zulip/zerver/tests/test_urls.py

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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import importlib
import os
import ujson
import django.core.urlresolvers
errors: Force a super-simpler handler for 400 errors. This works around a bug in Django in handling the error case of a client sending an inappropriate HTTP `Host:` header. Various internal Django machinery expects to be able to casually call `request.get_host()`, which will attempt to parse that header, so an exception will be raised. The exception-handling machinery attempts to catch that exception and just turn it into a 400 response... but in a certain case, that machinery itself ends up trying to call `request.get_host()`, and we end up with an uncaught exception that causes a 500 response, a chain of tracebacks in the logs, and an email to the server admins. See example below. That `request.get_host` call comes in the midst of some CSRF-related middleware, which doesn't even serve any function unless you have a form in your 400 response page that you want CSRF protection for. We use the default 400 response page, which is a 26-byte static HTML error message. So, just send that with no further ado. Example exception from server logs (lightly edited): 2017-10-08 09:51:50.835 ERR [django.security.DisallowedHost] Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. 2017-10-08 09:51:50.835 ERR [django.request] Internal Server Error: /loginWithSetCookie Traceback (most recent call last): File ".../django/core/handlers/exception.py", line 41, in inner response = get_response(request) File ".../django/utils/deprecation.py", line 138, in __call__ response = self.process_request(request) File ".../django/middleware/common.py", line 57, in process_request host = request.get_host() File ".../django/http/request.py", line 113, in get_host raise DisallowedHost(msg) django.core.exceptions.DisallowedHost: Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred: Traceback (most recent call last): File ".../django/core/handlers/exception.py", line 109, in get_exception_response response = callback(request, **dict(param_dict, exception=exception)) File ".../django/utils/decorators.py", line 145, in _wrapped_view result = middleware.process_view(request, view_func, args, kwargs) File ".../django/middleware/csrf.py", line 276, in process_view good_referer = request.get_host() File ".../django/http/request.py", line 113, in get_host raise DisallowedHost(msg) django.core.exceptions.DisallowedHost: Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS.
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from django.test import TestCase, Client
from typing import List, Optional
from zerver.lib.test_classes import ZulipTestCase
from zerver.lib.test_runner import slow
from zerver.models import Stream
from zproject import urls
class PublicURLTest(ZulipTestCase):
"""
Account creation URLs are accessible even when not logged in. Authenticated
URLs redirect to a page.
"""
def fetch(self, method: str, urls: List[str], expected_status: int) -> None:
for url in urls:
# e.g. self.client_post(url) if method is "post"
response = getattr(self, method)(url)
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, expected_status,
msg="Expected %d, received %d for %s to %s" % (
expected_status, response.status_code, method, url))
@slow("Tests dozens of endpoints, including all of our /help/ documents")
def test_public_urls(self) -> None:
"""
Test which views are accessible when not logged in.
"""
# FIXME: We should also test the Tornado URLs -- this codepath
# can't do so because this Django test mechanism doesn't go
# through Tornado.
denmark_stream_id = Stream.objects.get(name='Denmark').id
get_urls = {200: ["/accounts/home/", "/accounts/login/"
"/en/accounts/home/", "/ru/accounts/home/",
"/en/accounts/login/", "/ru/accounts/login/",
"/help/"],
302: ["/", "/en/", "/ru/"],
401: ["/json/streams/%d/members" % (denmark_stream_id,),
"/api/v1/users/me/subscriptions",
"/api/v1/messages",
"/json/messages",
"/api/v1/streams",
],
404: ["/help/nonexistent", "/help/include/admin"],
}
# Add all files in 'templates/zerver/help' directory (except for 'main.html' and
# 'index.md') to `get_urls['200']` list.
for doc in os.listdir('./templates/zerver/help'):
if doc.startswith(".") or '~' in doc or '#' in doc:
continue # nocoverage -- just here for convenience
if doc not in {'main.html', 'index.md', 'include'}:
get_urls[200].append('/help/' + os.path.splitext(doc)[0]) # Strip the extension.
