This is an implementation of Hypertext Transfer Protocol version 2 in C.
The framing layer of HTTP/2 is implemented as a form of reusable C library. On top of that, we have implemented HTTP/2 client, server and proxy. We have also developed load test and benchmarking tool for HTTP/2 and SPDY.
HPACK encoder and decoder are available as public API.
The experimental high level C++ library is also available.
We have Python binding of this libary, but we have not covered everything yet.
We started to implement h2-14 (http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-http2-14), the header compression (http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-header-compression-09) and HTTP Alternative Services (http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-alt-svc-04).
The nghttp2 code base was forked from spdylay project.
HTTP/2 Features | Support |
---|---|
Core frames handling | Yes |
Dependency Tree | Yes |
Large header (CONTINUATION) | Yes |
ALTSVC extension | Yes |
The following endpoints are available to try out nghttp2 implementation.
https://nghttp2.org/ (TLS + ALPN/NPN)
NPN offer
h2-14
,spdy/3.1
andhttp/1.1
.This endpoint requires TLSv1.2 for HTTP/2 connection.
http://nghttp2.org/ (Upgrade / Direct)
h2c-14
andhttp/1.1
. We configured this server to send ALTSVC frame or Alt-Svc header field to announce that alternative service is available at port 443.
The following package is required to build the libnghttp2 library:
- pkg-config >= 0.20
To build and run the unit test programs, the following package is required:
- cunit >= 2.1
To build the documentation, you need to install:
- sphinx (http://sphinx-doc.org/)
To build and run the application programs (nghttp
, nghttpd
and
nghttpx
) in src
directory, the following packages are
required:
- OpenSSL >= 1.0.1
- libevent-openssl >= 2.0.8
- zlib >= 1.2.3
ALPN support requires unreleased version OpenSSL >= 1.0.2.
To enable SPDY protocol in the application program nghttpx
and
h2load
, the following package is required:
- spdylay >= 1.3.0
To enable -a
option (getting linked assets from the downloaded
resource) in nghttp
, the following package is required:
- libxml2 >= 2.7.7
The HPACK tools require the following package:
- jansson >= 2.5
To mitigate heap fragmentation in long running server programs
(nghttpd
and nghttpx
), jemalloc is recommended:
- jemalloc
libnghttp2_asio C++ library requires the following packages:
- libboost-dev >= 1.54.0
- libboost-thread-dev >= 1.54.0
The Python bindings require the following packages:
- cython >= 0.19
- python >= 2.7
If you are using Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, you need the following packages installed:
- make
- binutils
- autoconf
- automake
- autotools-dev
- libtool
- pkg-config
- zlib1g-dev
- libcunit1-dev
- libssl-dev
- libxml2-dev
- libevent-dev
- libjansson-dev
- libjemalloc-dev
- cython
- python3.4-dev
spdylay is not packaged in Ubuntu, so you need to build it yourself: http://tatsuhiro-t.github.io/spdylay/
Building from git is easy, but please be sure that at least autoconf 2.68 is used:
$ autoreconf -i $ automake $ autoconf $ ./configure $ make
To compile source code, gcc >= 4.8.3 or clang >= 3.4 is required.
Note
Mac OS X users may need --disable-threads
configure option to
disable multi threading in nghttpd, nghttpx and h2load to prevent
them from crashing. Patch is welcome to make multi threading work
on Mac OS X platform.
Note
Documentation is still incomplete.
To build documentation, run:
$ make html
The documents will be generated under doc/manual/html/
.
The generated documents will not be installed with make install
.
The online documentation is available at https://nghttp2.org/documentation/
The src directory contains HTTP/2 client, server and proxy programs.
nghttp
is a HTTP/2 client. It can connect to the HTTP/2 server
with prior knowledge, HTTP Upgrade and NPN/ALPN TLS extension.
