Compress HTTP API responses and have the api client utilize this

This commit is contained in:
Alex Dadgar 2016-05-24 10:26:53 -07:00
parent bda23ba918
commit 2a4d5f0ef9
7 changed files with 266 additions and 2 deletions

View file

@ -2,6 +2,7 @@ package api
import (
"bytes"
"compress/gzip"
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"io"
@ -194,6 +195,7 @@ func (r *request) toHTTP() (*http.Request, error) {
return nil, err
}
req.Header.Add("Accept-Encoding", "gzip")
req.URL.Host = r.url.Host
req.URL.Scheme = r.url.Scheme
req.Host = r.url.Host
@ -231,6 +233,26 @@ func (c *Client) newRequest(method, path string) *request {
return r
}
// multiCloser is to wrap a ReadCloser such that when close is called, multiple
// Closes occur.
type multiCloser struct {
reader io.Reader
inorderClose []io.Closer
}
func (m *multiCloser) Close() error {
for _, c := range m.inorderClose {
if err := c.Close(); err != nil {
return err
}
}
return nil
}
func (m *multiCloser) Read(p []byte) (int, error) {
return m.reader.Read(p)
}
// doRequest runs a request with our client
func (c *Client) doRequest(r *request) (time.Duration, *http.Response, error) {
req, err := r.toHTTP()
@ -240,6 +262,27 @@ func (c *Client) doRequest(r *request) (time.Duration, *http.Response, error) {
start := time.Now()
resp, err := c.config.HttpClient.Do(req)
diff := time.Now().Sub(start)
// If the response is compressed, we swap the body's reader.
var reader io.ReadCloser
switch resp.Header.Get("Content-Encoding") {
case "gzip":
greader, err := gzip.NewReader(resp.Body)
if err != nil {
return 0, nil, err
}
// The gzip reader doesn't close the wrapped reader so we use
// multiCloser.
reader = &multiCloser{
reader: greader,
inorderClose: []io.Closer{greader, resp.Body},
}
default:
reader = resp.Body
}
resp.Body = reader
return diff, resp, err
}

View file

@ -12,6 +12,7 @@ import (
"strconv"
"time"
"github.com/NYTimes/gziphandler"
"github.com/hashicorp/nomad/nomad/structs"
"github.com/ugorji/go/codec"
)
@ -65,7 +66,7 @@ func NewHTTPServer(agent *Agent, config *Config, logOutput io.Writer) (*HTTPServ
srv.registerHandlers(config.EnableDebug)
// Start the server
go http.Serve(ln, mux)
go http.Serve(ln, gziphandler.GzipHandler(mux))
return srv, nil
}
@ -86,7 +87,7 @@ func newScadaHttp(agent *Agent, list net.Listener) *HTTPServer {
srv.registerHandlers(false) // Never allow debug for SCADA
// Start the server
go http.Serve(list, mux)
go http.Serve(list, gziphandler.GzipHandler(mux))
return srv
}

13
vendor/github.com/NYTimes/gziphandler/LICENSE.md generated vendored Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
Copyright (c) 2015 The New York Times Company
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this library except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

52
vendor/github.com/NYTimes/gziphandler/README.md generated vendored Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
Gzip Handler
============
This is a tiny Go package which wraps HTTP handlers to transparently gzip the
response body, for clients which support it. Although it's usually simpler to
leave that to a reverse proxy (like nginx or Varnish), this package is useful
when that's undesirable.
## Usage
Call `GzipHandler` with any handler (an object which implements the
`http.Handler` interface), and it'll return a new handler which gzips the
response. For example:
```go
package main
import (
"io"
"net/http"
"github.com/NYTimes/gziphandler"
)
func main() {
withoutGz := http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "text/plain")
io.WriteString(w, "Hello, World")
})
withGz := gziphandler.GzipHandler(withoutGz)
http.Handle("/", withGz)
http.ListenAndServe("0.0.0.0:8000", nil)
}
```
## Documentation
The docs can be found at [godoc.org] [docs], as usual.
## License
[Apache 2.0] [license].
[docs]: https://godoc.org/github.com/nytimes/gziphandler
[license]: https://github.com/nytimes/gziphandler/blob/master/LICENSE.md

