# Copyright 2014 ksyun.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"). You # may not use this file except in compliance with the License. A copy of # the License is located at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # or in the "license" file accompanying this file. This file 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. """Protocol input serializes. This module contains classes that implement input serialization for the various KSYUN protocol types. These classes essentially take user input, a model object that represents what the expected input should look like, and it returns a dictionary that contains the various parts of a request. A few high level design decisions: * Each protocol type maps to a separate class, all inherit from ``Serializer``. * The return value for ``serialize_to_request`` (the main entry point) returns a dictionary that represents a request. This will have keys like ``url_path``, ``query_string``, etc. This is done so that it's a) easy to test and b) not tied to a particular HTTP library. See the ``serialize_to_request`` docstring for more details. Unicode ------- The input to the serializers should be text (str/unicode), not bytes, with the exception of blob types. Those are assumed to be binary, and if a str/unicode type is passed in, it will be encoded as utf-8. """ import re import base64 from xml.etree import ElementTree import calendar from kscore.compat import six from kscore.compat import json, formatdate from kscore.utils import parse_to_aware_datetime from kscore.utils import percent_encode from kscore import validate # From the spec, the default timestamp format if not specified is iso8601. DEFAULT_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT = 'iso8601' ISO8601 = '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ' # Same as ISO8601, but with microsecond precision. ISO8601_MICRO = '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ' def create_serializer(protocol_name, include_validation=True): # TODO: Unknown protocols. serializer = SERIALIZERS[protocol_name]() if include_validation: validator = validate.ParamValidator() serializer = validate.ParamValidationDecorator(validator, serializer) return serializer class Serializer(object): DEFAULT_METHOD = 'POST' # Clients can change this to a different MutableMapping # (i.e OrderedDict) if they want. This is used in the # compliance test to match the hash ordering used in the # tests. MAP_TYPE = dict DEFAULT_ENCODING = 'utf-8' def serialize_to_request(self, parameters, operation_model): """Serialize parameters into an HTTP request. This method takes user provided parameters and a shape model and serializes the parameters to an HTTP request. More specifically, this method returns information about parts of the HTTP request, it does not enforce a particular interface or standard for an HTTP request. It instead returns a dictionary of: * 'url_path' * 'query_string' * 'headers' * 'body' * 'method' It is then up to consumers to decide how to map this to a Request object of their HTTP library of choice. Below is an example return value:: {'body': {'Action': 'OperationName', 'Bar': 'val2', 'Foo': 'val1', 'Version': '2014-01-01'}, 'headers': {}, 'method': 'POST', 'query_string': '', 'url_path': '/'} :param parameters: The dictionary input parameters for the operation (i.e the user input). :param operation_model: The OperationModel object that describes the operation. """ raise NotImplementedError("serialize_to_request") def _create_default_request(self): # Creates a boilerplate default request dict that subclasses # can use as a starting point. serialized = { 'url_path': '/', 'query_string': '', 'method': self.DEFAULT_METHOD, 'headers': self.headers, # An empty body is represented as an empty byte string. 'body': b'' } return serialized def _serialize_not_shape(self, data, parameters): pass def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data): serialized['body'] = data return serialized @property def headers(self): return {} # Some extra utility methods subclasses can use. def _timestamp_iso8601(self, value): if value.microsecond > 0: timestamp_format = ISO8601_MICRO else: timestamp_format = ISO8601 return value.strftime(timestamp_format) def _timestamp_unixtimestamp(self, value): return int(calendar.timegm(value.timetuple())) def _timestamp_rfc822(self, value): return formatdate(value, usegmt=True) def _convert_timestamp_to_str(self, value): datetime_obj = parse_to_aware_datetime(value) converter = getattr( self, '_timestamp_%s' % self.TIMESTAMP_FORMAT.lower()) final_value = converter(datetime_obj) return final_value def _get_serialized_name(self, shape, default_name): # Returns the serialized name for the shape if it exists. # Otherwise it will return the passed in default_name. return shape.serialization.get('name', default_name) def _get_base64(self, value): # Returns the base64-encoded version of value, handling # both strings and bytes. The returned value is a string # via the default encoding. if isinstance(value, six.text_type): value = value.encode(self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) return