# When adding new functions/classes to this file, you need to also add # their types to request.pyi in this directory (a mypy stubs file that # we use to ensure mypy does correct type inference with REQ, which it # can't do by default due to the dynamic nature of REQ). # # Because request.pyi exists, the type annotations in this file are # mostly not processed by mypy. from functools import wraps import ujson from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _ from zerver.lib.exceptions import JsonableError, ErrorCode from django.http import HttpRequest, HttpResponse from typing import Any, Callable, Type class RequestVariableMissingError(JsonableError): code = ErrorCode.REQUEST_VARIABLE_MISSING data_fields = ['var_name'] def __init__(self, var_name: str) -> None: self.var_name = var_name # type: str @staticmethod def msg_format() -> str: return _("Missing '{var_name}' argument") class RequestVariableConversionError(JsonableError): code = ErrorCode.REQUEST_VARIABLE_INVALID data_fields = ['var_name', 'bad_value'] def __init__(self, var_name: str, bad_value: Any) -> None: self.var_name = var_name # type: str self.bad_value = bad_value @staticmethod def msg_format() -> str: return _("Bad value for '{var_name}': {bad_value}") # Used in conjunction with @has_request_variables, below class REQ: # NotSpecified is a sentinel value for determining whether a # default value was specified for a request variable. We can't # use None because that could be a valid, user-specified default class _NotSpecified: pass NotSpecified = _NotSpecified() def __init__(self, whence: str=None, *, converter: Callable[[Any], Any]=None, default: Any=NotSpecified, validator: Callable[[Any], Any]=None, argument_type: str=None, type: Type=None) -> None: """whence: the name of the request variable that should be used for this parameter. Defaults to a request variable of the same name as the parameter. converter: a function that takes a string and returns a new value. If specified, this will be called on the request variable value before passing to the function default: a value to be used for the argument if the parameter is missing in the request validator: similar to converter, but takes an already parsed JSON data structure. If specified, we will parse the JSON request variable value before passing to the function argument_type: pass 'body' to extract the parsed JSON corresponding to the request body type: a hint to typing (using mypy) what the type of this parameter is. Currently only typically necessary if default=None and the type cannot be inferred in another way (eg. via converter). """ self.post_var_name = whence self.func_var_name = None # type: str self.converter = converter self.validator = validator self.default = default self.argument_type = argument_type if converter and validator: # Not user-facing, so shouldn't be tagged for translation raise AssertionError('converter and validator are mutually exclusive') # Extracts variables from the request object and passes them as # named function arguments. The request object must be the first # argument to the function. # # To use, assign a function parameter a default value that is an # instance of the REQ class. That parameter will then be automatically # populated from the HTTP request. The request object must be the # first argument to the decorated function. # # This should generally be the innermost (syntactically bottommost) # decorator applied to a view, since other decorators won't preserve # the default parameter values used by has_request_variables. # # Note that this can't be used in helper functions which are not # expected to call json_error or json_success, as it uses json_error # internally when it encounters an error def has_request_variables(view_func): # type: (Callable[[HttpRequest, Any, Any], HttpResponse]) -> Callable[[HttpRequest, *Any, **Any], HttpResponse] num_params = view_func.__code__.co_argcount if view_func.__defaults__ is None: num_default_params = 0 else: num_default_params = len(view_func.__defaults__) default_param_names = view_func.__code__.co_varnames[num_params - num_default_params:] default_param_values = view_func.__defaults__ if default_param_values is None: default_param_values = [] post_params = [] for (name, value) in zip(default_param_names, default_param_values): if isinstance(value, REQ): value.func_var_name = name if value.post_var_name is None: value.post_var_name = name post_params.append(value) @wraps(view_func) def _wrapped_view_func(request: HttpRequest, *args: Any, **kwargs: Any) -> HttpResponse: for param in post_params: if param.func_var_name in kwargs: continue if param.argument_type == 'body': try: val = ujson.loads(request.body) except ValueError: raise JsonableError(_('Malformed JSON')) kwargs[param.func_var_name] = val continue elif param.argument_type is not None: # This is a view bug, not a user error, and thus should throw a 500. raise Exception(_("Invalid argument type")) default_assigned = False try: query_params = request.GET.copy() query_params.update(request.POST) val = query_params[param.post_var_name] except KeyError: if param.default is REQ.NotSpecified: raise RequestVariableMissingError(param.post_var_name) val = param.default default_assigned = True if param.converter is not None and not default_assigned: try: val = param.converter(val) except JsonableError: raise except Exception: raise RequestVariableConversionError(param.post_var_name, val) # Validators are like converters, but they don't handle JSON parsing; we do. if param.validator is not None and not default_assigned: try: val = ujson.loads(val) except Exception: raise JsonableError(_('Argument "%s" is not valid JSON.') % (param.post_var_name,)) error = param.validator(param.post_var_name, val) if error: raise JsonableError(error) kwargs[param.func_var_name] = val return view_func(request, *args, **kwargs) return _wrapped_view_func