61 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Willy Tarreau
0bf6fa5e40 MEDIUM: session: count the frontend's connections at a single place
There are several places where we see feconn++, feconn--, totalconn++ and
an increment on the frontend's number of connections and connection rate.
This is done exactly once per session in each direction, so better take
care of this counter in the session and simplify the callers. At least it
ensures a better symmetry. It also ensures consistency as till now the
lua/spoe/peers frontend didn't have these counters properly set, which can
be useful at least for troubleshooting.
2017-09-15 11:49:52 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
05f5047d40 MINOR: listener: new function listener_release
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.
2017-09-15 11:49:52 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
6f5e4b98df MEDIUM: session: take care of incrementing/decrementing jobs
Each user of a session increments/decrements the jobs variable at its
own place, resulting in a real mess and inconsistencies between them.
Let's have session_new() increment jobs and session_free() decrement
it.
2017-09-15 11:49:52 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
2cc5bae0b8 MINOR: listeners: make listeners count consistent with reality
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.
2017-09-15 11:49:52 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
0de59fd53a MINOR: listeners: new function create_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.
2017-09-15 11:49:52 +02:00
Christopher Faulet
f5b8adc5c0 MINOR: listeners: Change enable_listener and disable_listener into private functions
These functions are only used in listener.c.
2017-09-05 10:14:16 +02:00
Christopher Faulet
5580ba2e11 MINOR: listeners: Change listener_full and limit_listener into private functions
These functions are only used in listener_accept. So there is no need to export
them.
2017-09-05 10:13:55 +02:00
William Lallemand
095ba4c242 MEDIUM: mworker: replace systemd mode by master worker mode
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.
2017-06-02 10:56:32 +02:00
Olivier Houchard
1fc0516516 MINOR: proxy: Don't close FDs if not our proxy.
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.
2017-04-13 19:15:17 +02:00
Olivier Houchard
f73629d23a MINOR: global: Add an option to get the old listening sockets.
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.
2017-04-13 19:15:17 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
3569df3fcf BUG/MEDIUM: listener: do not try to rebind another process' socket
When the "process" setting of a bind line limits the processes a
listening socket is enabled on, a "disable frontend" operation followed
by an "enable frontend" triggers a bug because all declared listeners
are attempted to be bound again regardless of their assigned processes.
This can at minima create new sockets not receiving traffic, and at worst
prevent from re-enabling a frontend if it's bound to a privileged port.

This bug was introduced by commit 1c4b814 ("MEDIUM: listener: support
rebinding during resume()") merged in 1.6-dev1, trying to perform the
bind() before checking the process list instead of after.

Just move the process check before the bind() operation to fix this.
This fix must be backported to 1.7 and 1.6.

Thanks to Pavlos for reporting this one.
2017-03-15 12:47:46 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
c95bad5013 MEDIUM: move listener->frontend to bind_conf->frontend
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.
2016-12-22 23:26:38 +01:00
Bertrand Jacquin
93b227db95 MINOR: listener: add the "accept-netscaler-cip" option to the "bind" keyword
When NetScaler application switch is used as L3+ switch, informations
regarding the original IP and TCP headers are lost as a new TCP
connection is created between the NetScaler and the backend server.

NetScaler provides a feature to insert in the TCP data the original data
that can then be consumed by the backend server.

Specifications and documentations from NetScaler:
  https://support.citrix.com/article/CTX205670
  https://www.citrix.com/blogs/2016/04/25/how-to-enable-client-ip-in-tcpip-option-of-netscaler/

When CIP is enabled on the NetScaler, then a TCP packet is inserted just after
the TCP handshake. This is composed as:

  - CIP magic number : 4 bytes
    Both sender and receiver have to agree on a magic number so that
    they both handle the incoming data as a NetScaler Client IP insertion
    packet.

  - Header length : 4 bytes
    Defines the length on the remaining data.

  - IP header : >= 20 bytes if IPv4, 40 bytes if IPv6
    Contains the header of the last IP packet sent by the client during TCP
    handshake.