It has verbose output mode for framing information. Here is sample
output from nghttp
client:
$ src/nghttp -nv https://nghttp2.org [ 0.033][NPN] server offers: * h2-14 * spdy/3.1 * http/1.1 The negotiated protocol: h2-14 [ 0.068] send SETTINGS frame <length=15, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (niv=3) [SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS(3):100] [SETTINGS_INITIAL_WINDOW_SIZE(4):65535] [SETTINGS_COMPRESS_DATA(5):1] [ 0.068] send HEADERS frame <length=46, flags=0x05, stream_id=1> ; END_STREAM | END_HEADERS (padlen=0) ; Open new stream :authority: nghttp2.org :method: GET :path: / :scheme: https accept: */* accept-encoding: gzip, deflate user-agent: nghttp2/0.4.0-DEV [ 0.068] recv SETTINGS frame <length=10, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (niv=2) [SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS(3):100] [SETTINGS_INITIAL_WINDOW_SIZE(4):65535] [ 0.068] send SETTINGS frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=0> ; ACK (niv=0) [ 0.079] recv SETTINGS frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=0> ; ACK (niv=0) [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) :status: 200 [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) accept-ranges: bytes [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) age: 15 [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) content-length: 40243 [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) content-type: text/html [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) date: Wed, 14 May 2014 15:14:30 GMT [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) etag: "535d0eea-9d33" [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) last-modified: Sun, 27 Apr 2014 14:06:34 GMT [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) server: nginx/1.4.6 (Ubuntu) [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) x-varnish: 2114900538 2114900537 [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) via: 1.1 varnish, 1.1 nghttpx [ 0.080] (stream_id=1, noind=0) strict-transport-security: max-age=31536000 [ 0.080] recv HEADERS frame <length=162, flags=0x04, stream_id=1> ; END_HEADERS (padlen=0) ; First response header [ 0.080] recv DATA frame <length=3786, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.080] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.081] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.093] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.093] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.094] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.094] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.094] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.096] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.096] send WINDOW_UPDATE frame <length=4, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (window_size_increment=36554) [ 0.096] send WINDOW_UPDATE frame <length=4, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> (window_size_increment=36554) [ 0.108] recv DATA frame <length=3689, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.108] recv DATA frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=1> ; END_STREAM [ 0.108] send GOAWAY frame <length=8, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (last_stream_id=0, error_code=NO_ERROR(0), opaque_data(0)=[])
The HTTP Upgrade is performed like this:
$ src/nghttp -nvu http://nghttp2.org [ 0.013] HTTP Upgrade request GET / HTTP/1.1 Host: nghttp2.org Connection: Upgrade, HTTP2-Settings Upgrade: h2c-14 HTTP2-Settings: AwAAAGQEAAD__wUAAAAB Accept: */* User-Agent: nghttp2/0.4.0-DEV [ 0.024] HTTP Upgrade response HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols Connection: Upgrade Upgrade: h2c-14 [ 0.024] HTTP Upgrade success [ 0.024] send SETTINGS frame <length=15, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (niv=3) [SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS(3):100] [SETTINGS_INITIAL_WINDOW_SIZE(4):65535] [SETTINGS_COMPRESS_DATA(5):1] [ 0.024] recv SETTINGS frame <length=10, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (niv=2) [SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS(3):100] [SETTINGS_INITIAL_WINDOW_SIZE(4):65535] [ 0.024] recv ALTSVC frame <length=43, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (max-age=86400, port=443, protocol_id=h2-14, host=nghttp2.org, origin=http://nghttp2.org) [ 0.024] send SETTINGS frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=0> ; ACK (niv=0) [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) :status: 200 [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) accept-ranges: bytes [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) age: 10 [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) content-length: 40243 [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) content-type: text/html [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) date: Wed, 14 May 2014 15:16:34 GMT [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) etag: "535d0eea-9d33" [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) last-modified: Sun, 27 Apr 2014 14:06:34 GMT [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) server: nginx/1.4.6 (Ubuntu) [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) x-varnish: 2114900541 2114900540 [ 0.024] (stream_id=1, noind=0) via: 1.1 varnish, 1.1 nghttpx [ 0.024] recv HEADERS frame <length=148, flags=0x04, stream_id=1> ; END_HEADERS (padlen=0) ; First response header [ 0.024] recv DATA frame <length=3786, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.025] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.031] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.031] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.032] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.032] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.033] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.033] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.033] send WINDOW_UPDATE frame <length=4, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (window_size_increment=33164) [ 0.033] send WINDOW_UPDATE frame <length=4, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> (window_size_increment=33164) [ 0.038] recv DATA frame <length=4096, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.038] recv DATA frame <length=3689, flags=0x00, stream_id=1> [ 0.038] recv DATA frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=1> ; END_STREAM [ 0.038] recv SETTINGS frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=0> ; ACK (niv=0) [ 0.038] send GOAWAY frame <length=8, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (last_stream_id=0, error_code=NO_ERROR(0), opaque_data(0)=[])
nghttpd
is a multi-threaded static web server.
