This adds a new keyword on the "server" line, "allow-0rtt", if set, we'll try
to send early data to the server, as long as the client sent early data, as
in case the server rejects the early data, we no longer have them, and can't
resend them, so the only option we have is to send back a 425, and we need
to be sure the client knows how to interpret it correctly.
The spin locks used to rely on W locks, which involve a loop waiting
for readers to leave, and this doesn't happen here. It's more efficient
to use S locks instead, which are also mutually exclusive and do not
have this loop. This saves one test per spinlock and a few tens of
bytes allowing certain functions to be inlined.
Currently the task scheduler suffers from an O(n) lookup when
skipping tasks that are not for the current thread. The reason
is that eb32_lookup_ge() has no information about the current
thread so it always revisits many tasks for other threads before
finding its own tasks.
This is particularly visible with HTTP/2 since the number of
concurrent streams created at once causes long series of tasks
for the same stream in the scheduler. With only 10 connections
and 100 streams each, by running on two threads, the performance
drops from 640kreq/s to 11.2kreq/s! Lookup metrics show that for
only 200000 task lookups, 430 million skips had to be performed,
which means that on average, each lookup leads to 2150 nodes to
be visited.
This commit backports the principle of scope lookups for ebtrees
from the ebtree_v7 development tree. The idea is that each node
contains a mask indicating the union of the scopes for the nodes
below it, which is fed during insertion, and used during lookups.
Then during lookups, branches that do not contain any leaf matching
the requested scope are simply ignored. This perfectly matches a
thread mask, allowing a thread to only extract the tasks it cares
about from the run queue, and to always find them in O(log(n))
instead of O(n). Thus the scheduler uses tid_bit and
task->thread_mask as the ebtree scope here.
Doing this has recovered most of the performance, as can be seen on
the test below with two threads, 10 connections, 100 streams each,
and 1 million requests total :
Before After Gain
test duration : 89.6s 4.73s x19
HTTP requests/s (DEBUG) : 11200 211300 x19
HTTP requests/s (PROD) : 15900 447000 x28
spin_lock time : 85.2s 0.46s /185
time per lookup : 13us 40ns /325
Even when going to 6 threads (on 3 hyperthreaded CPU cores), the
performance stays around 284000 req/s, showing that the contention
is much lower.
A test showed that there's no benefit in using this for the wait queue
though.
The __appctx_wakeup() function already does it. It matters with threads
enabled because it simplifies the code in appctx_res_wakeup() to get rid
of this test.
unbind_listener() takes the listener lock, which is already held by
enable_listener(). This situation happens when starting with nbproc > 1
with some bind lines limited to a certain process, because in this case
enable_listener() tries to stop unneeded listeners.
This commit introduces __do_unbind_listeners() which must be called with
the lock held, and makes enable_listener() use this one. Given that the
only return code has never been used and that it starts to make the code
more complicated to propagate it before throwing it to the trash, the
function's return type was changed to void.
This function incorrectly dealt with the case where data doesn't
wrap but lies at the end of the buffer, resulting in Lukas' reported
data corruption with HTTP/2. No backport is needed, it was introduced
for HTTP/2 in 1.8-dev.
For now it only supports literals and a bit of static header table
references for the 9 most common header field names (date, server,
content-type, content-length, last-modified, accept-ranges, etag,
cache-control, location).
A previous incarnation of this commit used to strip the forbidden H2
header names (connection, proxy-connection, upgrade, transfer-encoding,
keep-alive) but this is no longer the case as this filtering is irrelevant
to HPACK encoding and is specific to H2, so this will have to be done by
the caller.
It's quite not optimal but works fine enough to prepare some valid and
partially compressed responses during development.
The decoder is now fully functional. It makes use of the dynamic header
table. Dynamic header table size updates are currently ignored, as our
initially advertised value is the highest we support. Strictly speaking,
the impact is that a client referencing a header field after such an
update wouldn't observe an error instead of the connection being dropped
if it was implemented.
Decoded header fields are copied into a target buffer in HTTP/1 format
using HTTP/1.1 as the version. The Host header field is automatically
appended if a ":authority" header field is present.
All decoded header fields can be displayed if the file is compiled with
DEBUG_HPACK.
This code deals with header insertion, retrieval and eviction, as well
as with dynamic header table defragmentation. It is functional for use
as a decoder and was heavily tested in this context. There's still some
room for optimization (eg: the defragmentation code currently does it
in place using a memcpy).
Also for now the dynamic header table is allocated using malloc() while
a pool needs to be created instead.
This code was mostly imported from https://github.com/wtarreau/http2-exp
with "hpack_" prepended in front of most names to avoid risks of conflicts.
Some small cleanups and renamings were applied during the import. This
version must be considered more recent.
Some HPACK error codes were placed here (HPACK_ERR_*), not exactly because
they're needed by the decoder but they'll be needed by all callers. Maybe
a different location should be found.
The code was borrowed from the HPACK experimental implementations
available here :
https://github.com/wtarreau/http2-exp
It contains the Huffman table as specified in RFC7541 Appendix B, and a
set of reverse tables used to decode a Huffman byte stream, and produced
by contrib/h2/gen-rht. The encoder is not finalized, it doesn't emit the
byte stream but this is not needed for now.
This callback will be used to release upper layers when a mux is in
use. Given that the mux can be asynchronously deleted, we need a way
to release the extra information such as the session.
This callback will be called directly by the mux upon releasing
everything and before the connection itself is released, so that
the callee can find its information inside the connection if needed.
The way it currently works is not perfect, and most likely this should
instead become a mux release callback, but for now we have no easy way
to add mux-specific stuff, and since there's one mux per connection,
it works fine this way.
For H2, only the mux's timeout or other conditions might cause a
release of the mux and the connection, no stream should be allowed
to kill such a shared connection. So a stream will only detach using
cs_destroy() which will call mux->detach() then free the cs.
For now it's only handled by mux_pt. The goal is that the data layer
never has to care about the connection, which will have to be released
depending on the mux's mood.
This basically calls cs_shutw() followed by cs_shutr(). Both of them
are called in the most conservative mode so that any previous call is
still respected. The CS flags are cleared so that it can be reused
(this is important for connection retries when conn and CS are reused
without being reallocated).
In order to support all shutdown modes on the CS, we introduce the
following flags :
CS_FL_SHRD : shut read, drain extra data
CS_FL_SHRR : shut read, reset extra data
CS_FL_SHWN : shut write, normal notification
CS_FL_SHWS : shut write, silent mode (no notification)
And the following modes for shutr/shutw :
CS_SHR_DRAIN, CS_SHR_RESET, CS_SHW_NORMAL, CS_SHW_SILENT.
Note: it's possible that we won't need to distinguish the two shutw
above as they're only an action.
For now they are not used.
All the references to connections in the data path from streams and
stream_interfaces were changed to use conn_streams. Most functions named
"something_conn" were renamed to "something_cs" for this. Sometimes the
connection still is what matters (eg during a connection establishment)
and were not always renamed. The change is significant and minimal at the
same time, and was quite thoroughly tested now. As of this patch, all
accesses to the connection from upper layers go through the pass-through
mux.
Most of the functions dealing with conn_streams are here. They act at
the data layer and interact with the mux. For now they are not used yet
but everything builds.
This patch introduces a new struct conn_stream. It's the stream-side of
a multiplexed connection. A pool is created and destroyed on exit. For
now the conn_streams are not used at all.
When an incoming connection is made on an HTTP mode frontend, the
session now looks up the mux to use based on the ALPN token and the
proxy mode. This will allow easier mux registration, and we don't
need to hard-code the mux_pt_ops anymore.
Selecting a mux based on ALPN and the proxy mode will quickly become a
pain. This commit provides new functions to register/lookup a mux based
on the ALPN string and the proxy mode to make this easier. Given that
we're not supposed to support a wide range of muxes, the lookup should
not have any measurable performance impact.
For HTTP/2 and QUIC, we'll need to deal with multiplexed streams inside
a connection. After quite a long brainstorming, it appears that the
connection interface to the existing streams is appropriate just like
the connection interface to the lower layers. In fact we need to have
the mux layer in the middle of the connection, between the transport
and the data layer.
A mux can exist on two directions/sides. On the inbound direction, it
instanciates new streams from incoming connections, while on the outbound
direction it muxes streams into outgoing connections. The difference is
visible on the mux->init() call : in one case, an upper context is already
known (outgoing connection), and in the other case, the upper context is
not yet known (incoming connection) and will have to be allocated by the
mux. The session doesn't have to create the new streams anymore, as this
is performed by the mux itself.
This patch introduces this and creates a pass-through mux called
"mux_pt" which is used for all new connections and which only
calls the data layer's recv,send,wake() calls. One incoming stream
is immediately created when init() is called on the inbound direction.
There should not be any visible impact.
Note that the connection's mux is purposely not set until the session
is completed so that we don't accidently run with the wrong mux. This
must not cause any issue as the xprt_done_cb function is always called
prior to using mux's recv/send functions.
This is needed in the H2->H1 gateway so that we know how long the trailers
block is in chunked encoding. It returns the number of bytes, or 0 if some
are missing, or -1 in case of parse error.
It was a leftover from the last cleaning session; this mask applies
to threads and calling it process_mask is a bit confusing. It's the
same in fd, task and applets.
srv_set_fqdn() may be called with the DNS lock already held, but tries to
lock it anyway. So, add a new parameter to let it know if it was already
locked or not;
Commit 819fc6f ("MEDIUM: threads/stick-tables: handle multithreads on
stick tables") introduced a valid warning about an uninitialized return
value in stksess_kill_if_expired(). It just happens that this result is
never used, so let's turn the function back to void as previously.
The wrong bit was set to keep the lock on freq counter update. And the read
functions were re-worked to use volatile.
Moreover, when a freq counter is updated, it is now rotated only if the current
counter is in the past (now.tv_sec > ctr->curr_sec). It is important with
threads because the current time (now) is thread-local. So, rounded to the
second, the time may vary by more or less 1 second. So a freq counter rotated by
one thread may be see 1 second in the future. In this case, it is updated but
not rotated.
There was a flaw in the way the threads was created. the main one was just used
to create all the others and just wait to exit. Now, it is used to run a poll
loop. So we only create nbthread-1 threads.
This also fixes a bug about the compression filter when there is only 1 thread
(nbthread == 1 or no threads support). The bug was in the way thread-local
resources was initialized. per-thread init/deinit callbacks were never called
for the main process. So, with nthread set to 1, some buffers remained
uninitialized.
By default, no affinity is set for threads. To bind threads on CPU, you must
define a "thread-map" in the global section. The format is the same than the
"cpu-map" parameter, with a small difference. The process number must be
defined, with the same format than cpu-map ("all", "even", "odd" or a number
between 1 and 31/63).
A thread will be bound on the intersection of its mapping and the one of the
process on which it is attached. If the intersection is null, no specific bind
will be set for the thread.
Because there is not migration mechanism yet, all runtime information about an
SPOE agent are thread-local and async exchanges with agents are disabled when we
have serveral threads. Howerver, pipelining is still available. So for now, the
thread part of the SPOE is pretty simple.
We have two y for nsuring that the data is not concurently manipulated:
- locks
- running task on the same thread.
locks are expensives, it is better to avoid it.
This patch cecks that the Lua task run on the same thread that
the stream associated to the coprocess.
TODO: in a next version, the error should be replaced by a yield
and thread migration request.
Note that the Lua processing is not really thread safe. It provides
heavy system which consists to add our own lock function in the Lua
code and recompile the library. This system will probably not accepted
by maintainers of various distribs.
Our main excution point of the Lua is the function lua_resume(). A
quick looking on the Lua sources displays a lua_lock() a the start
of function and a lua_unlock() at the end of the function. So I
conclude that the Lua thread safe mode just perform a mutex around
all execution. So I prefer to do this in the HAProxy code, it will be
easier for distro maintainers.
Note that the HAProxy lua functions rounded by the macro SET_SAFE_LJMP
and RESET_SAFE_LJMP manipulates the Lua stack, so it will be careful
to set mutex around these functions.
Now, it is possible to define init_per_thread and deinit_per_thread callbacks to
deal with ressources allocation for each thread.
This is the filter responsibility to deal with concurrency. This is also the
filter responsibility to know if HAProxy is started with some threads. A good
way to do so is to check "global.nbthread" value. If it is greater than 1, then
_per_thread callbacks will be called.
A RW lock has been added to the vars structure to protect each list of
variables. And a global RW lock is used to protect registered names.
When a varibable is fetched, we duplicate sample data because the variable could
be modified by another thread.
When a frequency counter must be updated, we use the curr_sec/curr_tick fields
as a lock, by setting the MSB to 1 in a compare-and-swap to lock and by reseting
it to unlock. And when we need to read it, we loop until the counter is
unlocked. This way, the frequency counters are thread-safe without any external
lock. It is important to avoid increasing the size of many structures (global,
proxy, server, stick_table).
locks have been added in pat_ref and pattern_expr structures to protect all
accesses to an instance of on of them. Moreover, a global lock has been added to
protect the LRU cache used for pattern matching.
Patterns are now duplicated after a successfull matching, to avoid modification
by other threads when the result is used.
Finally, the function reloading a pattern list has been modified to be
thread-safe.
First, OpenSSL is now initialized to be thread-safe. This is done by setting 2
callbacks. The first one is ssl_locking_function. It handles the locks and
unlocks. The second one is ssl_id_function. It returns the current thread
id. During the init step, we create as much as R/W locks as needed, ie the
number returned by CRYPTO_num_locks function.
Next, The reusable SSL session in the server context is now thread-local.
Shctx is now also initialized if HAProxy is started with several threads.
And finally, a global lock has been added to protect the LRU cache used to store
generated certificates. The function ssl_sock_get_generated_cert is now
deprecated because the retrieved certificate can be removed by another threads
in same time. Instead, a new function has been added,
ssl_sock_assign_generated_cert. It must be used to search a certificate in the
cache and set it immediatly if found.
A lock is used to protect accesses to a peer structure.
A the lock is taken in the applet handler when the peer is identified
and released living the applet handler.
In the scheduling task for peers section, the lock is taken for every
listed peer and released at the end of the process task function.
The peer 'force shutdown' function was also re-worked.
A global lock has been added to protect accesses to the list of active
applets. A process mask has also been added on each applet. Like for FDs and
tasks, it is used to know which threads are allowed to process an
applet. Because applets are, most of time, linked to a session, it should be
sticky on the same thread. But in all cases, it is the responsibility of the
applet handler to lock what have to be protected in the applet context.
This is done by passing the right stream's proxy (the frontend or the backend,
depending on the context) to lock the error snapshot used to store the error
info.
The stick table API was slightly reworked:
A global spin lock on stick table was added to perform lookup and
insert in a thread safe way. The handling of refcount on entries
is now handled directly by stick tables functions under protection
of this lock and was removed from the code of callers.
The "stktable_store" function is no more externalized and users should
now use "stktable_set_entry" in any case of insertion. This last one performs
a lookup followed by a store if not found. So the code using "stktable_store"
was re-worked.
Lookup, and set_entry functions automatically increase the refcount
of the returned/stored entry.
The function "sticktable_touch" was renamed "sticktable_touch_local"
and is now able to decrease the refcount if last arg is set to true. It
is allowing to release the entry without taking the lock twice.
A new function "sticktable_touch_remote" is now used to insert
entries coming from remote peers at the right place in the update tree.
The code of peer update was re-worked to use this new function.
This function is also able to decrease the refcount if wanted.
The function "stksess_kill" also handle a parameter to decrease
the refcount on the entry.
A read/write lock is added on each entry to protect the data content
updates of the entry.
A lock for LB parameters has been added inside the proxy structure and atomic
operations have been used to update server variables releated to lb.
The only significant change is about lb_map. Because the servers status are
updated in the sync-point, we can call recalc_server_map function synchronously
in map_set_server_status_up/down function.
This list is used to save changes on the servers state. So when serveral threads
are used, it must be locked. The changes are then applied in the sync-point. To
do so, servers_update_status has be moved in the sync-point. So this is useless
to lock it at this step because the sync-point is a protected area by iteself.
For now, we have a list of each type per thread. So there is no need to lock
them. This is the easiest solution for now, but not the best one because there
is no sharing between threads. An idle connection on a thread will not be able
be used by a stream on another thread. So it could be a good idea to rework this
patch later.
Now, each proxy contains a lock that must be used when necessary to protect
it. Moreover, all proxy's counters are now updated using atomic operations.
First, we use atomic operations to update jobs/totalconn/actconn variables,
listener's nbconn variable and listener's counters. Then we add a lock on
listeners to protect access to their information. And finally, listener queues
(global and per proxy) are also protected by a lock. Here, because access to
these queues are unusal, we use the same lock for all queues instead of a global
one for the global queue and a lock per proxy for others.
2 global locks have been added to protect, respectively, the run queue and the
wait queue. And a process mask has been added on each task. Like for FDs, this
mask is used to know which threads are allowed to process a task.
For many tasks, all threads are granted. And this must be your first intension
when you create a new task, else you have a good reason to make a task sticky on
some threads. This is then the responsibility to the process callback to lock
what have to be locked in the task context.
Nevertheless, all tasks linked to a session must be sticky on the thread
creating the session. It is important that I/O handlers processing session FDs
and these tasks run on the same thread to avoid conflicts.
Many changes have been made to do so. First, the fd_updt array, where all
pending FDs for polling are stored, is now a thread-local array. Then 3 locks
have been added to protect, respectively, the fdtab array, the fd_cache array
and poll information. In addition, a lock for each entry in the fdtab array has
been added to protect all accesses to a specific FD or its information.
