611 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Willy Tarreau
2a6e8802c0 MEDIUM: stream-interface: introduce si_attach_conn to replace si_prepare_conn
si_prepare_conn() is not appropriate in our case as it both initializes and
attaches the connection to the stream interface. Due to the asymmetry between
accept() and connect(), it causes some fields such as the control and transport
layers to be reinitialized.

Now that we can separately initialize these fields using conn_prepare(), let's
break this function to only attach the connection to the stream interface.

Also, by analogy, si_prepare_none() was renamed si_detach(), and
si_prepare_applet() was renamed si_attach_applet().
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
7abddb5c67 MINOR: connection: replace conn_assign with conn_attach
We don't want to assign the control nor transport layers anymore
at the same time as the data layer, because it prevents one from
keeping existing settings when reattaching a connection to an
existing stream interface.

Let's have conn_attach() replace conn_assign() for this purpose.

Thus, conn_prepare() + conn_attach() do exactly the same as the
previous conn_assign().
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
910c6aa5b7 MINOR: connection: reintroduce conn_prepare to set the protocol and transport
Now that we can assign conn->xprt regardless of the initialization state,
we can reintroduce conn_prepare() to set only the protocol, the transport
layer and initialize the transport layer's state.
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
3ed35ef05b MINOR: stream-interface: introduce si_reset() and si_set_state()
The first function is used to (re)initialize a stream interface and
the second to force it into a known state. These are intended for
cleaning up the stream interface initialization code in session.c
and peers.c and avoiding future issues with missing initializations.
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
f79c8171b2 MAJOR: connection: add two new flags to indicate readiness of control/transport
Currently the control and transport layers of a connection are supposed
to be initialized when their respective pointers are not NULL. This will
not work anymore when we plan to reuse connections, because there is an
asymmetry between the accept() side and the connect() side :

  - on accept() side, the fd is set first, then the ctrl layer then the
    transport layer ; upon error, they must be undone in the reverse order,
    then the FD must be closed. The FD must not be deleted if the control
    layer was not yet initialized ;

  - on the connect() side, the fd is set last and there is no reliable way
    to know if it has been initialized or not. In practice it's initialized
    to -1 first but this is hackish and supposes that local FDs only will
    be used forever. Also, there are even less solutions for keeping trace
    of the transport layer's state.

Also it is possible to support delayed close() when something (eg: logs)
tracks some information requiring the transport and/or control layers,
making it even more difficult to clean them.

So the proposed solution is to add two flags to the connection :

  - CO_FL_CTRL_READY is set when the control layer is initialized (fd_insert)
    and cleared after it's released (fd_delete).

  - CO_FL_XPRT_READY is set when the control layer is initialized (xprt->init)
    and cleared after it's released (xprt->close).

The functions have been adapted to rely on this and not on the pointers
anymore. conn_xprt_close() was unused and dangerous : it did not close
the control layer (eg: the socket itself) but still marks the transport
layer as closed, preventing any future call to conn_full_close() from
finishing the job.

The problem comes from conn_full_close() in fact. It needs to close the
xprt and ctrl layers independantly. After that we're still having an issue :
we don't know based on ->ctrl alone whether the fd was registered or not.
For this we use the two new flags CO_FL_XPRT_READY and CO_FL_CTRL_READY. We
now rely on this and not on conn->xprt nor conn->ctrl anymore to decide what
remains to be done on the connection.

In order not to miss some flag assignments, we introduce conn_ctrl_init()
to initialize the control layer, register the fd using fd_insert() and set
the flag, and conn_ctrl_close() which unregisters the fd and removes the
flag, but only if the transport layer was closed.

Similarly, at the transport layer, conn_xprt_init() calls ->init and sets
the flag, while conn_xprt_close() checks the flag, calls ->close and clears
the flag, regardless xprt_ctx or xprt_st. This also ensures that the ->init
and the ->close functions are called only once each and in the correct order.
Note that conn_xprt_close() does nothing if the transport layer is still
tracked.

conn_full_close() now simply calls conn_xprt_close() then conn_full_close()
in turn, which do nothing if CO_FL_XPRT_TRACKED is set.