By default, it uses SSL/TLS connection. Use --no-tls
option to
disable it.
nghttpd
only accepts the HTTP/2 connection via NPN/ALPN or direct
HTTP/2 connection. No HTTP Upgrade is supported.
-p
option allows users to configure server push.
Just like nghttp
, it has verbose output mode for framing
information. Here is sample output from nghttpd
server:
$ src/nghttpd --no-tls -v 8080 IPv4: listen on port 8080 IPv6: listen on port 8080 [id=1] [ 15.921] send SETTINGS frame <length=10, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (niv=2) [SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS(3):100] [SETTINGS_COMPRESS_DATA(5):1] [id=1] [ 15.921] recv SETTINGS frame <length=15, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (niv=3) [SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS(3):100] [SETTINGS_INITIAL_WINDOW_SIZE(4):65535] [SETTINGS_COMPRESS_DATA(5):1] [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) :authority: localhost:8080 [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) :method: GET [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) :path: / [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) :scheme: http [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) accept: */* [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) accept-encoding: gzip, deflate [id=1] [ 15.921] (stream_id=1, noind=0) user-agent: nghttp2/0.4.0-DEV [id=1] [ 15.921] recv HEADERS frame <length=48, flags=0x05, stream_id=1> ; END_STREAM | END_HEADERS (padlen=0) ; Open new stream [id=1] [ 15.921] recv SETTINGS frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=0> ; ACK (niv=0) [id=1] [ 15.921] send SETTINGS frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=0> ; ACK (niv=0) [id=1] [ 15.921] send HEADERS frame <length=82, flags=0x04, stream_id=1> ; END_HEADERS (padlen=0) ; First response header :status: 200 cache-control: max-age=3600 content-length: 612 date: Wed, 14 May 2014 15:19:03 GMT last-modified: Sat, 08 Mar 2014 16:04:06 GMT server: nghttpd nghttp2/0.4.0-DEV [id=1] [ 15.922] send DATA frame <length=381, flags=0x20, stream_id=1> ; COMPRESSED [id=1] [ 15.922] send DATA frame <length=0, flags=0x01, stream_id=1> ; END_STREAM [id=1] [ 15.922] stream_id=1 closed [id=1] [ 15.922] recv GOAWAY frame <length=8, flags=0x00, stream_id=0> (last_stream_id=0, error_code=NO_ERROR(0), opaque_data(0)=[]) [id=1] [ 15.922] closed
nghttpx
is a multi-threaded reverse proxy for h2-14
, SPDY and
HTTP/1.1 and powers nghttp2.org site. It has several operation modes:
Mode option | Frontend | Backend | Note |
---|---|---|---|
default mode | HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) | HTTP/1.1 | Reverse proxy |
--http2-proxy |
HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) | HTTP/1.1 | SPDY proxy |
--http2-bridge |
HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1 (TLS) | HTTP/2 (TLS) | Â |
--client |
HTTP/2, HTTP/1.1 | HTTP/2 (TLS) | Â |
--client-proxy |
HTTP/2, HTTP/1.1 | HTTP/2 (TLS) | Forward proxy |
The interesting mode at the moment is the default mode. It works like
a reverse proxy and listens for h2-14
, SPDY and HTTP/1.1 and can
be deployed SSL/TLS terminator for existing web server.
