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from __future__ import annotations

import functools
import logging
import typing
import warnings
from types import TracebackType
from urllib.parse import urljoin

from ._collections import RecentlyUsedContainer
from ._request_methods import RequestMethods
from .connection import ProxyConfig
from .connectionpool import HTTPConnectionPool, HTTPSConnectionPool, port_by_scheme
from .exceptions import (
    LocationValueError,
    MaxRetryError,
    ProxySchemeUnknown,
    URLSchemeUnknown,
)
from .response import BaseHTTPResponse
from .util.connection import _TYPE_SOCKET_OPTIONS
from .util.proxy import connection_requires_http_tunnel
from .util.retry import Retry
from .util.timeout import Timeout
from .util.url import Url, parse_url

if typing.TYPE_CHECKING:
    import ssl

    from typing_extensions import Literal

__all__ = ["PoolManager", "ProxyManager", "proxy_from_url"]


log = logging.getLogger(__name__)

SSL_KEYWORDS = (
    "key_file",
    "cert_file",
    "cert_reqs",
    "ca_certs",
    "ssl_version",
    "ssl_minimum_version",
    "ssl_maximum_version",
    "ca_cert_dir",
    "ssl_context",
    "key_password",
    "server_hostname",
)
# Default value for `blocksize` - a new parameter introduced to
# http.client.HTTPConnection & http.client.HTTPSConnection in Python 3.7
_DEFAULT_BLOCKSIZE = 16384

_SelfT = typing.TypeVar("_SelfT")


class PoolKey(typing.NamedTuple):
    """
    All known keyword arguments that could be provided to the pool manager, its
    pools, or the underlying connections.

    All custom key schemes should include the fields in this key at a minimum.
    """

    key_scheme: str
    key_host: str
    key_port: int | None
    key_timeout: Timeout | float | int | None
    key_retries: Retry | bool | int | None
    key_block: bool | None
    key_source_address: tuple[str, int] | None
    key_key_file: str | None
    key_key_password: str | None
    key_cert_file: str | None
    key_cert_reqs: str | None
    key_ca_certs: str | None
    key_ssl_version: int | str | None
    key_ssl_minimum_version: ssl.TLSVersion | None
    key_ssl_maximum_version: ssl.TLSVersion | None
    key_ca_cert_dir: str | None
    key_ssl_context: ssl.SSLContext | None
    key_maxsize: int | None
    key_headers: frozenset[tuple[str, str]] | None
    key__proxy: Url | None
    key__proxy_headers: frozenset[tuple[str, str]] | None
    key__proxy_config: ProxyConfig | None
    key_socket_options: _TYPE_SOCKET_OPTIONS | None
    key__socks_options: frozenset[tuple[str, str]] | None
    key_assert_hostname: bool | str | None
    key_assert_fingerprint: str | None
    key_server_hostname: str | None
    key_blocksize: int | None


def _default_key_normalizer(
    key_class: type[PoolKey], request_context: dict[str, typing.Any]
) -> PoolKey:
    """
    Create a pool key out of a request context dictionary.

    According to RFC 3986, both the scheme and host are case-insensitive.
    Therefore, this function normalizes both before constructing the pool
    key for an HTTPS request. If you wish to change this behaviour, provide
    alternate callables to ``key_fn_by_scheme``.

    :param key_class:
        The class to use when constructing the key. This should be a namedtuple
        with the ``scheme`` and ``host`` keys at a minimum.
    :type  key_class: namedtuple
    :param request_context:
        A dictionary-like object that contain the context for a request.
    :type  request_context: dict

    :return: A namedtuple that can be used as a connection pool key.
    :rtype:  PoolKey
    """
    # Since we mutate the dictionary, make a copy first
    context = request_context.copy()
    context["scheme"] = context["scheme"].lower()
    context["host"] = context["host"].lower()

    # These are both dictionaries and need to be transformed into frozensets
    for key in ("headers", "_proxy_headers", "_socks_options"):
        if key in context and context[key] is not None:
            context[key] = frozenset(context[key].items())

    # The socket_options key may be a list and needs to be transformed into a
    # tuple.
    socket_opts = context.get("socket_options")
    if socket_opts is not None:
        context["socket_options"] = tuple(socket_opts)

