curl-w32/docs/CLIENT-WRITERS.md

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curl client writers

Client writers is a design in the internals of libcurl, not visible in its public API. They were started in curl v8.5.0. This document describes the concepts, its high level implementation and the motivations.

Naming

libcurl operates between clients and servers. A client is the application using libcurl, like the command line tool curl itself. Data to be uploaded to a server is read from the client and send to the server, the servers response is received by libcurl and then written to the client.

With this naming established, client writers are concerned with writing responses from the server to the application. Applications register callbacks via CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION and CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION to be invoked by libcurl when the response is received.

Invoking

All code in libcurl that handles response data is ultimately expected to forward this data via Curl_client_write() to the application. The exact prototype of this function is:

CURLcode Curl_client_write(struct Curl_easy *data, int type, char *buf, size_t blen);

The type argument specifies what the bytes in buf actually are. The following bits are defined:

#define CLIENTWRITE_BODY    (1<<0) /* non-meta information, BODY */
#define CLIENTWRITE_INFO    (1<<1) /* meta information, not a HEADER */
#define CLIENTWRITE_HEADER  (1<<2) /* meta information, HEADER */
#define CLIENTWRITE_STATUS  (1<<3) /* a special status HEADER */
#define CLIENTWRITE_CONNECT (1<<4) /* a CONNECT related HEADER */
#define CLIENTWRITE_1XX     (1<<5) /* a 1xx response related HEADER */
#define CLIENTWRITE_TRAILER (1<<6) /* a trailer HEADER */

The main types here are CLIENTWRITE_BODY and CLIENTWRITE_HEADER. They are mutually exclusive. The other bits are enhancements to CLIENTWRITE_HEADER to specify what the header is about. They are only used in HTTP and related protocols (RTSP and WebSocket).

The implementation of Curl_client_write() uses a chain of client writer instances to process the call and make sure that the bytes reach the proper application callbacks. This is similar to the design of connection filters: client writers can be chained to process the bytes written through them. The definition is:

struct Curl_cwtype {
  const char *name;
  CURLcode (*do_init)(struct Curl_easy *data,
                      struct Curl_cwriter *writer);
  CURLcode (*do_write)(struct Curl_easy *data,
                       struct Curl_cwriter *writer, int type,
                       const char *buf, size_t nbytes);
  void (*do_close)(struct Curl_easy *data,
                   struct Curl_cwriter *writer);
};

struct Curl_cwriter {
  const struct Curl_cwtype *cwt;  /* type implementation */
  struct Curl_cwriter *next;  /* Downstream writer. */
  Curl_cwriter_phase phase; /* phase at which it operates */
};

Curl_cwriter is a writer instance with a next pointer to form the chain. It has a type cwt which provides the implementation. The main callback is do_write() that processes the data and calls then the next writer. The others are for setup and tear down.

Phases and Ordering

Since client writers may transform the bytes written through them, the order in which the are called is relevant for the outcome. When a writer is created, one property it gets is the phase in which it operates. Writer phases are defined like:

typedef enum {
  CURL_CW_RAW,  /* raw data written, before any decoding */
  CURL_CW_TRANSFER_DECODE, /* remove transfer-encodings */
  CURL_CW_PROTOCOL, /* after transfer, but before content decoding */
  CURL_CW_CONTENT_DECODE, /* remove content-encodings */
  CURL_CW_CLIENT  /* data written to client */
} Curl_cwriter_phase;

If a writer for phase PROTOCOL is added to the chain, it is always added after any RAW or TRANSFER_DECODE and before any CONTENT_DECODE and CLIENT phase writer. If there is already a writer for the same phase present, the new writer is inserted just before that one.

All transfers have a chain of 3 writers by default. A specific protocol handler may alter that by adding additional writers. The 3 standard writers are (name, phase):

  1. "raw", CURL_CW_RAW : if the transfer is verbose, it forwards the body data to the debug function.
  2. "download", CURL_CW_PROTOCOL: checks that protocol limits are kept and updates progress counters. When a download has a known length, it checks that it is not exceeded and errors otherwise.
  3. "client", CURL_CW_CLIENT: the main work horse. It invokes the application callbacks or writes to the configured file handles. It chops large writes into smaller parts, as documented for CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION. If also handles pausing of transfers when the application callback returns CURL_WRITEFUNC_PAUSE.

With these writers always in place, libcurl's protocol handlers automatically have these implemented.

Enhanced Use

HTTP is the protocol in curl that makes use of the client writer chain by adding writers to it. When the libcurl application set CURLOPT_ACCEPT_ENCODING (as curl does with --compressed), the server is offered an Accept-Encoding header with the algorithms supported. The server then may choose to send the response body compressed. For example using gzip or brotli or even both.

In the server's response, there then will be a Content-Encoding header listing the encoding applied. If supported by libcurl it will then decompress the content before writing it out to the client. How does it do that?

The HTTP protocol will add client writers in phase CURL_CW_CONTENT_DECODE on seeing such a header. For each encoding listed, it will add the corresponding writer. The response from the server is then passed through Curl_client_write() to the writers that decode it. If several encodings had been applied the writer chain decodes them in the proper order.

When the server provides a Content-Length header, that value applies to the compressed content. So length checks on the response bytes must happen before it gets decoded. That is why this check happens in phase CURL_CW_PROTOCOL which always is ordered before writers in phase CURL_CW_CONTENT_DECODE.

What else?

Well, HTTP servers may also apply a Transfer-Encoding to the body of a response. The most well-known one is chunked, but algorithms like gzip and friends could also be applied. The difference to content encodings is that decoding needs to happen before protocol checks, for example on length, are done.

That is why transfer decoding writers are added for phase CURL_CW_TRANSFER_DECODE. Which makes their operation happen before phase CURL_CW_PROTOCOL where length may be checked.

Summary

By adding the common behavior of all protocols into Curl_client_write() we make sure that they do apply everywhere. Protocol handler have less to worry about. Changes to default behavior can be done without affecting handler implementations.

Having a writer chain as implementation allows protocol handlers with extra needs, like HTTP, to add to this for special behavior. The common way of writing the actual response data stays the same.