Common methods from applications/proto.py converted to the fixtures.
sysctl check moved to the specific file where it is using.
Some options moved to the constructor to have early access.
Previously, it was necessary to support older versions of Python for
compatibility. F-strings were released in Python 3.6. Python 3.5 was
marked as unsupported by the end of 2020, so now it's possible to start
using f-strings safely for better readability and performance.
This patch gives users the option to set a `"prefix"` attribute
for Python applications, either at the top level or for specific
`"target"`s. If the attribute is present, the value of `"prefix"`
must be a string beginning with `"/"`. If the value of the `"prefix"`
attribute is longer than 1 character and ends in `"/"`, the
trailing `"/"` is stripped.
The purpose of the `"prefix"` attribute is to set the `SCRIPT_NAME`
context value for WSGI applications and the `root_path` context
value for ASGI applications, allowing applications to properly route
requests regardless of the path that the server uses to expose the
application.
The context value is only set if the request's URL path begins with
the value of the `"prefix"` attribute. In all other cases, the
`SCRIPT_NAME` or `root_path` values are not set. In addition, for
WSGI applications, the value of `"prefix"` will be stripped from
the beginning of the request's URL path before it is sent to the
application.
Reviewed-by: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Artem Konev <artem.konev@nginx.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
Introducing "unit.log.Log" class for "unit.log" file management.
Moving "findall()" function into TestApplicationProto.
Using "os.kill()" to send signals.
In theory, all space characters in request target must be encoded; however,
some clients may violate the specification. For the sake of interoperability,
Unit supports unencoded space characters.
Previously, if there was a space character before the extension or arguments
parts, those parts weren't recognized. Also, quoted symbols and complex
target weren't detected after a space character.
According to CGI/1.1 RFC 3875:
The server MUST set this variable; if the Script-URI does not include a
query component, the QUERY_STRING MUST be defined as an empty string ("").
Python's PEP 333(3) allows omitting it in WSGI interface; PHP docs force no
requirements; PSGI and Rack specifications require it even if empty.
When nginx proxies requests over FastCGI, it always provides QUERY_STRING.
and some PHP apps have been observed to fail if it is missing (see issue
#201 on GitHub).
A drawback of this change (besides a small overhead) is that there will be
no easy way to tell a missing query string from an empty one (i.e. requests
with or without the "?" character); yet, it's negligible compared to the
possible benefits of wider application compatibility.
This closes#226 issue on GitHub.