post_urls = {200: ["/accounts/login/"],
302: ["/accounts/logout/"],
401: ["/json/messages",
"/json/invites",
"/json/subscriptions/exists",
"/api/v1/users/me/subscriptions/properties",
"/json/fetch_api_key",
"/json/users/me/pointer",
"/json/users/me/subscriptions",
"/api/v1/users/me/subscriptions",
],
400: ["/api/v1/external/github",
"/api/v1/fetch_api_key",
],
}
patch_urls = {
401: ["/json/settings"],
}
put_urls = {401: ["/json/users/me/pointer"],
}
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for status_code, url_set in get_urls.items():
self.fetch("client_get", url_set, status_code)
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for status_code, url_set in post_urls.items():
self.fetch("client_post", url_set, status_code)
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for status_code, url_set in patch_urls.items():
self.fetch("client_patch", url_set, status_code)
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for status_code, url_set in put_urls.items():
self.fetch("client_put", url_set, status_code)
def test_get_gcid_when_not_configured(self) -> None:
with self.settings(GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID=None):
resp = self.client_get("/api/v1/fetch_google_client_id")
self.assertEqual(400, resp.status_code,
msg="Expected 400, received %d for GET /api/v1/fetch_google_client_id" % (
resp.status_code,))
self.assertEqual('error', resp.json()['result'])
def test_get_gcid_when_configured(self) -> None:
with self.settings(GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID="ABCD"):
resp = self.client_get("/api/v1/fetch_google_client_id")
self.assertEqual(200, resp.status_code,
msg="Expected 200, received %d for GET /api/v1/fetch_google_client_id" % (
resp.status_code,))
data = ujson.loads(resp.content)
self.assertEqual('success', data['result'])
self.assertEqual('ABCD', data['google_client_id'])
class URLResolutionTest(TestCase):
def get_callback_string(self, pattern: django.core.urlresolvers.RegexURLPattern) -> Optional[str]:
callback_str = hasattr(pattern, 'lookup_str') and 'lookup_str'
callback_str = callback_str or '_callback_str'
return getattr(pattern, callback_str, None)
def check_function_exists(self, module_name: str, view: str) -> None:
module = importlib.import_module(module_name)
self.assertTrue(hasattr(module, view), "View %s.%s does not exist" % (module_name, view))
# Tests that all views in urls.v1_api_and_json_patterns exist
def test_rest_api_url_resolution(self) -> None:
for pattern in urls.v1_api_and_json_patterns:
callback_str = self.get_callback_string(pattern)
if callback_str and hasattr(pattern, "default_args"):
for func_string in pattern.default_args.values():
if isinstance(func_string, tuple):
func_string = func_string[0]
module_name, view = func_string.rsplit('.', 1)
self.check_function_exists(module_name, view)
