602 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Willy Tarreau
9b0ddcfd84 [MINOR] session: add the trk_conn_cur ACL keyword to track concurrent connection
This one applies to the entry being tracked by current session.
2010-08-10 18:04:13 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
9a3f849371 [MINOR] session: add the trk_conn_cnt ACL keyword to track connection counts
Most of the time we'll want to check the connection count of the
criterion we're currently tracking. So instead of duplicating the
src* tests, let's add trk_conn_cnt to report the total number of
connections from the stick table entry currently being tracked.

A nice part of the code was factored, and we should do the same
for the other criteria.
2010-08-10 18:04:12 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
855e4bbcc7 [MEDIUM] session: add data in and out volume counters
The new "bytes_in_cnt" and "bytes_out_cnt" session counters have been
added. They're automatically updated when session counters are updated.
They can be matched with the "src_kbytes_in" and "src_kbytes_out" ACLs
which apply to the volume per source address. This can be used to deny
access to service abusers.
2010-08-10 18:04:12 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
38285c18f4 [MEDIUM] session: add concurrent connections counter
The new "conn_cur" session counter has been added. It is automatically
updated upon "track XXX" directives, and the entry is touched at the
moment we increment the value so that we don't consider further counter
updates as real updates, otherwise we would end up updating upon completion,
which may not be desired. Probably that some other event counters (eg: HTTP
requests) will have to be updated upon each event though.

This counter can be matched against current session's source address using
the "src_conn_cur" ACL.
2010-08-10 18:04:12 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
8b22a71a4d [MEDIUM] session: move counter ACL fetches from proto_tcp
It was not normal to have counter fetches in proto_tcp.c. The only
reason was that the key based on the source address was fetched there,
but now we have split the key extraction and data processing, we must
move that to a more appropriate place. Session seems OK since the
counters are all manipulated from here.

Also, since we're precisely counting number of connections with these
ACLs, we rename them src_conn_cnt and src_updt_conn_cnt. This is not
a problem right now since no version was emitted with these keywords.
2010-08-10 18:04:12 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
9ba2dcc86c [MAJOR] session: add track-counters to track counters related to the session
This patch adds the ability to set a pointer in the session to an
entry in a stick table which holds various counters related to a
specific pattern.

Right now the syntax matches the target syntax and only the "src"
pattern can be specified, to track counters related to the session's
IPv4 source address. There is a special function to extract it and
convert it to a key. But the goal is to be able to later support as
many patterns as for the stick rules, and get rid of the specific
function.

The "track-counters" directive may only be set in a "tcp-request"
statement right now. Only the first one applies. Probably that later
we'll support multi-criteria tracking for a single session and that
we'll have to name tracking pointers.

No counter is updated right now, only the refcount is. Some subsequent
patches will have to bring that feature.
2010-08-10 18:04:12 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
fb35620e87 [MEDIUM] session: support "tcp-request content" rules in backends
Sometimes it's necessary to be able to perform some "layer 6" analysis
in the backend. TCP request rules were not available till now, although
documented in the diagram. Enable them in backend now.
2010-08-10 14:10:58 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
815a9b2039 [BUG] session: analysers must be checked when SI state changes
Since the BF_READ_ATTACHED bug was fixed, a new issue surfaced. When
a connection closes on the return path in tunnel mode while the request
input is already closed, the request analyser which is waiting for a
state change never gets woken up so it never closes the request output.
This causes stuck sessions to remain indefinitely.

One way to reliably reproduce the issue is the following (note that the
client expects a keep-alive but not the server) :

  server: printf "HTTP/1.0 303\r\n\r\n" | nc -lp8080
  client: printf "GET / HTTP/1.1\r\n\r\n" | nc 127.1 2500

The reason for the issue is that we don't wake the analysers up on
stream interface state changes. So the least intrusive and most reliable
thing to do is to consider stream interface state changes to call the
analysers.

We just need to remember what state each series of analysers have seen
and check for the differences. In practice, that works.

