fluke_hpack/encoder.rs
1//! Implements all functionality related to encoding header blocks using
2//! HPACK.
3//!
4//! Clients should use the `Encoder` struct as the API for performing HPACK
5//! encoding.
6//!
7//! # Examples
8//!
9//! Encodes a header using a literal encoding.
10//!
11//! ```rust
12//! use fluke_hpack::Encoder;
13//!
14//! let mut encoder = Encoder::new();
15//!
16//! let headers = vec![
17//! (&b"custom-key"[..], &b"custom-value"[..]),
18//! ];
19//! // First encoding...
20//! let result = encoder.encode(headers);
21//! // The result is a literal encoding of the header name and value, with an
22//! // initial byte representing the type of the encoding
23//! // (incremental indexing).
24//! assert_eq!(
25//! vec![0x40,
26//! 10, b'c', b'u', b's', b't', b'o', b'm', b'-', b'k', b'e', b'y',
27//! 12, b'c', b'u', b's', b't', b'o', b'm', b'-', b'v', b'a', b'l',
28//! b'u', b'e'],
29//! result);
30//! ```
31//!
32//! Encodes some pseudo-headers that are already found in the static table.
33//!
34//! ```rust
35//! use fluke_hpack::Encoder;
36//!
37//! let mut encoder = Encoder::new();
38//! let headers = vec![
39//! (&b":method"[..], &b"GET"[..]),
40//! (&b":path"[..], &b"/"[..]),
41//! ];
42//!
43//! // The headers are encoded by providing their index (with a bit flag
44//! // indicating that the indexed representation is used).
45//! assert_eq!(encoder.encode(headers), vec![2 | 0x80, 4 | 0x80]);
46//! ```
47use std::io;
48use std::num::Wrapping;
49
50use super::HeaderTable;
51use super::STATIC_TABLE;
52
53/// Encode an integer to the representation defined by HPACK, writing it into the provider
54/// `io::Write` instance. Also allows the caller to specify the leading bits of the first
55/// octet. Any bits that are already set within the last `prefix_size` bits will be cleared
56/// and overwritten by the integer's representation (in other words, only the first
57/// `8 - prefix_size` bits from the `leading_bits` octet are reflected in the first octet
58/// emitted by the function.
59///
60/// # Example
61///
62/// ```rust
63/// use fluke_hpack::encoder::encode_integer_into;
64///
65/// {
66/// // No bits specified in the 3 most significant bits of the first octet
67/// let mut vec = Vec::new();
68/// encode_integer_into(10, 5, 0, &mut vec);
69/// assert_eq!(vec, vec![10]);
70/// }
71/// {
72/// // The most significant bit should be set; i.e. the 3 most significant
73/// // bits are 100.
74/// let mut vec = Vec::new();
75/// encode_integer_into(10, 5, 0x80, &mut vec);
76/// assert_eq!(vec, vec![0x8A]);
77/// }
78/// {
79/// // The most leading bits number has a bit set within the last prefix-size
80/// // bits -- they are ignored by the function
81/// // bits are 100.
82/// let mut vec = Vec::new();
83/// encode_integer_into(10, 5, 0x10, &mut vec);
84/// assert_eq!(vec, vec![0x0A]);
85/// }
86/// {
87/// let mut vec = Vec::new();
88/// encode_integer_into(1337, 5, 0, &mut vec);
89/// assert_eq!(vec, vec![31, 154, 10]);
90/// }
91/// ```
92pub fn encode_integer_into<W: io::Write>(
93 mut value: usize,
94 prefix_size: u8,
95 leading_bits: u8,
96 writer: &mut W,
97) -> io::Result<()> {
98 let Wrapping(mask) = if prefix_size >= 8 {
99 Wrapping(0xFF)
100 } else {
101 Wrapping(1u8 << prefix_size) - Wrapping(1)
102 };
103 // Clear any bits within the last `prefix_size` bits of the provided `leading_bits`.
104 // Failing to do so might lead to an incorrect encoding of the integer.
105 let leading_bits = leading_bits & (!mask);
106 let mask = mask as usize;
107 if value < mask {
108 writer.write_all(&[leading_bits | value as u8])?;
109 return Ok(());
110 }
111
112 writer.write_all(&[leading_bits | mask as u8])?;
113 value -= mask;
114 while value >= 128 {
115 writer.write_all(&[((value % 128) + 128) as u8])?;
116 value /= 128;
117 }
118 writer.write_all(&[value as u8])?;
119 Ok(())
120}
121
122/// Encode an integer to the representation defined by HPACK.