  - TCP header : >= 20 bytes
    Contains the header of the last TCP packet sent by the client during TCP
    handshake.
2016-06-20 23:02:47 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
d6c06d0f65 BUG/MINOR: listener: stop unbound listeners on startup
When a listener is not bound to a process its frontend belongs to, it
is only paused and not stopped. This creates confusion from the outside
as "netstat -ltnp" for example will report only the parent process as
the listener instead of the effective one. "ss -lnp" will report that
all processes are listening to all sockets.

This is confusing enough to suggest a fix. Now we simply stop the unused
listeners. Example with this simple config :

  global
      nbproc 4

  frontend haproxy_test
      bind-process 1-40
      bind :12345 process 1
      bind :12345 process 2
      bind :12345 process 3
      bind :12345 process 4

Before the patch :
  $ netstat -ltnp
  Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address           Foreign Address         State       PID/Program name
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30457/./haproxy
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30457/./haproxy
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30457/./haproxy
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30457/./haproxy

After the patch :
  $ netstat -ltnp
  Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address           Foreign Address         State       PID/Program name
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30504/./haproxy
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30503/./haproxy
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30502/./haproxy
  tcp        0      0 0.0.0.0:12345           0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      30501/./haproxy

This patch may be backported to 1.6 and 1.5, but it relies on commit
7a798e5 ("CLEANUP: fix inconsistency between fd->iocb, proto->accept
and accept()") since it will expose an API inconsistency by including
listener.h in the .c.
2016-04-14 12:05:02 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
7a798e5d6b CLEANUP: fix inconsistency between fd->iocb, proto->accept and accept()
There's quite some inconsistency in the internal API. listener_accept()
which is the main accept() function returns void but is declared as int
in the include file. It's assigned to proto->accept() for all stream
protocols where an int is expected but the result is never checked (nor
is it documented by the way). This proto->accept() is in turn assigned
to fd->iocb() which is supposed to return an int composed of FD_WAIT_*
flags, but which is never checked either.

So let's fix all this mess :
  - nobody checks accept()'s return
  - nobody checks iocb()'s return
  - nobody sets a return value

=> let's mark all these functions void and keep the current ones intact.

Additionally we now include listener.h from listener.c to ensure we won't
silently hide this incoherency in the future.

Note that this patch could/should be backported to 1.6 and even 1.5 to
simplify debugging sessions.
2016-04-14 11:18:22 +02:00
Thierry Fournier
e7fe8eb889 BUG/MINOR: conf: "listener id" expects integer, but its not checked
The listener id was converted with a simple atol, so conversion
error are unchecked. This patch uses strtol and checks the
conversion status.
2016-03-19 07:39:51 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
136f9d34a9 MINOR: samples: rename union from "data" to "u"
The union name "data" is a little bit heavy while we read the source
code because we can read "data.data.sint". The rename from "data" to "u"
makes the read easiest like "data.u.sint".
2015-08-20 17:13:46 +02:00
Thierry FOURNIER
8c542cac07 MEDIUM: samples: Use the "struct sample_data" in the "struct sample"
This patch remove the struct information stored both in the struct
sample_data and in the striuct sample. Now, only thestruct sample_data
contains data, and the struct sample use the struct sample_data for storing
his own data.
2015-08-20 17:13:46 +02:00
Thierry FOURNIER
07ee64ef4d MAJOR: sample: converts uint and sint in 64 bits signed integer
This patch removes the 32 bits unsigned integer and the 32 bit signed
integer. It replaces these types by a unique type 64 bit signed.

This makes easy the usage of integer and clarify signed and unsigned use.
With the previous version, signed and unsigned are used ones in place of
others, and sometimes the converter loose the sign. For example, divisions
are processed with "unsigned", if one entry is negative, the result is
wrong.

Note that the integer pattern matching and dotted version pattern matching
are already working with signed 64 bits integer values.

