/* * Copyright 2021 Sean McArthur. MIT License. * Generated by gen_header.sh. Do not edit directly. */ #ifndef _HYPER_H #define _HYPER_H #include #include /* Return in iter functions to continue iterating. */ #define HYPER_ITER_CONTINUE 0 /* Return in iter functions to stop iterating. */ #define HYPER_ITER_BREAK 1 /* An HTTP Version that is unspecified. */ #define HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_NONE 0 /* The HTTP/1.0 version. */ #define HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_1_0 10 /* The HTTP/1.1 version. */ #define HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_1_1 11 /* The HTTP/2 version. */ #define HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_2 20 /* Sentinel value to return from a read or write callback that the operation is pending. */ #define HYPER_IO_PENDING 4294967295 /* Sentinel value to return from a read or write callback that the operation has errored. */ #define HYPER_IO_ERROR 4294967294 /* Return in a poll function to indicate it was ready. */ #define HYPER_POLL_READY 0 /* Return in a poll function to indicate it is still pending. The passed in `hyper_waker` should be registered to wake up the task at some later point. */ #define HYPER_POLL_PENDING 1 /* Return in a poll function indicate an error. */ #define HYPER_POLL_ERROR 3 /* A return code for many of hyper's methods. */ typedef enum hyper_code { /* All is well. */ HYPERE_OK, /* General error, details in the `hyper_error *`. */ HYPERE_ERROR, /* A function argument was invalid. */ HYPERE_INVALID_ARG, /* The IO transport returned an EOF when one wasn't expected. This typically means an HTTP request or response was expected, but the connection closed cleanly without sending (all of) it. */ HYPERE_UNEXPECTED_EOF, /* Aborted by a user supplied callback. */ HYPERE_ABORTED_BY_CALLBACK, /* An optional hyper feature was not enabled. */ HYPERE_FEATURE_NOT_ENABLED, /* The peer sent an HTTP message that could not be parsed. */ HYPERE_INVALID_PEER_MESSAGE, } hyper_code; /* A descriptor for what type a `hyper_task` value is. */ typedef enum hyper_task_return_type { /* The value of this task is null (does not imply an error). */ HYPER_TASK_EMPTY, /* The value of this task is `hyper_error *`. */ HYPER_TASK_ERROR, /* The value of this task is `hyper_clientconn *`. */ HYPER_TASK_CLIENTCONN, /* The value of this task is `hyper_response *`. */ HYPER_TASK_RESPONSE, /* The value of this task is `hyper_buf *`. */ HYPER_TASK_BUF, } hyper_task_return_type; /* A streaming HTTP body. */ typedef struct hyper_body hyper_body; /* A buffer of bytes that is sent or received on a `hyper_body`. */ typedef struct hyper_buf hyper_buf; /* An HTTP client connection handle. These are used to send a request on a single connection. It's possible to send multiple requests on a single connection, such as when HTTP/1 keep-alive or HTTP/2 is used. */ typedef struct hyper_clientconn hyper_clientconn; /* An options builder to configure an HTTP client connection. */ typedef struct hyper_clientconn_options hyper_clientconn_options; /* An async context for a task that contains the related waker. */ typedef struct hyper_context hyper_context; /* A more detailed error object returned by some hyper functions. */ typedef struct hyper_error hyper_error; /* A task executor for `hyper_task`s. */ typedef struct hyper_executor hyper_executor; /* An HTTP header map. These can be part of a request or response. */ typedef struct hyper_headers hyper_headers; /* An IO object used to represent a socket or similar concept. */ typedef struct hyper_io hyper_io; /* An HTTP request. */ typedef struct hyper_request hyper_request; /* An HTTP response. */ typedef struct hyper_response hyper_response; /* An async task. */ typedef struct hyper_task hyper_task; /* A waker that is saved and used to waken a pending task. */ typedef struct hyper_waker hyper_waker; typedef int (*hyper_body_foreach_callback)(void*, const struct hyper_buf*); typedef int (*hyper_body_data_callback)(void*, struct hyper_context*, struct hyper_buf**); typedef void (*hyper_request_on_informational_callback)(void*, struct hyper_response*); typedef int (*hyper_headers_foreach_callback)(void*, const uint8_t*, size_t, const uint8_t*, size_t); typedef size_t (*hyper_io_read_callback)(void*, struct hyper_context*, uint8_t*, size_t); typedef size_t (*hyper_io_write_callback)(void*, struct hyper_context*, const uint8_t*, size_t); #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif // __cplusplus /* Returns a static ASCII (null terminated) string of the hyper version. */ const char *hyper_version(void); /* Create a new "empty" body. If not configured, this body acts as an empty payload. */ struct hyper_body *hyper_body_new(void); /* Free a `hyper_body *`. */ void hyper_body_free(struct hyper_body *body); /* Return a task that will poll the body for the next buffer of data. The task value may have different types depending on the outcome: - `HYPER_TASK_BUF`: Success, and more data was received. - `HYPER_TASK_ERROR`: An error retrieving the data. - `HYPER_TASK_EMPTY`: The body has finished streaming data. This does not consume the `hyper_body *`, so it may be used to again. However, it MUST NOT be used or freed until the related task completes. */ struct hyper_task *hyper_body_data(struct