Source code for falcon.asgi.response

# Copyright 2019 by Kurt Griffiths
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
#    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.

"""ASGI Response class."""
try:
    from asyncio.coroutines import CoroWrapper  # type: ignore
except ImportError:  # pragma: nocover
    CoroWrapper = None  # type: ignore
from inspect import iscoroutine
from inspect import iscoroutinefunction

from falcon import response
from falcon.constants import _UNSET
from falcon.util.misc import _encode_items_to_latin1, is_python_func

__all__ = ['Response']


[docs] class Response(response.Response): """Represents an HTTP response to a client request. Note: ``Response`` is not meant to be instantiated directly by responders. Keyword Arguments: options (dict): Set of global options passed from the App handler. Attributes: status: HTTP status code or line (e.g., ``'200 OK'``). This may be set to a member of :class:`http.HTTPStatus`, an HTTP status line string or byte string (e.g., ``'200 OK'``), or an ``int``. Note: The Falcon framework itself provides a number of constants for common status codes. They all start with the ``HTTP_`` prefix, as in: ``falcon.HTTP_204``. (See also: :ref:`status`.) media (object): A serializable object supported by the media handlers configured via :class:`falcon.RequestOptions`. Note: See also :ref:`media` for more information regarding media handling. text (str): String representing response content. Note: Falcon will encode the given text as UTF-8 in the response. If the content is already a byte string, use the :attr:`data` attribute instead (it's faster). body (str): Deprecated alias for :attr:`text`. Will be removed in a future Falcon version. data (bytes): Byte string representing response content. Use this attribute in lieu of `text` when your content is already a byte string (of type ``bytes``). Warning: Always use the `text` attribute for text, or encode it first to ``bytes`` when using the `data` attribute, to ensure Unicode characters are properly encoded in the HTTP response. stream: An async iterator or generator that yields a series of byte strings that will be streamed to the ASGI server as a series of "http.response.body" events. Falcon will assume the body is complete when the iterable is exhausted or as soon as it yields ``None`` rather than an instance of ``bytes``:: async def producer(): while True: data_chunk = await read_data() if not data_chunk: break yield data_chunk resp.stream = producer Alternatively, a file-like object may be used as long as it implements an awaitable ``read()`` method:: resp.stream = await aiofiles.open('resp_data.bin', 'rb') If the object assigned to :py:attr:`~.stream` holds any resources (such as a file handle) that must be explicitly released, the object must implement a ``close()`` method. The ``close()`` method will be called after exhausting the iterable or file-like object. Note: In order to be compatible with Python 3.7+ and PEP 479, async iterators must return ``None`` instead of raising :py:class:`StopIteration`. This requirement does not apply to async generators (PEP 525). Note: If the stream length is known in advance, you may wish to also set the Content-Length header on the response. sse (coroutine): A Server-Sent Event (SSE) emitter, implemented as an async iterator or generator that yields a series of of :py:class:`falcon.asgi.SSEvent` instances. Each event will be serialized and sent to the client as HTML5 Server-Sent Events:: async def emitter(): while True: some_event = await get_next_event() if not some_event: # Send an event consisting of a single "ping" # comment to keep the connection alive. yield SSEvent() # Alternatively, one can simply yield None and # a "ping" will also be sent as above. # yield continue yield SSEvent(json=some_event, retry=5000) # ...or yield SSEvent(data=b'something', event_id=some_id) # Alternatively, you may yield anything that implements # a serialize() method that returns a byte string # conforming to the SSE event stream format. # yield some_event resp.sse = emitter() Note: When the `sse` property is set, it supersedes both the `text` and `data` properties. Note: When hosting an app that emits Server-Sent Events, the web server should be set with a relatively long keep-alive TTL to minimize the overhead of connection renegotiations. context (object): Empty object to hold any data (in its attributes) about the response which is specific to your app (e.g. session object). Falcon itself will not interact with this attribute after it has been initialized. Note: The preferred way to pass response-specific data, when using the default context type, is to set attributes directly on the `context` object. For example:: resp.context.cache_strategy = 'lru' context_type (class): Class variable that determines the