HTTP Parser
Last updated
Last updated
This is a parser for HTTP messages written in C. It parses both requests and responses. The parser is designed to be used in performance HTTP applications. It does not make any syscalls nor allocations, it does not buffer data, it can be interrupted at anytime. Depending on your architecture, it only requires about 40 bytes of data per message stream (in a web server that is per connection).
Features:
No dependencies
Handles persistent streams (keep-alive).
Decodes chunked encoding.
Upgrade support
Defends against buffer overflow attacks.
The parser extracts the following information from HTTP messages:
Header fields and values
Content-Length
Request method
Response status code
Transfer-Encoding
HTTP version
Request URL
Message body
One http_parser
object is used per TCP connection. Initialize the struct using http_parser_init()
and set the callbacks. That might look something like this for a request parser:
When data is received on the socket execute the parser and check for errors.
HTTP needs to know where the end of the stream is. For example, sometimes servers send responses without Content-Length and expect the client to consume input (for the body) until EOF. To tell http_parser about EOF, give 0
as the fourth parameter to http_parser_execute()
. Callbacks and errors can still be encountered during an EOF, so one must still be prepared to receive them.
Scalar valued message information such as status_code
, method
, and the HTTP version are stored in the parser structure. This data is only temporally stored in http_parser
and gets reset on each new message. If this information is needed later, copy it out of the structure during the headers_complete
callback.
The parser decodes the transfer-encoding for both requests and responses transparently. That is, a chunked encoding is decoded before being sent to the on_body callback.
HTTP supports upgrading the connection to a different protocol. An increasingly common example of this is the WebSocket protocol which sends a request like
followed by non-HTTP data.
(See RFC6455 for more information the WebSocket protocol.)
To support this, the parser will treat this as a normal HTTP message without a body, issuing both on_headers_complete and on_message_complete callbacks. However http_parser_execute() will stop parsing at the end of the headers and return.
The user is expected to check if parser->upgrade
has been set to 1 after http_parser_execute()
returns. Non-HTTP data begins at the buffer supplied offset by the return value of http_parser_execute()
.
During the http_parser_execute()
call, the callbacks set in http_parser_settings
will be executed. The parser maintains state and never looks behind, so buffering the data is not necessary. If you need to save certain data for later usage, you can do that from the callbacks.
There are two types of callbacks:
notification typedef int (*http_cb) (http_parser*);
Callbacks: on_message_begin, on_headers_complete, on_message_complete.
data typedef int (*http_data_cb) (http_parser*, const char *at, size_t length);
Callbacks: (requests only) on_url,
Callbacks must return 0 on success. Returning a non-zero value indicates error to the parser, making it exit immediately.
For cases where it is necessary to pass local information to/from a callback, the http_parser
object's data
field can be used. An example of such a case is when using threads to handle a socket connection, parse a request, and then give a response over that socket. By instantiation of a thread-local struct containing relevant data (e.g. accepted socket, allocated memory for callbacks to write into, etc), a parser's callbacks are able to communicate data between the scope of the thread and the scope of the callback in a threadsafe manner. This allows http-parser to be used in multi-threaded contexts.
Example:
In case you parse HTTP message in chunks (i.e. read()
request line from socket, parse, read half headers, parse, etc) your data callbacks may be called more than once. Http-parser guarantees that data pointer is only valid for the lifetime of callback. You can also read()
into a heap allocated buffer to avoid copying memory around if this fits your application.
Reading headers may be a tricky task if you read/parse headers partially. Basically, you need to remember whether last header callback was field or value and apply the following logic:
A simplistic zero-copy URL parser is provided as http_parser_parse_url()
. Users of this library may wish to use it to parse URLs constructed from consecutive on_url
callbacks.
See examples of reading in headers:
partial example in C
from Node library in Javascript