There is one user-visible change : the "uint()" and "sint()" sample fetch
functions which used to return a constant integer have been replaced with
a new more natural, unified "int()" function. These functions were only
introduced in the latest 1.6-dev2 so there's no impact on regular
deployments.
2015-07-22 00:48:23 +02:00
Thierry FOURNIER
0786d05a04 MEDIUM: sample: change the prototype of sample-fetches functions
This patch removes the "opt" entry from the prototype of the
sample-fetches fucntions. This permits to remove some weight
in the prototype call.
2015-05-11 20:03:08 +02:00
Thierry FOURNIER
0a9a2b8cec MEDIUM: sample change the prototype of sample-fetches and converters functions
This patch removes the structs "session", "stream" and "proxy" from
the sample-fetches and converters function prototypes.

This permits to remove some weight in the prototype call.
2015-05-11 20:01:42 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
af2fd584f3 BUG/MEDIUM: listener: don't report an error when resuming unbound listeners
Pavlos Parissis reported that a sequence of disable/enable on a frontend
performed on the CLI can result in an error if the frontend has several
"bind" lines each bound to different processes. This is because the
resume_listener() function returns a failure for frontends not part of
the current process instead of returning a success to pretend there was
no failure.

This fix should be backported to 1.5.
2015-04-14 12:10:06 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
192252e2d8 MAJOR: sample: pass a pointer to the session to each sample fetch function
Many such function need a session, and till now they used to dereference
the stream. Once we remove the stream from the embryonic session, this
will not be possible anymore.

So as of now, sample fetch functions will be called with this :

   - sess = NULL,  strm = NULL                     : never
   - sess = valid, strm = NULL                     : tcp-req connection
   - sess = valid, strm = valid, strm->txn = NULL  : tcp-req content
   - sess = valid, strm = valid, strm->txn = valid : http-req / http-res
2015-04-06 11:37:25 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
15e91e1b36 MAJOR: sample: don't pass l7 anymore to sample fetch functions
All of them can now retrieve the HTTP transaction *if it exists* from
the stream and be sure to get NULL there when called with an embryonic
session.

The patch is a bit large because many locations were touched (all fetch
functions had to have their prototype adjusted). The opportunity was
taken to also uniformize the call names (the stream is now always "strm"
instead of "l4") and to fix indent where it was broken. This way when
we later introduce the session here there will be less confusion.
2015-04-06 11:35:53 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
fb0afa77c9 MEDIUM: stream: move the listener's pointer to the session
The listener is session-specific, move it there.
2015-04-06 11:23:57 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
87b09668be REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream"
With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in
fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers,
logs, etc.

In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the
struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function
names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session.

The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed.

The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream
will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain
only what we need in an embryonic session.

Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so
that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called
"L4" which is in fact L6 for now.

Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this :

   L7 - http_txn
   L6 - stream
   L5 - session
   L4 - connection | applet

There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will
possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to
a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information
we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream.

Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from
being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at
many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to
be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager.
Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like
any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-06 11:23:56 +02:00
Thierry FOURNIER
f41a809dc9 MINOR: sample: add private argument to the struct sample_fetch
The add of this private argument is to prepare the integration
of the lua fetchs.
2015-02-28 23:12:31 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
1c4b814087 MEDIUM: listener: support rebinding during resume()
When a listener resumes operations, supporting a full rebind makes it
possible to perform a full stop as a pause(). This will be used for
pausing abstract namespace unix sockets.
2014-07-08 01:13:35 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
092d865c53 MEDIUM: listener: implement a per-protocol pause() function
In order to fix the abstact socket pause mechanism during soft restarts,
we'll need to proceed differently depending on the socket protocol. The
pause_listener() function already supports some protocol-specific handling
for the TCP case.

This commit makes this cleaner by adding a new ->pause() function to the
protocol struct, which, if defined, may be used to pause a listener of a
given protocol.

