]
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if status != 416:
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# A server sending a response with status code 416 (Requested
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# range not satisfiable) SHOULD include a Content-Range field
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# with a byte-range-resp-spec of "*". The instance-length
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# specifies the current length of the selected resource.
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# A response with status code 206 (Partial Content) MUST NOT
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# include a Content-Range field with a byte-range- resp-spec of "*".
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if "Content-Range" in respheaders:
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del respheaders["Content-Range"]
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class HTTPError(CherryPyException):
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"""Exception used to return an HTTP error code (4xx-5xx) to the client.
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This exception can be used to automatically send a response using a
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http status code, with an appropriate error page. It takes an optional
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``status`` argument (which must be between 400 and 599); it defaults to 500
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("Internal Server Error"). It also takes an optional ``message`` argument,
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which will be returned in the response body. See
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`RFC2616 <http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.4>`_
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for a complete list of available error codes and when to use them.
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Examples::
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raise cherrypy.HTTPError(403)
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raise cherrypy.HTTPError(
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"403 Forbidden", "You are not allowed to access this resource.")
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"""
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status = None
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"""The HTTP status code. May be of type int or str (with a Reason-Phrase).
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"""
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code = None
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"""The integer HTTP status code."""
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reason = None
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"""The HTTP Reason-Phrase string."""
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def __init__(self, status=500, message=None):
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self.status = status
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try:
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self.code, self.reason, defaultmsg = _httputil.valid_status(status)
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except ValueError:
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raise self.__class__(500, _exc_info()[1].args[0])
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if self.code < 400 or self.code > 599:
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raise ValueError("status must be between 400 and 599.")
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# See http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0352/
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# self.message = message
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self._message = message or defaultmsg
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CherryPyException.__init__(self, status, message)
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def set_response(self):
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"""Modify cherrypy.response status, headers, and body to represent
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self.
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CherryPy uses this internally, but you can also use it to create an
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HTTPError object and set its output without *raising* the exception.
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"""
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import cherrypy
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response = cherrypy.serving.response
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clean_headers(self.code)
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# In all cases, finalize will be called after this method,
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# so don't bother cleaning up response values here.
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response.status = self.status
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tb = None
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if cherrypy.serving.request.show_tracebacks:
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tb = format_exc()
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response.headers.pop('Content-Length', None)
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content = self.get_error_page(self.status, traceback=tb,
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message=self._message)
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response.body = content
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_be_ie_unfriendly(self.code)
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def get_error_page(self, *args, **kwargs):
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return get_error_page(*args, **kwargs)
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def __call__(self):
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"""Use this exception as a request.handler (raise self)."""
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raise self
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class NotFound(HTTPError):
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"""Exception raised when a URL could not be mapped to any handler (404).
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This is equivalent to raising
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:class:`HTTPError("404 Not Found") <cherrypy._cperror.HTTPError>`.
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"""
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def __init__(self, path=None):
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if path is None:
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import cherrypy
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request = cherrypy.serving.request
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path = request.script_name + request.path_info
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self.args = (path,)
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HTTPError.__init__(self, 404, "The path '%s' was not found." % path)
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_HTTPErrorTemplate = '''<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC
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"-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
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"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
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<html>
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<head>
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></meta>
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<title>%(status)s</title>
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<style type="text/css">
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#powered_by {
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margin-top: 20px;
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border-top: 2px solid black;
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font-style: italic;
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}
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#traceback {
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color: red;
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}
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</style>
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</head>
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<body>
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<h2>%(status)s</h2>
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<p>%(message)s</p>
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<pre id="traceback">%(traceback)s</pre>
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<div id="powered_by">
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<span>
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Powered by <a href="http://www.cherrypy.org">CherryPy %(version)s</a>
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</span>
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</div>
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</body>
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</html>
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'''
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def get_error_page(status, **kwargs):
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"""Return an HTML page, containing a pretty error response.
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status should be an int or a str.
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kwargs will be interpolated into the page template.
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"""
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import cherrypy
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try:
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code, reason, message = _httputil.valid_status(status)
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except ValueError:
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raise cherrypy.HTTPError(500, _exc_info()[1].args[0])
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# We can't use setdefault here, because some
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# callers send None for kwarg values.
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if kwargs.get('status') is None:
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kwargs['status'] = "%s %s" % (code, reason)
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if kwargs.get('message') is None:
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kwargs['message'] = message
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if kwargs.get('traceback') is None:
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kwargs['traceback'] = ''
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if kwargs.get('version') is None:
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kwargs['version'] = cherrypy.__version__
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for k, v in iteritems(kwargs):
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if v is None:
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kwargs[k] = ""
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else:
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kwargs[k] = _escape(kwargs[k])
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# Use a custom template or callable for the error page?
