Shell script - Force HTTP 1.1 pipelining in curl, nc or telnet - bash

I need to force HTTP pipelining (1.1) on serveral GET requests with curl, telnet or netcat on a bash script. I've already tried to do so with curl, but as far as I know the tool has dropped HTTP pipelining support since version 7.65.0, and I wasn't able to find much information about how to do so. Still, if with telnet or netcat couldn't be possible, I have access to curl version 7.29.0 in other computer.

From Wikipedia:
HTTP pipelining is a technique in which multiple HTTP requests are sent on a single TCP (transmission control protocol) connection without waiting for the corresponding responses.
To send multiple GET requests with netcat, something like this should do the trick:
echo -en "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\nGET /other.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\n" | nc example.com 80
This will send two HTTP GET requests to example.com, one for http://example.com/index.html and another for http://example.com/other.html.
The -e flag means interpret escape sequences (the carriage returns and line feeds, or \r and \n). The -n means don't print a newline at the end (it would probably work without the -n).
I just ran the above command and got two responses from this, one was a 200 OK, the other was a 404 Not Found.
It might be easier to see the multiple requests and responses if you do a HEAD request instead of a GET request. That way, example.com's server will only respond with the headers.
echo -en "HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\nHEAD /other.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\n" | nc example.com 80
This is the output I get from the above command:
$ echo -en "HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\nHEAD /other.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: example.com\r\n\r\n" | nc example.com 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Encoding: gzip
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Age: 355429
Cache-Control: max-age=604800
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Date: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 14:48:39 GMT
Etag: "3147526947"
Expires: Mon, 02 Mar 2020 14:48:39 GMT
Last-Modified: Thu, 17 Oct 2019 07:18:26 GMT
Server: ECS (dna/63B3)
X-Cache: HIT
Content-Length: 648
HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Age: 162256
Cache-Control: max-age=604800
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Date: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 14:48:39 GMT
Expires: Mon, 02 Mar 2020 14:48:39 GMT
Last-Modified: Sat, 22 Feb 2020 17:44:23 GMT
Server: ECS (dna/63AD)
X-Cache: 404-HIT
Content-Length: 1256
If you want to see more details, run one of these commands while wireshark is running. The request is sent in No. 7 (highlighted) and the two responses are received on No. 11 and No. 13.

Related

Is there a way to improve copying to the clipboard format from Bash on Ubuntu on Windows?

When using Bash on Windows, copying from the terminal results in terribly formatted content when I paste. Here is a curl request I made and copied directly from Bash on Ubuntu on Windows:
$ curl -IL aol.com HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2018 15:58:31 GMT Server: Apache Location: https://www.aol.com/ Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
It's basically all on one line, almost like the carriage returns are not respected. I would expect the paste output to look like this:
$ curl -IL aol.com
HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently
Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2018 15:19:49 GMT
Server: Apache
Location: https://www.aol.com/
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
Is there a way to fix this? Right now I have to go into a text editor to format every copy/paste I need to make.
Edit: Here is a screen shot of the above code blocked copied to the clipboard directly from Bash on Win10: https://i.imgur.com/VUKRhLX.png

How to ask the date to a server from windows terminal?

For example, if I want to know if I am connected I can use:
ping 8.8.8.8
to send a ping to google DNS server. Can I ask in a similar way the date of a server? Something like:
give_me_your_date 8.8.8.8
if you had curl you could
curl -I http://example.com
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Sun, 16 Oct 2016 23:37:15 GMT
Server: Apache/2.4.23 (Unix)
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.6.24
Connection: close
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
and you if that server is a webserver you would get an http header which you can retrieve the date from
you can get curl for windows here https://curl.haxx.se/download.html

RemoteException when creating file with WebHDFS REST API

I have not been able to create a file using Hadoop's WebHDFS REST API.
Following the docs, I'm doing this.
curl -i -X PUT "http://hadoop-primarynamenode:50070/webhdfs/v1/tmp/test1234?op=CREATE&overwrite=false"
Response:
HTTP/1.1 307 TEMPORARY_REDIRECT
Cache-Control: no-cache
Expires: Fri, 15 Jul 2016 04:10:13 GMT
Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2016 04:10:13 GMT
Pragma: no-cache
Expires: Fri, 15 Jul 2016 04:10:13 GMT
Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2016 04:10:13 GMT
Pragma: no-cache
Content-Type: application/octet-stream
Location: http://hadoop-datanode1:50075/webhdfs/v1/tmp/test1234?op=CREATE&namenoderpcaddress=hadoop-primarynamenode:8020&overwrite=false
Content-Length: 0
Server: Jetty(6.1.26)
Following the redirect:
curl -i -X PUT -T MYFILE "http://hadoop-datanode1:50075/webhdfs/v1/tmp/test1234?op=CREATE&namenoderpcaddress=hadoop-primarynamenode:8020"
Response:
HTTP/1.1 100 Continue
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: 162
Connection: close
{"RemoteException":{"exception":"IllegalArgumentException","javaClassName":"java.lang.IllegalArgumentException","message":"Failed to parse \"null\" to Boolean."}}
I could not find any leads for that error message. Has anyone experienced this before?
I'm running a Hadoop cluster installed using Ambari.
Seems like the second PUT command requires a "createparent" parameter. In fact, both "overwrite" and "createparent" are needed. WebHDFS is not using default values. Definitely a bug...
curl -i -X PUT -T MYFILE "http://hadoop-datanode1:50075/webhdfs/v1/tmp/test1234?op=CREATE&namenoderpcaddress=hadoop-primarynamenode:8020&overwrite=false&createparent=false"