For pollers, according to the poller, the way to manage the concurrency is
different. There is a poller loop on each thread. So the set of monitored FDs
may need to be protected. epoll and kqueue are thread-safe per-se, so there few
things to do to protect these pollers. This is not possible with select and
poll, so there is no sharing between the threads. The poller on each thread is
independant from others.
Finally, per-thread init/deinit functions are used for each pollers and for FD
part for manage thread-local ressources.
Now, you must be carefull when a FD is created during the HAProxy startup. All
update on the FD state must be made in the threads context and never before
their creation. This is mandatory because fd_updt array is thread-local and
initialized only for threads. Because there is no pollers for the main one, this
array remains uninitialized in this context. For this reason, listeners are now
enabled in run_thread_poll_loop function, just like the worker pipe.
log buffers and static variables used in log functions are now thread-local. So
there is no need to lock anything to log messages. Moreover, per-thread
init/deinit functions are now used to initialize these buffers.
A sync-point is a protected area where you have the warranty that no concurrency
access is possible. It is implementated as a thread barrier to enter in the
sync-point and another one to exit from it. Inside the sync-point, all threads
that must do some syncrhonous processing will be called one after the other
while all other threads will wait. All threads will then exit from the
sync-point at the same time.
A sync-point will be evaluated only when necessary because it is a costly
operation. To limit the waiting time of each threads, we must have a mechanism
to wakeup all threads. This is done with a pipe shared by all threads. By
writting in this pipe, we will interrupt all threads blocked on a poller. The
pipe is then flushed before exiting from the sync-point.
hap_register_per_thread_init and hap_register_per_thread_deinit functions has
been added to register functions to do, for each thread, respectively, some
initialization and deinitialization. These functions are added in the global
lists per_thread_init_list and per_thread_deinit_list.
These functions are called only when HAProxy is started with more than 1 thread
(global.nbthread > 1).
This file contains all functions and macros used to deal with concurrency in
HAProxy. It contains all high-level function to do atomic operation
(HA_ATOMIC_*). Note, for now, we rely on "__atomic" GCC builtins to do atomic
operation. So HAProxy can be compiled with the thread support iff these builtins
are available.
It also contains wrappers around plocks to use spin or read/write locks. These
wrappers are used to abstract the internal representation of the locking system
and to add information to help debugging, when compiled with suitable
options.
To add extra info on locks, you need to add DEBUG=-DDEBUG_THREAD or
DEBUG=-DDEBUG_FULL compilation option. In addition to timing info on locks, we
keep info on where a lock was acquired the last time (function name, file and
line). There are also the thread id and a flag to know if it is still locked or
not. This will be useful to debug deadlocks.
Now memprintf relies on memvprintf. This new function does exactly what
memprintf did before, but it must be called with a va_list instead of a variable
number of arguments. So there is no change for every functions using
memprintf. But it is now also possible to have same functionnality from any
function with variadic arguments.
Email alerts relies on checks to send emails. The link between a mailers section
and a proxy was resolved during the configuration parsing, But initialization was
done when the first alert is triggered. This implied memory allocations and
tasks creations. With this patch, everything is now initialized during the
configuration parsing. So when an alert is triggered, only the memory required
by this alert is dynamically allocated.
Moreover, alerts processing had a flaw. The task handler used to process alerts
to be sent to the same mailer, process_email_alert, was designed to give back
the control to the scheduler when an alert was sent. So there was a delay
between the sending of 2 consecutives alerts (the min of
"proxy->timeout.connect" and "mailer->timeout.mail"). To fix this problem, now,
we try to process as much queued alerts as possible when the task is woken up.
This is a huge patch with many changes, all about the DNS. Initially, the idea
was to update the DNS part to ease the threads support integration. But quickly,
I started to refactor some parts. And after several iterations, it was
impossible for me to commit the different parts atomically. So, instead of
adding tens of patches, often reworking the same parts, it was easier to merge
all my changes in a uniq patch. Here are all changes made on the DNS.
First, the DNS initialization has been refactored. The DNS configuration parsing
remains untouched, in cfgparse.c. But all checks have been moved in a post-check
callback. In the function dns_finalize_config, for each resolvers, the
nameservers configuration is tested and the task used to manage DNS resolutions
is created. The links between the backend's servers and the resolvers are also
created at this step. Here no connection are kept alive. So there is no needs
anymore to reopen them after HAProxy fork. Connections used to send DNS queries
will be opened on demand.
Then, the way DNS requesters are linked to a DNS resolution has been
reworked. The resolution used by a requester is now referenced into the
dns_requester structure and the resolution pointers in server and dns_srvrq
structures have been removed. wait and curr list of requesters, for a DNS
resolution, have been replaced by a uniq list. And Finally, the way a requester
is removed from a DNS resolution has been simplified. Now everything is done in
dns_unlink_resolution.
srv_set_fqdn function has been simplified. Now, there is only 1 way to set the
server's FQDN, independently it is done by the CLI or when a SRV record is
resolved.
The static DNS resolutions pool has been replaced by a dynamoc pool. The part
has been modified by Baptiste Assmann.
The way the DNS resolutions are triggered by the task or by a health-check has
been totally refactored. Now, all timeouts are respected. Especially
hold.valid. The default frequency to wake up a resolvers is now configurable
using "timeout resolve" parameter.
Now, as documented, as long as invalid repsonses are received, we really wait
all name servers responses before retrying.
As far as possible, resources allocated during DNS configuration parsing are
releases when HAProxy is shutdown.
Beside all these changes, the code has been cleaned to ease code review and the
doc has been updated.
The messages processing is done using existing functions. So here, the main task
is to find the SPOE engine to use. To do so, we loop on all filter instances
attached to the stream. For each, we check if it is a SPOE filter and, if yes,
if its name is the one used to declare the "send-spoe-group" action.
We also take care to return an error if the action processing is interrupted by
HAProxy (because of a timeout or an error at the HAProxy level). This is done by
checking if the flag ACT_FLAG_FINAL is set.
The function spoe_send_group is the action_ptr callback ot
Because we can have messages chained by event or by group, we need to have a way
to know which kind of list we manipulate during the encoding. So 2 types of list
has been added, SPOE_MSGS_BY_EVENT and SPOE_MSGS_BY_GROUP. And the right type is
passed when spoe_encode_messages is called.
This action is used to trigger sending of a group of SPOE messages. To do so,
the SPOE engine used to send messages must be defined, as well as the SPOE group
to send. Of course, the SPOE engine must refer to an existing SPOE filter. If
not engine name is provided on the SPOE filter line, the SPOE agent name must be
used. For example:
http-request send-spoe-group my-engine some-group
This action is available for "tcp-request content", "tcp-response content",
"http-request" and "http-response" rulesets. It cannot be used for tcp
connection/session rulesets because actions for these rulesets cannot yield.
For now, the action keyword is parsed and checked. But it does nothing. Its
processing will be added in another patch.
For now, this section is only parsed. It should have the following format:
spoe-group <grp-name>
messages <msg-name> ...
And then SPOE groups must be referenced in spoe-agent section:
spoe-agnt <name>
...
groups <grp-name> ...
The purpose of these groups is to trigger messages sending from TCP or HTTP
rules, directly from HAProxy configuration, and not on specific event. This part
will be added in another patch.
It is important to note that a message belongs at most to a group.
The engine name is now kept in "spoe_config" struture. Because a SPOE filter can
be declared without engine name, we use the SPOE agent name by default. Then,
its uniqness is checked against all others SPOE engines configured for the same
proxy.
* TODO: Add documentation
Now, it is possible to conditionnaly send a SPOE message by adding an ACL-based
condition on the "event" line, in a "spoe-message" section. Here is the example
coming for the SPOE documentation:
spoe-message get-ip-reputation
args ip=src
event on-client-session if ! { src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst }
To avoid mixin with proxy's ACLs, each SPOE message has its private ACL list. It
possible to declare named ACLs in "spoe-message" section, using the same syntax
than for proxies. So we can rewrite the previous example to use a named ACL:
spoe-message get-ip-reputation
args ip=src
acl ip-whitelisted src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst
event on-client-session if ! ip-whitelisted
ACL-based conditions are executed in the context of the stream that handle the
client and the server connections.
It was painful not to have the status code available, especially when
it was computed. Let's store it and ensure we don't claim content-length
anymore on 1xx, only 0 body bytes.
This patch reorganize the shctx API in a generic storage API, separating
the shared SSL session handling from its core.
The shctx API only handles the generic data part, it does not know what
kind of data you use with it.
A shared_context is a storage structure allocated in a shared memory,
allowing its usage in a multithread or a multiprocess context.
The structure use 2 linked list, one containing the available blocks,
and another for the hot locked blocks. At initialization the available
list is filled with <maxblocks> blocks of size <blocksize>. An <extra>
space is initialized outside the list in case you need some specific
storage.
+-----------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+----
| struct shared_context | extra | block1 | block2 | block3 | ...
+-----------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+----
<-------- maxblocks --------->
* blocksize
The API allows to store content on several linked blocks. For example,
if you allocated blocks of 16 bytes, and you want to store an object of
60 bytes, the object will be allocated in a row of 4 blocks.
The API was made for LRU usage, each time you get an object, it pushes
the object at the end of the list. When it needs more space, it discards
The functions name have been renamed in a more logical way, the part
regarding shctx have been prefixed by shctx_ and the functions for the
shared ssl session cache have been prefixed by sh_ssl_sess_.
Move the ssl callback functions of the ssl shared session cache to
ssl_sock.c. The shctx functions still needs to be separated of the ssl
tree and data.
A bind_conf does contain a ssl_bind_conf, which already has a flag to know
if early data are activated, so use that, instead of adding a new flag in
the ssl_options field.
When compiled with Openssl >= 1.1.1, before attempting to do the handshake,
try to read any early data. If any early data is present, then we'll create
the session, read the data, and handle the request before we're doing the
handshake.
For this, we add a new connection flag, CO_FL_EARLY_SSL_HS, which is not
part of the CO_FL_HANDSHAKE set, allowing to proceed with a session even
before an SSL handshake is completed.
As early data do have security implication, we let the origin server know
the request comes from early data by adding the "Early-Data" header, as
specified in this draft from the HTTP working group :
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-replay
This patch simply brings HAProxy internal regex system to the Lua API.
Lua doesn't embed regexes, now it inherits from the regexes compiled
with haproxy.
Allow to register a function which will be called after the
configuration file parsing, at the end of the check_config_validity().
It's useful fo checking dependencies between sections or for resolving
keywords, pointers or values.
This commit implements a post section callback. This callback will be
used at the end of a section parsing.
Every call to cfg_register_section must be modified to use the new
prototype:
int cfg_register_section(char *section_name,
int (*section_parser)(const char *, int, char **, int),
int (*post_section_parser)());
We used to have bo_{get,put}_{chr,blk,str} to retrieve/send data to
the output area of a buffer, but not the equivalent ones for the input
area. This will be needed to copy uploaded data frames in HTTP/2.
This one may be called by upper layers (eg: si_shutw()) or lower layers
(si_shutw() as well during stream_int_notify()) so we want it to take
care of updating the connection's flags if it's not going to be done
by the caller.
In transport-layer functions (snd_buf/rcv_buf), it's very problematic
never to know if polling changes made to the connection will be propagated
or not. This has led to some conn_cond_update_polling() calls being placed
at a few places to cover both the cases where the function is called from
the upper layer and when it's called from the lower layer. With the arrival
of the MUX, this becomes even more complicated, as the upper layer will not
have to manipulate anything from the connection layer directly and will not
have to push such updates directly either. But the snd_buf functions will
need to see their updates committed when called from upper layers.
The solution here is to introduce a connection flag set by the connection
handler (and possibly any other similar place) indicating that the caller
is committed to applying such changes on return. This way, the called
functions will be able to apply such changes by themselves before leaving
when the flag is not set, and the upper layer will not have to care about
that anymore.
This flag is only used when reading using splicing for now, and is only
set when a pipe full condition is met, so we can simplify its reset
condition in conn_refresh_polling_flags so that it's cleared at the
same time as the other ones, only when the control layer is ready.
This flag could be used more, to mark that a buffer full condition was
met with any receive method in order to simplify polling management.
This should probably be revisited after 1.8.
This is based on the git SHA1 implementation and optimized to do word
accesses rather than byte accesses, and to avoid unnecessary copies into
the context array.
BoringSSL switch OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER to 1.1.0 for compatibility.
Fix BoringSSL call and openssl-compat.h/#define occordingly.
This will not break openssl/libressl compat.
Now any call to trace() in the code will automatically appear interleaved
with the call sequence and timestamped in the trace file. They appear with
a '#' on the 3rd argument (caller's pointer) in order to make them easy to
spot. If the trace functionality is not used, a dmumy weak function is used
instead so that it doesn't require to recompile every time traces are
enabled/disabled.
The trace decoder knows how to deal with these messages, detects them and
indents them similarly to the currently traced function. This can be used
to print function arguments for example.
Note that we systematically flush the log when calling trace() to ensure we
never miss important events, so this may impact performance.
The trace() function uses the same format as printf() so it should be easy
to setup during debugging sessions.
Now only conn_full_close() will be used. It will become more obvious
when the tracking is in place or not and will make it easier to
convert remaining call places to conn_streams.
Instead of having to manually handle lingering outside, let's make
conn_sock_shutw() check for it before calling shutdown(). We simply
don't want to emit the FIN if we're going to reset the connection
due to lingering. It's particularly important for silent-drop where
it's absolutely mandatory that no packet leaves the machine.
These flags are not exactly for the data layer, they instead indicate
what is expected from the transport layer. Since we're going to split
the connection between the transport and the data layers to insert a
mux layer, it's important to have a clear idea of what each layer does.
All function conn_data_* used to manipulate these flags were renamed to
conn_xprt_*.
The HTTP/2->HTTP/1 gateway will need to process HTTP/1 responses. We
cannot sanely rely on the HTTP/1 txn to parse a response because :
1) responses generated by haproxy such as error messages, redirects,
stats or Lua are neither parsed nor indexed ; this could be
addressed over the long term but will take time.
2) the http txn is useless to parse the body : the states present there
are only meaningful to received bytes (ie next bytes to parse) and
not at all to sent bytes. Thus chunks cannot be followed at all.
Even when implementing this later, it's unsure whether it will be
possible when dealing with compression.
So using the HTTP txn is now out of the equation and the only remaining
solution is to call an HTTP/1 message parser. We already have one, it was
slightly modified to avoid keeping states by benefitting from the fact
that the response was produced by haproxy and this is entirely available.
It assumes the following rules are true, or that incuring an extra cost
to work around them is acceptable :
- the response buffer is read-write and supports modifications in place
- headers sent through / by haproxy are not folded. Folding is still
implemented by replacing CR/LF/tabs/spaces with spaces if encountered
- HTTP/0.9 responses are never sent by haproxy and have never been
supported at all
- haproxy will not send partial responses, the whole headers block will
be sent at once ; this means that we don't need to keep expensive
states and can afford to restart the parsing from the beginning when
facing a partial response ;
- response is contiguous (does not wrap). This was already the case
with the original parser and ensures we can safely dereference all
fields with (ptr,len)
The parser replaces all of the http_msg fields that were necessary with
local variables. The parser is not called on an http_msg but on a string
with a start and an end. The HTTP/1 states were reused for ease of use,
though the request-specific ones have not been implemented for now. The
error position and error state are supported and optional ; these ones
may be used later for bug hunting.
The parser issues the list of all the headers into a caller-allocated
array of struct ist.
The content-length/transfer-encoding header are checked and the relevant
info fed the h1 message state (flags + body_len).
This will be used initially by the hpack table and hopefully later by a
new native http processor. These headers are made of name and value, both
an immediate string (ie: pointer and length).
The chunk crlf parser used to depend on the channel and on the HTTP
message, eventhough it's not really needed. Let's remove this dependency
so that it can be used within the H2 to H1 gateway.
As part of this small API change, it was renamed to h1_skip_chunk_crlf()
to mention that it doesn't depend on http_msg anymore.
The chunk parser used to depend on the channel and on the HTTP message
but it's not really needed as they're only used to retrieve the buffer
as well as to return the number of bytes parsed and the chunk size.
Here instead we pass the (few) relevant information in arguments so that
the function may be reused without a channel nor an HTTP message (ie
from the H2 to H1 gateway).
As part of this API change, it was renamed to h1_parse_chunk_size() to
mention that it doesn't depend on http_msg anymore.
Functions http_parse_chunk_size(), http_skip_chunk_crlf() and
http_forward_trailers() were moved to h1.h and h1.c respectively so
that they can be called from outside. The parts that were inline
remained inline as it's critical for performance (+41% perf
difference reported in an earlier test). For now the "http_" prefix
remains in their name since they still depend on the http_msg type.
Certain types and enums are very specific to the HTTP/1 parser, and we'll
need to share them with the HTTP/2 to HTTP/1 translation code. Let's move
them to h1.c/h1.h. Those with very few occurrences or only used locally
were renamed to explicitly mention the relevant HTTP version :
enum ht_state -> h1_state.
http_msg_state_str -> h1_msg_state_str
HTTP_FLG_* -> H1_FLG_*
http_char_classes -> h1_char_classes
Others like HTTP_IS_*, HTTP_MSG_* are left to be done later.
Thus function returns the number of blocks. When a buffer is full and
properly aligned, buf->p loops back the beginning, and the test in the
code doesn't cover that specific case, so it returns two chunks, a full
one and an empty one. It's harmless but can sometimes have a small impact
on performance and definitely makes the code hard to debug.