For now, only TCP has been adapted, with the specific code moved from
pause_listener() to tcp_pause_listener().
2014-07-08 01:13:34 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
39447b6a57 BUG/MINOR: listener: set the listener's fd to -1 after deletion
This is currently harmless, but when stopping a listener, its fd is
closed but not set to -1, so it is not possible to re-open it again.
Currently this has no impact but can have after the abstract sockets
are modified to perform a complete close on soft-reload.

The fix can be backported to 1.5 and may even apply to 1.4 (protocols.c).
2014-07-08 01:13:34 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
ae30253c27 MAJOR: listener: only start listeners bound to the same processes
Now that we know what processes a "bind" statement is attached to, we
have the ability to avoid starting some of them when they're not on the
proper process. This feature is disabled when running in foreground
however, so that debug mode continues to work with everything bound to
the first and only process.

The main purpose of this change is to finally allow the global stats
sockets to be each bound to a different process.

It can also be used to force haproxy to use different sockets in different
processes for the same IP:port. The purpose is that under Linux 3.9 and
above (and possibly other OSes), when multiple processes are bound to the
same IP:port via different sockets, the system is capable of performing
a perfect round-robin between the socket queues instead of letting any
process pick all the connections from a queue. This results in a smoother
load balancing and may achieve a higher performance with a large enough
maxaccept setting.
2014-05-09 19:16:26 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
6ae1ba6f29 MEDIUM: listener: parse the new "process" bind keyword
This sets the bind_proc entry in the bind_conf config block. For now it's
still unused, but the doc was updated.
2014-05-09 19:16:26 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
bb66030a30 MEDIUM: listener: make the accept function more robust against pauses
During some tests in multi-process mode under Linux, it appeared that
issuing "disable frontend foo" on the CLI to pause a listener would
make the shutdown(read) of certain processes disturb another process
listening on the same socket, resulting in a 100% CPU loop. What
happens is that accept() returns EAGAIN without accepting anything.
Fortunately, we see that epoll_wait() reports EPOLLIN+EPOLLRDHUP
(likely because the FD points to the same file in the kernel), so we
can use that to stop the other process from trying to accept connections
for a short time and try again later, hoping for the situation to change.
We must not disable the FD otherwise there's no way to re-enable it.

Additionally, during these tests, a loop was encountered on EINVAL which
was not caught. Now if we catch an EINVAL, we proceed the same way, in
case the socket is re-enabled later.
2014-05-07 23:13:08 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
95ccdde1f2 BUILD: listener: add fcntl.h and unistd.h
Otherwise it fails to build on some platforms.
2014-02-01 09:29:03 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
818dca5098 BUG/MEDIUM: listener: improve detection of non-working accept4()
On ARM, glibc does not implement accept4() and simply returns ENOSYS
which was not caught as a reason to fall back to accept(), resulting
in a spinning process since poll() would call again.

Let's change the error detection mechanism to save the broken status
of the syscall into a local variable that is used to fall back to the
legacy accept().

In addition to this, since the code was becoming a bit messy, the
accept4() was removed, so now the fallback code and the legacy code
are the same. This will also increase bug report accuracy if needed.

This is 1.5-specific, no backport is needed.
2014-01-31 19:40:19 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
e43d5323c6 MEDIUM: listener: apply a limit on the session rate submitted to SSL
Just like the previous commit, we sometimes want to limit the rate of
incoming SSL connections. While it can be done for a frontend, it was
not possible for a whole process, which makes sense when multiple
processes are running on a system to server multiple customers.

The new global "maxsslrate" setting is usable to fix a limit on the
session rate going to the SSL frontends. The limits applies before
the SSL handshake and not after, so that it saves the SSL stack from
expensive key computations that would finally be aborted before being
accounted for.