A later improvement later could consist in being able to let analysers
state what they're interested to monitor :
  - left SI's state
  - right SI's state
  - request buffer flags
  - response buffer flags

That could help having only one set of analysers and call them once
status changes.
2010-08-10 14:04:28 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
7a20aa6e6b [MEDIUM] session: make it possible to call an I/O handler on both SI
This will be used when an I/O handler running in a stream interface
needs to establish a connection somewhere. We want the session
processor to evaluate both I/O handlers, depending on which side has
one. Doing so also requires that stream_int_update_embedded() wakes
the session up only when the other side is established or has closed,
for instance in order to handle connection errors without looping
indefinitely during the connection setup time.

The session processor still relies on BF_READ_ATTACHED being set,
though we must do whatever is required to remove this dependency.
2010-07-13 16:34:26 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
0bd05eaf24 [MEDIUM] stream-interface: add a ->release callback
When a connection is closed on a stream interface, some iohandlers
will need to be informed in order to release some resources. This
normally happens upon a shutr+shutw. It is the equivalent of the
fd_delete() call which is done for real sockets, except that this
time we release internal resources.

It can also be used with real sockets because it does not cost
anything else and might one day be useful.
2010-07-13 16:06:23 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
e8f6338c5d [BUG] stick-table: correctly refresh expiration timers
The store operation did not correctly refresh the expiration timer
on the stick entry. It did so on the temporary one instead.
2010-07-13 15:20:24 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
2a164ee549 [BUG] stick_table: the fix for the memory leak caused a regression
(cherry picked from commit 61ba936e6858dfcf9964d25870726621d8188fb9)
[ note: the bug was finally not present in 1.5-dev but at least we
  have to reset store_count to be compatible with 1.4 ]

Commit d6e9e3b5e320b957e6c491bd92d91afad30ba638 caused recently created
entries to be removed as soon as they were created, breaking stickiness.
It is not clear whether a use-after-free was possible or not in this case.

This bug was reported by Ben Congleton and narrowed down by Hervé Commowick,
both of whom also tested the fix. Thanks to them !
2010-06-18 09:57:45 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
5214be1b22 [MINOR] session: add a pointer to the tracked counters for the source
We'll have to keep counters of various criteria specific to the session's
source. When we get one, keep a pointer to it in the session.
2010-06-14 15:32:18 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
cb18364ca7 [MEDIUM] stick_table: separate storage and update of session entries
When an entry already exists, we just need to update its expiration
timer. Let's have a dedicated function for that instead of spreading
open code everywhere.

This change also ensures that an update of an existing sticky session
really leads to an update of its expiration timer, which was apparently
not the case till now. This point needs to be checked in 1.4.
2010-06-14 15:10:26 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
13c29dee21 [MEDIUM] stick_table: move the server ID to a generic data type
The server ID is now stored just as any other data type. It is only
allocated if needed and is manipulated just like the other ones.
2010-06-14 15:10:25 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
f16d2b8c1b [MEDIUM] stick_table: don't overwrite data when storing an entry
Till now sticky sessions only held server IDs. Now there are other
data types so it is not acceptable anymore to overwrite the server ID
when writing something. The server ID must then only be written from
the caller when appropriate. Doing this has also led to separate
lookup and storage.
2010-06-14 15:10:24 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
f0b38bfc33 [CLEANUP] stick_table: move pattern to key functions to stick_table.c
pattern.c depended on stick_table while in fact it should be the opposite.
So we move from pattern.c everything related to stick_tables and invert the
dependency. That way the code becomes more logical and intuitive.
2010-06-14 15:10:24 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
393379c3e0 [MINOR] stick_table: add support for variable-sized data
Right now we're only able to store a server ID in a sticky session.
The goal is to be able to store anything whose size is known at startup
time. For this, we store the extra data before the stksess pointer,
using a negative offset. It will then be easy to cumulate multiple
data provided they each have their own offset.
2010-06-14 15:10:23 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
24dcaf3450 [MEDIUM] frontend: count the incoming connection earlier
The frontend's connection was accounted for once the session was
instanciated. This was problematic because the early ACLs weren't
able to correctly account for the number of concurrent connections.
Now we count the connection once it is assigned to the frontend.
It also brings the nice advantage of being more symmetrical, because
the stream_sock's accept() does not have to account for that anymore,
only the session's accept() does.
2010-06-14 10:53:19 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
b36b4244a2 [MINOR] session: differenciate between accepted connections and received connections
Now we're able to reject connections very early, so we need to use a
different counter for the connections that are received and the ones
that are accepted and converted into sessions, so that the rate limits
can still apply to the accepted ones. The session rate must still be
used to compute the rate limit, so that we can reject undesired traffic
without affecting the rate.
2010-06-14 10:53:19 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
81f9aa3bf2 [MAJOR] frontend: split accept() into frontend_accept() and session_accept()
A new function session_accept() is now called from the lower layer to
instanciate a new session. Once the session is instanciated, the upper
layer's frontent_accept() is called. This one can be service-dependant.