Fix regression introduced by commit:
'MAJOR: servers: propagate server status changes asynchronously.'
The building of the log line was re-worked to be done at the
postponed point without lack of data.
[wt: this only affects 1.8-dev, no backport needed]
This function modifies the string to add a zero after the end, and returns
the start pointer. The purpose is to use it on strings extracted by parsers
from larger strings cut with delimiters that are not important and can be
destroyed. It allows any such string to be used with regular string
functions. It's also convenient to use with printf() to show data extracted
from writable areas.
There's no point having the channel marked writable as these functions
only extract data from the channel. The code was retrieved from their
ci/co ancestors.
For HTTP/2 we'll need some buffer-only equivalent functions to some of
the ones applying to channels and still squatting the bi_* / bo_*
namespace. Since these names have kept being misleading for quite some
time now and are really getting annoying, it's time to rename them. This
commit will use "ci/co" as the prefix (for "channel in", "channel out")
instead of "bi/bo". The following ones were renamed :
bi_getblk_nc, bi_getline_nc, bi_putblk, bi_putchr,
bo_getblk, bo_getblk_nc, bo_getline, bo_getline_nc, bo_inject,
bi_putchk, bi_putstr, bo_getchr, bo_skip, bi_swpbuf
This function returns true if the available buffer space wraps. This
will be used to detect if it's worth realigning a buffer when it lacks
contigous space.
bi_istput() injects the ist string into the input region of the buffer,
it will be used to feed small data chunks into the conn_stream. bo_istput()
does the same into the output region of the buffer, it will be used to send
data via the transport layer and assumes there's no input data.
In order to match known patterns in wrapping buffer, we'll introduce new
string manipulation functions for buffers. The new function b_isteq()
relies on an ist string for the pattern and compares it against any
location in the buffer relative to <p>. The second function bi_eat()
is specially designed to match input contents.
This simply reduces the amount of output data from the buffer after
they have been transferred, in a way that is more natural than by
fiddling with buf->o. b_del() was renamed to bi_del() to avoid any
ambiguity (it's not yet used).
Commit 36eb3a3 ("MINOR: tools: make my_htonll() more efficient on x86_64")
brought an incorrect asm statement missing the input constraints, causing
the input value not necessarily to be placed into the same register as the
output one, resulting in random output. It happens to work when building at
-O0 but not above. This was only detected in the HTTP/2 parser, but in
mainline it could only affect the integer to binary sample cast.
No backport is needed since this bug was only introduced in the development
branch.
In order to prepare multi-thread development, code was re-worked
to propagate changes asynchronoulsy.
Servers with pending status changes are registered in a list
and this one is processed and emptied only once 'run poll' loop.
Operational status changes are performed before administrative
status changes.
In a case of multiple operational status change or admin status
change in the same 'run poll' loop iteration, those changes are
merged to reach only the targeted status.
Commit bcb86ab ("MINOR: session: add a streams field to the session
struct") added this list of streams that is not needed anymore. Let's
get rid of it now.
After some tests, gcc 5.x produces better code with likely()
than without, contrary to gcc 4.x where it was better to disable
it. Let's re-enable it for 5 and above.
It's not possible to use strlen() in const arrays even with const
strings, but we can use sizeof-1 via a macro. Let's provide this in
the IST() macro, as it saves the developer from having to count the
characters.
After the removal of CO_FL_DATA_RD_SH and CO_FL_DATA_WR_SH, the
aggregate mask CO_FL_NOTIFY_DATA was not updated. It happens that
now CO_FL_NOTIFY_DATA and CO_FL_NOTIFY_DONE are similar, which may
reveal some overlap between the ->wake and ->xprt_done callbacks.
We'll see after the mux changes if both are still required.
These ones are the same as the previous ones but for 64 bit values.
We're using my_ntohll() and my_htonll() from standard.h for the byte
order conversion.
These ones are the equivalent of the read_* functions. They support
writing unaligned words, possibly wrapping, in host and network order.
The write_i*() functions were not implemented since the caller can
already use the unsigned version.
This patch adds the ability to read from a wrapping memory area (ie:
buffers). The new functions are called "readv_<type>". The original
ones were renamed to start with "read_" to make the difference more
obvious between the read method and the returned type.
It's worth noting that the memory barrier in readv_bytes() is critical,
as otherwise gcc decides that it doesn't need the resulting data, but
even worse, removes the length checks in readv_u64() and happily
performs an out-of-bounds unaligned read using read_u64()! Such
"optimizations" are a bit borderline, especially when they impact
security like this...
These ones return respectively the pointer to the end of the buffer and
the distance between b->p and the end. These will simplify a bit some
new code needed to parse directly from a wrapping buffer.
The current construct was made when developing on a 32-bit machine.
Having a simple bswap operation replaced with 2 bswap, 2 shift and
2 or is quite of a waste of precious cycles... Let's provide a trivial
asm-based implementation for x86_64.
Instead of duplicating some sensitive listener-specific code in the
session and in the stream code, let's call listener_release() when
releasing a connection attached to a listener.
Some places call delete_listener() then decrement the number of
listeners and jobs. At least one other place calls delete_listener()
without doing so, but since it's in deinit(), it's harmless and cannot
risk to cause zombie processes to survive. Given that the number of
listeners and jobs is incremented when creating the listeners, it's
much more logical to symmetrically decrement them when deleting such
listeners.
This function is used to create a series of listeners for a specific
address and a port range. It automatically calls the matching protocol
handlers to add them to the relevant lists. This way cfgparse doesn't
need to manipulate listeners anymore. As an added bonus, the memory
allocation is checked.
Since everything is self contained in proto_uxst.c there's no need to
export anything. The same should be done for proto_tcp.c but the file
contains other stuff that's not related to the TCP protocol itself
and which should first be moved somewhere else.
cfgparse has no business directly calling each individual protocol's 'add'
function to create a listener. Now that they're all registered, better
perform a protocol lookup on the family and have a standard ->add method
for all of them.
It's a shame that cfgparse() has to make special cases of each protocol
just to cast the port to the target address family. Let's pass the port
in argument to the function. The unix listener simply ignores it.
Adds cli commands to change at runtime whether informational messages
are prepended with severity level or not, with support for numeric and
worded severity in line with syslog severity level.
Adds stats socket config keyword severity-output to set default behavior
per socket on startup.
These notification management function and structs are generic and
it will be better to move in common parts.
The notification management functions and structs have names
containing some "lua" references because it was written for
the Lua. This patch removes also these references.
xref is used to create a relation between two elements.
Once an element is released, it breaks the relation. If the
relation is already broken, it frees the xref struct.
The pointer between two elements is a sort of refcount with
max value 1. The relation is only between two elements.
The pointer and the type of element a and b are conventional.
Note that xref is initialised from Lua files because Lua is
the only one user.
smp_fetch_ssl_fc_cl_str as very limited usage (only work with openssl == 1.0.2
compiled with the option enable-ssl-trace). It use internal cipher.algorithm_ssl
attribut and SSL_CIPHER_standard_name (available with ssl-trace).
This patch implement this (debug) function in a standard way. It used common
SSL_CIPHER_get_name to display cipher name. It work with openssl >= 1.0.2
and boringssl.
This function should be called by the poller to set FD_POLL_* flags on an FD and
update its state if needed. This function has been added to ease threads support
integration.
The server state and weight was reworked to handle
"pending" values updated by checks/CLI/LUA/agent.
These values are commited to be propagated to the
LB stack.
In further dev related to multi-thread, the commit
will be handled into a sync point.
Pending values are named using the prefix 'next_'
Current values used by the LB stack are named 'cur_'
This string is used in sample fetches so it is safe to use a preallocated trash
chunk instead of a buffer dynamically allocated during HAProxy startup.
First, this variable does not need to be publicly exposed because it is only
used by stick_table functions. So we declare it as a global static in
stick_table.c file. Then, it is useless to use a pointer. Using a plain struct
variable avoids any dynamic allocation.
swap_buffer is a global variable only used by buffer_slow_realign. So it has
been moved from global.h to buffer.c and it is allocated by init_buffer
function. deinit_buffer function has been added to release it. It is also used
to destroy the buffers' pool.
Now, we use init_log_buffers and deinit_log_buffers to, respectively, initialize
and deinitialize log buffers used for syslog messages.
These functions have been introduced to be used by threads, to deal with
thread-local log buffers.
Now, we use init_trash_buffers and deinit_trash_buffers to, respectively,
initialize and deinitialize trash buffers (trash, trash_buf1 and trash_buf2).
These functions have been introduced to be used by threads, to deal with
thread-local trash buffers.
Patch "MINOR: ssl: support ssl-min-ver and ssl-max-ver with crt-list"
introduce ssl_methods in struct ssl_bind_conf. struct bind_conf have now
ssl_methods and ssl_conf.ssl_methods (unused). It's error-prone. This patch
remove the duplicate structure to avoid any confusion.
After careful inspection, this flag is set at exactly two places :
- once in the health-check receive callback after receipt of a
response
- once in the stream interface's shutw() code where CF_SHUTW is
always set on chn->flags
The flag was checked in the checks before deciding to send data, but
when it is set, the wake() callback immediately closes the connection
so the CO_FL_SOCK_WR_SH flag is also set.
The flag was also checked in si_conn_send(), but checking the channel's
flag instead is enough and even reveals that one check involving it
could never match.
So it's time to remove this flag and replace its check with a check of
CF_SHUTW in the stream interface. This way each layer is responsible
for its shutdown, this will ease insertion of the mux layer.
This flag is both confusing and wrong. It is supposed to report the
fact that the data layer has received a shutdown, but in fact this is
reported by CO_FL_SOCK_RD_SH which is set by the transport layer after
this condition is detected. The only case where the flag above is set
is in the stream interface where CF_SHUTR is also set on the receiving
channel.
In addition, it was checked in the health checks code (while never set)
and was always test jointly with CO_FL_SOCK_RD_SH everywhere, except in
conn_data_read0_pending() which incorrectly doesn't match the second
time it's called and is fortunately protected by an extra check on
(ic->flags & CF_SHUTR).
This patch gets rid of the flag completely. Now conn_data_read0_pending()
accurately reports the fact that the transport layer has detected the end
of the stream, regardless of the fact that this state was already consumed,
and the stream interface watches ic->flags&CF_SHUTR to know if the channel
was already closed by the upper layer (which it already used to do).
The now unused conn_data_read0() function was removed.
The session may need to enforce a timeout when waiting for a handshake.
Till now we used a trick to avoid allocating a pointer, we used to set
the connection's owner to the task and set the task's context to the
session, so that it was possible to circle between all of them. The
problem is that we'll really need to pass the pointer to the session
to the upper layers during initialization and that the only place to
store it is conn->owner, which is squatted for this trick.
So this patch moves the struct task* into the session where it should
always have been and ensures conn->owner points to the session until
the data layer is properly initialized.
Historically listeners used to have a handler depending on the upper
layer. But now it's exclusively process_stream() and nothing uses it
anymore so it can safely be removed.
Currently a task is allocated in session_new() and serves two purposes :
- either the handshake is complete and it is offered to the stream via
the second arg of stream_new()
- or the handshake is not complete and it's diverted to be used as a
timeout handler for the embryonic session and repurposed once we land
into conn_complete_session()
Furthermore, the task's process() function was taken from the listener's
handler in conn_complete_session() prior to being replaced by a call to
stream_new(). This will become a serious mess with the mux.
Since it's impossible to have a stream without a task, this patch removes
the second arg from stream_new() and make this function allocate its own
task. In session_accept_fd(), we now only allocate the task if needed for
the embryonic session and delete it later.
The ->init() callback of the connection's data layer was only used to
complete the session's initialisation since sessions and streams were
split apart in 1.6. The problem is that it creates a big confusion in
the layers' roles as the session has to register a dummy data layer
when waiting for a handshake to complete, then hand it off to the
stream which will replace it.
The real need is to notify that the transport has finished initializing.
This should enable a better splitting between these layers.
This patch thus introduces a connection-specific callback called
xprt_done_cb() which informs about handshake successes or failures. With
this, data->init() can disappear, CO_FL_INIT_DATA as well, and we don't
need to register a dummy data->wake() callback to be notified of errors.
Till now connections used to rely exclusively on file descriptors. It
was planned in the past that alternative solutions would be implemented,
leading to member "union t" presenting sock.fd only for now.
With QUIC, the connection will need to continue to exist but will not
rely on a file descriptor but a connection ID.
So this patch introduces a "connection handle" which is either a file
descriptor or a connection ID, to replace the existing "union t". We've
now removed the intermediate "struct sock" which was never used. There
is no functional change at all, though the struct connection was inflated
by 32 bits on 64-bit platforms due to alignment.
Since commit 9d8dbbc ("MINOR: dns: Maximum DNS udp payload set to 8192") it's
possible to specify a packet size, but passing too large a size or a negative
size is not detected and results in memset() being performed over a 2GB+ area
upon receipt of the first DNS response, causing runtime crashes.
We now check that the size is not smaller than the smallest packet which is
the DNS header size (12 bytes).
No backport is needed.
Following up DNS extension introduction, this patch aims at making the
computation of the maximum number of records in DNS response dynamic.
This computation is based on the announced payload size accepted by
HAProxy.
This patch fixes a bug where some servers managed by SRV record query
types never ever recover from a "no resolution" status.
The problem is due to a wrong function called when breaking the
server/resolution (A/AAAA) relationship: this is performed when a server's SRV
record disappear from the SRV response.
Contrary to 64-bits libCs where size_t type size is 8, on systems with 32-bits
size of size_t is 4 (the size of a long) which does not equal to size of uint64_t type.
This was revealed by such GCC warnings on 32bits systems:
src/flt_spoe.c:2259:40: warning: passing argument 4 of spoe_decode_buffer from
incompatible pointer type
if (spoe_decode_buffer(&p, end, &str, &sz) == -1)
^
As the already existing code using spoe_decode_buffer() already use such pointers to
uint64_t, in place of pointer to size_t ;), most of this code is in contrib directory,
this simple patch modifies the prototype of spoe_decode_buffer() so that to use a
pointer to uint64_t in place of a pointer to size_t, uint64_t type being the type
finally required for decode_varint().
The two macros EXPECT_LF_HERE and EAT_AND_JUMP_OR_RETURN were exported
for use outside the HTTP parser. They now take extra arguments to avoid
implicit pointers and jump labels. These will be used to reimplement a
minimalist HTTP/1 parser in the H1->H2 gateway.
For HPACK we'll need to perform a lot of string manipulation between the
dynamic headers table and the output stream, and we need an efficient way
to deal with that, considering that the zero character is not an end of
string marker here. It turns out that gcc supports returning structs from
functions and is able to place up to two words directly in registers when
-freg-struct is used, which is the case by default on x86 and armv8. On
other architectures the caller reserves some stack space where the callee
can write, which is equivalent to passing a pointer to the return value.
So let's implement a few functions to deal with this as the resulting code
will be optimized on certain architectures where retrieving the length of
a string will simply consist in reading one of the two returned registers.
Extreme care was taken to ensure that the compiler gets maximum opportunities
to optimize out every bit of unused code. This is also the reason why no
call to regular string functions (such as strlen(), memcmp(), memcpy() etc)
were used. The code involving them is often larger than when they are open
coded. Given that strings are usually very small, especially when manipulating
headers, the time spent calling a function optimized for large vectors often
ends up being higher than the few cycles needed to count a few bytes.
An issue was met with __builtin_strlen() which can automatically convert
a constant string to its constant length. It doesn't accept NULLs and there
is no way to hide them using expressions as the check is made before the
optimizer is called. On gcc 4 and above, using an intermediary variable
is enough to hide it. On older versions, calls to ist() with an explicit
NULL argument will issue a warning. There is normally no reason to do this
but taking care of it the best possible still seems important.
Now each stream is added to the session's list of streams, so that it
will be possible to know all the streams belonging to a session, and
to know if any stream is still attached to a sessoin.
These two functions respectively copy a memory area onto the chunk, and
append the contents of a memory area over a chunk. They are convenient
to prepare binary output data to be sent and will be used for HTTP/2.
Edns extensions may be used to negotiate some settings between a DNS
client and a server.
For now we only use it to announce the maximum response payload size accpeted
by HAProxy.
This size can be set through a configuration parameter in the resolvers
section. If not set, it defaults to 512 bytes.
Commit 48a8332a introduce SSL_CTX_get0_privatekey in openssl-compat.h but
SSL_CTX_get0_privatekey access internal structure and can't be a candidate
to openssl-compat.h. The workaround with openssl < 1.0.2 is to use SSL_new
then SSL_get_privatekey.
Make it so for each server, instead of specifying a hostname, one can use
a SRV label.
When doing so, haproxy will first resolve the SRV label, then use the
resulting hostnames, as well as port and weight (priority is ignored right
now), to each server using the SRV label.
It is resolved periodically, and any server disappearing from the SRV records
will be removed, and any server appearing will be added, assuming there're
free servers in haproxy.
As DNS servers may not return all IPs in one answer, we want to cache the
previous entries. Those entries are removed when considered obsolete, which
happens when the IP hasn't been returned by the DNS server for a time
defined in the "hold obsolete" parameter of the resolver section. The default
is 30s.
Since the commit f6b37c67 ["BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: in bind line, ssl-options after
'crt' are ignored."], the certificates generation is broken.
To generate a certificate, we retrieved the private key of the default
certificate using the SSL object. But since the commit f6b37c67, the SSL object
is created with a dummy certificate (initial_ctx).
