zulip/zerver/lib/webhooks/common.py

166 lines
6.7 KiB
Python

import importlib
from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, Optional, Union
from urllib.parse import unquote
from django.http import HttpRequest
from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _
from zerver.lib.actions import (
check_send_private_message,
check_send_stream_message,
send_rate_limited_pm_notification_to_bot_owner,
)
from zerver.lib.exceptions import (
ErrorCode,
JsonableError,
StreamDoesNotExistError,
UnexpectedWebhookEventType,
)
from zerver.lib.request import REQ, has_request_variables
from zerver.lib.send_email import FromAddress
from zerver.models import UserProfile
MISSING_EVENT_HEADER_MESSAGE = """
Hi there! Your bot {bot_name} just sent an HTTP request to {request_path} that
is missing the HTTP {header_name} header. Because this header is how
{integration_name} indicates the event type, this usually indicates a configuration
issue, where you either entered the URL for a different integration, or are running
an older version of the third-party service that doesn't provide that header.
Contact {support_email} if you need help debugging!
"""
INVALID_JSON_MESSAGE = """
Hi there! It looks like you tried to setup the Zulip {webhook_name} integration,
but didn't correctly configure the webhook to send data in the JSON format
that this integration expects!
"""
# Django prefixes all custom HTTP headers with `HTTP_`
DJANGO_HTTP_PREFIX = "HTTP_"
def notify_bot_owner_about_invalid_json(user_profile: UserProfile,
webhook_client_name: str) -> None:
send_rate_limited_pm_notification_to_bot_owner(
user_profile, user_profile.realm,
INVALID_JSON_MESSAGE.format(webhook_name=webhook_client_name).strip(),
)
class MissingHTTPEventHeader(JsonableError):
code = ErrorCode.MISSING_HTTP_EVENT_HEADER
data_fields = ['header']
def __init__(self, header: str) -> None:
self.header = header
@staticmethod
def msg_format() -> str:
return _("Missing the HTTP event header '{header}'")
@has_request_variables
def check_send_webhook_message(
request: HttpRequest, user_profile: UserProfile,
topic: str, body: str, stream: Optional[str]=REQ(default=None),
user_specified_topic: Optional[str]=REQ("topic", default=None),
unquote_url_parameters: bool=False,
) -> None:
if stream is None:
assert user_profile.bot_owner is not None
check_send_private_message(user_profile, request.client,
user_profile.bot_owner, body)
else:
# Some third-party websites (such as Atlassian's JIRA), tend to
# double escape their URLs in a manner that escaped space characters
# (%20) are never properly decoded. We work around that by making sure
# that the URL parameters are decoded on our end.
if unquote_url_parameters:
stream = unquote(stream)
if user_specified_topic is not None:
topic = user_specified_topic
if unquote_url_parameters:
topic = unquote(topic)
try:
check_send_stream_message(user_profile, request.client,
stream, topic, body)
except StreamDoesNotExistError:
# A PM will be sent to the bot_owner by check_message, notifying
# that the webhook bot just tried to send a message to a non-existent
# stream, so we don't need to re-raise it since it clutters up
# webhook-errors.log
pass
def standardize_headers(input_headers: Union[None, Dict[str, Any]]) -> Dict[str, str]:
""" This method can be used to standardize a dictionary of headers with
the standard format that Django expects. For reference, refer to:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/request-response/#django.http.HttpRequest.headers
NOTE: Historically, Django's headers were not case-insensitive. We're still
capitalizing our headers to make it easier to compare/search later if required.
"""
canonical_headers = {}
if not input_headers:
return {}
for raw_header in input_headers:
polished_header = raw_header.upper().replace("-", "_")
if polished_header not in ["CONTENT_TYPE", "CONTENT_LENGTH"]:
if not polished_header.startswith("HTTP_"):
polished_header = "HTTP_" + polished_header
canonical_headers[polished_header] = str(input_headers[raw_header])
return canonical_headers
def validate_extract_webhook_http_header(request: HttpRequest, header: str,
integration_name: str,
fatal: bool=True) -> Optional[str]:
extracted_header = request.META.get(DJANGO_HTTP_PREFIX + header)
if extracted_header is None and fatal:
message_body = MISSING_EVENT_HEADER_MESSAGE.format(
bot_name=request.user.full_name,
request_path=request.path,
header_name=header,
integration_name=integration_name,
support_email=FromAddress.SUPPORT,
)
send_rate_limited_pm_notification_to_bot_owner(
request.user, request.user.realm, message_body)
raise MissingHTTPEventHeader(header)
return extracted_header
def get_fixture_http_headers(integration_name: str,
fixture_name: str) -> Dict["str", "str"]:
"""For integrations that require custom HTTP headers for some (or all)
of their test fixtures, this method will call a specially named
function from the target integration module to determine what set
of HTTP headers goes with the given test fixture.
"""
view_module_name = f"zerver.webhooks.{integration_name}.view"
try:
# TODO: We may want to migrate to a more explicit registration
# strategy for this behavior rather than a try/except import.
view_module = importlib.import_module(view_module_name)
fixture_to_headers = getattr(view_module, "fixture_to_headers")
except (ImportError, AttributeError):
return {}
return fixture_to_headers(fixture_name)
def get_http_headers_from_filename(http_header_key: str) -> Callable[[str], Dict[str, str]]:
"""If an integration requires an event type kind of HTTP header which can
be easily (statically) determined, then name the fixtures in the format
of "header_value__other_details" or even "header_value" and the use this
method in the headers.py file for the integration."""
def fixture_to_headers(filename: str) -> Dict[str, str]:
if '__' in filename:
event_type = filename.split("__")[0]
else:
event_type = filename
return {http_header_key: event_type}
return fixture_to_headers