This handshake handler must be independant, so move it away from
proto_tcp. It has a dedicated connection flag. It is tested before
I/O handlers and automatically removes the CO_FL_WAIT_L4_CONN flag
upon success.
It also sets the BF_WRITE_NULL flag on the stream interface and
stops the SI timeout. However it does not perform the task_wakeup(),
and relies on the data handler to do so for now. The SI wakeup will
have to be moved elsewhere anyway.
fdtab[].state was only used to know whether a connection was in progress
or an error was encountered. Instead we now use connection->flags to store
a flag for both. This way, connection management will be able to update the
connection status on I/O.
The destination address is purely a connection thing and not an fd thing.
It's also likely that later the address will be stored into the connection
and linked to by the SI.
struct fdinfo only keeps the pointer to the port range and the local port
for now. All of this also needs to move to the connection but before this
the release of the port range must move from fd_delete() to a new function
dedicated to the connection.
We start to move everything needed to manage a connection to a special
entity "struct connection". We have the data layer operations and the
control operations there. We'll also have more info in the future such
as file descriptors and applet contexts, so that in the end it becomes
detachable from the stream interface, which will allow connections to
be reused between sessions.
For now on, we start with minimal changes.
It is much better and more efficient to consider that the send-proxy
feature is part of the protocol layer than part of the data layer.
Now the connection is considered established once the send-proxy line
has been sent.
This way the data layer doesn't have to care anymore about this specific
part.
The tcp_connect_write() function now automatically calls the data layer
write() function once the connection is established, which saves calls
to epoll_ctl/epoll_wait/process_session.
It's starting to look more and more obvious that tcp_connect_read() and
tcp_connect_write() are not TCP-specific but only socket-specific and as
such should probably move, along with some functions from protocol.c, to
a socket-specific file (eg: stream_sock).
It would be nice to be able to support autonomous listeners to parse the
proxy protocol before accepting a connection, so that we get rid of it
at the session layer and to support using these informations in the
tcp-request connection rules.
If the connect succeeds exactly at the same millisecond as the connect
timeout is supposed to strike, the timeout is still considered while
data may have already be sent. This results in a new connection attempt
with no data and with the response being lost.
Note that in practice the only real-world situation where this is observed
is when connect timeouts are extremely low, too low for safe operations.
This bug was encountered with a 1ms connect timeout.
It is also present on 1.4 and needs to be fixed there too.
Calling the init() function in sess_establish was a bad idea, it is
too late to allow it to fail on lack of resource and does not help at
all. Remove it for now before it's used.
These pointers were used to hold pointers to buffers in the past, but
since we introduced the stream interface, they're no longer used but
they were still sometimes set.
Removing them shrink the struct fdtab from 32 to 24 bytes on 32-bit machines,
and from 52 to 36 bytes on 64-bit machines, which is a significant saving. A
quick tests shows a steady 0.5% performance gain, probably due to the better
cache efficiency.
Up to now, if an outgoing connection had no data to send, the socket layer
had to perform a connect() again to check for establishment. This is not
acceptable for SSL, and will cause problems with socketpair(). Some socket
layers will also need an initializer before sending data (eg: SSL).
The solution consists in moving the connect() test to the protocol layer
(eg: TCP) and to make it hold the fd->write callback until the connection
is validated. At this point, it will switch the write callback to the
socket layer's write function. In fact we need to hold both read and write
callbacks to ensure the socket layer is never called before being initialized.
This intermediate callback is used only if there is a socket init function
or if there are no data to send.
The socket layer does not have any code to check for connection establishment
anymore, which makes sense.
Commit e164e7a removed get_src/get_dst setting in the stream interfaces but
forgot to set it in proto_tcp. Get the feature back because we need it for
logging, transparent mode, ACLs etc... We now rely on the stream interface
direction to know what syscall to use.
One benefit of doing it this way is that we don't use getsockopt() anymore
on outgoing stream interfaces nor on UNIX sockets.
We'll soon have an SSL socket layer, and in order to ease the difference
between the two, we use the name "sock_raw" to designate the one which
directly talks to the sockets without any conversion.
All keywords registered using a cfg_kw_list now make use of the new error reporting
framework. This allows easier and more precise error reporting without having to
deal with complex buffer allocation issues.
These methods have been superseded by src and dst which support
multiple families. There is no point keeping them since they appeared
in a development version anyway.
For configurations using "src6", please use "src" instead. For "dst6",
use "dst" instead.
The previous sockstream_accept() function uses nothing from sockstream, and
is totally irrelevant to stream interfaces. Move this to the protocols.c
file which handles listeners and protocols, and call it listener_accept().
It now makes much more sense that the code dealing with listen() also handles
accept() and passes it to upper layers.
This is mainly a massive renaming in the code to get it in line with the
calling convention. Next patch will rename a few files to complete this
operation.
All parsing errors were known but impossible to return. Now by making use
of memprintf(), we're able to build meaningful error messages that the
caller can display.
pattern_fetch_rdp_cookie() is useless now since it only used to add controls
on top of smp_fetch_rdp_cookie() which have now been integrated into the
pattern subsystem. Let's remove it.
A test was already performed which worked by pure luck due to integer types,
otherwise it would have been possible to start checking for an offset out of
the buffer's bounds if the buffer size was large enough to allow an integer
wrap. Let's perform explicit checks and use unsigned ints for offsets instead
of risking being hit later.