So to fix the bug, we use directly the default certificate in the bind_conf
structure. We use SSL_CTX_get0_privatekey function to do so. Because this
function does not exist for OpenSSL < 1.0.2 and for LibreSSL, it has been added
in openssl-compat.h with the right #ifdef.
If a server presents an unexpected certificate to haproxy, that is, a
certificate that doesn't match the expected name as configured in
verifyhost or as requested using SNI, we want to store that precious
information. Fortunately we have access to the connection in the
verification callback so it's possible to store an error code there.
For this purpose we use CO_ER_SSL_MISMATCH_SNI (for when the cert name
didn't match the one requested using SNI) and CO_ER_SSL_MISMATCH for
when it doesn't match verifyhost.
This patch fixes the commit 2ab8867 ("MINOR: ssl: compare server certificate
names to the SNI on outgoing connections")
When we check the certificate sent by a server, in the verify callback, we get
the SNI from the session (SSL_SESSION object). In OpenSSL, tlsext_hostname value
for this session is copied from the ssl connection (SSL object). But the copy is
done only if the "server_name" extension is found in the server hello
message. This means the server has found a certificate matching the client's
SNI.
When the server returns a default certificate not matching the client's SNI, it
doesn't set any "server_name" extension in the server hello message. So no SNI
is set on the SSL session and SSL_SESSION_get0_hostname always returns NULL.
To fix the problemn, we get the SNI directly from the SSL connection. It is
always defined with the value set by the client.
If the commit 2ab8867 is backported in 1.7 and/or 1.6, this one must be
backported too.
Note: it's worth mentionning that by making the SNI check work, we
introduce another problem by which failed SNI checks can cause
long connection retries on the server, and in certain cases the
SNI value used comes from the client. So this patch series must
not be backported until this issue is resolved.
task_init() is called exclusively by task_new() which is the only way
to create a task. Most callers set t->expire to TICK_ETERNITY, some set
it to another value and a few like Lua don't set it at all as they don't
need a timeout, causing random values to be used in case the task gets
queued.
Let's always set t->expire to TICK_ETERNITY in task_init() so that all
tasks are now initialized in a clean state.
This patch can be backported as it will definitely make the code more
robust (at least the Lua code, possibly other places).
timegm() is not provided everywhere and the documentation on how to
replace it is bogus as it proposes an inefficient and non-thread safe
alternative.
Here we reimplement everything needed to compute the number of seconds
since Epoch based on the broken down fields in struct tm. It is only
guaranteed to return correct values for correct inputs. It was successfully
tested with all possible 32-bit values of time_t converted to struct tm
using gmtime() and back to time_t using the legacy timegm() and this
function, and both functions always produced the same result.
Thanks to Benot Garnier for an instructive discussion and detailed
explanations of the various time functions, leading to this solution.
In some cases, the socket is misused. The user can open socket and never
close it, or open the socket and close it without sending data. This
causes resources leak on all resources associated to the stream (buffer,
spoe, ...)
This is caused by the stream_shutdown function which is called outside
of the stream execution process. Sometimes, the shtudown is required
while the stream is not started, so the cleanup is ignored.
This patch change the shutdown mode of the session. Now if the session is
no longer used and the Lua want to destroy it, it just set a destroy flag
and the session kill itself.
This patch should be backported in 1.6 and 1.7
Functions hdr_idx_first_idx() and hdr_idx_first_pos() were missing a
"const" qualifier on their arguments which are not modified, causing
a warning in some experimental H2 code.
When several stick-tables were configured with several peers sections,
only a part of them could be synchronized: the ones attached to the last
parsed 'peers' section. This was due to the fact that, at least, the peer I/O handler
refered to the wrong peer section list, in fact always the same: the last one parsed.
The fact that the global peer section list was named "struct peers *peers"
lead to this issue. This variable name is dangerous ;).
So this patch renames global 'peers' variable to 'cfg_peers' to ensure that
no such wrong references are still in use, then all the functions wich used
old 'peers' variable have been modified to refer to the correct peer list.
Must be backported to 1.6 and 1.7.
When support for passing SNI to the server was added in 1.6-dev3, there
was no way to validate that the certificate presented by the server would
really match the name requested in the SNI, which is quite a problem as
it allows other (valid) certificates to be presented instead (when hitting
the wrong server or due to a man in the middle).
This patch adds the missing check against the value passed in the SNI.
The "verifyhost" value keeps precedence if set. If no SNI is used and
no verifyhost directive is specified, then the certificate name is not
checked (this is unchanged).
In order to extract the SNI value, it was necessary to make use of
SSL_SESSION_get0_hostname(), which appeared in openssl 1.1.0. This is
a trivial function which returns the value of s->tlsext_hostname, so
it was provided in the compat layer for older versions. After some
refinements from Emmanuel, it now builds with openssl 1.0.2, openssl
1.1.0 and boringssl. A test file was provided to ease testing all cases.
After some careful observation period it may make sense to backport
this to 1.7 and 1.6 as some users rightfully consider this limitation
as a bug.
Cc: Emmanuel Hocdet <manu@gandi.net>
Signed-off-by: Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
The bug: Maps/ACLs using the same file/id can mistakenly inherit
their flags from the last declared one.
i.e.
$ cat haproxy.conf
listen mylistener
mode http
bind 0.0.0.0:8080
acl myacl1 url -i -f mine.acl
acl myacl2 url -f mine.acl
acl myacl3 url -i -f mine.acl
redirect location / if myacl2
$ cat mine.acl
foobar
Shows an unexpected redirect for request 'GET /FOObAR HTTP/1.0\n\n'.
This fix should be backported on mainline branches v1.6 and v1.7.
The reference of the current map/acl element to dump could
be destroyed if map is updated from an 'http-request del-map'
configuration rule or throught a 'del map/acl' on CLI.
We use a 'back_refs' chaining element to fix this. As it
is done to dump sessions.
This patch needs also fix:
'BUG/MAJOR: cli: fix custom io_release was crushed by NULL.'
To clean the back_ref and avoid a crash on a further
del/clear map operation.
Those fixes should be backported on mainline branches 1.7 and 1.6.
This patch wont directly apply on 1.6.
In order to authorize call of appctx_wakeup on running task:
- from within the task handler itself.
- in futur, from another thread.
The appctx is considered paused as default after running the handler.
The handler should explicitly call appctx_wakeup to be re-called.
When the appctx_free is called on a running handler. The real
free is postponed at the end of the handler process.
This will be used to retrieve the ALPN negociated over SSL (or possibly
via the proxy protocol later). It's likely that this information should
be stored in the connection itself, but it requires adding an extra
pointer and an extra integer. Thus better rely on the transport layer
to pass this info for now.
In order to authorize call of task_wakeup on running task:
- from within the task handler itself.
- in futur, from another thread.
The lookups on runqueue and waitqueue are re-worked
to prepare multithread stuff.
If task_wakeup is called on a running task, the woken
message flags are savec in the 'pending_state' attribute of
the state. The real wakeup is postponed at the end of the handler
process and the woken messages are copied from pending_state
to the state attribute of the task.
It's important to note that this change will cause a very minor
(though measurable) performance loss but it is necessary to make
forward progress on a multi-threaded scheduler. Most users won't
ever notice.
Under certain circumstances, if a stream's task is first woken up
(eg: I/O event) then notified of the availability of a buffer it
was waiting for via stream_res_wakeup(), this second event is lost
because the flags are only merged after seeing that the task is
running. At the moment it seems that the TASK_WOKEN_RES event is
not explicitly checked for, but better fix this before getting
reports of lost events.
This fix removes this "task running" test which is properly
performed in task_wakeup(), while the flags are properly merged.
It must be backported to 1.7 and 1.6.
These functions was added in commit 637f8f2c ("BUG/MEDIUM: buffers: Fix how
input/output data are injected into buffers").
This patch fixes hidden bugs. When a buffer is full (buf->i + buf->o ==
buf->size), instead of returning 0, these functions can return buf->size. Today,
this never happens because callers already check if the buffer is full before
calling bi/bo_contig_space. But to avoid possible bugs if calling conditions
changed, we slightly refactored these functions.
SSL/TLS version can be changed per certificat if and only if openssl lib support
earlier callback on handshake and, of course, is implemented in haproxy. It's ok
for BoringSSL. For Openssl, version 1.1.1 have such callback and could support it.
Very early in the connection rework process leading to v1.5-dev12, commit
56a77e5 ("MEDIUM: connection: complete the polling cleanups") marked the
end of use for this flag which since was never set anymore, but it continues
to be tested. Let's kill it now.
When dumping data at various places in the code, it's hard to figure
what is present where. To make this easier, this patch slightly modifies
debug_hexdump() to take a prefix string which is prepended in front of
each output line.
This patch is a major upgrade of the internal run-time DNS resolver in
HAProxy and it brings the following 2 main changes:
1. DNS resolution task
Up to now, DNS resolution was triggered by the health check task.
From now, DNS resolution task is autonomous. It is started by HAProxy
right after the scheduler is available and it is woken either when a
network IO occurs for one of its nameserver or when a timeout is
matched.
From now, this means we can enable DNS resolution for a server without
enabling health checking.
2. Introduction of a dns_requester structure
Up to now, DNS resolution was purposely made for resolving server
hostnames.
The idea, is to ensure that any HAProxy internal object should be able
to trigger a DNS resolution. For this purpose, 2 things has to be done:
- clean up the DNS code from the server structure (this was already
quite clean actually) and clean up the server's callbacks from
manipulating too much DNS resolution
- create an agnostic structure which allows linking a DNS resolution
and a requester of any type (using obj_type enum)
3. Manage requesters through queues
Up to now, there was an uniq relationship between a resolution and it's
owner (aka the requester now). It's a shame, because in some cases,
multiple objects may share the same hostname and may benefit from a
resolution being performed by a third party.
This patch introduces the notion of queues, which are basically lists of
either currently running resolution or waiting ones.
The resolutions are now available as a pool, which belongs to the resolvers.
The pool has has a default size of 64 resolutions per resolvers and is
allocated at configuration parsing.
Introduction of a DNS response LRU cache in HAProxy.
When a positive response is received from a DNS server, HAProxy stores
it in the struct resolution and then also populates a LRU cache with the
response.
For now, the key in the cache is a XXHASH64 of the hostname in the
domain name format concatened to the query type in string format.
Prior this patch, the DNS responses were stored in a pre-allocated
memory area (allocated at HAProxy's startup).
The problem is that this memory is erased for each new DNS responses
received and processed.
This patch removes the global memory allocation (which was not thread
safe by the way) and introduces a storage of the dns response in the
struct
resolution.
The memory in the struct resolution is also reserved at start up and is
thread safe, since each resolution structure will have its own memory
area.
For now, we simply store the response and use it atomically per
response per server.
In the process of breaking links between dns_* functions and other
structures (mainly server and a bit of resolution), the function
dns_get_ip_from_response needs to be reworked: it now can call
"callback" functions based on resolution's owner type to allow modifying
the way the response is processed.
For now, main purpose of the callback function is to check that an IP
address is not already affected to an element of the same type.
For now, only server type has a callback.
This patch introduces a some re-organisation around the DNS code in
HAProxy.
1. make the dns_* functions less dependent on 'struct server' and 'struct resolution'.
With this in mind, the following changes were performed:
- 'struct dns_options' has been removed from 'struct resolution' (well,
we might need it back at some point later, we'll see)
==> we'll use the 'struct dns_options' from the owner of the resolution
- dns_get_ip_from_response(): takes a 'struct dns_options' instead of
'struct resolution'
==> so the caller can pass its own dns options to get the most
appropriate IP from the response
- dns_process_resolve(): struct dns_option is deduced from new
resolution->requester_type parameter
2. add hostname_dn and hostname_dn_len into struct server
In order to avoid recomputing a server's hostname into its domain name
format (and use a trash buffer to store the result), it is safer to
compute it once at configuration parsing and to store it into the struct
server.
In the mean time, the struct resolution linked to the server doesn't
need anymore to store the hostname in domain name format. A simple
pointer to the server one will make the trick.
The function srv_alloc_dns_resolution() properly manages everything for
us: memory allocation, pointer updates, etc...
3. move resolvers pointer into struct server
This patch makes the pointer to struct dns_resolvers from struct
dns_resolution obsolete.
Purpose is to make the resolution as "neutral" as possible and since the
requester is already linked to the resolvers, then we don't need this
information anymore in the resolution itself.
A couple of new functions to allocate and free memory for a DNS
resolution structure. Main purpose is to to make the code related to DNS
more consistent.
They allocate or free memory for the structure itself. Later, if needed,
they should also allocate / free the buffers, etc, used by this structure.
They don't set/unset any parameters, this is the role of the caller.
This patch also implement calls to these function eveywhere it is
required.
The default len of request uri in log messages is 1024. In some use
cases, you need to keep the long trail of GET parameters. The only
way to increase this len is to recompile with DEFINE=-DREQURI_LEN=2048.
This commit introduces a tune.http.logurilen configuration directive,
allowing to tune this at runtime.
This option exits every workers when one of the current workers die.
It allows you to monitor the master process in order to relaunch
everything on a failure.
For example it can be used with systemd and Restart=on-failure in a spec
file.
This commit remove the -Ds systemd mode in HAProxy in order to replace
it by a more generic master worker system. It aims to replace entirely
the systemd wrapper in the near future.
The master worker mode implements a new way of managing HAProxy
processes. The master is in charge of parsing the configuration
file and is responsible for spawning child processes.
The master worker mode can be invoked by using the -W flag. It can be
used either in background mode (-D) or foreground mode. When used in
background mode, the master will fork to daemonize.
In master worker background mode, chroot, setuid and setgid are done in
each child rather than in the master process, because the master process
will still need access to filesystem to reload the configuration.
This patch adds the support of a maximum of 32 engines
in async mode.
Some tests have been done using 2 engines simultaneously.
This patch also removes specific 'async' attribute from the connection
structure. All the code relies only on Openssl functions.
ssl-mode-async is a global configuration parameter which enables
asynchronous processing in OPENSSL for all SSL connections haproxy
handles. With SSL_MODE_ASYNC set, TLS I/O operations may indicate a
retry with SSL_ERROR_WANT_ASYNC with this mode set if an asynchronous
capable engine is used to perform cryptographic operations. Currently
async mode only supports one async-capable engine.
This is the latest version of the patchset which includes Emeric's
updates :
- improved async fd cleaning when openssl reports an fd to delete
- prevent conn_fd_handler from calling SSL_{read,write,handshake} until
the async fd is ready, as these operations are very slow and waste CPU
- postpone of SSL_free to ensure the async operation can complete and
does not cause a dereference a released SSL.
- proper removal of async fd from the fdtab and removal of the unused async
flag.
This patch adds the global 'ssl-engine' keyword. First arg is an engine
identifier followed by a list of default_algorithms the engine will
operate.
If the openssl version is too old, an error is reported when the option
is used.
This patch changes the stats socket rights for allowing the sending of
listening sockets.
The previous behavior was to allow any unix stats socket with admin
level to send sockets. It's not possible anymore, you have to set this
option to activate the socket sending.
Example:
stats socket /var/run/haproxy4.sock mode 666 expose-fd listeners level user process 4
The current level variable use only 2 bits for storing the 3 access
level (user, oper and admin).
This patch add a bitmask which allows to use the remaining bits for
other usage.
Plan is to add min-tlsxx max-tlsxx configuration, more consistent than no-tlsxx.
This patch introduce internal min/max and replace force-tlsxx implementation.
SSL method configuration is store in 'struct tls_version_filter'.
SSL method configuration to openssl setting is abstract in 'methodVersions' table.
With openssl < 1.1.0, SSL_CTX_set_ssl_version is used for force (min == max).
With openssl >= 1.1.0, SSL_CTX_set_min/max_proto_version is used.
This patch adds a new stats socket command to modify server
FQDNs at run time.
Its syntax:
set server <backend>/<server> fqdn <FQDN>
This patch also adds FQDNs to server state file at the end
of each line for backward compatibility ("-" if not present).
These encoding functions does general stuff and can be used in
other context than spoe. This patch moves the function spoe_encode_varint
and spoe_decode_varint from spoe to common. It also remove the prefix spoe.
These functions will be used for encoding values in new binary sample fetch.
When we include the header proto/spoe.h in other files in the same
project, the compilator claim that the symbol have multiple definitions:
src/flt_spoe.o: In function `spoe_encode_varint':
~/git/haproxy/include/proto/spoe.h:45: multiple definition of `spoe_encode_varint'
src/proto_http.o:~/git/haproxy/include/proto/spoe.h:45: first defined here
This patch makes backend sections support 'server-template' new keyword.
Such 'server-template' objects are parsed similarly to a 'server' object
by parse_server() function, but its first arguments are as follows:
server-template <ID prefix> <nb | range> <ip | fqdn>:<port> ...
The remaining arguments are the same as for 'server' lines.
With such server template declarations, servers may be allocated with IDs
built from <ID prefix> and <nb | range> arguments.
For instance declaring:
server-template foo 1-5 google.com:80 ...
or
server-template foo 5 google.com:80 ...
would be equivalent to declare:
server foo1 google.com:80 ...
server foo2 google.com:80 ...
server foo3 google.com:80 ...
server foo4 google.com:80 ...
server foo5 google.com:80 ...
When running with multiple process, if some proxies are just assigned
to some processes, the other processes will just close the file descriptors
for the listening sockets. However, we may still have to provide those
sockets when reloading, so instead we just try hard to pretend those proxies
are dead, while keeping the sockets opened.