Using Wget with buggy URL

I've got the following link, which is downloading a CSV file when put through a web browser.
http://pro.allocine.fr/film/export_classement.html?typeaffichage=2&lsttype=1001&lsttypeperiode=3002&typedonnees=visites&cfilm=&datefiltre=
However, when using Wget with Cygwin, with the command below, Wget retrieves a file, which is not a CSV file, but a file without extension. The file is empty, that is, has no data at all.
wget 'http://pro.allocine.fr/film/export_classement.html?typeaffichage=2&lsttype=1001&lsttypeperiode=3002&typedonnees=visites&cfilm=&datefiltre='
So as I hate to be stuck, I tried the following as well. I put the URL in a text file and used Wget with the file option:
inside fic.txt
'http://pro.allocine.fr/film/export_classement.html?typeaffichage=2&lsttype=1001&lsttypeperiode=3002&typedonnees=visites&cfilm=&datefiltre='
I used Wget in the following way:
wget -i fic.txt
I got the following errors:
Scheme missing
No URLs found in toto.txt
I think I can suggest some other options that will make your underlying problem more clear which is that it's supposed to be html, but there is no content (content-length = 0).
More concretely, this
wget -S -O export_classement.html 'http://pro.allocine.fr/film/export_classement.html?typeaffichage=2&lsttype=1001&lsttypeperiode=3002&typedonnees=visites&cfilm=&datefiltre='
produces this
Resolving pro.allocine.fr... 62.39.143.50
Connecting to pro.allocine.fr|62.39.143.50|:80... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response...
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2014 09:54:44 GMT
Content-Type: text/html; Charset=iso-8859-1
Connection: close
X-ServerName: WEBNX2
akamainocache: no-store
Content-Length: 0
Cache-control: private
X-KompressorName: kompressor7
Length: 0 [text/html]
2014-03-28 05:54:52 (0.00 B/s) - ‘export_classement.html’ saved [0/0]
Additionally the server is tailoring it's output based on how the browser identifies itself. using wget does have an option to include an arbitrary user-agent in the headers. Here's an example what happens when you make wget identify itself as Chrome. Here's a list of other possibiities.
wget -S --user-agent="Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_9_2) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/33.0.1750.152 Safari/537.36" 'http://pro.allocine.fr/film/export_classement.html?typeaffichage=2&lsttype=1001‌​&lsttypeperiode=3002&typedonnees=visites&cfilm=&datefiltre='
Now the output changes to export.csv, with type "application/octet-stream" instead of "text/html"
HTTP request sent, awaiting response...
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2014 10:34:09 GMT
Content-Type: application/octet-stream; Charset=iso-8859-1
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Connection: close
X-ServerName: WEBNX2
Edge-Control: no-store
Last-Modified: Fri, 28 Mar 2014 10:34:17 GMT
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=export.csv

How to properly handle a gzipped page when using curl?

I wrote a bash script that gets output from a website using curl and does a bunch of string manipulation on the html output. The problem is when I run it against a site that is returning its output gzipped. Going to the site in a browser works fine.
When I run curl by hand, I get gzipped output:
$ curl "http://example.com"
Here's the header from that particular site:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.2.17
Last-Modified: Sat, 03 Dec 2011 00:07:57 GMT
ETag: "6c38e1154f32dbd9ba211db8ad189b27"
Expires: Sun, 19 Nov 1978 05:00:00 GMT
Cache-Control: must-revalidate
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Length: 7796
Date: Sat, 03 Dec 2011 00:46:22 GMT
X-Varnish: 1509870407 1509810501
Age: 504
Via: 1.1 varnish
Connection: keep-alive
X-Cache-Svr: p2137050.pubip.peer1.net
X-Cache: HIT
X-Cache-Hits: 425
I know the returned data is gzipped, because this returns html, as expected:
$ curl "http://example.com" | gunzip
I don't want to pipe the output through gunzip, because the script works as-is on other sites, and piping through gzip would break that functionality.
What I've tried
changing the user-agent (I tried the same string my browser sends, "Mozilla/4.0", etc)
man curl
google search
searching stackoverflow
Everything came up empty
Any ideas?
curl will automatically decompress the response if you set the --compressed flag:
curl --compressed "http://example.com"
--compressed
(HTTP) Request a compressed response using one of the algorithms libcurl supports, and save the uncompressed document. If this option is used and the server sends an unsupported encoding, curl will report an error.
gzip is most likely supported, but you can check this by running curl -V and looking for libz somewhere in the "Features" line:
$ curl -V
...
Protocols: ...
Features: GSS-Negotiate IDN IPv6 Largefile NTLM SSL libz
Note that it's really the website in question that is at fault here. If curl did not pass an Accept-Encoding: gzip request header, the server should not have sent a compressed response.
In the relevant bug report Raw compressed output when not using --compressed but server returns gzip data #2836 the developers says:
The server shouldn't send content-encoding: gzip without the client having signaled that it is acceptable.
Besides, when you don't use --compressed with curl, you tell the command line tool you rather store the exact stream (compressed or not). I don't see a curl bug here...
So if the server could be sending gzipped content, use --compressed to let curl decompress it automatically.

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