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Middleware to check for obedience to the WSGI specification.

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  - That all the required keys are in the environment: REQUEST_METHOD,
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  - That HTTP_CONTENT_TYPE and HTTP_CONTENT_LENGTH are not in the
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  - That CGI-style variables (that don't contain a .) have
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  - That wsgi.version is a tuple

  - That wsgi.url_scheme is 'http' or 'https' (@@: is this too
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  - Warns if the REQUEST_METHOD is not known (@@: probably too
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  - That SCRIPT_NAME and PATH_INFO are empty or start with /

  - That at least one of SCRIPT_NAME or PATH_INFO are set.

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  - That wsgi.input has the methods read, readline, readlines, and
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  - That wsgi.errors has the methods flush, write, writelines

* The status is a string, contains a space, starts with an integer,
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* That the headers is a list (not a subclass, not another kind of
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* That the items of the headers are tuples of strings.

* That there is no 'status' header (that is used in CGI, but not in
  WSGI).

* That the headers don't contain newlines or colons, end in _ or -, or
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* That Content-Type is given if there is content (CGI often has a
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* That no Content-Type is given when there is no content (@@: is this
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* That the exc_info argument to start_response is a tuple or None.

* That all calls to the writer are with strings, and no other methods
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* That wsgi.input is used properly:

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* That wsgi.errors is used properly:

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* The response iterator:

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    been called (that can signal either a server or application
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