    # Map the kwargs to the names in the namedtuple - this is necessary since
    # namedtuples can't have fields starting with '_'.
    for key in list(context.keys()):
        context["key_" + key] = context.pop(key)

    # Default to ``None`` for keys missing from the context
    for field in key_class._fields:
        if field not in context:
            context[field] = None

    # Default key_blocksize to _DEFAULT_BLOCKSIZE if missing from the context
    if context.get("key_blocksize") is None:
        context["key_blocksize"] = _DEFAULT_BLOCKSIZE

    return key_class(**context)


#: A dictionary that maps a scheme to a callable that creates a pool key.
#: This can be used to alter the way pool keys are constructed, if desired.
#: Each PoolManager makes a copy of this dictionary so they can be configured
#: globally here, or individually on the instance.
key_fn_by_scheme = {
    "http": functools.partial(_default_key_normalizer, PoolKey),
    "https": functools.partial(_default_key_normalizer, PoolKey),
}

pool_classes_by_scheme = {"http": HTTPConnectionPool, "https": HTTPSConnectionPool}


class PoolManager(RequestMethods):
    """
    Allows for arbitrary requests while transparently keeping track of
    necessary connection pools for you.

    :param num_pools:
        Number of connection pools to cache before discarding the least
        recently used pool.

    :param headers:
        Headers to include with all requests, unless other headers are given
        explicitly.

    :param \\**connection_pool_kw:
        Additional parameters are used to create fresh
        :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool` instances.

    Example:

    .. code-block:: python

        import urllib3

        http = urllib3.PoolManager(num_pools=2)

        resp1 = http.request("GET", "https://google.com/")
        resp2 = http.request("GET", "https://google.com/mail")
        resp3 = http.request("GET", "https://yahoo.com/")

        print(len(http.pools))
        # 2

    """

    proxy: Url | None = None
    proxy_config: ProxyConfig | None = None

    def __init__(
        self,
        num_pools: int = 10,
        headers: typing.Mapping[str, str] | None = None,
        **connection_pool_kw: typing.Any,
    ) -> None:
        super().__init__(headers)
        self.connection_pool_kw = connection_pool_kw

        self.pools: RecentlyUsedContainer[PoolKey, HTTPConnectionPool]
        self.pools = RecentlyUsedContainer(num_pools)

        # Locally set the pool classes and keys so other PoolManagers can
        # override them.
        self.pool_classes_by_scheme = pool_classes_by_scheme
        self.key_fn_by_scheme = key_fn_by_scheme.copy()

    def __enter__(self: _SelfT) -> _SelfT:
        return self

    def __exit__(
        self,
        exc_type: type[BaseException] | None,
        exc_val: BaseException | None,
        exc_tb: TracebackType | None,
    ) -> Literal[False]:
        self.clear()
        # Return False to re-raise any potential exceptions
        return False

    def _new_pool(
        self,
        scheme: str,
        host: str,
        port: int,
        request_context: dict[str, typing.Any] | None = None,
    ) -> HTTPConnectionPool:
        """
        Create a new :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool` based on host, port, scheme, and
        any additional pool keyword arguments.

        If ``request_context`` is provided, it is provided as keyword arguments
        to the pool class used. This method is used to actually create the
        connection pools handed out by :meth:`connection_from_url` and
        companion methods. It is intended to be overridden for customization.
        """
        pool_cls: type[HTTPConnectionPool] = self.pool_classes_by_scheme[scheme]
        if request_context is None:
            request_context = self.connection_pool_kw.copy()

        # Default blocksize to _DEFAULT_BLOCKSIZE if missing or explicitly
        # set to 'None' in the request_context.
        if request_context.get("blocksize") is None:
            request_context["blocksize"] = _DEFAULT_BLOCKSIZE

        # Although the context has everything necessary to create the pool,
        # this function has historically only used the scheme, host, and port
        # in the positional args. When an API change is acceptable these can
        # be removed.
        for key in ("scheme", "host", "port"):
            request_context.pop(key, None)

        if scheme == "http":
            for kw in SSL_KEYWORDS:
                request_context.pop(kw, None)

        return pool_cls(host, port, **request_context)

    def clear(self) -> None:
        """
        Empty our store of pools and direct them all to close.

