zulip/zephyr/decorator.py

293 lines
11 KiB
Python

from django.views.decorators.csrf import csrf_exempt
from django.views.decorators.http import require_POST
from zephyr.models import UserProfile, UserActivity, get_client
from zephyr.lib.response import json_success, json_error
from django.utils.timezone import now
from django.db import transaction, IntegrityError
from django.conf import settings
import simplejson
from zephyr.lib.cache import cache_with_key
from zephyr.lib.queue import SimpleQueueClient
from zephyr.lib.timestamp import datetime_to_timestamp
from functools import wraps
class _RespondAsynchronously(object):
pass
# Return RespondAsynchronously from an @asynchronous view if the
# response will be provided later by calling handler.finish(), or has
# already been provided this way. We use this for longpolling mode.
RespondAsynchronously = _RespondAsynchronously()
def asynchronous(method):
@wraps(method)
def wrapper(request, *args, **kwargs):
return method(request, handler=request._tornado_handler, *args, **kwargs)
if getattr(method, 'csrf_exempt', False):
wrapper.csrf_exempt = True
return wrapper
if settings.USING_RABBITMQ:
# Don't try to publish messages to rabbitmq if we're not using
# it. UserActivity updates aren't really important for most
# local development, so skipping publishing them here is
# reasonable.
#
# update_active_status also pushes to rabbitmq, and we don't
# want to log it
activity_queue = SimpleQueueClient()
def update_user_activity(request, user_profile, client):
if request.META["PATH_INFO"] == '/json/update_active_status':
return
event={'query': request.META["PATH_INFO"],
'user_profile_id': user_profile.id,
'time': datetime_to_timestamp(now()),
'client': client.name}
activity_queue.json_publish("user_activity", event)
else:
update_user_activity = lambda request, user_profile, client: None
# I like the all-lowercase name better
require_post = require_POST
@cache_with_key(lambda user_profile_id: 'tornado_user_profile:%d' % (user_profile_id,))
def get_tornado_user_profile(user_id):
return UserProfile.objects.select_related().get(user_id=user_id)
@cache_with_key(lambda email: 'tornado_user_profile_email:%s' % (email,))
def get_tornado_user_profile_by_email(email):
return UserProfile.objects.select_related().get(user__email=email)
# authenticated_api_view will add the authenticated user's user_profile to
# the view function's arguments list, since we have to look it up
# anyway.
def authenticated_api_view(view_func):
@csrf_exempt
@require_post
@has_request_variables
@wraps(view_func)
def _wrapped_view_func(request, email=POST, api_key=POST('api-key'),
client=POST(default=get_client("API"), converter=get_client),
*args, **kwargs):
try:
if settings.RUNNING_INSIDE_TORNADO:
# Get the UserProfile from a cache because we aren't accessing
# any mutable fields (just ids plus the realm.domain)
user_profile = get_tornado_user_profile_by_email(email)
else:
user_profile = UserProfile.objects.select_related().get(user__email=email)
except UserProfile.DoesNotExist:
return json_error("Invalid user: %s" % (email,))
if api_key != user_profile.api_key:
return json_error("Invalid API key for user '%s'" % (email,))
request._client = client
request._email = email
update_user_activity(request, user_profile, client)
return view_func(request, user_profile, *args, **kwargs)
return _wrapped_view_func
def authenticate_log_and_execute_json(request, client, view_func, *args, **kwargs):
if not request.user.is_authenticated():
return json_error("Not logged in", status=401)
request._client = client
if settings.RUNNING_INSIDE_TORNADO:
# Get the UserProfile from a cache because we aren't accessing
# any mutable fields (just ids plus the realm.domain)
user_profile = get_tornado_user_profile(request.user.id)
else:
user_profile = UserProfile.objects.select_related().get(user=request.user)
request._email = user_profile.user.email
update_user_activity(request, user_profile, client)
return view_func(request, user_profile, *args, **kwargs)
# Checks if the request is a POST request and that the user is logged
# in. If not, return an error (the @login_required behavior of
# redirecting to a login page doesn't make sense for json views)
def authenticated_json_post_view(view_func):
@require_post
@has_request_variables
@wraps(view_func)
def _wrapped_view_func(request,
client=POST(default=get_client("website"), converter=get_client),
*args, **kwargs):
return authenticate_log_and_execute_json(request, client, view_func, *args, **kwargs)
return _wrapped_view_func
def authenticated_json_view(view_func):
@wraps(view_func)
def _wrapped_view_func(request,
client=get_client("website"),
*args, **kwargs):
return authenticate_log_and_execute_json(request, client, view_func, *args, **kwargs)
