HTTP::HPACK
HTTP::HPACK
Synopsis
Decoding:
my $decoder = HTTP::HPACK::Decoder.new;
my @headers = $decoder.decode-headers($buf);
say "{.name}: {.value} ({.indexing})" for @headers;
Encoding:
my @headers =
HTTP::HPACK::Header.new(
name => ':method',
value => 'GET'
),
HTTP::HPACK::Header.new(
name => 'password',
value => 'correcthorsebatterystaple',
indexing => HTTP::HPACK::Indexing::NeverIndexed
);
my $encoder = HTTP::HPACK::Encoder.new;
my $buf = $encoder.encode-headers(@headers);
Description
HPACK is the HTTP/2 header compression algorithm. This module implements encoding (compression) and decoding (decompression) of the HPACK format, as specified in RFC 7541. A HTTP/2 connection will typically have an instance of the decoder (to decompress incoming headers) and an instance of the encoder (to compress outgoing headers).
Notes on specific features
Huffman compression
Decoding of headers compressed using the Huffman codes (set out in the RFC) takes
place automatically. By default, the encoder will not apply Huffman compression.
To enable this, construct it with the huffman
option set to True
:
my $encoder = HTTP::HPACK::Encoder.new(:huffman);
Dynamic table management
The dynamic table size can be limited by passing the dynamic-table-limit
option
when constructing either the encoder or decoder:
my $decoder = HTTP::HPACK::Decoder.new(dynamic-table-limit => 256);
It is also possible to introspect the current dynamic table size:
say $decoder.dynamic-table-size;
The size is computed according to the algorithm in RFC 7541 Section 4.1.
Thread safety
Instances of HTTP::HPACK::Header are immutable and so safe to share and access concurrently. Instances of HTTP::HPACK::Decoder and HTTP::HPACK::Encoder are stateful (as a result of the dynamic table), and so a given instance may not be used concurrently. This is not a practical problem, since headers may only be processed in the order they are being received or transmitted anyway.
Known issues
The Huffman code termination handling has not been validated to be completely up to specification, and so may fail to signal errors in some cases where the Huffman code is terminated in a bogus way.