hyper_body *body); /* Return a task that will poll the body and execute the callback with each body chunk that is received. The `hyper_buf` pointer is only a borrowed reference, it cannot live outside the execution of the callback. You must make a copy to retain it. The callback should return `HYPER_ITER_CONTINUE` to continue iterating chunks as they are received, or `HYPER_ITER_BREAK` to cancel. This will consume the `hyper_body *`, you shouldn't use it anymore or free it. */ struct hyper_task *hyper_body_foreach(struct hyper_body *body, hyper_body_foreach_callback func, void *userdata); /* Set userdata on this body, which will be passed to callback functions. */ void hyper_body_set_userdata(struct hyper_body *body, void *userdata); /* Set the data callback for this body. The callback is called each time hyper needs to send more data for the body. It is passed the value from `hyper_body_set_userdata`. If there is data available, the `hyper_buf **` argument should be set to a `hyper_buf *` containing the data, and `HYPER_POLL_READY` should be returned. Returning `HYPER_POLL_READY` while the `hyper_buf **` argument points to `NULL` will indicate the body has completed all data. If there is more data to send, but it isn't yet available, a `hyper_waker` should be saved from the `hyper_context *` argument, and `HYPER_POLL_PENDING` should be returned. You must wake the saved waker to signal the task when data is available. If some error has occurred, you can return `HYPER_POLL_ERROR` to abort the body. */ void hyper_body_set_data_func(struct hyper_body *body, hyper_body_data_callback func); /* Create a new `hyper_buf *` by copying the provided bytes. This makes an owned copy of the bytes, so the `buf` argument can be freed or changed afterwards. This returns `NULL` if allocating a new buffer fails. */ struct hyper_buf *hyper_buf_copy(const uint8_t *buf, size_t len); /* Get a pointer to the bytes in this buffer. This should be used in conjunction with `hyper_buf_len` to get the length of the bytes data. This pointer is borrowed data, and not valid once the `hyper_buf` is consumed/freed. */ const uint8_t *hyper_buf_bytes(const struct hyper_buf *buf); /* Get the length of the bytes this buffer contains. */ size_t hyper_buf_len(const struct hyper_buf *buf); /* Free this buffer. */ void hyper_buf_free(struct hyper_buf *buf); /* Starts an HTTP client connection handshake using the provided IO transport and options. Both the `io` and the `options` are consumed in this function call. The returned `hyper_task *` must be polled with an executor until the handshake completes, at which point the value can be taken. */ struct hyper_task *hyper_clientconn_handshake(struct hyper_io *io, struct hyper_clientconn_options *options); /* Send a request on the client connection. Returns a task that needs to be polled until it is ready. When ready, the task yields a `hyper_response *`. */ struct hyper_task *hyper_clientconn_send(struct hyper_clientconn *conn, struct hyper_request *req); /* Free a `hyper_clientconn *`. */ void hyper_clientconn_free(struct hyper_clientconn *conn); /* Creates a new set of HTTP clientconn options to be used in a handshake. */ struct hyper_clientconn_options *hyper_clientconn_options_new(void); /* Set the whether or not header case is preserved. Pass `0` to allow lowercase normalization (default), `1` to retain original case. */ void hyper_clientconn_options_set_preserve_header_case(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts, int enabled); /* Set the whether or not header order is preserved. Pass `0` to allow reordering (default), `1` to retain original ordering. */ void hyper_clientconn_options_set_preserve_header_order(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts, int enabled); /* Free a `hyper_clientconn_options *`. */ void hyper_clientconn_options_free(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts); /* Set the client background task executor. This does not consume the `options` or the `exec`. */ void hyper_clientconn_options_exec(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts, const struct hyper_executor *exec); /* Set the whether to use HTTP2. Pass `0` to disable, `1` to enable. */ enum hyper_code hyper_clientconn_options_http2(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts, int enabled); /* Set the whether to include a copy of the raw headers in responses received on this connection. Pass `0` to disable, `1` to enable. If enabled, see `hyper_response_headers_raw()` for usage. */ enum hyper_code hyper_clientconn_options_headers_raw(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts, int enabled); /* Set whether HTTP/1 connections will accept obsolete line folding for header values. Newline codepoints (\r and \n) will be transformed to spaces when parsing. Pass `0` to disable, `1` to enable. */ enum hyper_code hyper_clientconn_options_http1_allow_multiline_headers(struct hyper_clientconn_options *opts, int enabled); /* Frees a `hyper_error`. */ void hyper_error_free(struct hyper_error *err); /* Get an equivalent `hyper_code` from this error. */ enum hyper_code hyper_error_code(const struct hyper_error *err); /* Print the details of this error to a buffer. The `dst_len` value must be the maximum length that the buffer can store. The return