return _wrapped_view_func
# These views are used by the main Django server to notify the Tornado server
# of events. We protect them from the outside world by checking a shared
# secret, and also the originating IP (for now).
def authenticate_notify(request):
return (request.META['REMOTE_ADDR'] in ('127.0.0.1', '::1')
and request.POST.get('secret') == settings.SHARED_SECRET)
def internal_notify_view(view_func):
@csrf_exempt
@require_post
@wraps(view_func)
def _wrapped_view_func(request, *args, **kwargs):
if not authenticate_notify(request):
return json_error('Access denied', status=403)
if not hasattr(request, '_tornado_handler'):
# We got called through the non-Tornado server somehow.
# This is not a security check; it's an internal assertion
# to help us find bugs.
raise RuntimeError, 'notify view called with no Tornado handler'
request._email = "internal"
return view_func(request, *args, **kwargs)
return _wrapped_view_func
class JsonableError(Exception):
def __init__(self, error):
self.error = error
def __str__(self):
return self.to_json_error_msg()
def to_json_error_msg(self):
return self.error
class RequestVariableMissingError(JsonableError):
def __init__(self, var_name):
self.var_name = var_name
def to_json_error_msg(self):
return "Missing '%s' argument" % (self.var_name,)
class RequestVariableConversionError(JsonableError):
def __init__(self, var_name, bad_value):
self.var_name = var_name
self.bad_value = bad_value
def to_json_error_msg(self):
return "Bad value for '%s': %s" % (self.var_name, self.bad_value)
# Used in conjunction with @has_request_variables, below
class POST(object):
# 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(object):
pass
NotSpecified = _NotSpecified()
def __init__(self, whence=None, converter=None, default=NotSpecified):
"""
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
"""
self.post_var_name = whence
self.func_var_name = None
self.converter = converter
self.default = default
# 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 POST class. That paramter 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):
num_params = view_func.func_code.co_argcount
if view_func.func_defaults is None:
num_default_params = 0
else:
num_default_params = len(view_func.func_defaults)
default_param_names = view_func.func_code.co_varnames[num_params - num_default_params:]
default_param_values = view_func.func_defaults
post_params = []
for (name, value) in zip(default_param_names, default_param_values):
if isinstance(value, POST):
value.func_var_name = name
if value.post_var_name is None:
value.post_var_name = name
post_params.append(value)
elif value == POST:
# If the function definition does not actually
# instantiate a POST object but instead uses the POST
# class itself as a value, we instantiate it as a
# convenience
post_var = POST(name)
post_var.func_var_name = name
post_params.append(post_var)
@wraps(view_func)
def _wrapped_view_func(request, *args, **kwargs):
for param in post_params:
if param.func_var_name in kwargs:
continue
default_assigned = False
try:
val = request.POST[param.post_var_name]
except KeyError:
if param.default is POST.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:
raise RequestVariableConversionError(param.post_var_name, val)
kwargs[param.func_var_name] = val
return view_func(request, *args, **kwargs)
return _wrapped_view_func
# Converter functions for use with has_request_variables
def to_non_negative_int(x):
x = int(x)
if x < 0:
raise ValueError("argument is negative")
return x
def json_to_foo(json, type):
data = simplejson.loads(json)
if not isinstance(data, type):
raise ValueError("argument is not a %s" % (type().__class__.__name__))
return data
def json_to_dict(json):
return json_to_foo(json, dict)
def json_to_list(json):
return json_to_foo(json, list)
def json_to_bool(json):
return json_to_foo(json, bool)