144
vendor/github.com/NYTimes/gziphandler/gzip.go generated vendored Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,144 @@
package gziphandler
import (
"compress/gzip"
"fmt"
"net/http"
"strconv"
"strings"
"sync"
)
const (
vary = "Vary"
acceptEncoding = "Accept-Encoding"
contentEncoding = "Content-Encoding"
)
type codings map[string]float64
// The default qvalue to assign to an encoding if no explicit qvalue is set.
// This is actually kind of ambiguous in RFC 2616, so hopefully it's correct.
// The examples seem to indicate that it is.
const DEFAULT_QVALUE = 1.0
var gzipWriterPool = sync.Pool{
New: func() interface{} { return gzip.NewWriter(nil) },
}
// GzipResponseWriter provides an http.ResponseWriter interface, which gzips
// bytes before writing them to the underlying response. This doesn't set the
// Content-Encoding header, nor close the writers, so don't forget to do that.
type GzipResponseWriter struct {
gw *gzip.Writer
http.ResponseWriter
}
// Write appends data to the gzip writer.
func (w GzipResponseWriter) Write(b []byte) (int, error) {
if _, ok := w.Header()["Content-Type"]; !ok {
// If content type is not set, infer it from the uncompressed body.
w.Header().Set("Content-Type", http.DetectContentType(b))
}
return w.gw.Write(b)
}
// Flush flushes the underlying *gzip.Writer and then the underlying
// http.ResponseWriter if it is an http.Flusher. This makes GzipResponseWriter
// an http.Flusher.
func (w GzipResponseWriter) Flush() {
w.gw.Flush()
if fw, ok := w.ResponseWriter.(http.Flusher); ok {
fw.Flush()
}
}
// GzipHandler wraps an HTTP handler, to transparently gzip the response body if
// the client supports it (via the Accept-Encoding header).
func GzipHandler(h http.Handler) http.Handler {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Header().Add(vary, acceptEncoding)
if acceptsGzip(r) {
// Bytes written during ServeHTTP are redirected to this gzip writer
// before being written to the underlying response.
gzw := gzipWriterPool.Get().(*gzip.Writer)
defer gzipWriterPool.Put(gzw)
gzw.Reset(w)
defer gzw.Close()
w.Header().Set(contentEncoding, "gzip")
h.ServeHTTP(GzipResponseWriter{gzw, w}, r)
} else {
h.ServeHTTP(w, r)
}
})
}
// acceptsGzip returns true if the given HTTP request indicates that it will
// accept a gzippped response.
func acceptsGzip(r *http.Request) bool {
acceptedEncodings, _ := parseEncodings(r.Header.Get(acceptEncoding))
return acceptedEncodings["gzip"] > 0.0
}
// parseEncodings attempts to parse a list of codings, per RFC 2616, as might
// appear in an Accept-Encoding header. It returns a map of content-codings to
// quality values, and an error containing the errors encounted. It's probably
// safe to ignore those, because silently ignoring errors is how the internet
// works.
//
// See: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616#section-14.3
func parseEncodings(s string) (codings, error) {
c := make(codings)
e := make([]string, 0)
for _, ss := range strings.Split(s, ",") {
coding, qvalue, err := parseCoding(ss)
if err != nil {
e = append(e, err.Error())
} else {
c[coding] = qvalue
}
}
// TODO (adammck): Use a proper multi-error struct, so the individual errors
// can be extracted if anyone cares.
if len(e) > 0 {
return c, fmt.Errorf("errors while parsing encodings: %s", strings.Join(e, ", "))
}
return c, nil
}
// parseCoding parses a single conding (content-coding with an optional qvalue),
// as might appear in an Accept-Encoding header. It attempts to forgive minor
// formatting errors.
func parseCoding(s string) (coding string, qvalue float64, err error) {
for n, part := range strings.Split(s, ";") {
part = strings.TrimSpace(part)
qvalue = DEFAULT_QVALUE
if n == 0 {
coding = strings.ToLower(part)
} else if strings.HasPrefix(part, "q=") {
qvalue, err = strconv.ParseFloat(strings.TrimPrefix(part, "q="), 64)
if qvalue < 0.0 {
qvalue = 0.0
} else if qvalue > 1.0 {
qvalue = 1.0
}
}
}
if coding == "" {
err = fmt.Errorf("empty content-coding")
}
return
}

6
vendor/vendor.json vendored
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@ -2,6 +2,12 @@
"comment": "",
"ignore": "test",
"package": [
{
"checksumSHA1": "XeG94RjA9o/0wo9Fuw6NSRGYnjk=",
"path": "github.com/NYTimes/gziphandler",
"revision": "63027b26b87e2ae2ce3810393d4b81021cfd3a35",
"revisionTime": "2016-04-19T20:25:41Z"
},
{
"comment": "v0.8.7-87-g4b6ea73",
"path": "github.com/Sirupsen/logrus",

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@ -87,6 +87,11 @@ servicing the request. A target region can be explicitly specified with the `reg
parameter. The request will be transparently forwarded and serviced by a server in the
appropriate region.
## Compressed Responses
The HTTP API will gzip the response if the HTTP request denotes that the client accepts
gzip compression. This is achieved via the standard, `Accept-Encoding: gzip`
## Formatted JSON Output
By default, the output of all HTTP API requests is minimized JSON. If the client passes `pretty`