        This will not affect in-flight connections, but they will not be
        re-used after completion.
        """
        self.pools.clear()

    def connection_from_host(
        self,
        host: str | None,
        port: int | None = None,
        scheme: str | None = "http",
        pool_kwargs: dict[str, typing.Any] | None = None,
    ) -> HTTPConnectionPool:
        """
        Get a :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool` based on the host, port, and scheme.

        If ``port`` isn't given, it will be derived from the ``scheme`` using
        ``urllib3.connectionpool.port_by_scheme``. If ``pool_kwargs`` is
        provided, it is merged with the instance's ``connection_pool_kw``
        variable and used to create the new connection pool, if one is
        needed.
        """

        if not host:
            raise LocationValueError("No host specified.")

        request_context = self._merge_pool_kwargs(pool_kwargs)
        request_context["scheme"] = scheme or "http"
        if not port:
            port = port_by_scheme.get(request_context["scheme"].lower(), 80)
        request_context["port"] = port
        request_context["host"] = host

        return self.connection_from_context(request_context)

    def connection_from_context(
        self, request_context: dict[str, typing.Any]
    ) -> HTTPConnectionPool:
        """
        Get a :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool` based on the request context.

        ``request_context`` must at least contain the ``scheme`` key and its
        value must be a key in ``key_fn_by_scheme`` instance variable.
        """
        if "strict" in request_context:
            warnings.warn(
                "The 'strict' parameter is no longer needed on Python 3+. "
                "This will raise an error in urllib3 v2.1.0.",
                DeprecationWarning,
            )
            request_context.pop("strict")

        scheme = request_context["scheme"].lower()
        pool_key_constructor = self.key_fn_by_scheme.get(scheme)
        if not pool_key_constructor:
            raise URLSchemeUnknown(scheme)
        pool_key = pool_key_constructor(request_context)

        return self.connection_from_pool_key(pool_key, request_context=request_context)

    def connection_from_pool_key(
        self, pool_key: PoolKey, request_context: dict[str, typing.Any]
    ) -> HTTPConnectionPool:
        """
        Get a :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool` based on the provided pool key.

        ``pool_key`` should be a namedtuple that only contains immutable
        objects. At a minimum it must have the ``scheme``, ``host``, and
        ``port`` fields.
        """
        with self.pools.lock:
            # If the scheme, host, or port doesn't match existing open
            # connections, open a new ConnectionPool.
            pool = self.pools.get(pool_key)
            if pool:
                return pool

            # Make a fresh ConnectionPool of the desired type
            scheme = request_context["scheme"]
            host = request_context["host"]
            port = request_context["port"]
            pool = self._new_pool(scheme, host, port, request_context=request_context)
            self.pools[pool_key] = pool

        return pool

    def connection_from_url(
        self, url: str, pool_kwargs: dict[str, typing.Any] | None = None
    ) -> HTTPConnectionPool:
        """
        Similar to :func:`urllib3.connectionpool.connection_from_url`.

        If ``pool_kwargs`` is not provided and a new pool needs to be
        constructed, ``self.connection_pool_kw`` is used to initialize
        the :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool`. If ``pool_kwargs``
        is provided, it is used instead. Note that if a new pool does not
        need to be created for the request, the provided ``pool_kwargs`` are
        not used.
        """
        u = parse_url(url)
        return self.connection_from_host(
            u.host, port=u.port, scheme=u.scheme, pool_kwargs=pool_kwargs
        )

    def _merge_pool_kwargs(
        self, override: dict[str, typing.Any] | None
    ) -> dict[str, typing.Any]:
        """
        Merge a dictionary of override values for self.connection_pool_kw.

