Validate HTTP messages in XML2RFC documents
Project description
rfc-http-validate
This is a simple script to validate HTTP messages (possibly containing Structured Fields) in xml2rfcv3 documents.
HTTP Messages in RFC XML
This script examines all sourcecode
and artwork
elements; when one has a type
of
http-message
, it checks that the content:
- Optionally, starts with a valid HTTP/1/1 request or status line
- Has one or more HTTP/1.1 header field lines, possibly with line folding (so that long lines can be formatted within the constraints of the RFC format)
- Optionally, has a response body, separated from the header fields with a single empty line
The start line will be checked that the method or status code is reasonable, and that the version identifier HTTP/1.1
is correct. The URL in requests will not be validated, however.
Header fields will be validated for general syntax. Additionally, header field names that are configured with structured type information (see below) will be validated according to that type.
For example,
<sourcecode type="http-message">
Foo: bar; baz
Foo: one,
two
</sourcecode>
... will be validated as having a single field, foo
, with the value bar; baz, one, two
.
The body, if present, is currently ignored (i.e., the Content-Length
is not checked).
Note that in your XML, there must not be any whitespace at the start of lines, unless they're continuation of previous lines (folding, as seen above).
Configuring Structured Type Information for Fields
To validated structured fields, you can pass type information (i.e., List, Dictionary, or Item) for field names on the command line, or in a configuration file.
To pass a type on the command line, use the --list
, --dictionary
or --item
arguments as appropriate, followed by the field name. For example:
rfc-http-validate.py --list Foo --list Bar --item Baz my_draft_.xml
Here, Foo
and Bar
will be validated as Structured Lists, while Baz
will be validated as a Structured Item.
Alternatively, you can collect this information in a JSON file, with the top-level object keys being field names, and their values being list
, dict
or item
as appropriate. Thus, the configuration in the example above could be expressed in a JSON file sf.json
as:
{
"Foo": "list",
"Bar": "list",
"Baz": "item"
}
... and passed to the script like this:
rfc-http-validate.py --map sf.json my_draft.xml
Installation
The script requires Python 3, and can be installed with pip:
pip3 install rfc-http-validate
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