from typing import Any, List, Mapping, Optional import orjson from django.http import HttpRequest, HttpResponse, HttpResponseNotAllowed from zerver.lib.exceptions import JsonableError, UnauthorizedError def json_unauthorized( message: Optional[str] = None, www_authenticate: Optional[str] = None ) -> HttpResponse: return json_response_from_error( UnauthorizedError(msg=message, www_authenticate=www_authenticate) ) def json_method_not_allowed(methods: List[str]) -> HttpResponseNotAllowed: resp = HttpResponseNotAllowed(methods) resp.content = orjson.dumps( {"result": "error", "msg": "Method Not Allowed", "allowed_methods": methods} ) return resp def json_response( res_type: str = "success", msg: str = "", data: Mapping[str, Any] = {}, status: int = 200 ) -> HttpResponse: content = {"result": res_type, "msg": msg} content.update(data) # Because we don't pass a default handler, OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATETIME # actually causes orjson to raise a TypeError on datetime objects. This # helps us avoid relying on the particular serialization used by orjson. return HttpResponse( content=orjson.dumps( content, option=orjson.OPT_APPEND_NEWLINE | orjson.OPT_PASSTHROUGH_DATETIME, ), content_type="application/json", status=status, ) def json_success(request: HttpRequest, data: Mapping[str, Any] = {}) -> HttpResponse: return json_response(data=data) def json_response_from_error(exception: JsonableError) -> HttpResponse: """ This should only be needed in middleware; in app code, just raise. When app code raises a JsonableError, the JsonErrorHandler middleware takes care of transforming it into a response by calling this function. """ response = json_response( "error", msg=exception.msg, data=exception.data, status=exception.http_status_code ) for header, value in exception.extra_headers.items(): response[header] = value return response class AsynchronousResponse(HttpResponse): """ This response is just a sentinel to be discarded by Tornado and replaced with a real response later; see zulip_finish. """ status_code = 399