A new global option, no-reused-socket", has been added, to restore the old
behavior of closing the sockets not bound to this process.
Add the "-x" flag, that takes a path to a unix socket as an argument. If
used, haproxy will connect to the socket, and asks to get all the
listening sockets from the old process. Any failure is fatal.
This is needed to get seamless reloads on linux.
Add a new command that will send all the listening sockets, via the
stats socket, and their properties.
This is a first step to workaround the linux problem when reloading
haproxy.
Released version 1.8-dev1 with the following main changes :
- BUG/MEDIUM: proxy: return "none" and "unknown" for unknown LB algos
- BUG/MINOR: stats: make field_str() return an empty string on NULL
- DOC: Spelling fixes
- BUG/MEDIUM: http: Fix tunnel mode when the CONNECT method is used
- BUG/MINOR: http: Keep the same behavior between 1.6 and 1.7 for tunneled txn
- BUG/MINOR: filters: Protect args in macros HAS_DATA_FILTERS and IS_DATA_FILTER
- BUG/MINOR: filters: Invert evaluation order of HTTP_XFER_BODY and XFER_DATA analyzers
- BUG/MINOR: http: Call XFER_DATA analyzer when HTTP txn is switched in tunnel mode
- BUG/MAJOR: stream: fix session abort on resource shortage
- OPTIM: stream-int: don't disable polling anymore on DONT_READ
- BUG/MINOR: cli: allow the backslash to be escaped on the CLI
- BUG/MEDIUM: cli: fix "show stat resolvers" and "show tls-keys"
- DOC: Fix map table's format
- DOC: Added 51Degrees conv and fetch functions to documentation.
- BUG/MINOR: http: don't send an extra CRLF after a Set-Cookie in a redirect
- DOC: mention that req_tot is for both frontends and backends
- BUG/MEDIUM: variables: some variable name can hide another ones
- MINOR: lua: Allow argument for actions
- BUILD: rearrange target files by build time
- CLEANUP: hlua: just indent functions
- MINOR: lua: give HAProxy variable access to the applets
- BUG/MINOR: stats: fix be/sessions/max output in html stats
- MINOR: proxy: Add fe_name/be_name fetchers next to existing fe_id/be_id
- DOC: lua: Documentation about some entry missing
- DOC: lua: Add documentation about variable manipulation from applet
- MINOR: Do not forward the header "Expect: 100-continue" when the option http-buffer-request is set
- DOC: Add undocumented argument of the trace filter
- DOC: Fix some typo in SPOE documentation
- MINOR: cli: Remove useless call to bi_putchk
- BUG/MINOR: cli: be sure to always warn the cli applet when input buffer is full
- MINOR: applet: Count number of (active) applets
- MINOR: task: Rename run_queue and run_queue_cur counters
- BUG/MEDIUM: stream: Save unprocessed events for a stream
- BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled
- BUILD/MEDIUM: Fixing the build using LibreSSL
- BUG/MEDIUM: lua: In some case, the return of sample-fetches is ignored (2)
- SCRIPTS: git-show-backports: fix a harmless typo
- SCRIPTS: git-show-backports: add -H to use the hash of the commit message
- BUG/MINOR: stream-int: automatically release SI_FL_WAIT_DATA on SHUTW_NOW
- CLEANUP: applet/lua: create a dedicated ->fcn entry in hlua_cli context
- CLEANUP: applet/table: add an "action" entry in ->table context
- CLEANUP: applet: remove the now unused appctx->private field
- DOC: lua: documentation about time parser functions
- DOC: lua: improve links
- DOC: lua: section declared twice
- MEDIUM: cli: 'show cli sockets' list the CLI sockets
- BUG/MINOR: cli: "show cli sockets" wouldn't list all processes
- BUG/MINOR: cli: "show cli sockets" would always report process 64
- CLEANUP: lua: rename one of the lua appctx union
- BUG/MINOR: lua/cli: bad error message
- MEDIUM: lua: use memory pool for hlua struct in applets
- MINOR: lua/signals: Remove Lua part from signals.
- DOC: cli: show cli sockets
- MINOR: cli: automatically enable a CLI I/O handler when there's no parser
- CLEANUP: memory: remove the now unused cli_parse_show_pools() function
- CLEANUP: applet: group all CLI contexts together
- CLEANUP: stats: move a misplaced stats context initialization
- MINOR: cli: add two general purpose pointers and integers in the CLI struct
- MINOR: appctx/cli: remove the cli_socket entry from the appctx union
- MINOR: appctx/cli: remove the env entry from the appctx union
- MINOR: appctx/cli: remove the "be" entry from the appctx union
- MINOR: appctx/cli: remove the "dns" entry from the appctx union
- MINOR: appctx/cli: remove the "server_state" entry from the appctx union
- MINOR: appctx/cli: remove the "tlskeys" entry from the appctx union
- CONTRIB: tcploop: add limits.h to fix build issue with some compilers
- MINOR/DOC: lua: just precise one thing
- DOC: fix small typo in fe_id (backend instead of frontend)
- BUG/MINOR: Fix the sending function in Lua's cosocket
- BUG/MINOR: lua: memory leak executing tasks
- BUG/MINOR: lua: bad return code
- BUG/MINOR: lua: memleak when Lua/cli fails
- MEDIUM: lua: remove Lua struct from session, and allocate it with memory pools
- CLEANUP: haproxy: statify unexported functions
- MINOR: haproxy: add a registration for build options
- CLEANUP: wurfl: use the build options list to report it
- CLEANUP: 51d: use the build options list to report it
- CLEANUP: da: use the build options list to report it
- CLEANUP: namespaces: use the build options list to report it
- CLEANUP: tcp: use the build options list to report transparent modes
- CLEANUP: lua: use the build options list to report it
- CLEANUP: regex: use the build options list to report the regex type
- CLEANUP: ssl: use the build options list to report the SSL details
- CLEANUP: compression: use the build options list to report the algos
- CLEANUP: auth: use the build options list to report its support
- MINOR: haproxy: add a registration for post-check functions
- CLEANUP: checks: make use of the post-init registration to start checks
- CLEANUP: filters: use the function registration to initialize all proxies
- CLEANUP: wurfl: make use of the late init registration
- CLEANUP: 51d: make use of the late init registration
- CLEANUP: da: make use of the late init registration code
- MINOR: haproxy: add a registration for post-deinit functions
- CLEANUP: wurfl: register the deinit function via the dedicated list
- CLEANUP: 51d: register the deinitialization function
- CLEANUP: da: register the deinitialization function
- CLEANUP: wurfl: move global settings out of the global section
- CLEANUP: 51d: move global settings out of the global section
- CLEANUP: da: move global settings out of the global section
- MINOR: cfgparse: add two new functions to check arguments count
- MINOR: cfgparse: move parsing of "ca-base" and "crt-base" to ssl_sock
- MEDIUM: cfgparse: move all tune.ssl.* keywords to ssl_sock
- MEDIUM: cfgparse: move maxsslconn parsing to ssl_sock
- MINOR: cfgparse: move parsing of ssl-default-{bind,server}-ciphers to ssl_sock
- MEDIUM: cfgparse: move ssl-dh-param-file parsing to ssl_sock
- MEDIUM: compression: move the zlib-specific stuff from global.h to compression.c
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: properly reset the reused_sess during a forced handshake
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: avoid double free when releasing bind_confs
- BUG/MINOR: stats: fix be/sessions/current out in typed stats
- MINOR: tcp-rules: check that the listener exists before updating its counters
- MEDIUM: spoe: don't create a dummy listener for outgoing connections
- MINOR: listener: move the transport layer pointer to the bind_conf
- MEDIUM: move listener->frontend to bind_conf->frontend
- MEDIUM: ssl: remote the proxy argument from most functions
- MINOR: connection: add a new prepare_bind_conf() entry to xprt_ops
- MEDIUM: ssl_sock: implement ssl_sock_prepare_bind_conf()
- MINOR: connection: add a new destroy_bind_conf() entry to xprt_ops
- MINOR: ssl_sock: implement ssl_sock_destroy_bind_conf()
- MINOR: server: move the use_ssl field out of the ifdef USE_OPENSSL
- MINOR: connection: add a minimal transport layer registration system
- CLEANUP: connection: remove all direct references to raw_sock and ssl_sock
- CLEANUP: connection: unexport raw_sock and ssl_sock
- MINOR: connection: add new prepare_srv()/destroy_srv() entries to xprt_ops
- MINOR: ssl_sock: implement and use prepare_srv()/destroy_srv()
- CLEANUP: ssl: move tlskeys_finalize_config() to a post_check callback
- CLEANUP: ssl: move most ssl-specific global settings to ssl_sock.c
- BUG/MINOR: backend: nbsrv() should return 0 if backend is disabled
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: for a handshake when server-side SNI changes
- BUG/MINOR: systemd: potential zombie processes
- DOC: Add timings events schemas
- BUILD: lua: build failed on FreeBSD.
- MINOR: samples: add xx-hash functions
- MEDIUM: regex: pcre2 support
- BUG/MINOR: option prefer-last-server must be ignored in some case
- MINOR: stats: Support "select all" for backend actions
- BUG/MINOR: sample-fetches/stick-tables: bad type for the sample fetches sc*_get_gpt0
- BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers
- BUG/MINOR: http: report real parser state in error captures
- BUILD: scripts: automatically update the branch in version.h when releasing
- MINOR: tools: add a generic hexdump function for debugging
- BUG/MAJOR: http: fix risk of getting invalid reports of bad requests
- MINOR: http: custom status reason.
- MINOR: connection: add sample fetch "fc_rcvd_proxy"
- BUG/MINOR: config: emit a warning if http-reuse is enabled with incompatible options
- BUG/MINOR: tools: fix off-by-one in port size check
- BUG/MEDIUM: server: consider AF_UNSPEC as a valid address family
- MEDIUM: server: split the address and the port into two different fields
- MINOR: tools: make str2sa_range() return the port in a separate argument
- MINOR: server: take the destination port from the port field, not the addr
- MEDIUM: server: disable protocol validations when the server doesn't resolve
- BUG/MEDIUM: tools: do not force an unresolved address to AF_INET:0.0.0.0
- BUG/MINOR: ssl: EVP_PKEY must be freed after X509_get_pubkey usage
- BUG/MINOR: ssl: assert on SSL_set_shutdown with BoringSSL
- MINOR: Use "500 Internal Server Error" for 500 error/status code message.
- MINOR: proto_http.c 502 error txt typo.
- DOC: add deprecation notice to "block"
- MINOR: compression: fix -vv output without zlib/slz
- BUG/MINOR: Reset errno variable before calling strtol(3)
- MINOR: ssl: don't show prefer-server-ciphers output
- OPTIM/MINOR: config: Optimize fullconn automatic computation loading configuration
- BUG/MINOR: stream: Fix how backend-specific analyzers are set on a stream
- MAJOR: ssl: bind configuration per certificat
- MINOR: ssl: add curve suite for ECDHE negotiation
- MINOR: checks: Add agent-addr config directive
- MINOR: cli: Add possiblity to change agent config via CLI/socket
- MINOR: doc: Add docs for agent-addr configuration variable
- MINOR: doc: Add docs for agent-addr and agent-send CLI commands
- BUILD: ssl: fix to build (again) with boringssl
- BUILD: ssl: fix build on OpenSSL 1.0.0
- BUILD: ssl: silence a warning reported for ERR_remove_state()
- BUILD: ssl: eliminate warning with OpenSSL 1.1.0 regarding RAND_pseudo_bytes()
- BUILD: ssl: kill a build warning introduced by BoringSSL compatibility
- BUG/MEDIUM: tcp: don't poll for write when connect() succeeds
- BUG/MINOR: unix: fix connect's polling in case no data are scheduled
- MINOR: server: extend the flags to 32 bits
- BUG/MINOR: lua: Map.end are not reliable because "end" is a reserved keyword
- MINOR: dns: give ability to dns_init_resolvers() to close a socket when requested
- BUG/MAJOR: dns: restart sockets after fork()
- MINOR: chunks: implement a simple dynamic allocator for trash buffers
- BUG/MEDIUM: http: prevent redirect from overwriting a buffer
- BUG/MEDIUM: filters: Do not truncate HTTP response when body length is undefined
- BUG/MEDIUM: http: Prevent replace-header from overwriting a buffer
- BUG/MINOR: http: Return an error when a replace-header rule failed on the response
- BUG/MINOR: sendmail: The return of vsnprintf is not cleanly tested
- BUG/MAJOR: ssl: fix a regression in ssl_sock_shutw()
- BUG/MAJOR: lua segmentation fault when the request is like 'GET ?arg=val HTTP/1.1'
- BUG/MEDIUM: config: reject anything but "if" or "unless" after a use-backend rule
- MINOR: http: don't close when redirect location doesn't start with "/"
- MEDIUM: boringssl: support native multi-cert selection without bundling
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: fix verify/ca-file per certificate
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: switchctx should not return SSL_TLSEXT_ERR_ALERT_WARNING
- MINOR: ssl: removes SSL_CTX_set_ssl_version call and cleanup CTX creation.
- BUILD: ssl: fix build with -DOPENSSL_NO_DH
- MEDIUM: ssl: add new sample-fetch which captures the cipherlist
- MEDIUM: ssl: remove ssl-options from crt-list
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: in bind line, ssl-options after 'crt' are ignored.
- BUG/MINOR: ssl: fix cipherlist captures with sustainable SSL calls
- MINOR: ssl: improved cipherlist captures
- BUG/MINOR: spoe: Fix soft stop handler using a specific id for spoe filters
- BUG/MINOR: spoe: Fix parsing of arguments in spoe-message section
- MAJOR: spoe: Add support of pipelined and asynchronous exchanges with agents
- MINOR: spoe: Add support for pipelining/async capabilities in the SPOA example
- MINOR: spoe: Remove SPOE details from the appctx structure
- MINOR: spoe: Add status code in error variable instead of hardcoded value
- MINOR: spoe: Send a log message when an error occurred during event processing
- MINOR: spoe: Check the scope of sample fetches used in SPOE messages
- MEDIUM: spoe: Be sure to wakeup the good entity waiting for a buffer
- MINOR: spoe: Use the min of all known max_frame_size to encode messages
- MAJOR: spoe: Add support of payload fragmentation in NOTIFY frames
- MINOR: spoe: Add support for fragmentation capability in the SPOA example
- MAJOR: spoe: refactor the filter to clean up the code
- MINOR: spoe: Handle NOTIFY frames cancellation using ABORT bit in ACK frames
- REORG: spoe: Move struct and enum definitions in dedicated header file
- REORG: spoe: Move low-level encoding/decoding functions in dedicated header file
- MINOR: spoe: Improve implementation of the payload fragmentation
- MINOR: spoe: Add support of negation for options in SPOE configuration file
- MINOR: spoe: Add "pipelining" and "async" options in spoe-agent section
- MINOR: spoe: Rely on alertif_too_many_arg during configuration parsing
- MINOR: spoe: Add "send-frag-payload" option in spoe-agent section
- MINOR: spoe: Add "max-frame-size" statement in spoe-agent section
- DOC: spoe: Update SPOE documentation to reflect recent changes
- MINOR: config: warn when some HTTP rules are used in a TCP proxy
- BUG/MEDIUM: ssl: Clear OpenSSL error stack after trying to parse OCSP file
- BUG/MEDIUM: cli: Prevent double free in CLI ACL lookup
- BUG/MINOR: Fix "get map <map> <value>" CLI command
- MINOR: Add nbsrv sample converter
- CLEANUP: Replace repeated code to count usable servers with be_usable_srv()
- MINOR: Add hostname sample fetch
- CLEANUP: Remove comment that's no longer valid
- MEDIUM: http_error_message: txn->status / http_get_status_idx.
- MINOR: http-request tarpit deny_status.
- CLEANUP: http: make http_server_error() not set the status anymore
- MEDIUM: stats: Add JSON output option to show (info|stat)
- MEDIUM: stats: Add show json schema
- BUG/MAJOR: connection: update CO_FL_CONNECTED before calling the data layer
- MINOR: server: Add dynamic session cookies.
- MINOR: cli: Let configure the dynamic cookies from the cli.
- BUG/MINOR: checks: attempt clean shutw for SSL check
- CONTRIB: tcploop: make it build on FreeBSD
- CONTRIB: tcploop: fix time format to silence build warnings
- CONTRIB: tcploop: report action 'K' (kill) in usage message
- CONTRIB: tcploop: fix connect's address length
- CONTRIB: tcploop: use the trash instead of NULL for recv()
- BUG/MEDIUM: listener: do not try to rebind another process' socket
- BUG/MEDIUM server: Fix crash when dynamic is defined, but not key is provided.
- CLEANUP: config: Typo in comment.