factory or type to use for initializing the `context` attribute. By default, the framework will instantiate bare objects (instances of the bare :class:`falcon.Context` class). However, you may override this behavior by creating a custom child class of :class:`falcon.asgi.Response`, and then passing that new class to ``falcon.App()`` by way of the latter's `response_type` parameter. Note: When overriding `context_type` with a factory function (as opposed to a class), the function is called like a method of the current Response instance. Therefore the first argument is the Response instance itself (self). options (dict): Set of global options passed in from the App handler. headers (dict): Copy of all headers set for the response, sans cookies. Note that a new copy is created and returned each time this property is referenced. complete (bool): Set to ``True`` from within a middleware method to signal to the framework that request processing should be short-circuited (see also :ref:`Middleware <middleware>`). """ # PERF(kgriffs): These will be shadowed when set on an instance; let's # us avoid having to implement __init__ and incur the overhead of # an additional function call. _sse = None _registered_callbacks = None @property def sse(self): return self._sse @sse.setter def sse(self, value): self._sse = value
[docs] def set_stream(self, stream, content_length): """Set both `stream` and `content_length`. Although the :attr:`~falcon.asgi.Response.stream` and :attr:`~falcon.asgi.Response.content_length` properties may be set directly, using this method ensures :attr:`~falcon.asgi.Response.content_length` is not accidentally neglected when the length of the stream is known in advance. Using this method is also slightly more performant as compared to setting the properties individually. Note: If the stream length is unknown, you can set :attr:`~falcon.asgi.Response.stream` directly, and ignore :attr:`~falcon.asgi.Response.content_length`. In this case, the ASGI server may choose to use chunked encoding for HTTP/1.1 Args: stream: A readable, awaitable file-like object or async iterable that returns byte strings. If the object implements a close() method, it will be called after reading all of the data. content_length (int): Length of the stream, used for the Content-Length header in the response. """ self.stream = stream # PERF(kgriffs): Set directly rather than incur the overhead of # the self.content_length property. self._headers['content-length'] = str(content_length)
[docs] async def render_body(self): """Get the raw bytestring content for the response body. This coroutine can be awaited to get the raw data for the HTTP response body, taking into account the :attr:`~.text`, :attr:`~.data`, and :attr:`~.media` attributes. Note: This method ignores :attr:`~.stream`; the caller must check and handle that attribute directly. Returns: bytes: The UTF-8 encoded value of the `text` attribute, if set. Otherwise, the value of the `data` attribute if set, or finally the serialized value of the `media` attribute. If none of these attributes are set, ``None`` is returned. """ # NOTE(vytas): The code below is also inlined in asgi.App.__call__. text = self.text if text is None: data = self._data if data is None and self._media is not None: # NOTE(kgriffs): We use a special _UNSET singleton since # None is ambiguous (the media handler might return None). if self._media_rendered is _UNSET: if not self.content_type: self.content_type = self.options.default_media_type handler, serialize_sync, _ = self.options.media_handlers._resolve( self.content_type, self.options.default_media_type ) if serialize_sync: self._media_rendered = serialize_sync(self._media) else: self._media_rendered = await handler.serialize_async( self._media, self.content_type ) data = self._media_rendered else: try: # NOTE(kgriffs): Normally we expect text to be a string data = text.encode() except AttributeError: # NOTE(kgriffs): Assume it was a bytes object already data = text return data
[docs] def schedule(self, callback): """Schedule an async callback to run soon after sending the HTTP response. This method can be used to execute a background job after the response has been returned to the client. The callback is assumed to be an async coroutine function. It will be scheduled to run on the event loop as soon as possible. The callback will be invoked without arguments. Use :any:`functools.partial` to pass arguments to the callback as needed. Note: If an unhandled exception is raised while processing the request, the callback will not be scheduled to run. Note: When an SSE emitter has been set on the response, the callback will be scheduled before the first call to the emitter. Warning: Because coroutines run on the main request thread, care should be taken to ensure they are non-blocking. Long-running operations