value is number of bytes that were written to `dst`. */ size_t hyper_error_print(const struct hyper_error *err, uint8_t *dst, size_t dst_len); /* Construct a new HTTP request. */ struct hyper_request *hyper_request_new(void); /* Free an HTTP request if not going to send it on a client. */ void hyper_request_free(struct hyper_request *req); /* Set the HTTP Method of the request. */ enum hyper_code hyper_request_set_method(struct hyper_request *req, const uint8_t *method, size_t method_len); /* Set the URI of the request. The request's URI is best described as the `request-target` from the RFCs. So in HTTP/1, whatever is set will get sent as-is in the first line (GET $uri HTTP/1.1). It supports the 4 defined variants, origin-form, absolute-form, authority-form, and asterisk-form. The underlying type was built to efficiently support HTTP/2 where the request-target is split over :scheme, :authority, and :path. As such, each part can be set explicitly, or the type can parse a single contiguous string and if a scheme is found, that slot is "set". If the string just starts with a path, only the path portion is set. All pseudo headers that have been parsed/set are sent when the connection type is HTTP/2. To set each slot explicitly, use `hyper_request_set_uri_parts`. */ enum hyper_code hyper_request_set_uri(struct hyper_request *req, const uint8_t *uri, size_t uri_len); /* Set the URI of the request with separate scheme, authority, and path/query strings. Each of `scheme`, `authority`, and `path_and_query` should either be null, to skip providing a component, or point to a UTF-8 encoded string. If any string pointer argument is non-null, its corresponding `len` parameter must be set to the string's length. */ enum hyper_code hyper_request_set_uri_parts(struct hyper_request *req, const uint8_t *scheme, size_t scheme_len, const uint8_t *authority, size_t authority_len, const uint8_t *path_and_query, size_t path_and_query_len); /* Set the preferred HTTP version of the request. The version value should be one of the `HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_` constants. Note that this won't change the major HTTP version of the connection, since that is determined at the handshake step. */ enum hyper_code hyper_request_set_version(struct hyper_request *req, int version); /* Gets a reference to the HTTP headers of this request This is not an owned reference, so it should not be accessed after the `hyper_request` has been consumed. */ struct hyper_headers *hyper_request_headers(struct hyper_request *req); /* Set the body of the request. The default is an empty body. This takes ownership of the `hyper_body *`, you must not use it or free it after setting it on the request. */ enum hyper_code hyper_request_set_body(struct hyper_request *req, struct hyper_body *body); /* Set an informational (1xx) response callback. The callback is called each time hyper receives an informational (1xx) response for this request. The third argument is an opaque user data pointer, which is passed to the callback each time. The callback is passed the `void *` data pointer, and a `hyper_response *` which can be inspected as any other response. The body of the response will always be empty. NOTE: The `hyper_response *` is just borrowed data, and will not be valid after the callback finishes. You must copy any data you wish to persist. */ enum hyper_code hyper_request_on_informational(struct hyper_request *req, hyper_request_on_informational_callback callback, void *data); /* Free an HTTP response after using it. */ void hyper_response_free(struct hyper_response *resp); /* Get the HTTP-Status code of this response. It will always be within the range of 100-599. */ uint16_t hyper_response_status(const struct hyper_response *resp); /* Get a pointer to the reason-phrase of this response. This buffer is not null-terminated. This buffer is owned by the response, and should not be used after the response has been freed. Use `hyper_response_reason_phrase_len()` to get the length of this buffer. */ const uint8_t *hyper_response_reason_phrase(const struct hyper_response *resp); /* Get the length of the reason-phrase of this response. Use `hyper_response_reason_phrase()` to get the buffer pointer. */ size_t hyper_response_reason_phrase_len(const struct hyper_response *resp); /* Get a reference to the full raw headers of this response. You must have enabled `hyper_clientconn_options_headers_raw()`, or this will return NULL. The returned `hyper_buf *` is just a reference, owned by the response. You need to make a copy if you wish to use it after freeing the response. The buffer is not null-terminated, see the `hyper_buf` functions for getting the bytes and length. */ const struct hyper_buf *hyper_response_headers_raw(const struct hyper_response *resp); /* Get the HTTP version used by this response. The returned value could be: - `HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_1_0` - `HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_1_1` - `HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_2` - `HYPER_HTTP_VERSION_NONE` if newer (or older). */ int hyper_response_version(const struct hyper_response *resp); /* Gets a reference to the HTTP headers of this response. This is not an owned reference, so it should not be accessed