        This does not modify self.connection_pool_kw and returns a new dict.
        Any keys in the override dictionary with a value of ``None`` are
        removed from the merged dictionary.
        """
        base_pool_kwargs = self.connection_pool_kw.copy()
        if override:
            for key, value in override.items():
                if value is None:
                    try:
                        del base_pool_kwargs[key]
                    except KeyError:
                        pass
                else:
                    base_pool_kwargs[key] = value
        return base_pool_kwargs

    def _proxy_requires_url_absolute_form(self, parsed_url: Url) -> bool:
        """
        Indicates if the proxy requires the complete destination URL in the
        request.  Normally this is only needed when not using an HTTP CONNECT
        tunnel.
        """
        if self.proxy is None:
            return False

        return not connection_requires_http_tunnel(
            self.proxy, self.proxy_config, parsed_url.scheme
        )

    def urlopen(  # type: ignore[override]
        self, method: str, url: str, redirect: bool = True, **kw: typing.Any
    ) -> BaseHTTPResponse:
        """
        Same as :meth:`urllib3.HTTPConnectionPool.urlopen`
        with custom cross-host redirect logic and only sends the request-uri
        portion of the ``url``.

        The given ``url`` parameter must be absolute, such that an appropriate
        :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ConnectionPool` can be chosen for it.
        """
        u = parse_url(url)

        if u.scheme is None:
            warnings.warn(
                "URLs without a scheme (ie 'https://') are deprecated and will raise an error "
                "in a future version of urllib3. To avoid this DeprecationWarning ensure all URLs "
                "start with 'https://' or 'http://'. Read more in this issue: "
                "https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/2920",
                category=DeprecationWarning,
                stacklevel=2,
            )

        conn = self.connection_from_host(u.host, port=u.port, scheme=u.scheme)

        kw["assert_same_host"] = False
        kw["redirect"] = False

        if "headers" not in kw:
            kw["headers"] = self.headers

        if self._proxy_requires_url_absolute_form(u):
            response = conn.urlopen(method, url, **kw)
        else:
            response = conn.urlopen(method, u.request_uri, **kw)

        redirect_location = redirect and response.get_redirect_location()
        if not redirect_location:
            return response

        # Support relative URLs for redirecting.
        redirect_location = urljoin(url, redirect_location)

        # RFC 7231, Section 6.4.4
        if response.status == 303:
            method = "GET"

        retries = kw.get("retries")
        if not isinstance(retries, Retry):
            retries = Retry.from_int(retries, redirect=redirect)

        # Strip headers marked as unsafe to forward to the redirected location.
        # Check remove_headers_on_redirect to avoid a potential network call within
        # conn.is_same_host() which may use socket.gethostbyname() in the future.
        if retries.remove_headers_on_redirect and not conn.is_same_host(
            redirect_location
        ):
            new_headers = kw["headers"].copy()
            for header in kw["headers"]:
                if header.lower() in retries.remove_headers_on_redirect:
                    new_headers.pop(header, None)
            kw["headers"] = new_headers

        try:
            retries = retries.increment(method, url, response=response, _pool=conn)
        except MaxRetryError:
            if retries.raise_on_redirect:
                response.drain_conn()
                raise
            return response

        kw["retries"] = retries
        kw["redirect"] = redirect

        log.info("Redirecting %s -> %s", url, redirect_location)

        response.drain_conn()
        return self.urlopen(method, redirect_location, **kw)


class ProxyManager(PoolManager):
    """
    Behaves just like :class:`PoolManager`, but sends all requests through
    the defined proxy, using the CONNECT method for HTTPS URLs.

    :param proxy_url:
        The URL of the proxy to be used.

    :param proxy_headers:
        A dictionary containing headers that will be sent to the proxy. In case
        of HTTP they are being sent with each request, while in the
        HTTPS/CONNECT case they are sent only once. Could be used for proxy
        authentication.

    :param proxy_ssl_context:
        The proxy SSL context is used to establish the TLS connection to the
        proxy when using HTTPS proxies.

    :param use_forwarding_for_https:
        (Defaults to False) If set to True will forward requests to the HTTPS
        proxy to be made on behalf of the client instead of creating a TLS
        tunnel via the CONNECT method. **Enabling this flag means that request
        and response headers and content will be visible from the HTTPS proxy**
        whereas tunneling keeps request and response headers and content
        private.  IP address, target hostname, SNI, and port are always visible
        to an HTTPS proxy even when this flag is disabled.

