[ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MODPYTHON-171?page=all ]

Graham Dumpleton reopened MODPYTHON-171:
----------------------------------------

             
Unfortunately, one cannot auto normalise paths when assigning to req.filename. 
This is because some Apache modules use req.filename to allow handlers to 
communicate information to them. An example of this is the proxy-server handler 
(MODPYTHON-141). By auto normalising the path on assignment to req.filename, 
this can stuff up a specially formatted string which the third party module is 
expecting.

What will have to be done instead is for a new function to be supplied in the 
'mod_python.apache' module whose soul purpose is to normalise paths. In effect 
this will be a wrapper for the apr_filepath_merge() function. Because the whole 
functionaility of that APR function isn't required and probably shouldn't be 
exposed, for now suggest that the function provided follow more the Python 
naming convention. Thus, would be called normpath().

Thus, if assigning to req.filename, would use:

  from mod_python import apache

  req.filename = apache.normpath('/some/path')

In time it may make sense to add to the 'mod_python.apache' module other 
functions the equivalent of what is in os.path/posixpath. The reason for this 
is that Apache supplies req.filename and req.uri in a POSIXish style format, 
but one sees quite a lot that people use os.path functions in their code when 
by rights they should use posixpath functions to be portable. The posixpath 
functions don't necessarily though treat drive specifiers on Windows as may be 
provided by Apache in req.filename the correct way. To be as compatible as 
possible, the functions added to 'mod_python.apache' should just wrap the APR 
functions which provide equivalent functionality.

> Assignment to req.filename and POSIX style pathnames.
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: MODPYTHON-171
>                 URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MODPYTHON-171
>             Project: mod_python
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: core
>    Affects Versions: 3.2.8
>            Reporter: Graham Dumpleton
>         Assigned To: Graham Dumpleton
>             Fix For: 3.3
>
>
> In Apache, all the path names relating to the matched target of a request are 
> dealt with as POSIX style paths. That is, a forward slash is used as the 
> directory separator even if the platform is Win32. The only real allowance 
> for Win32 stuff is that drive specifiers may still occur in which case the 
> drive letter is always converted to upper case.
> All the Apache C API functions dealing with manipulation of and specifically 
> generation of modified paths will by default ensure that paths are maintained 
> in this POSIX style. To have a path be generated in its true native form, you 
> need to provide special flags to functions.
> When an Apache module writer works with paths, they would normally rely on 
> the default behaviour and so long as they use the functions provided by the 
> Apache C API, the result will always be consistent.
> Where would all this be a potential issue is where modules set the 
> request_rec->filename attribute, ie., the req.filename attribute of the 
> mod_python request object. In a C Apache module, as the result is always 
> going to be in the correct form when request_rec->filename is modified, 
> everything still comes out okay.
> The problem in mod_python, or more perhaps when using Python, is that all the 
> directory manipulation routines in os.path as they exist on Win32 platform 
> can generate paths with back slashes in them. Further, it is often convenient 
> to use __file__ attribute of modules in some way, which again is going to use 
> back slashes on Win32 platform. If the results from either of these is 
> assigned to req.filename, the result request_rec->filename attribute is no 
> longer going to be in the POSIX style form which is would normally exist if 
> only the Apache C APIs were used.
> One area where this causes a problem (and which isn't fixed) was described in 
> MODPYTHON-161, whereby setting req.filename to a path which includes back 
> slashes instead of the required POSIX style forward slashes can result in the 
> wrong interpreter being selected for a subsequent phase if the 
> PythonInterpPerDirectory directive is being used. The case used for any drive 
> specifier could similarly be a problem.
> Now although Python provides os.path.normpath(), that normalises a path in 
> the native format. There is no function which can normalise a path and output 
> it in the POSIX style format. Trying to create a function in Python which 
> does may not yield the same result as what Apache expects.
> The actual function in Apache which can be used to normalise paths and which 
> outputs the POSIX style path required is apr_filepath_merge(). The question 
> is, should this be exposed in some way so that it is useable from mod_python, 
> or for the req.filename case, should assignment to req.filename automatically 
> trigger normalisation of the path to ensure that it simply just works all the 
> time and isn't dependent on a user of mod_python realising they need to 
> normalise it first in the POSIX style to ensure their code is portable across 
> platforms.

-- 
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
-
If you think it was sent incorrectly contact one of the administrators: 
http://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/Administrators.jspa
-
For more information on JIRA, see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira

        

Reply via email to