The default mode, --http2-proxy
and --http2-bridge
modes use
SSL/TLS in the frontend connection by default. To disable SSL/TLS,
use --frontend-no-tls
option. If that option is used, SPDY is
disabled in the frontend and incoming HTTP/1.1 connection can be
upgraded to HTTP/2 through HTTP Upgrade.
The --http2-bridge
, --client
and --client-proxy
modes use
SSL/TLS in the backend connection by deafult. To disable SSL/TLS, use
--backend-no-tls
option.
nghttpx
supports configuration file. See --conf
option and
sample configuration file nghttpx.conf.sample
.
nghttpx
does not support server push.
In the default mode, (without any of --http2-proxy
,
--http2-bridge
, --client-proxy
and --client
options),
nghttpx
works as reverse proxy to the backend server:
Client <-- (HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/1.1) --> Web Server [reverse proxy]
With --http2-proxy
option, it works as so called secure proxy (aka
SPDY proxy):
Client <-- (HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/1.1) --> Proxy [secure proxy] (e.g., Squid, ATS)
The Client
in the above is needs to be configured to use
nghttpx
as secure proxy.
At the time of this writing, Chrome is the only browser which supports secure proxy. The one way to configure Chrome to use secure proxy is create proxy.pac script like this:
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
return "HTTPS SERVERADDR:PORT";
}
SERVERADDR
and PORT
is the hostname/address and port of the
machine nghttpx is running. Please note that Chrome requires valid
certificate for secure proxy.
Then run Chrome with the following arguments:
$ google-chrome --proxy-pac-url=file:///path/to/proxy.pac --use-npn
With --http2-bridge
, it accepts HTTP/2, SPDY and HTTP/1.1
connections and communicates with backend in HTTP/2:
Client <-- (HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/2) --> Web or HTTP/2 Proxy etc (e.g., nghttpx -s)
With --client-proxy
option, it works as forward proxy and expects
that the backend is HTTP/2 proxy:
Client <-- (HTTP/2, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/2) --> HTTP/2 Proxy [forward proxy] (e.g., nghttpx -s)
The Client
needs to be configured to use nghttpx as forward
proxy. The frontend HTTP/1.1 connection can be upgraded to HTTP/2
through HTTP Upgrade. With the above configuration, one can use
HTTP/1.1 client to access and test their HTTP/2 servers.
With --client
option, it works as reverse proxy and expects that
the backend is HTTP/2 Web server:
Client <-- (HTTP/2, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/2) --> Web Server [reverse proxy]
The frontend HTTP/1.1 connection can be upgraded to HTTP/2 through HTTP Upgrade.
For the operation modes which talk to the backend in HTTP/2 over
SSL/TLS, the backend connections can be tunneled through HTTP proxy.
The proxy is specified using --backend-http-proxy-uri
option. The
following figure illustrates the example of --http2-bridge
and
--backend-http-proxy-uri
options to talk to the outside HTTP/2
proxy through HTTP proxy:
Client <-- (HTTP/2, SPDY, HTTP/1.1) --> nghttpx <-- (HTTP/2) -- --===================---> HTTP/2 Proxy (HTTP proxy tunnel) (e.g., nghttpx -s)
The h2load
program is a benchmarking tool for HTTP/2 and SPDY.
The SPDY support is enabled if the program was built with spdylay
library. The UI of h2load
is heavily inspired by weighttp
(https://github.com/lighttpd/weighttp). The typical usage is as
follows:
$ src/h2load -n1000 -c10 -m10 https://127.0.0.1:8443/ starting benchmark... progress: 10% done progress: 20% done progress: 30% done progress: 40% done progress: 50% done progress: 60% done progress: 70% done progress: 80% done progress: 90% done progress: 100% done finished in 0 sec, 152 millisec and 152 microsec, 6572 req/s, 749 kbytes/s requests: 1000 total, 1000 started, 1000 done, 0 succeeded, 1000 failed, 0 errored status codes: 0 2xx, 0 3xx, 1000 4xx, 0 5xx traffic: 141100 bytes total, 840 bytes headers, 116000 bytes data
The above example issued total 1000 requests, using 10 concurrent
clients (thus 10 HTTP/2 sessions), and maximum 10 streams per client.
