use strict;
use warnings;
use utf8;
use Furl::HTTP;
use Test::TCP;
use Test::More;
use FindBin;
use lib "$FindBin::Bin/../..";
use t::HTTPServer;
# Scenario: The server returns bad content-length.
# RFC 2616 says Content-Length header's format is:
#
# Content-Length = "Content-Length" ":" 1*DIGIT
#
# But some server returns invalid format.
# It makes mysterious error message by Perl interpreter.
#
# Then, Furl validates content-length header before processing.
#
# ref. https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt
my $n = shift(@ARGV) || 3;
test_tcp(
client => sub {
my $port = shift;
my $furl = Furl::HTTP->new(bufsize => 10, timeout => 3);
my ( undef, $code, $msg, $headers, $content ) =
$furl->request(
port => $port,
path_query => '/foo',
host => '127.0.0.1',
headers => [ "X-Foo" => "ppp" ]
);
is $code, 500, "request()/$_";
like $msg, qr/Internal Response/;
like $content, qr/Bad Content-Length: 5963,5963/
or do{ require Devel::Peek; Devel::Peek::Dump($content) };
done_testing;
},
server => sub {
my $port = shift;
t::HTTPServer->new(port => $port)->run(sub {;
my $env = shift;
return [ 200,
[ 'Content-Length' => '5963,5963' ],
[$env->{REQUEST_URI}]
];
});
}
);