base64.b64encode(value).strip().decode( self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) class QuerySerializer(Serializer): """ BASE HTTP QUERY REQUEST """ TIMESTAMP_FORMAT = 'iso8601' def serialize_to_request(self, parameters, operation_model): shape = operation_model.input_shape serialized = self._create_default_request() serialized['method'] = operation_model.http.get('method', self.DEFAULT_METHOD) # The query serializer only deals with body params so # that's what we hand off the _serialize_* methods. serialized['headers'].update( { 'X-Action': operation_model.name, 'X-Version': operation_model.metadata['apiVersion'], } ) if 'requestUri' in operation_model.http: serialized['url_path'] = operation_model.http['requestUri'] body_params = self.MAP_TYPE() body_params['Action'] = operation_model.name body_params['Version'] = operation_model.metadata['apiVersion'] if shape is not None: self._serialize(body_params, parameters, shape) else: self._serialize_not_shape(body_params, parameters) return self._serialize_data(serialized, body_params) def _serialize_not_shape(self, data, parameters): pass def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data): serialized['body'] = data return serialized def _serialize(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): # serialized: The dict that is incrementally added to with the # final serialized parameters. # value: The current user input value. # shape: The shape object that describes the structure of the # input. # prefix: The incrementally built up prefix for the serialized # key (i.e Foo.bar.members.1). method = getattr(self, '_serialize_type_%s' % shape.type_name, self._default_serialize) method(serialized, value, shape, prefix=prefix) def _serialize_type_structure(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): members = shape.members for key, value in value.items(): member_shape = members[key] member_prefix = self._get_serialized_name(member_shape, key) if prefix: member_prefix = '%s.%s' % (prefix, member_prefix) self._serialize(serialized, value, member_shape, member_prefix) def _serialize_type_list(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): if not value: # The query protocol serializes empty lists. serialized[prefix] = '' return if self._is_shape_flattened(shape): list_prefix = prefix if shape.member.serialization.get('name'): name = self._get_serialized_name(shape.member, default_name='') # Replace '.Original' with '.{name}'. list_prefix = '.'.join(prefix.split('.')[:-1] + [name]) else: list_name = shape.member.serialization.get('name', 'member') list_prefix = '%s.%s' % (prefix, list_name) for i, element in enumerate(value, 1): element_prefix = '%s.%s' % (list_prefix, i) element_shape = shape.member self._serialize(serialized, element, element_shape, element_prefix) def _serialize_type_map(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): if self._is_shape_flattened(shape): full_prefix = prefix else: full_prefix = '%s.entry' % prefix template = full_prefix + '.{i}.{suffix}' key_shape = shape.key value_shape = shape.value key_suffix = self._get_serialized_name(key_shape, default_name='key') value_suffix = self._get_serialized_name(value_shape, 'value') for i, key in enumerate(value, 1): key_prefix = template.format(i=i, suffix=key_suffix) value_prefix = template.format(i=i, suffix=value_suffix) self._serialize(serialized, key, key_shape, key_prefix) self._serialize(serialized, value[key], value_shape, value_prefix) def _serialize_type_blob(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): # Blob args must be base64 encoded. serialized[prefix] = self._get_base64(value) def _serialize_type_timestamp(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): serialized[prefix] = self._convert_timestamp_to_str(value) def _serialize_type_boolean(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): if value: serialized[prefix] = 'true' else: serialized[prefix] = 'false' def _default_serialize(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): serialized[prefix] = value def _is_shape_flattened(self, shape): return shape.serialization.get('flattened') class EC2Serializer(QuerySerializer): """EC2 specific customizations to the query protocol serializers. The EC2 model is almost, but not exactly, similar to the query protocol serializer. This class encapsulates those differences. The model will have be marked with a ``protocol`` of ``ec2``, so you don't need to worry about wiring this class up correctly. """ def _get_serialized_name(self, shape, default_name): # Returns the serialized name for the shape if it exists. # Otherwise it will return the passed in default_name. if 'queryName' in shape.serialization: return shape.serialization['queryName'] elif 'name' in shape.serialization: # A locationName is always capitalized # on input for the ec2 protocol. name = shape.serialization['name'] return name[0].upper() + name[1:] else: return default_name def _serialize_type_list(self, serialized, value, shape, prefix=''): for i, element in enumerate(value, 1): element_prefix = '%s.