With -t
option, h2load
will use multiple native threads to
avoid saturating single core on client side.
Warning
Don't use this tool against publicly available servers. That is considered a DOS attack. Please only use against your private servers.
The src
directory contains HPACK tools. The deflatehd
is a
command-line header compression tool. The inflatehd
is
command-line header decompression tool. Both tools read input from
stdin and write output to stdout. The errors are written to stderr.
They take JSON as input and output. We use (mostly) same JSON data
format described at https://github.com/http2jp/hpack-test-case
The deflatehd
reads JSON data or HTTP/1-style header fields from
stdin and outputs compressed header block in JSON.
For the JSON input, the root JSON object must include cases
key.
Its value has to include the sequence of input header set. They share
the same compression context and are processed in the order they
appear. Each item in the sequence is a JSON object and it must
include headers
key. Its value is an array of a JSON object,
which includes exactly one name/value pair.
Example:
{
"cases":
[
{
"headers": [
{ ":method": "GET" },
{ ":path": "/" }
]
},
{
"headers": [
{ ":method": "POST" },
{ ":path": "/" }
]
}
]
}
With -t
option, the program can accept more familiar HTTP/1 style
header field block. Each header set is delimited by empty line:
Example:
:method: GET :scheme: https :path: / :method: POST user-agent: nghttp2
The output is JSON object. It should include cases
key and its
value is an array of JSON object, which has at least following keys:
- seq
- The index of header set in the input.
- input_length
- The sum of length of name/value pair in the input.
- output_length
- The length of compressed header block.
- percentage_of_original_size
input_length
/output_length
* 100- wire
- The compressed header block in hex string.
- headers
- The input header set.
- header_table_size
- The header table size adjusted before deflating header set.
Examples:
{
"cases":
[
{
"seq": 0,
"input_length": 66,
"output_length": 20,
"percentage_of_original_size": 30.303030303030305,
"wire": "01881f3468e5891afcbf83868a3d856659c62e3f",
"headers": [
{
":authority": "example.org"
},
{
":method": "GET"
},
{
":path": "/"
},
{
":scheme": "https"
},
{
"user-agent": "nghttp2"
}
],
"header_table_size": 4096
}
,
{
"seq": 1,
"input_length": 74,
"output_length": 10,
"percentage_of_original_size": 13.513513513513514,
"wire": "88448504252dd5918485",
"headers": [
{
":authority": "example.org"
},
{
":method": "POST"
},
{
":path": "/account"
},
{
":scheme": "https"
},
{
"user-agent": "nghttp2"
}
],
"header_table_size": 4096
}
]
}
The output can be used as the input for inflatehd
and
deflatehd
.
With -d
option, the extra header_table
key is added and its
associated value includes the state of dynamic header table after the
corresponding header set was processed. The value includes at least
the following keys:
- entries
- The entry in the header table. If
referenced
istrue
, it is in the reference set. Thesize
includes the overhead (32 bytes). Theindex
corresponds to the index of header table. Thename
is the header field name and thevalue
is the header field value. - size
- The sum of the spaces entries occupied, this includes the entry overhead.
- max_size
- The maximum header table size.
- deflate_size
- The sum of the spaces entries occupied within
max_deflate_size
. - max_deflate_size
- The maximum header table size encoder uses. This can be smaller
than
max_size
. In this case, encoder only uses up to firstmax_deflate_size
buffer. Since the header table size is stillmax_size
, the encoder has to keep track of entries ouside themax_deflate_size
but inside themax_size
and make sure that they are no longer referenced.