123///
124/// Returns a newly allocated `Vec` containing the encoded bytes.
125/// Only `prefix_size` lowest-order bits of the first byte in the
126/// array are guaranteed to be used.
127pub fn encode_integer(value: usize, prefix_size: u8) -> Vec<u8> {
128 let mut res = Vec::new();
129 encode_integer_into(value, prefix_size, 0, &mut res).unwrap();
130 res
131}
132
133/// Represents an HPACK encoder. Allows clients to encode arbitrary header sets
134/// and tracks the encoding context. That is, encoding subsequent header sets
135/// will use the context built by previous encode calls.
136///
137/// This is the main API for performing HPACK encoding of headers.
138///
139/// # Examples
140///
141/// Encoding a header two times in a row produces two different
142/// representations, due to the utilization of HPACK compression.
143///
144/// ```rust
145/// use fluke_hpack::Encoder;
146///
147/// let mut encoder = Encoder::new();
148///
149/// let headers = vec![
150/// (b"custom-key".to_vec(), b"custom-value".to_vec()),
151/// ];
152/// // First encoding...
153/// let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
154/// // The result is a literal encoding of the header name and value, with an
155/// // initial byte representing the type of the encoding
156/// // (incremental indexing).
157/// assert_eq!(
158/// vec![0x40,
159/// 10, b'c', b'u', b's', b't', b'o', b'm', b'-', b'k', b'e', b'y',
160/// 12, b'c', b'u', b's', b't', b'o', b'm', b'-', b'v', b'a', b'l',
161/// b'u', b'e'],
162/// result);
163///
164/// // Encode the same headers again!
165/// let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
166/// // The result is simply the index of the header in the header table (62),
167/// // with a flag representing that the decoder should use the index.
168/// assert_eq!(vec![0x80 | 62], result);
169/// ```
170pub struct Encoder<'a> {
171 /// The header table represents the encoder's context
172 header_table: HeaderTable<'a>,
173}
174
175impl<'a> Default for Encoder<'a> {
176 fn default() -> Self {
177 Self::new()
178 }
179}
180
181impl<'a> Encoder<'a> {
182 /// Creates a new `Encoder` with a default static table, as defined by the
183 /// HPACK spec (Appendix A).
184 pub fn new() -> Encoder<'a> {
185 Encoder {
186 header_table: HeaderTable::with_static_table(STATIC_TABLE),
187 }
188 }
189
190 /// Sets a new maximum dynamic table size for the encoder.
191 pub fn set_max_table_size(&mut self, new_max_size: usize) {
192 self.header_table
193 .dynamic_table
194 .set_max_table_size(new_max_size);
195 }
196
197 /// Encodes the given headers using the HPACK rules and returns a newly
198 /// allocated `Vec` containing the bytes representing the encoded header
199 /// set.
200 ///
201 /// The encoder so far supports only a single, extremely simple encoding
202 /// strategy, whereby each header is represented as an indexed header if
203 /// already found in the header table and a literal otherwise. When a
204 /// header isn't found in the table, it is added if the header name wasn't
205 /// found either (i.e. there are never two header names with different
206 /// values in the produced header table). Strings are always encoded as
207 /// literals (Huffman encoding is not used).
208 pub fn encode<'b, I>(&mut self, headers: I) -> Vec<u8>
209 where
210 I: IntoIterator<Item = (&'b [u8], &'b [u8])>,
211 {
212 let mut encoded: Vec<u8> = Vec::new();
213 self.encode_into(headers, &mut encoded).unwrap();
214 encoded
215 }
216
217 /// Encodes the given headers into the given `io::Write` instance. If the io::Write raises an
218 /// Error at any point, this error is propagated out. Any changes to the internal state of the
219 /// encoder will not be rolled back, though, so care should be taken to ensure that the paired
220 /// decoder also ends up seeing the same state updates or that their pairing is cancelled.
221 pub fn encode_into<'b, I, W>(&mut self, headers: I, writer: &mut W) -> io::Result<()>
222 where
223 I: IntoIterator<Item = (&'b [u8], &'b [u8])>,
224 W: io::Write,
225 {
226 for header in headers {
227 self.encode_header_into(header, writer)?;
228 }
229 Ok(())
230 }
231
232 /// Encodes a single given header into the given `io::Write` instance.
233 ///
234 /// Any errors are propagated, similarly to the `encode_into` method, and it is the callers
235 /// responsiblity to make sure that the paired encoder sees them too.