That way, we have a 3-phase accept() sequence :
  1) protocol-specific, session-less accept(), which is pointed to by
     the listener. It defaults to the generic stream_sock_accept().
  2) session_accept() which relies on a frontend but not necessarily
     for use in a proxy (eg: stats or any future service).
  3) frontend_accept() which performs the accept for the service
     offerred by the frontend. It defaults to frontend_accept() which
     is really what is used by a proxy.

The TCP/HTTP proxies have been moved to this mode so that we can now rely on
frontend_accept() for any type of session initialization relying on a frontend.

The next step will be to convert the stats to use the same system for the stats.
2010-06-14 10:53:17 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
070ceb6cfb [MEDIUM] session: don't assign conn_retries upon accept() anymore
The conn_retries attribute is now assigned when switching from SI_ST_INI
to SI_ST_REQ. This eliminates one of the last dependencies on the backend
in the frontend's accept() function.
2010-06-14 10:53:16 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
ee28de0a12 [MEDIUM] session: move the conn_retries attribute to the stream interface
The conn_retries still lies in the session and its initialization depends
on the backend when it may not yet be known. Let's first move it to the
stream interface.
2010-06-14 10:53:16 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
d04e858db0 [MEDIUM] session: initialize server-side timeouts after connect()
It was particularly embarrassing that the server timeout was assigned
to buffers during an accept() just to be potentially changed later in
case of a use_backend rule. The frontend side has nothing to do with
server timeouts.

Now we initialize them right after the connect() succeeds. Later this
should change for a unique stream-interface timeout setting only.
2010-06-14 10:53:14 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
85e7d00a70 [MEDIUM] session: finish session establishment sequence in with I/O handlers
Calling sess_establish() upon a successful connect() was essential, but
it was not clearly stated whether it was necessary for an access to an
I/O handler or not. While it would be desired, having it automatically
add the response analyzers is quite a problem, and it breaks HTTP stats.

The solution is thus not to call it for now and to perform the few response
initializations as needed.

For the long term, we need to find a way to specify the analyzers to install
during a stream_int_register_handler() if any.
2010-06-14 10:53:14 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
a4cda67323 [BUG] stick_table: fix possible memory leak in case of connection error
If a "stick store-request" rule is present, an entry is preallocated during
the request. However, if there is no response due to an error or to a redir
mode server, we never release it.
2010-06-14 10:49:24 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
a6eebb372d [BUG] session: clear BF_READ_ATTACHED before next I/O
The BF_READ_ATTACHED flag was created to wake analysers once after
a connection was established. It turns out that this flag is never
cleared once set, so even if there is no event, some analysers are
still evaluated for no reason.

The bug was introduced with commit ea38854d34675d5472319c453b7027af42fe8aab.
It may cause slightly increased CPU usages during data transfers, maybe
even quite noticeable once when transferring transfer-encoded data,
due to the fact that the request analysers are being checked for every
chunk.

This fix must be backported in 1.4 after all non-reg tests have been
completed.
2010-06-04 14:49:52 +02:00
Cyril Bonté
47fdd8e993 [MINOR] add the "ignore-persist" option to conditionally ignore persistence
This is used to disable persistence depending on some conditions (for
example using an ACL matching static files or a specific User-Agent).
You can see it as a complement to "force-persist".

In the configuration file, the force-persist/ignore-persist declaration
order define the rules priority.