In order to handle the error path, we also provide conn_force_close() which
ignores CO_FL_XPRT_TRACKED and closes the transport and the control layers
in turns. All relevant instances of fd_delete() have been replaced with
conn_force_close(). Now we always know what state the connection is in and
we can expect to split its initialization.
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
b97f3b1abf MINOR: connection: add conn_new() / conn_free()
conn_new() will be a more convenient way of allocating and initializing
a connection. It calls pool_alloc2() and conn_init() upon success.

conn_free() is just a pool_free2() but is provided for symmetry with
conn_new().
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
c10aec299f MINOR: get rid of si_takeover_conn()
Since last commit, this function is an exact copy of si_prepare_conn().
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
37213433a8 MEDIUM: connection: replace conn_prepare with conn_assign
Everywhere conn_prepare() is used, the call to conn_init() has already
been done. We can now safely replace all instances of conn_prepare()
with conn_assign() which does not reset the transport layer, and remove
conn_prepare().
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
d015577428 MINOR: connection: add conn_init() to (re)initialize a connection
This function will ease the initialization of new connections as well
as their reuse. It initializes the obj_type and a few fields so that
the connection is fresh again. It leaves the addresses and target
untouched so it is suitable for use across connection retries.
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
b363a1f469 MAJOR: stream-int: stop using si->conn and use si->end instead
The connection will only remain there as a pre-allocated entity whose
goal is to be placed in ->end when establishing an outgoing connection.
All connection initialization can be made on this connection, but all
information retrieved should be applied to the end point only.

This change is huge because there were many users of si->conn. Now the
only users are those who initialize the new connection. The difficulty
appears in a few places such as backend.c, proto_http.c, peers.c where
si->conn is used to hold the connection's target address before assigning
the connection to the stream interface. This is why we have to keep
si->conn for now. A future improvement might consist in dynamically
allocating the connection when it is needed.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
691b1f429e CLEANUP: stream-int: remove obsolete si_ctrl function
This function makes no sense anymore and will cause trouble to convert
the remains of connection/applet to end points. Let's replace it now
with its contents.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
cf644ed37a MEDIUM: stream-int: make ->end point to the connection or the appctx
The long-term goal is to have a context for applets as an alternative
to the connection and not as a complement. At the moment, the context
is still stored into the stream interface, and we only put a pointer
to the applet's context in si->end, initialize the context with object
type OBJ_TYPE_APPCTX, and this allows us not to allocate an entry when
deciding to switch to an applet.

A special care is taken to never dereference si->conn anymore when
dealing with an applet. That's why it's important that si->end is
always set to the proper type :

    si->end == NULL             => not connected to anything
   *si->end == OBJ_TYPE_APPCTX  => connected to an applet
   *si->end == OBJ_TYPE_CONN    => real connection (server, proxy, ...)

The session management code used to check the applet from the connection's
target. Now it uses the stream interface's end point and does not touch the
connection at all. Similarly, we stop checking the connection's addresses
and file descriptors when reporting the applet's status in the stats dump.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
4a59f2f954 MAJOR: stream interface: remove the ->release function pointer
Since last commit, we now have a pointer to the applet in the
applet context. So we don't need the si->release function pointer
anymore, it can be extracted from applet->applet.release. At many
places, the ->release function was still tested for real connections
while it is only limited to applets, so most of them were simply
removed. For the remaining valid uses, a new inline function
si_applet_release() was added to simplify the check and the call.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
48099c7a07 MEDIUM: stream-interface: set the pointer to the applet into the applet context
In preparation for a later move of all the applet context outside of the
stream interface, we'll need to have access to the applet itself from the
context. Let's have a pointer to it inside the context.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
7d67d7b9e5 MINOR: stream-int: add a new pointer to the end point
The end point will correspond to either an applet context or a connection,
depending on the object type. For now the pointer remains null.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
372d6708fb MINOR: stream-int: split si_prepare_embedded into si_prepare_none and si_prepare_applet
si_prepare_embedded() was used both to attach an applet and to detach
anything from a stream interface. Split it into si_prepare_none() to
detach and si_prepare_applet() to attach an applet.

si->conn->target is now assigned from within these two functions instead
of their respective callers.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
0788f47cc1 MINOR: obj: introduce a new type appctx
The object type was added to "struct appctx". The purpose will be
to identify an appctx when the applet context is detached from the
stream interface. For now, it's still attached, so this patch only
adds the new type and does not replace its use.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
51c2184755 MINOR: connection: add a field to store an object type
This will soon be used to differenciate connections from applet
contexts. Object type "connection" has also been added.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
66337a0784 MINOR: obj: provide a safe and an unsafe access to pointed objects
Most of the times, the caller of objt_<type>(ptr) will know that <ptr>
is valid and of the correct type (eg: in an "if" condition). Let's provide
an unsafe variant that does not perform the check again for these usages.
The new functions are called "__objt_<type>".
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
6fe1541285 MINOR: stream-int: make the shutr/shutw functions void
This is to be more consistent with the other functions. The only
reason why these functions used to return a value was to let the
caller adjust polling by itself, but now their only callers were
the si_shutr()/si_shutw() inline functions. Now these functions
do not depend anymore on the connection.