The same setting may be changed at run time on the CLI using
"set rate-limit ssl-session global".
2014-01-28 15:50:10 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
93e7c006c1 MEDIUM: listener: add support for limiting the session rate in addition to the connection rate
It's sometimes useful to be able to limit the connection rate on a machine
running many haproxy instances (eg: per customer) but it removes the ability
for that machine to defend itself against a DoS. Thus, better also provide a
limit on the session rate, which does not include the connections rejected by
"tcp-request connection" rules. This permits to have much higher limits on
the connection rate without having to raise the session rate limit to insane
values.

The limit can be changed on the CLI using "set rate-limit sessions global",
or in the global section using "maxsessrate".
2014-01-28 15:49:27 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
6c11bd2f89 OPTIM: raw-sock: don't speculate after a short read if polling is enabled
This is the reimplementation of the "done" action : when we experience
a short read, we're almost certain that we've exhausted the system's
buffers and that we'll meet an EAGAIN if we attempt to read again. If
the FD is not yet polled, the stream interface already takes care of
stopping the speculative read. When the FD is already being polled, we
have two options :
  - either we're running from a level-triggered poller, in which case
    we'd rather report that we've reached the end so that we don't
    speculate over the poller and let it report next time data are
    available ;

  - or we're running from an edge-triggered poller in which case we
    have no choice and have to see the EAGAIN to re-enable events.

At the moment we don't have any edge-triggered poller, so it's desirable
to avoid speculative I/O that we know will fail.

Note that this must not be ported to SSL since SSL hides the real
readiness of the file descriptor.

Thanks to this change, we observe no EAGAIN anymore during keep-alive
transfers, and failed recvfrom() are reduced by half in http-server-close
mode (the client-facing side is always being polled and the second recv
can be avoided). Doing so results in about 5% performance increase in
keep-alive mode. Similarly, we used to have up to about 1.6% of EAGAIN
on accept() (1/maxaccept), and these have completely disappeared under
high loads.
2014-01-26 00:42:32 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
f817e9f473 MAJOR: polling: rework the whole polling system
This commit heavily changes the polling system in order to definitely
fix the frequent breakage of SSL which needs to remember the last
EAGAIN before deciding whether to poll or not. Now we have a state per
direction for each FD, as opposed to a previous and current state
previously. An FD can have up to 8 different states for each direction,
each of which being the result of a 3-bit combination. These 3 bits
indicate a wish to access the FD, the readiness of the FD and the
subscription of the FD to the polling system.

This means that it will now be possible to remember the state of a
file descriptor across disable/enable sequences that generally happen
during forwarding, where enabling reading on a previously disabled FD
would result in forgetting the EAGAIN flag it met last time.

Several new state manipulation functions have been introduced or
adapted :
  - fd_want_{recv,send} : enable receiving/sending on the FD regardless
    of its state (sets the ACTIVE flag) ;

  - fd_stop_{recv,send} : stop receiving/sending on the FD regardless
    of its state (clears the ACTIVE flag) ;

  - fd_cant_{recv,send} : report a failure to receive/send on the FD
    corresponding to EAGAIN (clears the READY flag) ;

  - fd_may_{recv,send}  : report the ability to receive/send on the FD
    as reported by poll() (sets the READY flag) ;

Some functions are used to report the current FD status :

  - fd_{recv,send}_active
  - fd_{recv,send}_ready
  - fd_{recv,send}_polled

Some functions were removed :
  - fd_ev_clr(), fd_ev_set(), fd_ev_rem(), fd_ev_wai()

The POLLHUP/POLLERR flags are now reported as ready so that the I/O layers
knows it can try to access the file descriptor to get this information.

In order to simplify the conditions to add/remove cache entries, a new
function fd_alloc_or_release_cache_entry() was created to be used from
pollers while scanning for updates.

