If the X-Forwarded-For header already exists on a request, we
should append our client's IP to it after a comma+space instead
of overwriting it.
Fixes#3846.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6448053
The reverseproxy test depended on the behavior of
runtime.NumGoroutines(), which makes no guarantee when
goroutines are reaped. Instead, modify the flushLoop()
to invoke a callback when it returns, so the exit
from the loop can be tested, instead of the number
of gorountines running.
R=bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6068046
When FlushInterval is specified on ReverseProxy, the ResponseWriter is
wrapped with a maxLatencyWriter that periodically flushes in a
goroutine. That goroutine was not being cleaned up at the end of the
request. This resulted in a panic when Flush() was being called on a
ResponseWriter that was closed.
The code was updated to always send the done message to the flushLoop()
goroutine after copying the body. Futhermore, the code was refactored to
allow the test to verify the maxLatencyWriter behavior.
R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6033043
Duplicated fields from URL were dropped so that its behavior
is simple and expected when being stringified and when being
operated by packages like http. Most of the preserved fields
are in unencoded form, except for RawQuery which continues to
exist and be more easily handled via url.Query().
The RawUserinfo field was also replaced since it wasn't practical
to use and had limitations when operating with empty usernames
and passwords which are allowed by the RFC. In its place the
Userinfo type was introduced and made accessible through the
url.User and url.UserPassword functions.
What was previous built as:
url.URL{RawUserinfo: url.EncodeUserinfo("user", ""), ...}
Is now built as:
url.URL{User: url.User("user"), ...}
R=rsc, bradfitz, gustavo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5498076