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pages = cherrypy.serving.request.error_page
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error_page = pages.get(code) or pages.get('default')
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# Default template, can be overridden below.
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template = _HTTPErrorTemplate
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if error_page:
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try:
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if hasattr(error_page, '__call__'):
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# The caller function may be setting headers manually,
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# so we delegate to it completely. We may be returning
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# an iterator as well as a string here.
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#
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# We *must* make sure any content is not unicode.
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result = error_page(**kwargs)
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if cherrypy.lib.is_iterator(result):
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from cherrypy.lib.encoding import UTF8StreamEncoder
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|
return UTF8StreamEncoder(result)
|
|
elif isinstance(result, cherrypy._cpcompat.unicodestr):
|
|
return result.encode('utf-8')
|
|
else:
|
|
if not isinstance(result, cherrypy._cpcompat.bytestr):
|
|
raise ValueError('error page function did not '
|
|
'return a bytestring, unicodestring or an '
|
|
'iterator - returned object of type %s.'
|
|
% (type(result).__name__))
|
|
return result
|
|
else:
|
|
# Load the template from this path.
|
|
template = tonative(open(error_page, 'rb').read())
|
|
except:
|
|
e = _format_exception(*_exc_info())[-1]
|
|
m = kwargs['message']
|
|
if m:
|
|
m += "<br />"
|
|
m += "In addition, the custom error page failed:\n<br />%s" % e
|
|
kwargs['message'] = m
|
|
|
|
response = cherrypy.serving.response
|
|
response.headers['Content-Type'] = "text/html;charset=utf-8"
|
|
result = template % kwargs
|
|
return result.encode('utf-8')
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_ie_friendly_error_sizes = {
|
|
400: 512, 403: 256, 404: 512, 405: 256,
|
|
406: 512, 408: 512, 409: 512, 410: 256,
|
|
500: 512, 501: 512, 505: 512,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
def _be_ie_unfriendly(status):
|
|
import cherrypy
|
|
response = cherrypy.serving.response
|
|
|
|
# For some statuses, Internet Explorer 5+ shows "friendly error
|
|
# messages" instead of our response.body if the body is smaller
|
|
# than a given size. Fix this by returning a body over that size
|
|
# (by adding whitespace).
|
|
# See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q218155/
|
|
s = _ie_friendly_error_sizes.get(status, 0)
|
|
if s:
|
|
s += 1
|
|
# Since we are issuing an HTTP error status, we assume that
|
|
# the entity is short, and we should just collapse it.
|
|
content = response.collapse_body()
|
|
l = len(content)
|
|
if l and l < s:
|
|
# IN ADDITION: the response must be written to IE
|
|
# in one chunk or it will still get replaced! Bah.
|
|
content = content + (ntob(" ") * (s - l))
|
|
response.body = content
|
|
response.headers['Content-Length'] = str(len(content))
|
|
|
|
|
|
def format_exc(exc=None):
|
|
"""Return exc (or sys.exc_info if None), formatted."""
|
|
try:
|
|
if exc is None:
|
|
exc = _exc_info()
|
|
if exc == (None, None, None):
|
|
return ""
|
|
import traceback
|
|
return "".join(traceback.format_exception(*exc))
|
|
finally:
|
|
del exc
|
|
|
|
|
|
def bare_error(extrabody=None):
|
|
"""Produce status, headers, body for a critical error.
|
|
|
|
Returns a triple without calling any other questionable functions,
|
|
so it should be as error-free as possible. Call it from an HTTP server
|
|
if you get errors outside of the request.
|
|
|
|
If extrabody is None, a friendly but rather unhelpful error message
|
|
is set in the body. If extrabody is a string, it will be appended
|
|
as-is to the body.
|
|
"""
|
|
|
|
# The whole point of this function is to be a last line-of-defense
|
|
# in handling errors. That is, it must not raise any errors itself;
|
|
# it cannot be allowed to fail. Therefore, don't add to it!
|
|
# In particular, don't call any other CP functions.
|
|
|
|
body = ntob("Unrecoverable error in the server.")
|
|
if extrabody is not None:
|
|
if not isinstance(extrabody, bytestr):
|
|
extrabody = extrabody.encode('utf-8')
|
|
body += ntob("\n") + extrabody
|
|
|
|
return (ntob("500 Internal Server Error"),
|
|
[(ntob('Content-Type'), ntob('text/plain')),
|
|
(ntob('Content-Length'), ntob(str(len(body)), 'ISO-8859-1'))],
|
|
[body])
|