The following pollers have been updated :

   ev_select() : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10
   ev_poll()   : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10
   ev_epoll()  : done, built, tested on Linux 3.10 & 3.13
   ev_kqueue() : done, built, tested on OpenBSD 5.2
2014-01-26 00:42:30 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
a593ec5bf4 MEDIUM: listener: fix polling management in the accept loop
The accept loop used to force fd_poll_recv() even in places where it
was not completely appropriate (eg: unexpected errors). It does not
yet cause trouble but will do with the upcoming polling changes. Let's
use it only where relevant now. EINTR/ECONNABORTED do not result in
poll() anymore but the failed connection is simply skipped (this code
dates from 1.1.32 when error codes were first considered).
2014-01-20 22:27:16 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
4448925930 BUILD/MINOR: listener: remove a glibc warning on accept4()
The accept4() Linux syscall requires _GNU_SOURCE on ix86, otherwise
it emits a warning. On other archs including x86_64, this problem
doesn't happen. Thanks to Charles Carter from Sigma Software for
reporting this.
2014-01-14 17:54:12 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
ef38c39287 MEDIUM: sample: systematically pass the keyword pointer to the keyword
We're having a lot of duplicate code just because of minor variants between
fetch functions that could be dealt with if the functions had the pointer to
the original keyword, so let's pass it as the last argument. An earlier
version used to pass a pointer to the sample_fetch element, but this is not
the best solution for two reasons :
  - fetch functions will solely rely on the keyword string
  - some other smp_fetch_* users do not have the pointer to the original
    keyword and were forced to pass NULL.

So finally we're passing a pointer to the keyword as a const char *, which
perfectly fits the original purpose.
2013-08-01 21:17:13 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
dc13c11c1e BUG/MEDIUM: prevent gcc from moving empty keywords lists into BSS
Benoit Dolez reported a failure to start haproxy 1.5-dev19. The
process would immediately report an internal error with missing
fetches from some crap instead of ACL names.

The cause is that some versions of gcc seem to trim static structs
containing a variable array when moving them to BSS, and only keep
the fixed size, which is just a list head for all ACL and sample
fetch keywords. This was confirmed at least with gcc 3.4.6. And we
can't move these structs to const because they contain a list element
which is needed to link all of them together during the parsing.

The bug indeed appeared with 1.5-dev19 because it's the first one
to have some empty ACL keyword lists.

One solution is to impose -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss to everyone
but this is not really nice. Another solution consists in ensuring
the struct is never empty so that it does not move there. The easy
solution consists in having a non-null list head since it's not yet
initialized.

A new "ILH" list head type was thus created for this purpose : create
an Initialized List Head so that gcc cannot move the struct to BSS.
This fixes the issue for this version of gcc and does not create any
burden for the declarations.
2013-06-21 23:29:02 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
6d4e4e8dd2 MEDIUM: acl: remove a lot of useless ACLs that are equivalent to their fetches
The following 116 ACLs were removed because they're redundant with their
fetch function since last commit which allows the fetch function to be
used instead for types BOOL, INT and IP. Most places are now left with
an empty ACL keyword list that was not removed so that it's easier to
add other ACLs later.