%s' % (prefix, i) element_shape = shape.member self._serialize(serialized, element, element_shape, element_prefix) class QueryAcceptJsonSerializer(QuerySerializer): @property def headers(self): return {"Accept": 'application/json'} def _serialize_not_shape(self, data, parameters): data.update(parameters) def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data): if serialized['method'].lower() == "get": serialized['body'] = {} serialized['query_string'] = data else: serialized['body'] = data return serialized class KCSSerializer(QueryAcceptJsonSerializer): def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data): serialized['body'] = {} serialized['query_string'] = data return serialized class CustomBodySerializer(QueryAcceptJsonSerializer): def serialize_to_request(self, parameters, operation_model): shape = operation_model.input_shape serialized = self._create_default_request() serialized['method'] = operation_model.http.get('method', self.DEFAULT_METHOD) # The query serializer only deals with body params so # that's what we hand off the _serialize_* methods. serialized['headers'].update( { 'X-Action': operation_model.name, 'X-Version': operation_model.metadata['apiVersion'], } ) if 'requestUri' in operation_model.http: serialized['url_path'] = operation_model.http['requestUri'] body_params = self.MAP_TYPE() custom_body = None if 'Body' in parameters: custom_body = parameters.pop('Body') if shape is not None: self._serialize(body_params, parameters, shape) else: self._serialize_not_shape(body_params, parameters) return self._serialize_data(serialized, body_params, custom_body) def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data, body=None): if body is not None: serialized['body'] = json.dumps(body).encode(self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) serialized['query_string'] = data return serialized class JSONSerializer(Serializer): """ BASE JSON REQUEST all method with json body """ TIMESTAMP_FORMAT = 'unixtimestamp' def serialize_to_request(self, parameters, operation_model): target = '%s.%s' % (operation_model.metadata['targetPrefix'], operation_model.name) serialized = self._create_default_request() serialized['method'] = operation_model.http.get('method', self.DEFAULT_METHOD) if 'requestUri' in operation_model.http: serialized['url_path'] = operation_model.http['requestUri'] serialized['query_string'] = self.MAP_TYPE() serialized['headers'] = { 'X-Amz-Target': target, 'Content-Type': 'application/json', 'Accept': 'application/json', 'X-Action': operation_model.name, 'X-Version': operation_model.metadata['apiVersion'] } body = self.MAP_TYPE() input_shape = operation_model.input_shape if input_shape is not None: self._serialize(body, parameters, input_shape) else: self._serialize_not_shape(body, parameters) return self._serialize_data(serialized, body) def _serialize_not_shape(self, data, parameters): data.update(parameters) def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data): serialized['body'] = json.dumps(data).encode(self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) return serialized def _serialize(self, serialized, value, shape, key=None): method = getattr(self, '_serialize_type_%s' % shape.type_name, self._default_serialize) method(serialized, value, shape, key) def _serialize_type_structure(self, serialized, value, shape, key): if key is not None: # If a key is provided, this is a result of a recursive # call so we need to add a new child dict as the value # of the passed in serialized dict. We'll then add # all the structure members as key/vals in the new serialized # dictionary we just created. new_serialized = self.MAP_TYPE() serialized[key] = new_serialized serialized = new_serialized members = shape.members for member_key, member_value in value.items(): member_shape = members[member_key] if 'name' in member_shape.serialization: member_key = member_shape.serialization['name'] self._serialize(serialized, member_value, member_shape, member_key) def _serialize_type_map(self, serialized, value, shape, key): map_obj = self.MAP_TYPE() serialized[key] = map_obj for sub_key, sub_value in value.items(): self._serialize(map_obj, sub_value, shape.value, sub_key) def _serialize_type_list(self, serialized, value, shape, key): list_obj = [] serialized[key] = list_obj for list_item in value: wrapper = {} # The JSON list serialization is the only case where we aren't # setting a key on a dict. We handle this by using # a __current__ key on a wrapper dict to serialize each # list item before appending it to the serialized list. self._serialize(wrapper, list_item, shape.member, "__current__") list_obj.append(wrapper["__current__"]) def _default_serialize(self, serialized, value, shape, key): serialized[key] = value def _serialize_type_timestamp(self, serialized, value, shape, key): serialized[key] = self._convert_timestamp_to_str(value) def _serialize_type_blob(self, serialized, value, shape, key): serialized[key] = self._get_base64(value) class NotGetJsonSerializer(JSONSerializer): def _serialize_data(self, serialized, data): if serialized['method'].lower() == "get": serialized['body'] = {} serialized['query_string'].update(data) else: serialized['body'] = json.dumps(data).encode(self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) return serialized class BaseRestSerializer(Serializer): """Base class for rest protocols. The only variance between the various rest protocols is the way that the body is serialized. All other aspects (headers, uri, etc.) are the same and logic for serializing those aspects lives here. Subclasses must implement the ``_serialize_body_params`` method. """ # This is a list of known values for the "location" key in the # serialization dict. The location key tells us where on the request # to put the serialized value. KNOWN_LOCATIONS = ['uri', 'querystring', 'header', 'headers'] def serialize_to_request(self, parameters, operation_model): serialized = self._create_default_request() serialized['headers'] = { 'X-Action': operation_model.name, 'X-Version': operation_model.metadata['apiVersion'] } serialized['method'] = operation_model.http.get('method', self.DEFAULT_METHOD) shape = operation_model.input_shape if shape is None: serialized['url_path'] = operation_model.http['requestUri'] return serialized shape_members = shape.members # While the ``serialized`` key holds the final serialized request # data, we need interim dicts for the various locations of the # request. We need this for the uri_path_kwargs and the # query_string_kwargs because they are templated, so we need # to gather all the needed data for the string template, # then we render the template. The body_kwargs is needed # because once we've collected them all, we run them through # _serialize_body_params, which for rest-json, creates JSON, # and for rest-xml, will create XML. This is what the # ``partitioned`` dict below is for. partitioned = { 'uri_path_kwargs': self.MAP_TYPE(), 'query_string_kwargs': self.MAP_TYPE(), 'body_kwargs': self.MAP_TYPE(), 'headers': self.MAP_TYPE(), } for param_name, param_value in parameters.items(): if param_value is None: # Don't serialize any parameter with a None value. continue self._partition_parameters(partitioned, param_name, param_value, shape_members) serialized['url_path'] = self._render_uri_template( operation_model.http['requestUri'], partitioned['uri_path_kwargs']) # Note that we lean on the http implementation to handle the case # where the requestUri path already has query parameters. # The bundled http client, requests, already supports this. serialized['query_string'] = partitioned['query_string_kwargs'] if partitioned['headers']: serialized['headers'] = partitioned['headers'] self._serialize_payload(partitioned, parameters, serialized, shape, shape_members) return serialized def _render_uri_template(self, uri_template, params): # We need to handle two cases:: # # /{Bucket}/foo # /{Key+}/bar # A label ending with '+' is greedy. There can only # be one greedy key. encoded_params = {} for template_param in re.findall(r'{(.*?)}', uri_template): if template_param.endswith('+'): encoded_params[template_param] = percent_encode( params[template_param[:-1]], safe='/~') else: encoded_params[template_param] = percent_encode( params[template_param]) return uri_template.format(**encoded_params) def _serialize_payload(self, partitioned, parameters, serialized, shape, shape_members): # partitioned - The user input params partitioned by location. # parameters - The user input params. # serialized - The final serialized request dict. # shape - Describes the expected input shape # shape_members - The members of the input struct shape payload_member = shape.serialization.get('payload') if payload_member is not None and \ shape_members[payload_member].type_name in ['blob', 'string']: # If it's streaming, then the body is just the # value of the payload. body_payload = parameters.get(payload_member, b'') body_payload = self._encode_payload(body_payload) serialized['body'] = body_payload elif payload_member is not None: # If there's a payload member, we serialized that # member to they body. body_params = parameters.get(payload_member) if body_params is not None: serialized['body'] = self._serialize_body_params( body_params, shape_members[payload_member]) elif partitioned['body_kwargs']: serialized['body'] = self._serialize_body_params( partitioned['body_kwargs'], shape) def _encode_payload(self, body): if isinstance(body, six.text_type): return body.encode(self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) return body def _partition_parameters(self, partitioned, param_name, param_value, shape_members): # This takes the user provided input parameter (``param``) # and figures out where they go in the request dict. # Some params are HTTP headers, some are used in the URI, some # are in the request body. This method deals with this. member = shape_members[param_name] location = member.serialization.get('location') key_name = member.serialization.get('name', param_name) if location == 'uri': partitioned['uri_path_kwargs'][key_name] = param_value elif location == 'querystring': if isinstance(param_value, dict): partitioned['query_string_kwargs'].update(param_value) else: partitioned['query_string_kwargs'][key_name] = param_value elif location == 'header': shape = shape_members[param_name] value = self._convert_header_value(shape, param_value) partitioned['headers'][key_name] = str(value) elif location == 'headers': # 'headers' is a bit of an oddball. The ``key_name`` # is actually really a prefix for the header names: header_prefix = key_name # The value provided by the user is a dict so we'll be # creating multiple header key/val pairs. The key # name to use for each header is the header_prefix (``key_name``) # plus the key provided by the user. self._do_serialize_header_map(header_prefix, partitioned['headers'], param_value) else: partitioned['body_kwargs'][param_name] = param_value def _do_serialize_header_map(self, header_prefix, headers, user_input): for key, val in user_input.items(): full_key = header_prefix + key headers[full_key] = val def _serialize_body_params(self, params, shape): raise NotImplementedError('_serialize_body_params') def _convert_header_value(self, shape, value): if shape.type_name == 'timestamp': datetime_obj = parse_to_aware_datetime(value) timestamp = calendar.timegm(datetime_obj.utctimetuple()) return self._timestamp_rfc822(timestamp) else: return value class RestJSONSerializer(BaseRestSerializer, JSONSerializer): def _serialize_body_params(self, params, shape): serialized_body = self.MAP_TYPE() self._serialize(serialized_body, params, shape) return json.dumps(serialized_body).encode(self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) class RestXMLSerializer(BaseRestSerializer): TIMESTAMP_FORMAT = 'iso8601' def _serialize_body_params(self, params, shape): root_name = shape.serialization['name'] pseudo_root = ElementTree.Element('') self._serialize(shape, params, pseudo_root, root_name) real_root = list(pseudo_root)[0] return ElementTree.tostring(real_root, encoding=self.DEFAULT_ENCODING) def _serialize(self, shape, params, xmlnode, name): method = getattr(self, '_serialize_type_%s' % shape.type_name, self._default_serialize) method(xmlnode, params, shape, name) def _serialize_type_structure(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): structure_node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) if 'xmlNamespace' in shape.serialization: namespace_metadata = shape.serialization['xmlNamespace'] attribute_name = 'xmlns' if namespace_metadata.get('prefix'): attribute_name += ':%s' % namespace_metadata['prefix'] structure_node.attrib[attribute_name] = namespace_metadata['uri'] for key, value in params.items(): member_shape = shape.members[key] member_name = member_shape.serialization.get('name', key) # We need to special case member shapes that are marked as an # xmlAttribute. Rather than serializing into an XML child node, # we instead serialize the shape to an XML attribute of the # *current* node. if value is None: # Don't serialize any param whose value is None. return if member_shape.serialization.get('xmlAttribute'): # xmlAttributes must have a serialization name. xml_attribute_name = member_shape.serialization['name'] structure_node.attrib[xml_attribute_name] = value continue self._serialize(member_shape, value, structure_node, member_name) def _serialize_type_list(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): member_shape = shape.member if shape.serialization.get('flattened'): element_name = name list_node = xmlnode else: element_name = member_shape.serialization.get('name', 'member') list_node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) for item in params: self._serialize(member_shape, item, list_node, element_name) def _serialize_type_map(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): # Given the ``name`` of MyMap, and input of {"key1": "val1"} # we serialize this as: # # # key1 # val1 # # node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) # TODO: handle flattened maps. for key, value in params.items(): entry_node = ElementTree.SubElement(node, 'entry') key_name = self._get_serialized_name(shape.key, default_name='key') val_name = self._get_serialized_name(shape.value, default_name='value') self._serialize(shape.key, key, entry_node, key_name) self._serialize(shape.value, value, entry_node, val_name) def _serialize_type_boolean(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): # For scalar types, the 'params' attr is actually just a scalar # value representing the data we need to serialize as a boolean. # It will either be 'true' or 'false' node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) if params: str_value = 'true' else: str_value = 'false' node.text = str_value def _serialize_type_blob(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) node.text = self._get_base64(params) def _serialize_type_timestamp(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) node.text = self._convert_timestamp_to_str(params) def _default_serialize(self, xmlnode, params, shape, name): node = ElementTree.SubElement(xmlnode, name) node.text = str(params) SERIALIZERS = { 'kcs': KCSSerializer, 'ec2': EC2Serializer, 'query': QuerySerializer, 'query-json': QueryAcceptJsonSerializer, 'json': JSONSerializer, 'json2': NotGetJsonSerializer, 'rest-json': RestJSONSerializer, 'rest-xml': RestXMLSerializer, 'custom-body': CustomBodySerializer, }