236 pub fn encode_header_into<W: io::Write>(
237 &mut self,
238 header: (&[u8], &[u8]),
239 writer: &mut W,
240 ) -> io::Result<()> {
241 match self.header_table.find_header(header) {
242 None => {
243 // The name of the header is in no tables: need to encode
244 // it with both a literal name and value.
245 self.encode_literal(&header, true, writer)?;
246 self.header_table
247 .add_header(header.0.to_vec(), header.1.to_vec());
248 }
249 Some((index, false)) => {
250 // The name of the header is at the given index, but the
251 // value does not match the current one: need to encode
252 // only the value as a literal.
253 self.encode_indexed_name((index, header.1), false, writer)?;
254 }
255 Some((index, true)) => {
256 // The full header was found in one of the tables, so we
257 // just encode the index.
258 self.encode_indexed(index, writer)?;
259 }
260 };
261 Ok(())
262 }
263
264 /// Encodes a header as a literal (i.e. both the name and the value are
265 /// encoded as a string literal) and places the result in the given buffer
266 /// `buf`.
267 ///
268 /// # Parameters
269 ///
270 /// - `header` - the header to be encoded
271 /// - `should_index` - indicates whether the given header should be indexed, i.e.
272 /// inserted into the dynamic table
273 /// - `buf` - The buffer into which the result is placed
274 ///
275 fn encode_literal<W: io::Write>(
276 &mut self,
277 header: &(&[u8], &[u8]),
278 should_index: bool,
279 buf: &mut W,
280 ) -> io::Result<()> {
281 let mask = if should_index { 0x40 } else { 0x0 };
282
283 buf.write_all(&[mask])?;
284 self.encode_string_literal(header.0, buf)?;
285 self.encode_string_literal(header.1, buf)?;
286 Ok(())
287 }
288
289 /// Encodes a string literal and places the result in the given buffer
290 /// `buf`.
291 ///
292 /// The function does not consider Huffman encoding for now, but always
293 /// produces a string literal representations, according to the HPACK spec
294 /// section 5.2.
295 fn encode_string_literal<W: io::Write>(
296 &mut self,
297 octet_str: &[u8],
298 buf: &mut W,
299 ) -> io::Result<()> {
300 encode_integer_into(octet_str.len(), 7, 0, buf)?;
301 buf.write_all(octet_str)?;
302 Ok(())
303 }
304
305 /// Encodes a header whose name is indexed and places the result in the
306 /// given buffer `buf`.
307 fn encode_indexed_name<W: io::Write>(
308 &mut self,
309 header: (usize, &[u8]),
310 should_index: bool,
311 buf: &mut W,
312 ) -> io::Result<()> {
313 let (mask, prefix) = if should_index { (0x40, 6) } else { (0x0, 4) };
314
315 encode_integer_into(header.0, prefix, mask, buf)?;
316 // So far, we rely on just one strategy for encoding string literals.
317 self.encode_string_literal(header.1, buf)?;
318 Ok(())
319 }
320
321 /// Encodes an indexed header (a header that is fully in the header table)
322 /// and places the result in the given buffer `buf`.
323 ///
324 /// The encoding is according to the rules of the HPACK spec, section 6.1.
325 fn encode_indexed<W: io::Write>(&self, index: usize, buf: &mut W) -> io::Result<()> {
326 // We need to set the most significant bit, since the bit-pattern is
327 // `1xxxxxxx` for indexed headers.
328 encode_integer_into(index, 7, 0x80, buf)?;
329 Ok(())
330 }
331}
332
333#[cfg(test)]
334mod tests {
335 use tracing::debug;
336
337 use super::encode_integer;
338 use super::Encoder;
339
340 use super::super::Decoder;
341
342 #[test]
343 fn test_encode_integer() {
344 assert_eq!(encode_integer(10, 5), [10]);
345 assert_eq!(encode_integer(1337, 5), [31, 154, 10]);
346 assert_eq!(encode_integer(127, 7), [127, 0]);
347 assert_eq!(encode_integer(255, 8), [255, 0]);
348 assert_eq!(encode_integer(254, 8), [254]);
349 assert_eq!(encode_integer(1, 8), [1]);
350 assert_eq!(encode_integer(0, 8), [0]);
351 assert_eq!(encode_integer(255, 7), [127, 128, 1]);
352 }
353
354 /// A helper function that checks whether the given buffer can be decoded
355 /// into a set of headers that corresponds to the given `headers` list.