- BUG/MEDIUM: filters: Fix channels synchronization in flt_end_analyze
- TESTS: add a test configuration to stress handshake combinations
- BUG/MAJOR: stream-int: do not depend on connection flags to detect connection
- BUG/MEDIUM: connection: ensure to always report the end of handshakes
- MEDIUM: connection: don't test for CO_FL_WAKE_DATA
- CLEANUP: connection: completely remove CO_FL_WAKE_DATA
- BUG: payload: fix payload not retrieving arbitrary lengths
- BUILD: ssl: simplify SSL_CTX_set_ecdh_auto compatibility
- BUILD: ssl: fix OPENSSL_NO_SSL_TRACE for boringssl and libressl
- BUG/MAJOR: http: fix typo in http_apply_redirect_rule
- MINOR: doc: 2.4. Examples should be 2.5. Examples
- BUG/MEDIUM: stream: fix client-fin/server-fin handling
- MINOR: fd: add a new flag HAP_POLL_F_RDHUP to struct poller
- BUG/MINOR: raw_sock: always perfom the last recv if RDHUP is not available
- OPTIM: poll: enable support for POLLRDHUP
- MINOR: kqueue: exclusively rely on the kqueue returned status
- MEDIUM: kqueue: take care of EV_EOF to improve polling status accuracy
- MEDIUM: kqueue: only set FD_POLL_IN when there are pending data
- DOC/MINOR: Fix typos in proxy protocol doc
- DOC: Protocol doc: add checksum, TLV type ranges
- DOC: Protocol doc: add SSL TLVs, rename CHECKSUM
- DOC: Protocol doc: add noop TLV
- MEDIUM: global: add a 'hard-stop-after' option to cap the soft-stop time
- MINOR: dns: improve DNS response parsing to use as many available records as possible
- BUG/MINOR: cfgparse: loop in tracked servers lists not detected by check_config_validity().
- MINOR: server: irrelevant error message with 'default-server' config file keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'backup' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'check-send-proxy' keyword.
- CLEANUP: server: code alignement.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'non-stick' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'send-proxy' and 'send-proxy-v2 keywords.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'check-ssl' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'force-sslv3' and 'force-tlsv1[0-2]' keywords.
- CLEANUP: server: code alignement.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'no-ssl*' and 'no-tlsv*' keywords.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'ssl' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'send-proxy-v2-ssl*' keywords.
- CLEANUP: server: code alignement.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'verify' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'verifyhost' setting.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'check' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'track' setting.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'ca-file', 'crl-file' and 'crt' settings.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'redir' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'observe' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'cookie' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'ciphers' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'tcp-ut' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'namespace' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'source' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'sni' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'addr' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Make 'default-server' support 'disabled' keyword.
- MINOR: server: Add 'no-agent-check' server keyword.
- DOC: server: Add docs for "server" and "default-server" new "no-*" and other settings.
- MINOR: doc: fix use-server example (imap vs mail)
- BUG/MEDIUM: tcp: don't require privileges to bind to device
- BUILD: make the release script use shortlog for the final changelog
- BUILD: scripts: fix typo in announce-release error message
- CLEANUP: time: curr_sec_ms doesn't need to be exported
- BUG/MEDIUM: server: Wrong server default CRT filenames initialization.
- BUG/MEDIUM: peers: fix buffer overflow control in intdecode.
- BUG/MEDIUM: buffers: Fix how input/output data are injected into buffers
- BUG/MINOR: http: Fix conditions to clean up a txn and to handle the next request
- CLEANUP: http: Remove channel_congested function
- CLEANUP: buffers: Remove buffer_bounce_realign function
- CLEANUP: buffers: Remove buffer_contig_area and buffer_work_area functions
- MINOR: http: remove useless check on HTTP_MSGF_XFER_LEN for the request
- MINOR: http: Add debug messages when HTTP body analyzers are called
- BUG/MEDIUM: http: Fix blocked HTTP/1.0 responses when compression is enabled
- BUG/MINOR: filters: Don't force the stream's wakeup when we wait in flt_end_analyze
- DOC: fix parenthesis and add missing "Example" tags
- DOC: update the contributing file
- DOC: log-format/tcplog/httplog update
- MINOR: config parsing: add warning when log-format/tcplog/httplog is overriden in "defaults" sections
The function buffer_contig_space is buggy and could lead to pernicious bugs
(never hitted until now, AFAIK). This function should return the number of bytes
that can be written into the buffer at once (without wrapping).
First, this function is used to inject input data (bi_putblk) and to inject
output data (bo_putblk and bo_inject). But there is no context. So it cannot
decide where contiguous space should placed. For input data, it should be after
bi_end(buf) (ie, buf->p + buf->i modulo wrapping calculation). For output data,
it should be after bo_end(buf) (ie, buf->p) and input data are assumed to not
exist (else there is no space at all).
Then, considering we need to inject input data, this function does not always
returns the right value. And when we need to inject output data, we must be sure
to have no input data at all (buf->i == 0), else the result can also be wrong
(but this is the caller responsibility, so everything should be fine here).
The buffer can be in 3 different states:
1) no wrapping
<---- o ----><----- i ----->
+------------+------------+-------------+------------+
| |oooooooooooo|iiiiiiiiiiiii|xxxxxxxxxxxx|
+------------+------------+-------------+------------+
^ <contig_space>
p ^ ^
l r
2) input wrapping
...---> <---- o ----><-------- i -------...
+-----+------------+------------+--------------------+
|iiiii|xxxxxxxxxxxx|oooooooooooo|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|
+-----+------------+------------+--------------------+
<contig_space> ^
^ ^ p
l r
3) output wrapping
...------ o ------><----- i -----> <----...
+------------------+-------------+------------+------+
|oooooooooooooooooo|iiiiiiiiiiiii|xxxxxxxxxxxx|oooooo|
+------------------+-------------+------------+------+
^ <contig_space>
p ^ ^
l r
buffer_contig_space returns (l - r). The cases 1 and 3 are correctly
handled. But for the second case, r is wrong. It points on the buffer's end
(buf->data + buf->size). It should be bo_end(buf) (ie, buf->p - buf->o).
To fix the bug, the function has been splitted. Now, bi_contig_space and
bo_contig_space should be used to know the contiguous space available to insert,
respectively, input data and output data. For bo_contig_space, input data are
assumed to not exist. And the right version is used, depending what we want to
do.
In addition, to clarify the buffer's API, buffer_realign does not return value
anymore. So it has the same API than buffer_slow_realign.
This patch can be backported in 1.7, 1.6 and 1.5.
This patch adds 'no-agent-check' setting supported both by 'default-server'
and 'server' directives to disable an agent check for a specific server which would
have 'agent-check' set as default value (inherited from 'default-server'
'agent-check' setting), or, on 'default-server' lines, to disable 'agent-check' setting
as default value for any further 'server' declarations.
For instance, provided this configuration:
default-server agent-check
server srv1
server srv2 no-agent-check
server srv3
default-server no-agent-check
server srv4
srv1 and srv3 would have an agent check enabled contrary to srv2 and srv4.
We do not allocate anymore anything when parsing 'default-server' 'agent-check'
setting.
This patch makes 'default-server' directives support 'sni' settings.
A field 'sni_expr' has been added to 'struct server' to temporary
stores SNI expressions as strings during both 'default-server' and 'server'
lines parsing. So, to duplicate SNI expressions from 'default-server' 'sni' setting
for new 'server' instances we only have to "strdup" these strings as this is
often done for most of the 'server' settings.
Then, sample expressions are computed calling sample_parse_expr() (only for 'server'
instances).
A new function has been added to produce the same error output as before in case
of any error during 'sni' settings parsing (display_parser_err()).
Should not break anything.
Before this patch 'check' setting was only supported by 'server' directives.
This patch makes also 'default-server' directives support this setting.
A new 'no-check' keyword parser has been implemented to disable this setting both
in 'default-server' and 'server' directives.
Should not break anything.
When SIGUSR1 is received, haproxy enters in soft-stop and quits when no
connection remains.
It can happen that the instance remains alive for a long time, depending
on timeouts and traffic. This option ensures that soft-stop won't run
for too long.
Example:
global
hard-stop-after 30s # Once in soft-stop, the instance will remain
# alive for at most 30 seconds.
We'll need to differenciate between pollers which can report hangup at
the same time as read (POLL_RDHUP) from the other ones, because only
these ones may benefit from the fd_done_recv() optimization. Epoll has
had support for EPOLLRDHUP since Linux 2.6.17 and has always been used
this way in haproxy, so now we only set the flag once we've observed it
once in a response. It means that some initial requests may try to
perform a second recv() call, but after the first closed connection it
will be enough to know that the second call is not needed anymore.
Later we may extend these flags to designate event-triggered pollers.
A tcp half connection can cause 100% CPU on expiration.
First reproduced with this haproxy configuration :
global
tune.bufsize 10485760
defaults
timeout server-fin 90s
timeout client-fin 90s
backend node2
mode tcp
timeout server 900s
timeout connect 10s
server def 127.0.0.1:3333
frontend fe_api
mode tcp
timeout client 900s
bind :1990
use_backend node2
Ie timeout server-fin shorter than timeout server, the backend server
sends data, this package is left in the cache of haproxy, the backend
server continue sending fin package, haproxy recv fin package. this
time the session information is as follows:
time the session information is as follows:
0x2373470: proto=tcpv4 src=127.0.0.1:39513 fe=fe_api be=node2
srv=def ts=08 age=1s calls=3 rq[f=848000h,i=0,an=00h,rx=14m58s,wx=,ax=]
rp[f=8004c020h,i=0,an=00h,rx=,wx=14m58s,ax=] s0=[7,0h,fd=6,ex=]
s1=[7,18h,fd=7,ex=] exp=14m58s
rp has set the CF_SHUTR state, next, the client sends the fin package,
session information is as follows:
0x2373470: proto=tcpv4 src=127.0.0.1:39513 fe=fe_api be=node2
srv=def ts=08 age=38s calls=4 rq[f=84a020h,i=0,an=00h,rx=,wx=,ax=]
rp[f=8004c020h,i=0,an=00h,rx=1m11s,wx=14m21s,ax=] s0=[7,0h,fd=6,ex=]
s1=[9,10h,fd=7,ex=] exp=1m11s
After waiting 90s, session information is as follows:
0x2373470: proto=tcpv4 src=127.0.0.1:39513 fe=fe_api be=node2
srv=def ts=04 age=4m11s calls=718074391 rq[f=84a020h,i=0,an=00h,rx=,wx=,ax=]
rp[f=8004c020h,i=0,an=00h,rx=?,wx=10m49s,ax=] s0=[7,0h,fd=6,ex=]
s1=[9,10h,fd=7,ex=] exp=? run(nice=0)
cpu information:
6899 root 20 0 112224 21408 4260 R 100.0 0.7 3:04.96 haproxy
Buffering is set to ensure that there is data in the haproxy buffer, and haproxy
can receive the fin package, set the CF_SHUTR flag, If the CF_SHUTR flag has been
set, The following code does not clear the timeout message, causing cpu 100%:
stream.c:process_stream:
if (unlikely((res->flags & (CF_SHUTR|CF_READ_TIMEOUT)) == CF_READ_TIMEOUT)) {
if (si_b->flags & SI_FL_NOHALF)
si_b->flags |= SI_FL_NOLINGER;
si_shutr(si_b);
}
If you have closed the read, set the read timeout does not make sense.
With or without cf_shutr, read timeout is set:
if (tick_isset(s->be->timeout.serverfin)) {
res->rto = s->be->timeout.serverfin;
res->rex = tick_add(now_ms, res->rto);
}
After discussion on the mailing list, setting half-closed timeouts the
hard way here doesn't make sense. They should be set only at the moment
the shutdown() is performed. It will also solve a special case which was
already reported of some half-closed timeouts not working when the shutw()
is performed directly at the stream-interface layer (no analyser involved).
Since the stream interface layer cannot know the timeout values, we'll have
to store them directly in the stream interface so that they are used upon
shutw(). This patch does this, fixing the problem.
An easier reproducer to validate the fix is to keep the huge buffer and
shorten all timeouts, then call it under tcploop server and client, and
wait 3 seconds to see haproxy run at 100% CPU :
global
tune.bufsize 10485760
listen px
bind :1990
timeout client 90s
timeout server 90s
timeout connect 1s
timeout server-fin 3s
timeout client-fin 3s
server def 127.0.0.1:3333
$ tcploop 3333 L W N20 A P100 F P10000 &
$ tcploop 127.0.0.1:1990 C S10000000 F
"sample-fetch which captures the cipherlist" patch introduce #define
do deal with trace functions only available in openssl > 1.0.2.
Add this #define to libressl and boringssl environment.
Thanks to Piotr Kubaj for postponing and testing with libressl.
SSL_CTX_set_ecdh_auto is declared (when present) with #define. A simple #ifdef
avoid to list all cases of ssllibs. It's a placebo in new ssllibs. It's ok with
openssl 1.0.1, 1.0.2, 1.1.0, libressl and boringssl.
Thanks to Piotr Kubaj for postponing and testing with libressl.
Despite the previous commit working fine on all tests, it's still not
sufficient to completely address the problem. If the connection handler
is called with an event validating an L4 connection but some handshakes
remain (eg: accept-proxy), it will still wake the function up, which
will not report the activity, and will not detect a change once the
handshake it complete so it will not notify the ->wake() handler.
In fact the only reason why the ->wake() handler is still called here
is because after dropping the last handshake, we try to call ->recv()
and ->send() in turn and change the flags in order to detect a data
activity. But if for any reason the data layer is not interested in
reading nor writing, it will not get these events.
A cleaner way to address this is to call the ->wake() handler only
on definitive status changes (shut, error), on real data activity,
and on a complete connection setup, measured as CONNECTED with no
more handshake pending.
It could be argued that the handshake flags have to be made part of
the condition to set CO_FL_CONNECTED but that would currently break
a part of the health checks. Also a handshake could appear at any
moment even after a connection is established so we'd lose the
ability to detect a second end of handshake.
For now the situation around CO_FL_CONNECTED is not clean :
- session_accept() only sets CO_FL_CONNECTED if there's no pending
handshake ;
- conn_fd_handler() will set it once L4 and L6 are complete, which
will do what session_accept() above refrained from doing even if
an accept_proxy handshake is still pending ;
- ssl_sock_infocbk() and ssl_sock_handshake() consider that a
handshake performed with CO_FL_CONNECTED set is a renegociation ;
=> they should instead filter on CO_FL_WAIT_L6_CONN
- all ssl_fc_* sample fetch functions wait for CO_FL_CONNECTED before
accepting to fetch information
=> they should also get rid of any pending handshake
- smp_fetch_fc_rcvd_proxy() uses !CO_FL_CONNECTED instead of
CO_FL_ACCEPT_PROXY
- health checks (standard and tcp-checks) don't check for HANDSHAKE
and may report a successful check based on CO_FL_CONNECTED while
not yet done (eg: send buffer full on send_proxy).
This patch aims at solving some of these side effects in a backportable
way before this is reworked in depth :
- we need to call ->wake() to report connection success, measure
connection time, notify that the data layer is ready and update
the data layer after activity ; this has to be done either if
we switch from pending {L4,L6}_CONN to nothing with no handshakes
left, or if we notice some handshakes were pending and are now
done.
- we document that CO_FL_CONNECTED exactly means "L4 connection
setup confirmed at least once, L6 connection setup confirmed
at least once or not necessary, all this regardless of any
possibly remaining handshakes or future L6 negociations".
This patch also renames CO_FL_CONN_STATUS to the more explicit
CO_FL_NOTIFY_DATA, and works around the previous flags trick consiting
in setting an impossible combination of flags to notify the data layer,
by simply clearing the current flags.
This fix should be backported to 1.7, 1.6 and 1.5.
When a filter is used, there are 2 channel's analyzers to surround all the
others, flt_start_analyze and flt_end_analyze. This is the good place to acquire
and release resources used by filters, when needed. In addition, the last one is
used to synchronize the both channels, especially for HTTP streams. We must wait
that the analyze is finished for the both channels for an HTTP transaction
before restarting it for the next one.
But this part was buggy, leading to unexpected behaviours. First, depending on
which channel ends first, the request or the response can be switch in a
"forward forever" mode. Then, the HTTP transaction can be cleaned up too early,
while a processing is still in progress on a channel.
To fix the bug, the flag CF_FLT_ANALYZE has been added. It is set on channels in
flt_start_analyze and is kept if at least one filter is still analyzing the
channel. So, we can trigger the channel syncrhonization if this flag was removed
on the both channels. In addition, the flag TX_WAIT_CLEANUP has been added on
the transaction to know if the transaction must be cleaned up or not during
channels syncrhonization. This way, we are sure to reset everything once all the
processings are finished.
This patch should be backported in 1.7.
This adds 3 new commands to the cli :
enable dynamic-cookie backend <backend> that enables dynamic cookies for a
specified backend
disable dynamic-cookie backend <backend> that disables dynamic cookies for a
specified backend
set dynamic-cookie-key backend <backend> that lets one change the dynamic
cookie secret key, for a specified backend.
This adds a new "dynamic" keyword for the cookie option. If set, a cookie
will be generated for each server (assuming one isn't already provided on
the "server" line), from the IP of the server, the TCP port, and a secret
key provided. To provide the secret key, a new keyword as been added,
"dynamic-cookie-key", for backends.
Example :
backend bk_web
balance roundrobin
dynamic-cookie-key "bla"
cookie WEBSRV insert dynamic
server s1 127.0.0.1:80 check
server s2 192.168.56.1:80 check
This is a first step to be able to dynamically add and remove servers,
without modifying the configuration file, and still have all the load
balancers redirect the traffic to the right server.
Provide a way to generate session cookies, based on the IP address of the
server, the TCP port, and a secret key provided.
This may be used to output the JSON schema which describes the output of
show info json and show stats json.
The JSON output is without any extra whitespace in order to reduce the
volume of output. For human consumption passing the output through a
pretty printer may be helpful.
e.g.:
$ echo "show schema json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat stdio | \
python -m json.tool
The implementation does not generate the schema. Some consideration could
be given to integrating the output of the schema with the output of
typed and json info and stats. In particular the types (u32, s64, etc...)
and tags.