# Tests function-based views declared in urls.urlpatterns for
# whether the function exists. We at present do not test the
# class-based views.
def test_non_api_url_resolution(self) -> None:
for pattern in urls.urlpatterns:
callback_str = self.get_callback_string(pattern)
if callback_str:
(module_name, base_view) = callback_str.rsplit(".", 1)
self.check_function_exists(module_name, base_view)
errors: Force a super-simpler handler for 400 errors. This works around a bug in Django in handling the error case of a client sending an inappropriate HTTP `Host:` header. Various internal Django machinery expects to be able to casually call `request.get_host()`, which will attempt to parse that header, so an exception will be raised. The exception-handling machinery attempts to catch that exception and just turn it into a 400 response... but in a certain case, that machinery itself ends up trying to call `request.get_host()`, and we end up with an uncaught exception that causes a 500 response, a chain of tracebacks in the logs, and an email to the server admins. See example below. That `request.get_host` call comes in the midst of some CSRF-related middleware, which doesn't even serve any function unless you have a form in your 400 response page that you want CSRF protection for. We use the default 400 response page, which is a 26-byte static HTML error message. So, just send that with no further ado. Example exception from server logs (lightly edited): 2017-10-08 09:51:50.835 ERR [django.security.DisallowedHost] Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. 2017-10-08 09:51:50.835 ERR [django.request] Internal Server Error: /loginWithSetCookie Traceback (most recent call last): File ".../django/core/handlers/exception.py", line 41, in inner response = get_response(request) File ".../django/utils/deprecation.py", line 138, in __call__ response = self.process_request(request) File ".../django/middleware/common.py", line 57, in process_request host = request.get_host() File ".../django/http/request.py", line 113, in get_host raise DisallowedHost(msg) django.core.exceptions.DisallowedHost: Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred: Traceback (most recent call last): File ".../django/core/handlers/exception.py", line 109, in get_exception_response response = callback(request, **dict(param_dict, exception=exception)) File ".../django/utils/decorators.py", line 145, in _wrapped_view result = middleware.process_view(request, view_func, args, kwargs) File ".../django/middleware/csrf.py", line 276, in process_view good_referer = request.get_host() File ".../django/http/request.py", line 113, in get_host raise DisallowedHost(msg) django.core.exceptions.DisallowedHost: Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS.
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class ErrorPageTest(TestCase):
def test_bogus_http_host(self) -> None:
errors: Force a super-simpler handler for 400 errors. This works around a bug in Django in handling the error case of a client sending an inappropriate HTTP `Host:` header. Various internal Django machinery expects to be able to casually call `request.get_host()`, which will attempt to parse that header, so an exception will be raised. The exception-handling machinery attempts to catch that exception and just turn it into a 400 response... but in a certain case, that machinery itself ends up trying to call `request.get_host()`, and we end up with an uncaught exception that causes a 500 response, a chain of tracebacks in the logs, and an email to the server admins. See example below. That `request.get_host` call comes in the midst of some CSRF-related middleware, which doesn't even serve any function unless you have a form in your 400 response page that you want CSRF protection for. We use the default 400 response page, which is a 26-byte static HTML error message. So, just send that with no further ado. Example exception from server logs (lightly edited): 2017-10-08 09:51:50.835 ERR [django.security.DisallowedHost] Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. 2017-10-08 09:51:50.835 ERR [django.request] Internal Server Error: /loginWithSetCookie Traceback (most recent call last): File ".../django/core/handlers/exception.py", line 41, in inner response = get_response(request) File ".../django/utils/deprecation.py", line 138, in __call__ response = self.process_request(request) File ".../django/middleware/common.py", line 57, in process_request host = request.get_host() File ".../django/http/request.py", line 113, in get_host raise DisallowedHost(msg) django.core.exceptions.DisallowedHost: Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred: Traceback (most recent call last): File ".../django/core/handlers/exception.py", line 109, in get_exception_response response = callback(request, **dict(param_dict, exception=exception)) File ".../django/utils/decorators.py", line 145, in _wrapped_view result = middleware.process_view(request, view_func, args, kwargs) File ".../django/middleware/csrf.py", line 276, in process_view good_referer = request.get_host() File ".../django/http/request.py", line 113, in get_host raise DisallowedHost(msg) django.core.exceptions.DisallowedHost: Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'example.com'. You may need to add 'example.com' to ALLOWED_HOSTS.
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# This tests that we've successfully worked around a certain bug in
# Django's exception handling. The enforce_csrf_checks=True,
# secure=True, and HTTP_REFERER with an `https:` scheme are all
# there to get us down just the right path for Django to blow up
# when presented with an HTTP_HOST that's not a valid DNS name.
client = Client(enforce_csrf_checks=True)
result = client.post('/json/users',
secure=True,
HTTP_REFERER='https://somewhere',
HTTP_HOST='$nonsense')
self.assertEqual(result.status_code, 400)