after the `hyper_response` has been freed. */ struct hyper_headers *hyper_response_headers(struct hyper_response *resp); /* Take ownership of the body of this response. It is safe to free the response even after taking ownership of its body. */ struct hyper_body *hyper_response_body(struct hyper_response *resp); /* Iterates the headers passing each name and value pair to the callback. The `userdata` pointer is also passed to the callback. The callback should return `HYPER_ITER_CONTINUE` to keep iterating, or `HYPER_ITER_BREAK` to stop. */ void hyper_headers_foreach(const struct hyper_headers *headers, hyper_headers_foreach_callback func, void *userdata); /* Sets the header with the provided name to the provided value. This overwrites any previous value set for the header. */ enum hyper_code hyper_headers_set(struct hyper_headers *headers, const uint8_t *name, size_t name_len, const uint8_t *value, size_t value_len); /* Adds the provided value to the list of the provided name. If there were already existing values for the name, this will append the new value to the internal list. */ enum hyper_code hyper_headers_add(struct hyper_headers *headers, const uint8_t *name, size_t name_len, const uint8_t *value, size_t value_len); /* Create a new IO type used to represent a transport. The read and write functions of this transport should be set with `hyper_io_set_read` and `hyper_io_set_write`. */ struct hyper_io *hyper_io_new(void); /* Free an unused `hyper_io *`. This is typically only useful if you aren't going to pass ownership of the IO handle to hyper, such as with `hyper_clientconn_handshake()`. */ void hyper_io_free(struct hyper_io *io); /* Set the user data pointer for this IO to some value. This value is passed as an argument to the read and write callbacks. */ void hyper_io_set_userdata(struct hyper_io *io, void *data); /* Set the read function for this IO transport. Data that is read from the transport should be put in the `buf` pointer, up to `buf_len` bytes. The number of bytes read should be the return value. It is undefined behavior to try to access the bytes in the `buf` pointer, unless you have already written them yourself. It is also undefined behavior to return that more bytes have been written than actually set on the `buf`. If there is no data currently available, a waker should be claimed from the `ctx` and registered with whatever polling mechanism is used to signal when data is available later on. The return value should be `HYPER_IO_PENDING`. If there is an irrecoverable error reading data, then `HYPER_IO_ERROR` should be the return value. */ void hyper_io_set_read(struct hyper_io *io, hyper_io_read_callback func); /* Set the write function for this IO transport. Data from the `buf` pointer should be written to the transport, up to `buf_len` bytes. The number of bytes written should be the return value. If no data can currently be written, the `waker` should be cloned and registered with whatever polling mechanism is used to signal when data is available later on. The return value should be `HYPER_IO_PENDING`. Yeet. If there is an irrecoverable error reading data, then `HYPER_IO_ERROR` should be the return value. */ void hyper_io_set_write(struct hyper_io *io, hyper_io_write_callback func); /* Creates a new task executor. */ const struct hyper_executor *hyper_executor_new(void); /* Frees an executor and any incomplete tasks still part of it. */ void hyper_executor_free(const struct hyper_executor *exec); /* Push a task onto the executor. The executor takes ownership of the task, it should not be accessed again unless returned back to the user with `hyper_executor_poll`. */ enum hyper_code hyper_executor_push(const struct hyper_executor *exec, struct hyper_task *task); /* Polls the executor, trying to make progress on any tasks that have notified that they are ready again. If ready, returns a task from the executor that has completed. If there are no ready tasks, this returns `NULL`. */ struct hyper_task *hyper_executor_poll(const struct hyper_executor *exec); /* Free a task. */ void hyper_task_free(struct hyper_task *task); /* Takes the output value of this task. This must only be called once polling the task on an executor has finished this task. Use `hyper_task_type` to determine the type of the `void *` return value. */ void *hyper_task_value(struct hyper_task *task); /* Query the return type of this task. */ enum hyper_task_return_type hyper_task_type(struct hyper_task *task); /* Set a user data pointer to be associated with this task. This value will be passed to task callbacks, and can be checked later with `hyper_task_userdata`. */ void hyper_task_set_userdata(struct hyper_task *task, void *userdata); /* Retrieve the userdata that has been set via `hyper_task_set_userdata`. */ void *hyper_task_userdata(struct hyper_task *task); /* Copies a waker out of the task context. */ struct hyper_waker *hyper_context_waker(struct hyper_context *cx); /* Free a waker that hasn't been woken. */ void hyper_waker_free(struct hyper_waker *waker); /* Wake up the task associated with a waker. NOTE: This consumes the waker. You should not use or free the waker afterwards. */ void hyper_waker_wake(struct hyper_waker *waker); #ifdef __cplusplus } // extern "C" #endif // __cplusplus #endif /* _HYPER_H */