These connection variant of these functions now call
conn_data_stop_recv()/conn_data_stop_send() before returning order
not to require a return code anymore. The applet version does not
need this at all.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
8b3d7dfd7c MEDIUM: stream-int: split the shutr/shutw functions between applet and conn
These functions induce a lot of ifs everywhere because they consider two
different cases, one which is where the connection exists and has a file
descriptor, and the other one which is the default case where at most an
applet has to be notified.

Let's have them in si_ops and automatically decide which one to use.

The connection shutdown sequence has been slightly simplified, and we
now clear the flags at the end.

Also we remove SHUTR_NOW after a shutw with nolinger, as it's cleaner
not to keep it.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
347a35d19e MAJOR: stats: move the HTTP stats handling to its applet
There is a big trouble with the way POST is handled for the admin
stats page. The POST parameters are extracted from some http-request
rules, and if not round they return zero hoping for being called again
when more data passes. This results in the HTTP analyser being called
several times and all the rules prior to the stats being executed
multiple times as well. That includes rewrite rules.

So instead of doing this, we now move all the processing of the stats
into the stats applet.

That way we just set the stats applet in the HTTP analyser when a stats
request is detected, and the applet takes the time it needs to read the
arguments and respond. We could even imagine improving the applet to
support requests larger than a single buffer.

The code was almost only moved and minimally changed. Several new HTTP
states were added to the stats applet to emit headers, redirects and
to read POST. It was necessary to do this because the headers sent
depend on the parsing of the POST request. In the end it's beneficial
because we removed two stream_int_retnclose() calls.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
96d44918f7 MEDIUM: stats: prepare the HTTP stats I/O handler to support more states
In preparation for moving the POST processing to the applet, we first
add new states to the HTTP I/O handler. Till now st0 was only 0/1 for
start/end. We now replace it with an enum.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
787add2932 MINOR: session: add a simple function to retrieve a session from a task
This function only casts t->context to (struct session *). It will
avoid some ugly and unsafe casts in upcoming changes.
2013-12-09 15:40:21 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
d18cd0f110 MEDIUM: http: The redirect strings follows the log format rules.
We handle "http-request redirect" with a log-format string now, but we
leave "redirect" unaffected.

Note that the control of the special "/" case is move from the runtime
execution to the configuration parsing. If the format rule list is
empty, the build_logline() function does nothing.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
6f8fe310cf MINOR: pattern: import acl_find_match_name() into pattern.h
It's only dedicated to pattern match lookups, so it was renamed
pat_find_match_name().
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
0cba607400 MINOR: acl/pattern: use types different from int to clarify who does what.
We now have the following enums and all related functions return them and
consume them :

   enum pat_match_res {
	PAT_NOMATCH = 0,         /* sample didn't match any pattern */
	PAT_MATCH = 3,           /* sample matched at least one pattern */
   };

   enum acl_test_res {
	ACL_TEST_FAIL = 0,           /* test failed */
	ACL_TEST_MISS = 1,           /* test may pass with more info */
	ACL_TEST_PASS = 3,           /* test passed */
   };

   enum acl_cond_pol {
	ACL_COND_NONE,		/* no polarity set yet */
	ACL_COND_IF,		/* positive condition (after 'if') */
	ACL_COND_UNLESS,	/* negative condition (after 'unless') */
   };

It's just in order to avoid doubts when reading some code.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
a65b343eee MEDIUM: pattern: rename "acl" prefix to "pat"
This patch just renames functions, types and enums. No code was changed.
A significant number of files were touched, especially the ACL arrays,
so it is likely that some external patches will not apply anymore.

One important thing is that we had to split ACL_PAT_* into two groups :
  - ACL_TEST_{PASS|MISS|FAIL}
  - PAT_{MATCH|UNMATCH}

A future patch will enforce enums on all these places to avoid confusion.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
d163e1ce30 MEDIUM: pattern: create pattern expression
This new structure contains the data needed for pattern matching. It's
the first step to the complete independance of the pattern matching.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
ed66c297c2 REORG: acl/pattern: extract pattern matching from the acl file and create pattern.c
This patch just moves code without any change.