Example:
{
"cases":
[
{
"seq": 0,
"input_length": 66,
"output_length": 20,
"percentage_of_original_size": 30.303030303030305,
"wire": "01881f3468e5891afcbf83868a3d856659c62e3f",
"headers": [
{
":authority": "example.org"
},
{
":method": "GET"
},
{
":path": "/"
},
{
":scheme": "https"
},
{
"user-agent": "nghttp2"
}
],
"header_table_size": 4096,
"header_table": {
"entries": [
{
"index": 1,
"name": "user-agent",
"value": "nghttp2",
"referenced": true,
"size": 49
},
{
"index": 2,
"name": ":scheme",
"value": "https",
"referenced": true,
"size": 44
},
{
"index": 3,
"name": ":path",
"value": "/",
"referenced": true,
"size": 38
},
{
"index": 4,
"name": ":method",
"value": "GET",
"referenced": true,
"size": 42
},
{
"index": 5,
"name": ":authority",
"value": "example.org",
"referenced": true,
"size": 53
}
],
"size": 226,
"max_size": 4096,
"deflate_size": 226,
"max_deflate_size": 4096
}
}
,
{
"seq": 1,
"input_length": 74,
"output_length": 10,
"percentage_of_original_size": 13.513513513513514,
"wire": "88448504252dd5918485",
"headers": [
{
":authority": "example.org"
},
{
":method": "POST"
},
{
":path": "/account"
},
{
":scheme": "https"
},
{
"user-agent": "nghttp2"
}
],
"header_table_size": 4096,
"header_table": {
"entries": [
{
"index": 1,
"name": ":method",
"value": "POST",
"referenced": true,
"size": 43
},
{
"index": 2,
"name": "user-agent",
"value": "nghttp2",
"referenced": true,
"size": 49
},
{
"index": 3,
"name": ":scheme",
"value": "https",
"referenced": true,
"size": 44
},
{
"index": 4,
"name": ":path",
"value": "/",
"referenced": false,
"size": 38
},
{
"index": 5,
"name": ":method",
"value": "GET",
"referenced": false,
"size": 42
},
{
"index": 6,
"name": ":authority",
"value": "example.org",
"referenced": true,
"size": 53
}
],
"size": 269,
"max_size": 4096,
"deflate_size": 269,
"max_deflate_size": 4096
}
}
]
}
The inflatehd
reads JSON data from stdin and outputs decompressed
name/value pairs in JSON.
The root JSON object must include cases
key. Its value has to
include the sequence of compressed header block. They share the same
compression context and are processed in the order they appear. Each
item in the sequence is a JSON object and it must have at least
wire
key. Its value is a compressed header block in hex string.
Example:
{
"cases":
[
{ "wire": "8285" },
{ "wire": "8583" }
]
}
The output is JSON object. It should include cases
key and its
value is an array of JSON object, which has at least following keys:
- seq
- The index of header set in the input.
- headers
- The JSON array includes decompressed name/value pairs.
- wire
- The compressed header block in hex string.
- header_table_size
- The header table size adjusted before inflating compressed header block.
Example:
{
"cases":
[
{
"seq": 0,
"wire": "01881f3468e5891afcbf83868a3d856659c62e3f",
"headers": [
{
":authority": "example.org"
},
{
":method": "GET"
},
{
":path": "/"
},
{
":scheme": "https"
},
{
"user-agent": "nghttp2"
}
],
"header_table_size": 4096
}
,
{
"seq": 1,
"wire": "88448504252dd5918485",
"headers": [
{
":method": "POST"
},
{
":path": "/account"
},
{
"user-agent": "nghttp2"
},
{
":scheme": "https"
},
{
":authority": "example.org"
}
],
"header_table_size": 4096
}
]
}
The output can be used as the input for deflatehd
and
inflatehd
.