These ones were easy to adapt to ACL usage and may really be useful,
so let's make them available right now. It's likely that some extension
such as regex, string-to-IP and raw IP matching will be implemented in
the near future.
Since pattern_process() is able to automatically cast returned types
into expected types, we can safely use the sample functions to fetch
addresses whatever their family. The lowest castable type must be
declared with the keyword so that config checks pass.
Right now this means that src/dst use the same fetch function for ACLs
and patterns. src6/dst6 have been kept so that configs which explicitly
rely on v6 are properly checked.
src_port, dst_port and url_param have converged between ACLs and patterns.
This means that src_port is now available in patterns and that urlp_* has
been added to ACLs. Some code has moved to accommodate for static function
definitions, but there were little changes.
Patterns were using a bitmask to indicate if request or response was desired
in fetch functions and keywords. ACLs were using a bitmask in fetch keywords
and a single bit in fetch functions. ACLs were also using an ACL_PARTIAL bit
in fetch functions indicating that a non-final fetch was performed, which was
an abuse of the existing direction flag.
The change now consists in using :
- a capabilities field for fetch keywords => SMP_CAP_REQ/RES to indicate
if a keyword supports requests, responses, both, etc...
- an option field for fetch functions to indicate what the caller expects
(request/response, final/non-final)
The ACL_PARTIAL bit was reversed to get SMP_OPT_FINAL as it's more explicit
to know we're working on a final buffer than on a non-final one.
ACL_DIR_* were removed, as well as PATTERN_FETCH_*. L4 fetches were improved
to support being called on responses too since they're still available.
The <dir> field of all fetch functions was changed to <opt> which is now
unsigned.
The patch is large but mostly made of cosmetic changes to accomodate this, as
almost no logic change happened.
The former was only a wrapper to the second, let's remove it now that
the calling convention is exactly the same. This is the first function
to be unified between ACLs and samples.
Having the args everywhere will make it easier to share fetch functions
between patterns and ACLs. The only place where we could have needed
the expr was in the http_prefetch function which can do well without.
Previously, both pattern, backend and persist_rdp_cookie would build fake
ACL expressions to fetch an RDP cookie by calling acl_fetch_rdp_cookie().
Now we switch roles. The RDP cookie fetch function is provided as a sample
fetch function that all others rely on, including ACL. The code is exactly
the same, only the args handling moved from expr->args to args. The code
was moved to proto_tcp.c, but probably that a dedicated file would be more
suited to content handling.
We need the pattern fetchers and converters to correctly set the output type
so that they can be used by ACL fetchers. By using the sample type instead of
the keyword type, we also open the possibility to create some multi-type
pattern fetch methods later (eg: "src" being v4/v6). Right now the type in
the keyword is used to validate the configuration.
Now there is no more reference to union pattern_data. All pattern fetch and
conversion functions now make use of the common sample type. Note: none of
them adjust the type right now so it's important to do it next otherwise
we would risk sharing such functions with ACLs and seeing them fail.
This one is not needed anymore as we can return the data and its type in the
sample provided by the caller. ACLs now always return the proper type. BOOL
is already returned when the result is expected to be processed as a boolean.
temp_pattern has been unexported now.
The new sample types are necessary for the acl-pattern convergence.
These types are boolean and signed int. Some types were renamed for
less ambiguity (ip->ipv4, integer->uint).
This is used to validate that arguments are coherent. For instance,
payload_lv expects that the last arg (if any) is not more negative
than the sum of the first two. The error is reported if any.
We don't need the pattern-specific args parsers anymore, make use of the
common parser instead. We still need to improve this by adding a validation
function to report abnormal argument values or combinations. We don't report
precise parsing errors yet but this was not previously done either.
arg_i was almost unused, and since we migrated to use struct arg everywhere,
the rare cases where arg_i was needed could be replaced by switching to
arg->type = ARGT_STOP.
The types and minimal number of ACL keyword arguments are now stored in
their declaration. This will allow many more fantasies if some ACL use
several arguments or types.
Doing so required to rework all ACL keyword declarations to add two
parameters. So this was a good opportunity for a general cleanup and
to sort all entries in alphabetical order.
We still have two pending issues :
- parse_acl_expr() checks for errors but has no way to report them to
the user ;
- the types of some arguments are still not resolved and kept as strings
(eg: ARGT_FE/BE/TAB) for compatibility reasons, which must be resolved
in acl_find_targets()
The ACL parser now uses the argument parser to build a typed argument list.
Right now arguments are all strings and only one argument is supported since
this is what ACLs currently support.
This change introduces the buffer's base pointer, which is the limit between
incoming and outgoing data. It's the point where the parsing should start
from. A number of computations have already been greatly simplified, but
more simplifications are expected to come from the removal of buf->r.
The changes appear good and have revealed occasional improper use of some
pointers. It is possible that this patch has introduced bugs or revealed
some, although preliminary testings tend to indicate that everything still
works as it should.
We don't have buf->l anymore. We have buf->i for pending data and
the total length is retrieved by adding buf->o. Some computation
already become simpler.
Despite extreme care, bugs are not excluded.
It's worth noting that msg->err_pos as set by HTTP request/response
analysers becomes relative to pending data and not to the beginning
of the buffer. This has not been completed yet so differences might
occur when outgoing data are left in the buffer.