    :param proxy_assert_hostname:
        The hostname of the certificate to verify against.

    :param proxy_assert_fingerprint:
        The fingerprint of the certificate to verify against.

    Example:

    .. code-block:: python

        import urllib3

        proxy = urllib3.ProxyManager("https://localhost:3128/")

        resp1 = proxy.request("GET", "https://google.com/")
        resp2 = proxy.request("GET", "https://httpbin.org/")

        print(len(proxy.pools))
        # 1

        resp3 = proxy.request("GET", "https://httpbin.org/")
        resp4 = proxy.request("GET", "https://twitter.com/")

        print(len(proxy.pools))
        # 3

    """

    def __init__(
        self,
        proxy_url: str,
        num_pools: int = 10,
        headers: typing.Mapping[str, str] | None = None,
        proxy_headers: typing.Mapping[str, str] | None = None,
        proxy_ssl_context: ssl.SSLContext | None = None,
        use_forwarding_for_https: bool = False,
        proxy_assert_hostname: None | str | Literal[False] = None,
        proxy_assert_fingerprint: str | None = None,
        **connection_pool_kw: typing.Any,
    ) -> None:
        if isinstance(proxy_url, HTTPConnectionPool):
            str_proxy_url = f"{proxy_url.scheme}://{proxy_url.host}:{proxy_url.port}"
        else:
            str_proxy_url = proxy_url
        proxy = parse_url(str_proxy_url)

        if proxy.scheme not in ("http", "https"):
            raise ProxySchemeUnknown(proxy.scheme)

        if not proxy.port:
            port = port_by_scheme.get(proxy.scheme, 80)
            proxy = proxy._replace(port=port)

        self.proxy = proxy
        self.proxy_headers = proxy_headers or {}
        self.proxy_ssl_context = proxy_ssl_context
        self.proxy_config = ProxyConfig(
            proxy_ssl_context,
            use_forwarding_for_https,
            proxy_assert_hostname,
            proxy_assert_fingerprint,
        )

        connection_pool_kw["_proxy"] = self.proxy
        connection_pool_kw["_proxy_headers"] = self.proxy_headers
        connection_pool_kw["_proxy_config"] = self.proxy_config

        super().__init__(num_pools, headers, **connection_pool_kw)

    def connection_from_host(
        self,
        host: str | None,
        port: int | None = None,
        scheme: str | None = "http",
        pool_kwargs: dict[str, typing.Any] | None = None,
    ) -> HTTPConnectionPool:
        if scheme == "https":
            return super().connection_from_host(
                host, port, scheme, pool_kwargs=pool_kwargs
            )

        return super().connection_from_host(
            self.proxy.host, self.proxy.port, self.proxy.scheme, pool_kwargs=pool_kwargs  # type: ignore[union-attr]
        )

    def _set_proxy_headers(
        self, url: str, headers: typing.Mapping[str, str] | None = None
    ) -> typing.Mapping[str, str]:
        """
        Sets headers needed by proxies: specifically, the Accept and Host
        headers. Only sets headers not provided by the user.
        """
        headers_ = {"Accept": "*/*"}

        netloc = parse_url(url).netloc
        if netloc:
            headers_["Host"] = netloc

        if headers:
            headers_.update(headers)
        return headers_

    def urlopen(  # type: ignore[override]
        self, method: str, url: str, redirect: bool = True, **kw: typing.Any
    ) -> BaseHTTPResponse:
        "Same as HTTP(S)ConnectionPool.urlopen, ``url`` must be absolute."
        u = parse_url(url)
        if not connection_requires_http_tunnel(self.proxy, self.proxy_config, u.scheme):
            # For connections using HTTP CONNECT, httplib sets the necessary
            # headers on the CONNECT to the proxy. If we're not using CONNECT,
            # we'll definitely need to set 'Host' at the very least.
            headers = kw.get("headers", self.headers)
            kw["headers"] = self._set_proxy_headers(url, headers)

        return super().urlopen(method, url, redirect=redirect, **kw)


def proxy_from_url(url: str, **kw: typing.Any) -> ProxyManager:
    return ProxyManager(proxy_url=url, **kw)

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