You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

143 lines
4.1 KiB
Python

2 years ago
import typing as t
from .._internal import _encode_idna
from ..exceptions import SecurityError
from ..urls import uri_to_iri
from ..urls import url_quote
def host_is_trusted(hostname: str, trusted_list: t.Iterable[str]) -> bool:
"""Check if a host matches a list of trusted names.
:param hostname: The name to check.
:param trusted_list: A list of valid names to match. If a name
starts with a dot it will match all subdomains.
.. versionadded:: 0.9
"""
if not hostname:
return False
if isinstance(trusted_list, str):
trusted_list = [trusted_list]
def _normalize(hostname: str) -> bytes:
if ":" in hostname:
hostname = hostname.rsplit(":", 1)[0]
return _encode_idna(hostname)
try:
hostname_bytes = _normalize(hostname)
except UnicodeError:
return False
for ref in trusted_list:
if ref.startswith("."):
ref = ref[1:]
suffix_match = True
else:
suffix_match = False
try:
ref_bytes = _normalize(ref)
except UnicodeError:
return False
if ref_bytes == hostname_bytes:
return True
if suffix_match and hostname_bytes.endswith(b"." + ref_bytes):
return True
return False
def get_host(
scheme: str,
host_header: t.Optional[str],
server: t.Optional[t.Tuple[str, t.Optional[int]]] = None,
trusted_hosts: t.Optional[t.Iterable[str]] = None,
) -> str:
"""Return the host for the given parameters.
This first checks the ``host_header``. If it's not present, then
``server`` is used. The host will only contain the port if it is
different than the standard port for the protocol.
Optionally, verify that the host is trusted using
:func:`host_is_trusted` and raise a
:exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.SecurityError` if it is not.
:param scheme: The protocol the request used, like ``"https"``.
:param host_header: The ``Host`` header value.
:param server: Address of the server. ``(host, port)``, or
``(path, None)`` for unix sockets.
:param trusted_hosts: A list of trusted host names.
:return: Host, with port if necessary.
:raise ~werkzeug.exceptions.SecurityError: If the host is not
trusted.
"""
host = ""
if host_header is not None:
host = host_header
elif server is not None:
host = server[0]
if server[1] is not None:
host = f"{host}:{server[1]}"
if scheme in {"http", "ws"} and host.endswith(":80"):
host = host[:-3]
elif scheme in {"https", "wss"} and host.endswith(":443"):
host = host[:-4]
if trusted_hosts is not None:
if not host_is_trusted(host, trusted_hosts):
raise SecurityError(f"Host {host!r} is not trusted.")
return host
def get_current_url(
scheme: str,
host: str,
root_path: t.Optional[str] = None,
path: t.Optional[str] = None,
query_string: t.Optional[bytes] = None,
) -> str:
"""Recreate the URL for a request. If an optional part isn't
provided, it and subsequent parts are not included in the URL.
The URL is an IRI, not a URI, so it may contain Unicode characters.
Use :func:`~werkzeug.urls.iri_to_uri` to convert it to ASCII.
:param scheme: The protocol the request used, like ``"https"``.
:param host: The host the request was made to. See :func:`get_host`.
:param root_path: Prefix that the application is mounted under. This
is prepended to ``path``.
:param path: The path part of the URL after ``root_path``.
:param query_string: The portion of the URL after the "?".
"""
url = [scheme, "://", host]
if root_path is None:
url.append("/")
return uri_to_iri("".join(url))
url.append(url_quote(root_path.rstrip("/")))
url.append("/")
if path is None:
return uri_to_iri("".join(url))
url.append(url_quote(path.lstrip("/")))
if query_string:
url.append("?")
url.append(url_quote(query_string, safe=":&%=+$!*'(),"))
return uri_to_iri("".join(url))