The ACL are just the association between sample and pattern. The pattern
contains the match method and the parse method. These two things are
different. This patch cleans the code by splitting it.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
dd69a04666 MEDIUM: acl: associate "struct sample_storage" to each "struct acl_pattern"
This will be used later with maps. Each map will associate an entry with
a sample_storage value.

This patch changes the "parse" prototype and all the parsing methods.
The goal is to associate "struct sample_storage" to each entry of
"struct acl_pattern". Only the "parse" function can add the sample value
into the "struct acl_pattern".
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
29d47b87c4 MINOR: acl: Extract the pattern matching function
The map feature will need to match acl patterns. This patch extracts
the matching function from the global ACL function "acl_exec_cond".

The code was only moved to its own function, no functional changes were made.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
3a103c5a6b MINOR: acl: Extract the pattern parsing and indexation from the "acl_read_patterns_from_file()" function
With this split, the pattern indexation can apply to any source. The map
feature needs this functionality because the map cannot be loaded with the
same file format as the ones supported by acl_read_patterns_from_file().

The code was only moved to its own function, no functional changes were made.
2013-12-02 23:31:33 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
348971ea28 MEDIUM: acl: use the fetch syntax 'fetch(args),conv(),conv()' into the ACL keyword
If the acl keyword is a "fetch", the dedicated parsing function
"sample_parse_expr()" is used. Otherwise, the acl parsing function
"parse_acl_expr()" is extended to understand the syntax of a series
of converters placed after the "fetch" keyword.

Before this patch, each acl uses a "struct sample_fetch" and executes
it with the "<fetch>->process()" function. Now, the dedicated function
"sample_process()" is called.

These syntax are now avalaible:

   acl bad req.hdr(host),lower -m str www
   http-request redirect prefix /go-away if bad

   acl bad hdr_beg(host),lower www
   http-request redirect prefix /go-away if bad
2013-12-02 23:31:32 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
20f4996738 MINOR: sample: export the generic sample conversion parser
just export function "find_sample_conv()" to prepare the
generic sample conversion parser.
2013-12-02 23:31:32 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
34c2fb6f89 BUG/MINOR: config: report the correct track-sc number in tcp-rules
When parsing track-sc* actions in tcp-request rules, we now automatically
compute the track-sc identifier number using %d when displaying an error
message. But the ID has become wrong since we introduced sc0, we continue
to report id+1 in error messages causing some confusion.

No backport is needed.
2013-12-02 23:31:32 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
830bf61815 BUG/MINOR: connection: fix typo in error message report
"unknownn" -> "unknown"
2013-12-01 20:29:58 +01:00
Simon Horman
8c3d0be987 MEDIUM: Add DRAIN state and report it on the stats page
Add a DRAIN sub-state for a server which
will be shown on the stats page instead of UP if
its effective weight is zero.

Also, log if a server enters or leaves the DRAIN state
as the result of an agent check.

Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
2013-11-25 07:31:16 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
d32c399747 MINOR: stats: report correct throttling percentage for servers in slowstart
The column used to report the throttle percentage when a server is in
slowstart is based on the time only. This is wrong, because server weights
in slowstart are updated at most once a second, so the reported value is
wrong at least fo rone second during each step, which means all the time
when using short delays (< 20s).

The second point is that it's disturbing to see a weight < 100% without
any throttle at the end of the period (during the last second), because
the effective weight has not yet been updated.

Instead, we now compute the exact ratio between eweight and uweight and
report it. It's always accurate and describes the value being used instead
of using only the date.

It can be backported to 1.4 though it's not particularly important.
2013-11-21 15:30:45 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
004e045f31 BUG/MAJOR: server: weight calculation fails for map-based algorithms
A crash was reported by Igor at owind when changing a server's weight
on the CLI. Lukas Tribus could reproduce a related bug where setting
a server's weight would result in the new weight being multiplied by
the initial one. The two bugs are the same.

The incorrect weight calculation results in the total farm weight being
larger than what was initially allocated, causing the map index to be out
of bounds on some hashes. It's easy to reproduce using "balance url_param"
with a variable param, or with "balance static-rr".

It appears that the calculation is made at many places and is not always
right and not always wrong the same way. Thus, this patch introduces a
new function "server_recalc_eweight()" which is dedicated to this task
of computing ->eweight from many other elements including uweight and
current time (for slowstart), and all users now switch to use this
function.

The patch is a bit large but the code was not trivially fixable in a way
that could guarantee this situation would not occur anymore. The fix is
much more readable and has been verified to work with all algorithms,
with both consistent and map-based hashes, and even with static-rr.

Slowstart was tested as well, just like enable/disable server.