A sample verification of show info json and show stats json using
the schema is as follows. It uses the jsonschema python module:
cat > jschema.py << __EOF__
import json
from jsonschema import validate
from jsonschema.validators import Draft3Validator
with open('schema.txt', 'r') as f:
schema = json.load(f)
Draft3Validator.check_schema(schema)
with open('instance.txt', 'r') as f:
instance = json.load(f)
validate(instance, schema, Draft3Validator)
__EOF__
$ echo "show schema json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat stdio > schema.txt
$ echo "show info json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat stdio > instance.txt
python ./jschema.py
$ echo "show stats json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat stdio > instance.txt
python ./jschema.py
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
Add a json parameter to show (info|stat) which will output information
in JSON format. A follow-up patch will add a JSON schema which describes
the format of the JSON output of these commands.
The JSON output is without any extra whitespace in order to reduce the
volume of output. For human consumption passing the output through a
pretty printer may be helpful.
e.g.:
$ echo "show info json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat stdio | \
python -m json.tool
STAT_STARTED has bee added in order to track if show output has begun or
not. This is used in order to allow the JSON output routines to only insert
a "," between elements when needed. I would value any feedback on how this
might be done better.
Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
This commit removes second argument(msgnum) from http_error_message and
changes http_error_message to use s->txn->status/http_get_status_idx for
mapping status code from 200..504 to HTTP_ERR_200..HTTP_ERR_504(enum).
This is needed for http-request tarpit deny_status commit.
This is like the nbsrv() sample fetch function except that it works as
a converter so it can count the number of available servers of a backend
name retrieved using a sample fetch or an environment variable.
Signed-off-by: Nenad Merdanovic <nmerdan@haproxy.com>
This option can be used to enable or to disable (prefixing the option line with
the "no" keyword) the sending of fragmented payload to agents. By default, this
option is enabled.
These options can be used to enable or to disable (prefixing the option line
with the "no" keyword), respectively, pipelined and asynchronous exchanged
between HAproxy and agents. By default, pipelining and async options are
enabled.
Now, when a payload is fragmented, the first frame must define the frame type
and the followings must use the special type SPOE_FRM_T_UNSET. This way, it is
easy to know if a fragment is the first one or not. Of course, all frames must
still share the same stream-id and frame-id.
Update SPOA example accordingly.
Now, as for peers, we use an opaque pointer to store information related to the
SPOE filter in appctx structure. These information are now stored in a dedicated
structure (spoe_appctx) and allocated, using a pool, when the applet is created.
This removes the dependency between applets and the SPOE filter and avoids to
eventually inflate the appctx structure.
Now, HAProxy and agents can announce the support for "pipelining" and/or "async"
capabilities during the HELLO handshake. For now, HAProxy always announces the
support of both. In addition, in its HELLO frames. HAproxy adds the "engine-id"
key. It is a uniq string that identify a SPOE engine.
The "pipelining" capability is the ability for a peer to decouple NOTIFY and ACK
frames. This is a symmectical capability. To be used, it must be supported by
HAproxy and agents. Unlike HTTP pipelining, the ACK frames can be send in any
order, but always on the same TCP connection used for the corresponding NOTIFY
frame.
The "async" capability is similar to the pipelining, but here any TCP connection
established between HAProxy and the agent can be used to send ACK frames. if an
agent accepts connections from multiple HAProxy, it can use the "engine-id"
value to group TCP connections.
Bug introduced with "removes SSL_CTX_set_ssl_version call and cleanup CTX
creation": ssl_sock_new_ctx is called before all the bind line is parsed.
The fix consists of separating the use of default_ctx as the initialization
context of the SSL connection via bind_conf->initial_ctx. Initial_ctx contains
all the necessary parameters before performing the selection of the CTX:
default_ctx is processed as others ctx without unnecessary parameters.
This patch used boringssl's callback to analyse CLientHello before any
handshake to extract key signature capabilities.
Certificat with better signature (ECDSA before RSA) is choosed
transparenty, if client can support it. RSA and ECDSA certificates can
be declare in a row (without order). This makes it possible to set
different ssl and filter parameter with crt-list.
The trash buffers are becoming increasingly complex to deal with due to
the code's modularity allowing some functions to be chained and causing
the same chunk buffers to be used multiple times along the chain, possibly
corrupting each other. In fact the trash were designed from scratch for
explicitly not surviving a function call but string manipulation makes
this impossible most of the time while not fullfilling the need for
reliable temporary chunks.
Here we introduce the ability to allocate a temporary trash chunk which
is reserved, so that it will not conflict with the trash chunks other
functions use, and will even support reentrant calls (eg: build_logline).
For this, we create a new pool which is exactly the size of a usual chunk
buffer plus the size of the chunk struct so that these chunks when allocated
are exactly the same size as the ones returned by get_trash_buffer(). These
chunks may fail so the caller must check them, and the caller is also
responsible for freeing them.
The code focuses on minimal changes and ease of reliable backporting
because it will be needed in stable versions in order to support next
patch.
The function dns_init_resolvers() is used to initialize socket used to
send DNS queries.
This patch gives the function the ability to close a socket before
re-opening it.
[wt: this needs to be backported to 1.7 for next fix]
Right now not only we're limited to 8 bits, but it's mentionned nowhere
and the limit was already reached. In addition, pp_opts (proxy protocol
options) were set to 32 bits while only 3 are needed. So let's swap
these two and group them together to avoid leaving two holes in the
structure, saving 64 bits on 64-bit machines.
A recent patch to support BoringSSL caused this warning to appear on
OpenSSL 1.1.0 :
src/ssl_sock.c:3062:4: warning: statement with no effect [-Wunused-value]
It's caused by SSL_CTX_set_ecdh_auto() which is now only a macro testing
that the last argument is zero, and the result is not used here. Let's
just kill it for both versions.
Tested with 0.9.8, 1.0.0, 1.0.1, 1.0.2, 1.1.0. This fix may be backported
to 1.7 if the boringssl fix is as well.
This function was deprecated in 1.1.0 causing this warning :
src/ssl_sock.c:551:3: warning: 'RAND_pseudo_bytes' is deprecated (declared at /opt/openssl-1.1.0/include/openssl/rand.h:47) [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
The man suggests to use RAND_bytes() instead. While the return codes
differ, it turns out that the function was already misused and was
relying on RAND_bytes() return code instead.
The patch was tested on 0.9.8, 1.0.0, 1.0.1, 1.0.2 and 1.1.0.
This fix must be backported to 1.7 and the return code check should
be backported to earlier versions if relevant.
In 1.0.0, this function was replaced with ERR_remove_thread_state().
As of openssl 1.1.0, both are now deprecated and do nothing at all.
Thus we simply make this call do nothing in 1.1.0 to silence the
warning.
The change was tested with 0.9.8, 1.0.0, 1.0.1, 1.0.2 and 1.1.0.
This kills the following warning on 1.1.0 :
src/ssl_sock.c:7266:9: warning: 'ERR_remove_state' is deprecated (declared at /dev/shm/openssl-1.1.0b/include/openssl/err.h:247) [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
This fix should be backported to 1.7.
After the code was ported to support 1.1.0, this one broke on 1.0.0 :
src/shctx.c:406: undefined reference to `SSL_SESSION_set1_id_context'
The function was indeed introduced only in 1.0.1. The build was validated
with 0.9.8, 1.0.0, 1.0.1, 1.0.2 and 1.1.0.
This fix must be backported to 1.7.
Limitations:
. disable force-ssl/tls (need more work)
should be set earlier with SSL_CTX_new (SSL_CTX_set_ssl_version is removed)
. disable generate-certificates (need more work)
introduce SSL_NO_GENERATE_CERTIFICATES to disable generate-certificates.
Cleanup some #ifdef and type related to boringssl env.
crt-list is extend to support ssl configuration. You can now have
such line in crt-list <file>:
mycert.pem [npn h2,http/1.1]
Support include "npn", "alpn", "verify", "ca_file", "crl_file",
"ecdhe", "ciphers" configuration and ssl options.
"crt-base" is also supported to fetch certificates.
The previous version used an O(number of proxies)^2 algo to get the sum of
the number of maxconns of frontends which reference a backend at least once.
This new version adds the frontend's maxconn number to the backend's
struct proxy member 'tot_fe_maxconn' when the backend name is resolved
for switching rules or default_backend statment. At the end, the final
backend's fullconn is computed looping only one time for all on proxies O(n).
The load of a configuration using a large amount of backends (10 thousands)
without configured fullconn was reduced from several minutes to few seconds.
Keeping the address and the port in the same field causes a lot of problems,
specifically on the DNS part where we're forced to cheat on the family to be
able to keep the port. This causes some issues such as some families not being
resolvable anymore.
This patch first moves the service port to a new field "svc_port" so that the
port field is never used anymore in the "addr" field (struct sockaddr_storage).
All call places were adapted (there aren't that many).
fc_rcvd_proxy : boolean
Returns true if the client initiated the connection with a PROXY protocol
header.
A flag is added on the struct connection if a PROXY header is successfully
parsed.
The older 'rsprep' directive allows modification of the status reason.
Extend 'http-response set-status' to take an optional string of the new
status reason.
http-response set-status 418 reason "I'm a coffeepot"
Matching updates in Lua code:
- AppletHTTP.set_status
- HTTP.res_set_status
Signed-off-by: Robin H. Johnson <robbat2@gentoo.org>
debug_hexdump() prints to the requested output stream (typically stdout
or stderr) an hex dump of the blob passed in argument. This is useful
to help debug binary protocols.
Error captures almost always report a state 26 (MSG_ERROR) making it
very hard to know what the parser was expecting. The reason is that
we have to switch to MSG_ERROR to trigger the dump, and then during
the dump we capture the current state which is already MSG_ERROR. With
this change we now copy the current state into an err_state field that
will be reported as the faulty state.
This patch looks a bit large because the parser doesn't update the
current state until it runs out of data so the current state is never
known when jumping to ther error label! Thus the code had to be updated
to take copies of the current state before switching to MSG_ERROR based
on the switch/case values.
As a bonus, it now shows the current state in human-readable form and
not only in numeric form ; in the past it was not an issue since it was
always 26 (MSG_ERROR).
At least now we can get exploitable invalid request/response reports :
[05/Jan/2017:19:28:57.095] frontend f (#2): invalid request
backend <NONE> (#-1), server <NONE> (#-1), event #1
src 127.0.0.1:39894, session #4, session flags 0x00000080
HTTP msg state MSG_RQURI(4), msg flags 0x00000000, tx flags 0x00000000
HTTP chunk len 0 bytes, HTTP body len 0 bytes
buffer flags 0x00908002, out 0 bytes, total 20 bytes
pending 20 bytes, wrapping at 16384, error at position 5:
00000 GET /\e HTTP/1.0\r\n
00017 \r\n
00019 \n
[05/Jan/2017:19:28:33.827] backend b (#3): invalid response
frontend f (#2), server s1 (#1), event #0
src 127.0.0.1:39718, session #0, session flags 0x000004ce
HTTP msg state MSG_HDR_NAME(17), msg flags 0x00000000, tx flags 0x08300000
HTTP chunk len 0 bytes, HTTP body len 0 bytes
buffer flags 0x80008002, out 0 bytes, total 59 bytes
pending 59 bytes, wrapping at 16384, error at position 31:
00000 HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n
00017 Content-length : 10\r\n
00038 \r\n
00040 0a\r\n
00044 0123456789\r\n
00056 0\r\n
This should be backported to 1.7 and 1.6 at least to help with bug
reports.
It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order
they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because
during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the
higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its
evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an
analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it
has already been called once but removed since.
With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the
main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with
their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response
analyzers.
So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to
have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response
channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place.
Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order:
* AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES
* AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES
* AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP
Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can
still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the
problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and
response analyzers.
[wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported
to 1.6 and 1.5]
this adds a support of the newest pcre2 library,
more secure than its older sibling in a cost of a
more complex API.
It works pretty similarly to pcre's part to keep
the overall change smooth, except :
- we define the string class supported at compile time.
- after matching the ovec data is properly sized, althought
we do not take advantage of it here.
- the lack of jit support is treated less 'dramatically'
as pcre2_jit_compile in this case is 'no-op'.
Historically a lot of SSL global settings were stored into the global
struct, but we've reached a point where there are 3 ifdefs in it just
for this, and others in haproxy.c to initialize it.
This patch moves all the private fields to a new struct "global_ssl"
stored in ssl_sock.c. This includes :
char *crt_base;
char *ca_base;
char *listen_default_ciphers;
char *connect_default_ciphers;
int listen_default_ssloptions;
int connect_default_ssloptions;
int tune.sslprivatecache; /* Force to use a private session cache even if nbproc > 1 */
unsigned int tune.ssllifetime; /* SSL session lifetime in seconds */
unsigned int tune.ssl_max_record; /* SSL max record size */
unsigned int tune.ssl_default_dh_param; /* SSL maximum DH parameter size */
int tune.ssl_ctx_cache; /* max number of entries in the ssl_ctx cache. */
The "tune" part was removed (useless here) and the occasional "ssl"
prefixes were removed as well. Thus for example instead of
global.tune.ssl_default_dh_param
we now have :
global_ssl.default_dh_param
A few initializers were present in the constructor, they could be brought
back to the structure declaration.
A few other entries had to stay in global for now. They concern memory
calculationn (used in haproxy.c) and stats (used in stats.c).
The code is already much cleaner now, especially for global.h and haproxy.c
which become readable.
tlskeys_finalize_config() was the only reason for haproxy.c to still
require ifdef and includes for ssl_sock. This one fits perfectly well
in the late initializers so it was changed to be registered with
hap_register_post_check().
There are still a lot of #ifdef USE_OPENSSL in the code (still 43
occurences) because we never know if we can directly access ssl_sock
or not. This patch attacks the problem differently by providing a
way for transport layers to register themselves and for users to
retrieve the pointer. Unregistered transport layers will point to NULL
so it will be easy to check if SSL is registered or not. The mechanism
is very inexpensive as it relies on a two-entries array of pointers,
so the performance will not be affected.
Having it in the ifdef complicates certain operations which require
additional ifdefs just to access a member which could remain zero in
non-ssl cases. Let's move it out, it will not even increase the
struct size on 64-bit machines due to alignment.
This one will be set by the transport layers which want to destroy
a bind_conf. It will typically be used by SSL to release certificates,
CAs and so on.
Instead of hard-coding all SSL preparation in cfgparse.c, we now register
this new function as the transport layer's prepare_bind_conf() and call it
only when definied. This removes some non-obvious SSL-specific code from
cfgparse.c as well as a #ifdef.
This one will be set by the transport layers which want to initialize
a bind_conf. It will typically be used by SSL to load certificates, CAs
and so on.
Most of the SSL functions used to have a proxy argument which was mostly
used to be able to emit clean errors using Alert(). First, many of them
were converted to memprintf() and don't require this pointer anymore.
Second, the rare which still need it also have either a bind_conf argument
or a server argument, both of which carry a pointer to the relevant proxy.
So let's now get rid of it, it needlessly complicates the API and certain
functions already have many arguments.
Historically, all listeners have a pointer to the frontend. But since
the introduction of SSL, we now have an intermediary layer called
bind_conf corresponding to a "bind" line. It makes no sense to have
the frontend on each listener given that it's the same for all
listeners belonging to a same bind_conf. Also certain parts like
SSL can only operate on bind_conf and need the frontend.
This patch fixes this by moving the frontend pointer from the listener
to the bind_conf. The extra indirection is quite cheap given and the
places were this is used are very scarce.
A mistake was made when the socket layer was cut into proto and
transport, the transport was attached to the listener while all
listeners in a single "bind" line always have exactly the same
transport. It doesn't seem obvious but this is the reason why there
are so many #ifdefs USE_OPENSSL in cfgparse : a lot of operations
have to be open-coded because cfgparse only manipulates bind_conf
and we don't have the information of the transport layer here.
Very little code makes use of the transport layer, mainly session
setup and log. These places can afford an extra pointer indirection
(the listener points to the bind_conf). This change is thus very small,
it saves a little bit of memory (8B per listener) and makes the code
more flexible.
This finishes to clean up the zlib-specific parts. It also unbreaks recent
commit b97c6fb ("CLEANUP: compression: use the build options list to report
the algos") which broke USE_ZLIB due to MAXWBITS not being defined anymore
in haproxy.c.
We already had alertif_too_many_args{,_idx}(), but these ones are
specifically designed for use in cfgparse. Outside of it we're
trying to avoid calling Alert() all the time so we need an
equivalent using a pointer to an error message.
These new functions called too_many_args{,_idx)() do exactly this.
They don't take the file name nor the line number which they have
no use for but instead they take an optional pointer to an error
message and the pointer to the error code is optional as well.
With (NULL, NULL) they'll simply check the validity and return a
verdict. They are quite convenient for use in isolated keyword
parsers.
These two new functions as well as the previous ones have all been
exported.
We replaced global.deviceatlas with global_deviceatlas since there's no need
to store all this into the global section. This removes the last #ifdefs,
and now the code is 100% self-contained in da.c. The file da.h was now
removed because it was only used to load dac.h, which is more easily
loaded directly from da.c. It provides another good example of how to
integrate code in the future without touching the core parts.
We replaced global._51degrees with global_51degrees since there's no need
to store all this into the global section. This removes the last #ifdefs,
and now the code is 100% self-contained in 51d.c. The file 51d.h was now
removed because it was only used to load 51Degrees.h, which is more easily
loaded from 51d.c. It provides a good example of how to integrate code in
the future without touching the core parts.