With -d
option, the extra header_table
key is added and its
associated value includes the state of dynamic header table after the
corresponding header set was processed. The format is the same as
deflatehd
.
libnghttp2_asio is C++ library built on top of libnghttp2 and provides high level abstraction API to build HTTP/2 applications. It depends on Boost::ASIO library and OpenSSL. Currently libnghttp2_asio provides server side API.
libnghttp2_asio is not built by default. Use --enable-asio-lib
configure flag to build libnghttp2_asio. The required Boost libraries
are:
- Boost::Asio
- Boost::System
- Boost::Thread
Server API is designed to build HTTP/2 server very easily to utilize C++11 anonymous function and closure. The bare minimum example of HTTP/2 server looks like this:
#include <nghttp2/asio_http2.h>
using namespace nghttp2::asio_http2;
using namespace nghttp2::asio_http2::server;
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
http2 server;
server.listen("*", 3000, [](const std::shared_ptr<request> &req,
const std::shared_ptr<response> &res) {
res->write_head(200);
res->end("hello, world");
});
}
For more details, see the documentation of libnghttp2_asio.
This python
directory contains nghttp2 Python bindings. The
bindings currently provide HPACK compressor and decompressor classes
and HTTP/2 server.
The extension module is called nghttp2
.
make
will build the bindings and target Python version is
determined by configure script. If the detected Python version is not
what you expect, specify a path to Python executable in PYTHON
variable as an argument to configure script (e.g., ./configure
PYTHON=/usr/bin/python3.4
).
The following example code illustrates basic usage of HPACK compressor and decompressor in Python:
import binascii
import nghttp2
deflater = nghttp2.HDDeflater()
inflater = nghttp2.HDInflater()
data = deflater.deflate([(b'foo', b'bar'),
(b'baz', b'buz')])
print(binascii.b2a_hex(data))
hdrs = inflater.inflate(data)
print(hdrs)
The nghttp2.HTTP2Server
class builds on top of the asyncio event
loop. On construction, RequestHandlerClass must be given, which
must be a subclass of nghttp2.BaseRequestHandler
class.
The BaseRequestHandler
class is used to handle the HTTP/2 stream.
By default, it does nothing. It must be subclassed to handle each
event callback method.
The first callback method invoked is on_headers()
. It is called
when HEADERS frame, which includes request header fields, has arrived.
If request has request body, on_data(data)
is invoked for each
chunk of received data.
When whole request is received, on_request_done()
is invoked.
When stream is closed, on_close(error_code)
is called.
The application can send response using send_response()
method.
It can be used in on_headers()
, on_data()
or
on_request_done()
.
The application can push resource using push()
method. It must be
used before send_response()
call.
The following instance variables are available:
- client_address
- Contains a tuple of the form (host, port) referring to the client's address.
- stream_id
- Stream ID of this stream.
- scheme
- Scheme of the request URI. This is a value of :scheme header field.
- method
- Method of this stream. This is a value of :method header field.
- host
- This is a value of :authority or host header field.
- path
- This is a value of :path header field.
The following example illustrates the HTTP2Server and BaseRequestHandler usage:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import io, ssl
import nghttp2
class Handler(nghttp2.BaseRequestHandler):
def on_headers(self):
self.push(path='/css/bootstrap.css',
request_headers = [('content-length', '3')],
status=200,
body='foo')
self.push(path='/js/bootstrap.js',
method='GET',
request_headers = [('content-length', '10')],
status=200,
body='foobarbuzz')
self.send_response(status=200,
headers = [('content-type', 'text/plain')],
body=io.BytesIO(b'nghttp2-python FTW'))
ctx = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
ctx.options = ssl.OP_ALL | ssl.OP_NO_SSLv2
ctx.load_cert_chain('server.crt', 'server.key')
# give None to ssl to make the server non-SSL/TLS
server = nghttp2.HTTP2Server(('127.0.0.1', 8443), Handler, ssl=ctx)
server.serve_forever()
[This text was composed based on 1.2. License section of curl/libcurl project.]
When contributing with code, you agree to put your changes and new code under the same license nghttp2 is already using unless stated and agreed otherwise.
When changing existing source code, you do not alter the copyright of the original file(s). The copyright will still be owned by the original creator(s) or those who have been assigned copyright by the original author(s).
By submitting a patch to the nghttp2 project, you are assumed to have the right to the code and to be allowed by your employer or whatever to hand over that patch/code to us. We will credit you for your changes as far as possible, to give credit but also to keep a trace back to who made what changes. Please always provide us with your full real name when contributing!
See Contribution Guidelines for more details.