The same bug is very likely present in 1.4 as well, so the patch will
probably need to be backported eventhough it will not apply as-is.

Thanks to Lukas and Igor for the information they provided to reproduce it.
2013-11-21 15:09:02 +01:00
Simon Horman
4a741432be MEDIUM: Paramatise functions over the check of a server
Paramatise the following functions over the check of a server

* set_server_down
* set_server_up
* srv_getinter
* server_status_printf
* set_server_check_status
* set_server_disabled
* set_server_enabled

Generally the server parameter of these functions has been removed.
Where it is still needed it is obtained using check->server.

This is in preparation for associating a agent check
with a server which runs as well as the server's existing check.
By paramatising these functions they may act on each of the checks
without further significant modification.

Explanation of the SSP_O_HCHK portion of this change:

* Prior to this patch SSP_O_HCHK serves a single purpose which
  is to tell server_status_printf() weather it should print
  the details of the check of a server or not.

  With the paramatisation that this patch adds there are two cases.
  1) Printing the details of the check in which case a
     valid check parameter is needed.
  2) Not printing the details of the check in which case
     the contents check parameter are unused.

  In case 1) we could pass SSP_O_HCHK and a valid check and;
  In case 2) we could pass !SSP_O_HCHK and any value for check
  including NULL.

  If NULL is used for case 2) then SSP_O_HCHK becomes supurfulous
  and as NULL is used for case 2) SSP_O_HCHK has been removed.

Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
2013-11-19 09:35:54 +01:00
Simon Horman
a360844735 CLEANUP: Make parameters of srv_downtime and srv_getinter const
The parameters of srv_downtime and srv_getinter are not modified
and thus may be const.

Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <horms@verge.net.au>
2013-11-19 08:04:58 +01:00
Thierry FOURNIER
de6617b486 MINOR: http: some exported functions were not in the header file
Export the following functions:
 - find_hdr_value_end
 - http_header_match2
 - http_remove_header2
 - http_header_add_tail2
2013-10-23 12:21:38 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
3a925c155d MEDIUM: stick-tables: flush old entries upon soft-stop
When a process with large stick tables is replaced by a new one and remains
present until the last connection finishes, it keeps these data in memory
for nothing since they will never be used anymore by incoming connections,
except during syncing with the new process. This is especially problematic
when dealing with long session protocols such as WebSocket as it becomes
possible to stack many processes and eat a lot of memory.

So the idea here is to know if a table still needs to be synced or not,
and to purge all unused entries once the sync is complete. This means that
after a few hundred milliseconds when everything has been synchronized with
the new process, only a few entries will remain allocated (only the ones
held by sessions during the restart) and all the remaining memory will be
freed.

Note that we carefully do that only after the grace period is expired so as
not to impact a possible proxy that needs to accept a few more connections
before leaving.

Doing this required to add a sync counter to the stick tables, to know how
many peer sync sessions are still in progress in order not to flush the entries
until all synchronizations are completed.
2013-09-04 17:54:01 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
b4c8493a9f MINOR: session: make the number of stick counter entries more configurable
In preparation of more flexibility in the stick counters, make their
number configurable. It still defaults to 3 which is the minimum
accepted value. Changing the value alone is not sufficient to get
more counters, some bitfields still need to be updated and the TCP
actions need to be updated as well, but this update tries to be
easier, which is nice for experimentation purposes.
2013-08-01 21:17:14 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
cadd8c9ec3 MINOR: payload: split smp_fetch_rdp_cookie()
This function is also called directly from backend.c, so let's stop
building fake args to call it as a sample fetch, and have a lower
layer more generic function instead.
2013-08-01 21:17:13 +02:00
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
Godbach
430f291a99 CLEANUP: session: remove event_accept() which was not used anymore
Remove event_accept() in include/proto/proto_http.h and use correct function
name in other two files instead of event_accept().

Signed-off-by: Godbach <nylzhaowei@gmail.com>
2013-06-20 08:07:35 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
be4a3eff34 MEDIUM: counters: use sc0/sc1/sc2 instead of sc1/sc2/sc3
It was a bit inconsistent to have gpc start at 0 and sc start at 1,
so make sc start at zero like gpc. No previous release was issued
with sc3 anyway, so no existing setup should be affected.
2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02:00
Thierry FOURNIER
d3879e8b57 CLEANUP: fix missing include <string.h> in proto/listener.h
The file proto/listener.h makes use of strdup() but doesn't include
<string.h> so it's sensible to include file ordering.
2013-06-14 19:52:17 +02:00