We replaced global.wurfl with global_wurfl since there's no need to store
all this into the global section. This removes the last #ifdefs, and now
the code is 100% self-contained in wurfl.c. It provides a good example of
how to integrate code in the future without touching the core parts.
deinit_51degrees() is not called anymore from haproxy.c, removing
2 #ifdefs and one include. The function was made static. The include
file still includes 51Degrees.h which is needed by global.h and 51d.c
so it was not touched beyond this last function removal.
By registering the deinit function we avoid another #ifdef in haproxy.c.
The ha_wurfl_deinit() function has been made static and unexported. Now
proto/wurfl.h is totally empty, the code being self-contained in wurfl.c,
so the useless .h has been removed.
The 3 device detection engines stop at the same place in deinit()
with the usual #ifdefs. Similar to the other functions we can have
some late deinitialization functions. These functions do not return
anything however so we have to use a different type.
Instead of having a #ifdef in the main init code we now use the registered
init functions. Doing so also enables error checking as errors were previously
reported as alerts but ignored. Also they were incorrect as the 'status'
variable was hidden by a second one and was always reporting DA_SYS (which
is apparently an error) in every case including the case where no file was
loaded. The init_deviceatlas() function was unexported since it's not used
outside of this place anymore.
This removes some #ifdefs from the main haproxy code path. Function
init_51degrees() now returns ERR_* instead of exit(1) on error, and
this function was made static and is not exported anymore.
This removes some #ifdefs from the main haproxy code path and enables
error checking. The current code only makes use of warnings even for
some errors that look serious. While this choice is questionnable, it
has been kept as-is, and only the return codes were adapted to ERR_WARN
to at least report that some warnings were emitted. ha_wurfl_init() was
unexported as it's not needed anymore.
Instead of calling the checks directly from the init code, we now
register the start_checks() function to be run at this point. This
also allows to unexport the check init function and to remove one
include from haproxy.c.
There's a significant amount of late initialization calls which are
performed after the point where we exit in check mode. These calls
are used to allocate resource and perform certain slow operations.
Let's have a way to register some functions which need to be called
there instead of having this multitude of #ifdef in the init path.
Many extensions now report some build options to ease debugging, but
this is now being done at the expense of code maintainability. Let's
provide a registration function to do this so that we can start to
remove most of the #ifdefs from haproxy.c (18 currently just for a
single function).
This one now migrates to the general purpose cli.p0 for the ref pointer,
cli.i0 for the dump_all flag and cli.i1 for the dump_keys_index. A few
comments were added.
The applet.h file doesn't depend on openssl anymore. It's worth noting
that the previous dependency was accidental and only used to work because
all files including this one used to have openssl included prior to
loading this file.
This one now migrates to the general purpose cli.p0 for the proxy pointer,
cli.p1 for the server pointer, and cli.i0 for the proxy's instance if only
one has to be dumped.
Most of the keywords don't need to have their own entry in the appctx
union, they just need to reuse some generic pointers like we've been
used to do in the appctx with st{0,1,2}. This patch adds p0, p1, i0, i1
and initializes them to zero before calling the parser. This way some
of the simplest existing keywords will be able to disappear from the
union.
It's worth noting that this is an extension to what was initially
attempted via the "private" member that I removed a few patches ago by
not understanding how it was supposed to be used. Here the fact that
we share the same union will force us to be stricter: the code either
uses the general purpose variables or it uses its own fields but not
both.
The appctx storage became a real mess along the years. It now contains
mostly CLI-specific parts that share the same storage as the "cli" part
which in fact only contains the fields needed to pass an error message
to the caller, and it also has room a few other regular applets which
may become more and more common.
This first patch moves the parts around in the union so that all
standard applet parts are grouped together and the CLI-specific ones
are grouped together. It also adds a few comments to indicate what
certain parts are used for since it's sometimes a bit confusing.
The struct hlua size is 128 bytes. The size is the biggest of all the elements
of the union embedded in the appctx struct. With HTTP2, it is possible that this
appctx struct will be use many times for each connection, so the 128 bytes are
a little bit heavy for the global memory consomation.
This patch replace the embbeded hlua struct by a pointer and an associated memory
pool. Now, the memory for lua is allocated only if it is required.
[wt: the appctx is now down to 160 bytes]
Just like previous patch, this was the only other user of the "private"
field of the applet. It used to store a copy of the keyword's action.
Let's just put it into ->table->action and use it from there. It also
slightly simplifies the code by removing a few pointer to integer casts.
We have very few users of the appctx's private field which was introduced
prior to the split of the CLI. Unfortunately it was not removed after the
end. This commit simply introduces hlua_cli->fcn which is the pointer to
the Lua function that the Lua code used to store in this private pointer.
This problem is already detected here:
8dc7316a6f
Another case raises. Now HAProxy sends a final message (typically
with "http-request deny"). Once the the message is sent, the response
channel flags are not modified.
HAProxy executes a Lua sample-fecthes for building logs, and the
result is ignored because the response flag remains set to the value
HTTP_MSG_RPBEFORE. So the Lua function hlua_check_proto() want to
guarantee the valid state of the buffer and ask for aborting the
request.
The function check_proto() is not the good way to ensure request
consistency. The real question is not "Are the message valid ?", but
"Are the validity of message unchanged ?"
This patch memorize the parser state before entering int the Lua
code, and perform a check when it go out of the Lua code. If the parser
state change for down, the request is aborted because the HTTP message
is degraded.
This patch should be backported in version 1.6 and 1.7
Fixing the build using LibreSSL as OpenSSL implementation.
Currently, LibreSSL 2.4.4 provides the same API of OpenSSL 1.0.1x,
but it redefine the OpenSSL version number as 2.0.x, breaking all
checks with OpenSSL 1.1.x.
The patch solves the issue checking the definition of the symbol
LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER when Openssl 1.1.x features are requested.
When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example
because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited,
this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available
buffer.
Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it
were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be
waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other
entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list.
Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a
buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in
<buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we
wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have
waiting applets and never awakened.
So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting
entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the
callback used to awaken it.
In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become
active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this
is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is
allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or
not and can do additional processing if not.
[wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
A stream can be awakened for different reasons. During its processing, it can be
early stopped if no buffer is available. In this situation, the reason why the
stream was awakened is lost, because we rely on the task state, which is reset
after each processing loop.
In many cases, that's not a big deal. But it can be useful to accumulate the
task states if the stream processing is interrupted, especially if some filters
need to be called.
To be clearer, here is an simple example:
1) A stream is awakened with the reason TASK_WOKEN_MSG.
2) Because no buffer is available, the processing is interrupted, the stream
is back to sleep. And the task state is reset.
3) Some buffers become available, so the stream is awakened with the reason
TASK_WOKEN_RES. At this step, the previous reason (TASK_WOKEN_MSG) is lost.
Now, the task states are saved for a stream and reset only when the stream
processing is not interrupted. The correspoing bitfield represents the pending
events for a stream. And we use this one instead of the task state during the
stream processing.
Note that TASK_WOKEN_TIMER and TASK_WOKEN_RES are always removed because these
events are always handled during the stream processing.
[wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
<run_queue> is used to track the number of task in the run queue and
<run_queue_cur> is a copy used for the reporting purpose. These counters has
been renamed, respectively, <tasks_run_queue> and <tasks_run_queue_cur>. So the
naming is consistent between tasks and applets.
[wt: needed for next fixes, backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
As for tasks, 2 counters has been added to track :
* the total number of applets : nb_applets
* the number of active applets : applets_active_queue
[wt: needed for next fixes, to backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
(http|tcp)-(request|response) action cannot take arguments from the
configuration file. Arguments are useful for executing the action with
a special context.
This patch adds the possibility of passing arguments to an action. It
runs exactly like sample fetches and other Lua wrappers.
Note that this patch implements a 'TODO'.
Commit 5fddab0 ("OPTIM: stream_interface: disable reading when
CF_READ_DONTWAIT is set") improved the connection layer's efficiency
back in 1.5-dev13 by avoiding successive read attempts on an active
FD. But by disabling this on a polled FD, it causes an unpleasant
side effect which is that the FD that was subscribed to polling is
suddenly stopped and may need to be re-enabled once the kernel
starts to slow down on data eviction (eg: saturated server at the
other end, bursty traffic caused by too large maxpollevents).
This behaviour is observable with persistent connections when there
is a large enough connection count so that there's no data in the
early connection and polling is required, because there are then
up to 4 epoll_ctl() calls per request. It's important that the
server is slower than haproxy to cause some delays when reading
response.
The current connection layer as designed in 1.6 with the FD cache
doesn't require this trick anymore, though it still benefits from
it when it saves an FD from being uselessly polled. But compared
to the increased cost of enabling and disabling poll all the time,
it's still better to disable it. In some cases it's possible to
observe a performance increase as high as 30% by avoiding this
epoll_ctl() dance.
In the end we only want to disable it when the FD is speculatively
read and not when it's polled. For this we introduce a new function
__conn_data_done_recv() which is used to indicate that we're done
with recv() and not interested in new attempts. If/when we later
support event-triggered epoll, this function will have to change
a bit to do the same even in the polled case.
A quick test with keep-alive requests run on a dual-core / dual-
thread Atom shows a significant improvement :
single process, 0 bytes :
before: Requests per second: 12243.20 [#/sec] (mean)
after: Requests per second: 13354.54 [#/sec] (mean)
single process, 4k :
before: Requests per second: 9639.81 [#/sec] (mean)
after: Requests per second: 10991.89 [#/sec] (mean)
dual process, 0 bytes (unstable) :
before: Requests per second: 16900-19800 ~ 17600 [#/sec] (mean)
after: Requests per second: 18600-21400 ~ 20500 [#/sec] (mean)
It already returns an empty string when the field is empty, but as a
preventive measure we should do the same when the string itself is a
NULL. While it is not supposed to happen, it will make the code more
resistant against failed allocations and unexpected results.
This fix should be backported to 1.7.
Historically we used to have the stick counters processing put into
session.c which became stream.c. But a big part of it is now in
stick-table.c (eg: converters) but despite this we still have all
the sample fetch functions in stream.c
These parts do not depend on the stream anymore, so let's move the
remaining chunks to stick-table.c and have cleaner files.
What remains in stream.c is everything needed to attach/detach
trackers to the stream and to update the counters while the stream
is being processed.
There's no more reason to keep tcp rules processing inside proto_tcp.c
given that there is nothing in common there except these 3 letters : tcp.
The tcp rules are in fact connection, session and content processing rules.
Let's move them to "tcp-rules" and let them live their life there.
We used to have 3 types of counters with a huge overlap :
- listener counters : stats collected for each bind line
- proxy counters : union of the frontend and backend counters
- server counters : stats collected per server
It happens that quite a good part was common between listeners and
proxies due to the frontend counters being updated at the two locations,
and that similarly the server and proxy counters were overlapping and
being updated together.
This patch cleans this up to propose only two types of counters :
- fe_counters: used by frontends and listeners, related to
incoming connections activity
- be_counters: used by backends and servers, related to outgoing
connections activity
This allowed to remove some non-sensical counters from both parts. For
frontends, the following entries were removed :
cum_lbconn, last_sess, nbpend_max, failed_conns, failed_resp,
retries, redispatches, q_time, c_time, d_time, t_time
For backends, this ones was removed : intercepted_req.
While doing this it was discovered that we used to incorrectly report
intercepted_req for backends in the HTML stats, which was always zero
since it's never updated.
Also it revealed a few inconsistencies (which were not fixed as they
are harmless). For example, backends count connections (cum_conn)
instead of sessions while servers count sessions and not connections.
Over the long term, some extra cleanups may be performed by having
some counters update functions touching both the server and backend
at the same time, as well as both the frontend and listener, to
ensure that all sides have all their stats properly filled. The stats
dump will also be able to factor the dump functions by counter types.
Reinhard Vicinus reported that the reported average response times cannot
be larger than 16s due to the double multiply being performed by
swrate_add() which causes an overflow very quickly. Indeed, with N=512,
the highest average value is 16448.
One solution proposed by Reinhard is to turn to long long, but this
involves 64x64 multiplies and 64->32 divides, which are extremely
expensive on 32-bit platforms.
There is in fact another way to avoid the overflow without using larger
integers, it consists in avoiding the multiply using the fact that
x*(n-1)/N = x-(x/N).
Now it becomes possible to store average values as large as 8.4 millions,
which is around 2h18mn.
Interestingly, this improvement also makes the code cheaper to execute
both on 32 and on 64 bit platforms :
Before :
00000000 <swrate_add>:
0: 8b 54 24 04 mov 0x4(%esp),%edx
4: 8b 0a mov (%edx),%ecx
6: 89 c8 mov %ecx,%eax
8: c1 e0 09 shl $0x9,%eax
b: 29 c8 sub %ecx,%eax
d: 8b 4c 24 0c mov 0xc(%esp),%ecx
11: c1 e8 09 shr $0x9,%eax
14: 01 c8 add %ecx,%eax
16: 89 02 mov %eax,(%edx)
After :
00000020 <swrate_add>:
20: 8b 4c 24 04 mov 0x4(%esp),%ecx
24: 8b 44 24 0c mov 0xc(%esp),%eax
28: 8b 11 mov (%ecx),%edx
2a: 01 d0 add %edx,%eax
2c: 81 c2 ff 01 00 00 add $0x1ff,%edx
32: c1 ea 09 shr $0x9,%edx
35: 29 d0 sub %edx,%eax
37: 89 01 mov %eax,(%ecx)
This fix may be backported to 1.6.
When dealing with many proxies, it's hard to spot response errors because
all internet-facing frontends constantly receive attacks. This patch now
makes it possible to demand that only request or response errors are dumped
by appending "request" or "reponse" to the show errors command.
The function log format emit its own error message using Alert(). This
patch replaces this behavior and uses the standard HAProxy error system
(with memprintf).
The benefits are:
- cleaning the log system
- the logformat can ignore the caller (actually the caller must set
a flag designing the caller function).
- Make the usage of the logformat function easy for future components.
Commit 1866d6d ("MEDIUM: ssl: Add support for OpenSSL 1.1.0")
introduced support for openssl 1.1.0 and temporarily broke 0.9.8.
In the end the port was not very hard given that the only cause of
build failures were functions supposedly absent from 0.9.8 that in
fact did exist.
Thus, adding a new #if to move these functions for versions older
than 0.9.8 was enough to fix the trouble. It received very light
testing, basically only an SSL bridge decrypting and re-encrypting
traffic, and checking that everything looks right. That said, the
functions specific to 0.9.8 here compared to 1.0.x are only
SSL_SESSION_set1_id_context(), EVP_PKEY_base_id(), and
X509_PUBKEY_get0_param().
Until now, the function parse_logformat_string() never fails. It
send warnings when it parses bad format, and returns expression in
best effort.
This patch replaces warnings by alert and returns a fail code.
Maybe the warning mode is designed for a compatibility with old
configuration versions. If it is the case, now this compatibility
is broken.
[wt: no, the reason is that an alert must cause a startup failure,
but this will be OK with next patch]
The log-format function parse_logformat_string() takes file and line
for building parsing logs. These two parameters are embedded in the
struct proxy curproxy, which is the current parsing context.
This patch removes these two unused arguments.
Remove export of the fucntion parse_logformat_var_args() and
parse_logformat_var(). These functions are a part of the
logformat parser, and this export is useless.
We get this when Lua is disabled, just a missing include.
In file included from src/queue.c:18:0:
include/proto/server.h:51:39: warning: 'struct appctx' declared inside parameter list [enabled by default]
This way we don't have any more state specific to a given yieldable
command. The other commands should be easier to move as they only
involve a parser.
It really belongs to proto_http.c since it's a dump for HTTP request
and response errors. Note that it's possible that some parts do not
need to be exported anymore since it really is the only place where
errors are manipulated.
The table dump code was a horrible mess, with common parts interleaved
all the way to deal with the various actions (set/clear/show). A few
error messages were still incorrect, as the "set" operation did not
update them so they would still report "unknown action" (now fixed).
The action was now passed as a private argument to the CLI keyword
which itself is copied into the appctx private field. It's just an
int cast to a pointer.
Some minor issues were noticed while doing this, for example when dumping
an entry by key, if the key doesn't exist, nothing is printed, not even
the table's header. It's unclear whether this was intentional but it
doesn't really match what is done for data-based dumps. It was left
unchanged for now so that a later fix can be backported if needed.
Enum entries STAT_CLI_O_TAB, STAT_CLI_O_CLR and STAT_CLI_O_SET were
removed.
Move the "show info" command to stats.c using the CLI keyword API
to register it on the CLI. The stats_dump_info_to_buffer() function
is now static again. Note, we don't need proto_ssl anymore in cli.c.
Move the "show stat" command to stats.c using the CLI keyword API
to register it on the CLI. The stats_dump_stat_to_buffer() function
is now static again.
Move 'show sess' CLI functions to stream.c and use the cli keyword API
to register it on the CLI.
[wt: the choice of stream vs session makes sense because since 1.6 these
really are streams that we're dumping and not sessions anymore]
Several CLI commands require a frontend, so let's have a function to
look this one up and prepare the appropriate error message and the
appctx's state in case of failure.
Several CLI commands require a server, so let's have a function to
look this one up and prepare the appropriate error message and the
appctx's state in case of failure.
Move map and acl CLI functions to map.c and use the cli keyword API to
register actions on the CLI. Then remove the now unused individual
"add" and "del" keywords.
proto/dumpstats.h has been split in 4 files:
* proto/cli.h contains protypes for the CLI
* proto/stats.h contains prototypes for the stats
* types/cli.h contains definition for the CLI
* types/stats.h contains definition for the stats