always_false, always_true, avg_queue, be_conn, be_id, be_sess_rate, connslots,
nbsrv, queue, srv_conn, srv_id, srv_is_up, srv_sess_rate, res.comp, fe_conn,
fe_id, fe_sess_rate, dst_conn, so_id, wait_end, http_auth, http_first_req,
status, dst, dst_port, src, src_port, sc1_bytes_in_rate, sc1_bytes_out_rate,
sc1_clr_gpc0, sc1_conn_cnt, sc1_conn_cur, sc1_conn_rate, sc1_get_gpc0,
sc1_gpc0_rate, sc1_http_err_cnt, sc1_http_err_rate, sc1_http_req_cnt,
sc1_http_req_rate, sc1_inc_gpc0, sc1_kbytes_in, sc1_kbytes_out, sc1_sess_cnt,
sc1_sess_rate, sc1_tracked, sc1_trackers, sc2_bytes_in_rate,
sc2_bytes_out_rate, sc2_clr_gpc0, sc2_conn_cnt, sc2_conn_cur, sc2_conn_rate,
sc2_get_gpc0, sc2_gpc0_rate, sc2_http_err_cnt, sc2_http_err_rate,
sc2_http_req_cnt, sc2_http_req_rate, sc2_inc_gpc0, sc2_kbytes_in,
sc2_kbytes_out, sc2_sess_cnt, sc2_sess_rate, sc2_tracked, sc2_trackers,
sc3_bytes_in_rate, sc3_bytes_out_rate, sc3_clr_gpc0, sc3_conn_cnt,
sc3_conn_cur, sc3_conn_rate, sc3_get_gpc0, sc3_gpc0_rate, sc3_http_err_cnt,
sc3_http_err_rate, sc3_http_req_cnt, sc3_http_req_rate, sc3_inc_gpc0,
sc3_kbytes_in, sc3_kbytes_out, sc3_sess_cnt, sc3_sess_rate, sc3_tracked,
sc3_trackers, src_bytes_in_rate, src_bytes_out_rate, src_clr_gpc0,
src_conn_cnt, src_conn_cur, src_conn_rate, src_get_gpc0, src_gpc0_rate,
src_http_err_cnt, src_http_err_rate, src_http_req_cnt, src_http_req_rate,
src_inc_gpc0, src_kbytes_in, src_kbytes_out, src_sess_cnt, src_sess_rate,
src_updt_conn_cnt, table_avl, table_cnt, ssl_c_ca_err, ssl_c_ca_err_depth,
ssl_c_err, ssl_c_used, ssl_c_verify, ssl_c_version, ssl_f_version, ssl_fc,
ssl_fc_alg_keysize, ssl_fc_has_crt, ssl_fc_has_sni, ssl_fc_use_keysize,
2013-06-11 21:22:58 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
d86e29d2a1 CLEANUP: acl: remove unused references to ACL_USE_*
Now that acl->requires is not used anymore, we can remove all references
to it as well as all ACL_USE_* flags.
2013-04-03 02:13:00 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
c48c90dfa5 MAJOR: acl: remove the arg_mask from the ACL definition and use the sample fetch's
Now that ACLs solely rely on sample fetch functions, make them use the
same arg mask. All inconsistencies have been fixed separately prior to
this patch, so this patch almost only adds a new pointer indirection
and removes all references to ARG*() in the definitions.

The parsing is still performed by the ACL code though.
2013-04-03 02:12:58 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
8ed669b12a MAJOR: acl: make all ACLs reference the fetch function via a sample.
ACL fetch functions used to directly reference a fetch function. Now
that all ACL fetches have their sample fetches equivalent, we can make
ACLs reference a sample fetch keyword instead.

In order to simplify the code, a sample keyword name may be NULL if it
is the same as the ACL's, which is the most common case.

A minor change appeared, http_auth always expects one argument though
the ACL allowed it to be missing and reported as such afterwards, so
fix the ACL to match this. This is not really a bug.
2013-04-03 02:12:58 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
0ccb744ffb MINOR: listener: rename sample fetch functions and declare the sample keywords
The following sample fetch functions were only usable by ACLs but are now
usable by sample fetches too :

          dst_conn, so_id,

The fetch functions have been renamed "smp_fetch_*".
2013-04-03 02:12:57 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
50de90a228 MINOR: listeners: make the accept loop more robust when maxaccept==0
If some listeners are mistakenly configured with 0 as the maxaccept value,
then we now consider them as limited to one accept() at a time. This will
avoid some issues as fixed by the past commit.
2012-11-23 20:22:10 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
16a2147dfe MEDIUM: adjust the maxaccept per listener depending on the number of processes
global.tune.maxaccept was used for all listeners. This becomes really not
convenient when some listeners are bound to a single process and other ones
are bound to many processes.

Now we change the principle : we count the number of processes a listener
is bound to, and apply the maxaccept either entirely if there is a single
process, or divided by twice the number of processes in order to maintain
fairness.

The default limit has also been increased from 32 to 64 as it appeared that
on small machines, 32 was too low to achieve high connection rates.
2012-11-19 12:39:59 +01:00