356 /// Relies on using the `fluke_hpack::decoder::Decoder`` struct for
357 /// performing the decoding.
358 ///
359 /// # Returns
360 ///
361 /// A `bool` indicating whether such a decoding can be performed.
362 fn is_decodable(buf: &[u8], headers: &Vec<(Vec<u8>, Vec<u8>)>) -> bool {
363 let mut decoder = Decoder::new();
364 match decoder.decode(buf).ok() {
365 Some(h) => h == *headers,
366 None => false,
367 }
368 }
369
370 /// Tests that encoding only the `:method` header works.
371 #[test]
372 fn test_encode_only_method() {
373 let mut encoder: Encoder = Encoder::new();
374 let headers = vec![(b":method".to_vec(), b"GET".to_vec())];
375
376 let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
377
378 debug!("{:?}", result);
379 assert!(is_decodable(&result, &headers));
380 }
381
382 /// Tests that when a single custom header is sent it gets indexed by the
383 /// coder.
384 #[test]
385 fn test_custom_header_gets_indexed() {
386 let mut encoder: Encoder = Encoder::new();
387 let headers = vec![(b"custom-key".to_vec(), b"custom-value".to_vec())];
388
389 let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
390 assert!(is_decodable(&result, &headers));
391 // The header is in the encoder's dynamic table.
392 assert_eq!(encoder.header_table.dynamic_table.to_vec(), headers);
393 // ...but also indicated as such in the output.
394 assert!(0x40 == (0x40 & result[0]));
395 debug!("{:?}", result);
396 }
397
398 /// Tests that when a header gets added to the dynamic table, the encoder
399 /// will use the index, instead of the literal representation on the next
400 /// encoding of the same header.
401 #[test]
402 fn test_uses_index_on_second_iteration() {
403 let mut encoder: Encoder = Encoder::new();
404 let headers = vec![(b"custom-key".to_vec(), b"custom-value".to_vec())];
405 // First encoding...
406 let _ = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
407
408 // Encode the same headers again!
409 let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
410
411 // The header is in the encoder's dynamic table.
412 assert_eq!(encoder.header_table.dynamic_table.to_vec(), headers);
413 // The output is a single index byte?
414 assert_eq!(result.len(), 1);
415 // The index is correctly encoded:
416 // - The most significant bit is set
417 assert_eq!(0x80 & result[0], 0x80);
418 // - The other 7 bits decode to an integer giving the index in the full
419 // header address space.
420 assert_eq!(result[0] ^ 0x80, 62);
421 // The header table actually contains the header at that index?
422 assert_eq!(
423 encoder.header_table.get_from_table(62).unwrap(),
424 (&headers[0].0[..], &headers[0].1[..])
425 );
426 }
427
428 /// Tests that when a header name is indexed, but the value isn't, the
429 /// header is represented by an index (for the name) and a literal (for
430 /// the value).
431 #[test]
432 fn test_name_indexed_value_not() {
433 {
434 let mut encoder: Encoder = Encoder::new();
435 // `:method` is in the static table, but only for GET and POST
436 let headers = [(b":method", b"PUT")];
437
438 let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
439
440 // The first byte represents the index in the header table: last
441 // occurrence of `:method` is at index 3.
442 assert_eq!(result[0], 3);
443 // The rest of it correctly represents PUT?
444 assert_eq!(&result[1..], &[3, b'P', b'U', b'T']);
445 }
446 {
447 let mut encoder: Encoder = Encoder::new();
448 // `:method` is in the static table, but only for GET and POST
449 let headers = [(b":authority".to_vec(), b"example.com".to_vec())];
450 let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
451
452 assert_eq!(result[0], 1);
453 // The rest of it correctly represents PUT?
454 assert_eq!(
455 &result[1..],
456 &[11, b'e', b'x', b'a', b'm', b'p', b'l', b'e', b'.', b'c', b'o', b'm']
457 )
458 }
459 }
460
461 /// Tests that multiple headers are correctly encoded (i.e. can be decoded
462 /// back to their original representation).
463 #[test]
464 fn test_multiple_headers_encoded() {
465 let mut encoder = Encoder::new();
466 let headers = vec![
467 (b"custom-key".to_vec(), b"custom-value".to_vec()),
468 (b":method".to_vec(), b"GET".to_vec()),
469 (b":path".to_vec(), b"/some/path".to_vec()),
470 ];
471
472 let result = encoder.encode(headers.iter().map(|h| (&h.0[..], &h.1[..])));
473
474 assert!(is_decodable(&result, &headers));
475 }
476}