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As discussed in [the Flow View section of the mitmproxy
overview](@!urlTo("mitmproxy.html")!@), mitmproxy allows you to inspect and
manipulate flows.  When inspecting a single flow, mitmproxy uses a number of
heuristics to show a friendly view of various content types; if mitmproxy
cannot show a friendly view, mitmproxy defaults to a __raw__ view.

Each content type invokes a different flow viewer to parse the data and display
the friendly view. Users can add custom content viewers by adding a view class
to contentview.py, discussed below.

## Adding a new View class to contentview.py

The content viewers used by mitmproxy to present a friendly view of various
content types are stored in contentview.py.  Reviewing this file shows a number
of classes named ViewSomeDataType, each with the properties: __name__,
__prompt__, and __content\_types__ and a function named __\_\_call\_\___.

Adding a new content viewer to parse a data type is as simple as writing a new
View class.  Your new content viewer View class should have the same properties
as the other View classes: __name__, __prompt__, and __content\_types__ and a
__\_\_call\_\___ function to parse the content of the request/response. 

* The __name__ property should be a string describing the contents and new content viewer; 
* The __prompt__ property should be a two item tuple:

  - __1__: A string that will be used to display the new content viewer's type; and
  - __2__: A one character string that will be the hotkey used to select the new content viewer from the Flow View screen; 

* The __content\_types__ property should be a list of strings of HTTP Content\-Types that the new content viewer can parse.  
  * Note that mitmproxy will use the content\_types to try and heuristically show a friendly view of content and that you can override the built-in views by populating content\_types with values for content\_types that are already parsed -- e.g. "image/png".

After defining the __name__, __prompt__, and __content\_types__ properties of
the class, you should write the __\_\_call\_\___ function, which will parse the
request/response data and provide a friendly view of the data.  The
__\_\_call\_\___ function should take the following arguments: __self__,
__hdrs__, __content__, __limit__; __hdrs__ is a ODictCaseless object containing
the headers of the request/response; __content__ is the content of the
request/response, and __limit__ is an integer representing the amount of data
to display in the view window.

The __\_\_call\_\___ function returns two values: (1) a string describing the
parsed data; and (2) the parsed data for friendly display.  The parsed data to
be displayed should be a list of strings formatted for display.  You can use
the __\_view\_text__ function in contentview.py to format text for display.
Alternatively, you can display content as a series of key-value pairs; to do
so, prepare a list of lists, where each list item is a two item list -- a key
that describes the data, and then the data itself; after preparing the list of
lists, use the __common.format\_keyvals__ function on it to prepare it as text
for display.  

If the new content viewer fails or throws an exception, mitmproxy will default
to a __raw__ view.
an> The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. **************************************************************************************************/ #ifndef ABC__sat__lsat__solver_h #define ABC__sat__lsat__solver_h ABC_NAMESPACE_HEADER_START // SolverTypes: // typedef struct solver_t solver; typedef int solver_Var; typedef int solver_Lit; typedef int solver_lbool; // Constants: (can these be made inline-able?) // extern const solver_lbool solver_l_True; extern const solver_lbool solver_l_False; extern const solver_lbool solver_l_Undef; solver* solver_new (void); void solver_delete (solver* s); solver_Var solver_newVar (solver *s); solver_Lit solver_newLit (solver *s); solver_Lit solver_mkLit (solver_Var x); solver_Lit solver_mkLit_args (solver_Var x, int sign); solver_Lit solver_negate (solver_Lit p); solver_Var solver_var (solver_Lit p); int solver_sign (solver_Lit p); int solver_addClause (solver *s, int len, solver_Lit *ps); void solver_addClause_begin (solver *s); void solver_addClause_addLit(solver *s, solver_Lit p); int solver_addClause_commit(solver *s); int solver_simplify (solver *s); int solver_solve (solver *s, int len, solver_Lit *ps); void solver_solve_begin (solver *s); void solver_solve_addLit (solver *s, solver_Lit p); int solver_solve_commit (solver *s); int solver_okay (solver *s); void solver_setPolarity (solver *s, solver_Var v, int b); void solver_setDecisionVar (solver *s, solver_Var v, int b); solver_lbool solver_get_l_True (void); solver_lbool solver_get_l_False (void); solver_lbool solver_get_l_Undef (void); solver_lbool solver_value_Var (solver *s, solver_Var x); solver_lbool solver_value_Lit (solver *s, solver_Lit p); solver_lbool solver_modelValue_Var (solver *s, solver_Var x); solver_lbool solver_modelValue_Lit (solver *s, solver_Lit p); int solver_num_assigns (solver *s); int solver_num_clauses (solver *s); int solver_num_learnts (solver *s); int solver_num_vars (solver *s); int solver_num_freeVars (solver *s); int solver_conflict_len (solver *s); solver_Lit solver_conflict_nthLit (solver *s, int i); // Setters: void solver_set_verbosity (solver *s, int v); // Getters: int solver_num_conflicts (solver *s); /* TODO // Mode of operation: // int verbosity; double var_decay; double clause_decay; double random_var_freq; double random_seed; double restart_luby_start; // The factor with which the values of the luby sequence is multiplied to get the restart (default 100) double restart_luby_inc; // The constant that the luby sequence uses powers of (default 2) int expensive_ccmin; // FIXME: describe. int rnd_pol; // FIXME: describe. int restart_first; // The initial restart limit. (default 100) double restart_inc; // The factor with which the restart limit is multiplied in each restart. (default 1.5) double learntsize_factor; // The intitial limit for learnt clauses is a factor of the original clauses. (default 1 / 3) double learntsize_inc; // The limit for learnt clauses is multiplied with this factor each restart. (default 1.1) int learntsize_adjust_start_confl; double learntsize_adjust_inc; // Statistics: (read-only member variable) // uint64_t starts, decisions, rnd_decisions, propagations, conflicts; uint64_t dec_vars, clauses_literals, learnts_literals, max_literals, tot_literals; */ ABC_NAMESPACE_HEADER_END #endif