must use async libraries or delegate to an :class:`~concurrent.futures.Executor` pool to avoid blocking the processing of subsequent requests. Args: callback(object): An async coroutine function. The callback will be invoked without arguments. """ # NOTE(kgriffs): We also have to do the CoroWrapper check because # iscoroutine is less reliable under Python 3.6. if not iscoroutinefunction(callback): if iscoroutine(callback) or ( CoroWrapper is not None and isinstance(callback, CoroWrapper) ): raise TypeError( 'The callback object appears to ' 'be a coroutine, rather than a coroutine function. Please ' 'pass the function itself, rather than the result obtained ' 'by calling the function. ' ) elif is_python_func(callback): # pragma: nocover raise TypeError('The callback must be a coroutine function.') # NOTE(kgriffs): The implicit "else" branch is actually covered # by tests running in a Cython environment, but we can't # detect it with the coverage tool. rc = (callback, True) if not self._registered_callbacks: self._registered_callbacks = [rc] else: self._registered_callbacks.append(rc)
[docs] def schedule_sync(self, callback): """Schedule a synchronous callback to run soon after sending the HTTP response. This method can be used to execute a background job after the response has been returned to the client. The callback is assumed to be a synchronous (non-coroutine) function. It will be scheduled on the event loop's default :class:`~concurrent.futures.Executor` (which can be overridden via :meth:`asyncio.AbstractEventLoop.set_default_executor`). The callback will be invoked without arguments. Use :any:`functools.partial` to pass arguments to the callback as needed. Note: If an unhandled exception is raised while processing the request, the callback will not be scheduled to run. Note: When an SSE emitter has been set on the response, the callback will be scheduled before the first call to the emitter. Warning: Synchronous callables run on the event loop's default :class:`~concurrent.futures.Executor`, which uses an instance of :class:`~concurrent.futures.ThreadPoolExecutor` unless :meth:`asyncio.AbstractEventLoop.set_default_executor` is used to change it to something else. Due to the GIL, CPU-bound jobs will block request processing for the current process unless the default :class:`~concurrent.futures.Executor` is changed to one that is process-based instead of thread-based (e.g., an instance of :class:`concurrent.futures.ProcessPoolExecutor`). Args: callback(object): An async coroutine function or a synchronous callable. The callback will be called without arguments. """ rc = (callback, False) if not self._registered_callbacks: self._registered_callbacks = [rc] else: self._registered_callbacks.append(rc)
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Helper methods # ------------------------------------------------------------------------ def _asgi_headers(self, media_type=None): """Convert headers into the format expected by ASGI servers. Header names must be lowercased and both name and value must be byte strings. See also: https://asgi.readthedocs.io/en/latest/specs/www.html#response-start Args: media_type: Default media type to use for the Content-Type header if the header was not set explicitly (default ``None``). """ headers = self._headers # PERF(vytas): uglier inline version of Response._set_media_type if media_type is not None and 'content-type' not in headers: headers['content-type'] = media_type try: # NOTE(vytas): Supporting ISO-8859-1 for historical reasons as per # RFC 7230, Section 3.2.4; and to strive for maximum # compatibility with WSGI. # PERF(vytas): On CPython, _encode_items_to_latin1 is implemented # in Cython (with a pure Python fallback), where the resulting # C code speeds up the method substantially by directly invoking # CPython's C API functions such as PyUnicode_EncodeLatin1. items = _encode_items_to_latin1(headers) except UnicodeEncodeError as ex: # TODO(vytas): In 3.1.0, update this error message to highlight the # fact that we decided to allow ISO-8859-1? raise ValueError( 'The modern series of HTTP standards require that header ' f'names and values use only ASCII characters: {ex}' ) if self._extra_headers: items += [ (n.encode('ascii'), v.encode('ascii')) for n, v in self._extra_headers ] # NOTE(kgriffs): It is important to append these after self._extra_headers # in case the latter contains Set-Cookie headers that should be # overridden by a call to unset_cookie(). if self._cookies is not None: # PERF(tbug): # The below implementation is ~23% faster than # the alternative: # # self._cookies.output().split("\\r\\n") # # Even without the .split("\\r\\n"), the below # is still ~17% faster, so don't use .output() items += [ (b'set-cookie', c.OutputString().encode('ascii')) for c in self._cookies.values() ] return items