Used with the "appsesion" keyword, it can also help reducing memory usage,
as the session won't be hashed the persistence is ignored.
2010-04-25 22:37:14 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
e45997661b [MEDIUM] session: better fix for connection to servers with closed input
The following patch fixed an issue but brought another one :
  296897 [MEDIUM] connect to servers even when the input has already been closed

The new issue is that when a connection is inspected and aborted using
TCP inspect rules, now it is sent to the server before being closed. So
that test is not satisfying. A probably better way is not to prevent a
connection from establishing if only BF_SHUTW_NOW is set but BF_SHUTW
is not. That way, the BF_SHUTW flag is not set if the request has any
data pending, which still fixes the stats issue, but does not let any
empty connection pass through.

Also, as a safety measure, we extend buffer_abort() to automatically
disable the BF_AUTO_CONNECT flag. While it appears to always be OK,
it is by pure luck, so better safe than sorry.
2010-03-21 23:31:42 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
296897f2c6 [MEDIUM] connect to servers even when the input has already been closed
The BF_AUTO_CLOSE flag prevented a connection from establishing on
a server if the other side's input channel was already closed. This
is wrong because there may be pending data to be sent.

This was causing an issue with stats, as noticed and reported by
Cyril Bonté. Since the stats are now handled as a server, sometimes
concurrent accesses were causing one of the connections to send the
shutdown(write) before the connection to the stats function was
established, which aborted it early.

This fix causes the BF_AUTO_CLOSE flag to be checked only when the
connection on the outgoing stream interface has reached an established
state. That way we're still able to connect, send the request then
close.
2010-03-14 19:21:34 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
15e5554467 [CLEANUP] session: remove duplicate test
This duplicate test should have been removed with the loop rework but was forgotten.
It was harmless, but disassembly shows that it prevents gcc from correctly optimizing
the loop.
2010-03-05 10:12:01 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
ae52678444 [STATS] count transfer aborts caused by client and by server
Often we need to understand why some transfers were aborted or what
constitutes server response errors. With those two counters, it is
now possible to detect an unexpected transfer abort during a data
phase (eg: too short HTTP response), and to know what part of the
server response errors may in fact be assigned to aborted transfers.
2010-03-04 20:34:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
033b2dbeb3 [BUG] logs: don't report "last data" when we have just closed after an error
Some people have reported seeing "SL" flags in their logs quite often while
this should never happen. The reason was that then a server error is detected,
we close the connection to that server and when we decide what state we were
in, we see the connection is closed, and deduce it was the last data transfer,
which is wrong. We should report DATA if the previous state was an established
state, which this patch does.

Now logs correctly report "SD" and not "SL" when a server resets a connection
before the end of the transfer.
2010-03-04 18:45:47 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
2465779459 [STATS] separate frontend and backend HTTP stats
It is wrong to merge FE and BE stats for a proxy because when we consult a
BE's stats, it reflects the FE's stats eventhough the BE has received no
traffic. The most common example happens with listen instances, where the
backend gets credited for all the trafic even when a use_backend rule makes
use of another backend.
2010-02-26 10:30:28 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
2e2b3eb65a [BUILD] fix build breakage with DEBUG_FULL
Paul Hirose reported a build error when DEBUG_FULL is set.
2010-02-09 20:55:44 +01:00
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki
f9423ae43a [MINOR] acl: add http_auth and http_auth_group
Add two acls to match http auth data:
 acl <name> http_auth(userlist)
 acl <name> http_auth_hroup(userlist) group1 group2 (...)
2010-01-31 19:14:09 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
4de9149f87 [MINOR] add the "force-persist" statement to force persistence on down servers
This is used to force access to down servers for some requests. This
is useful when validating that a change on a server correctly works
before enabling the server again.
2010-01-22 19:10:05 +01:00
Emeric Brun
1d33b2965e [MEDIUM] Add stick and store rules analysers. 2010-01-12 16:01:24 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
762a23618e [BUG] appsession's sessid must be reset at end of transaction
If we don't do that, we may corrupt the pools in keep-alive sessions.
2010-01-09 13:57:26 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
e34070e1be [MEDIUM] session: limit the number of analyser loops
The initial code's intention was to loop on the analysers as long
as an analyser is added by another one. [This code was wrong due to
the while(0) which breaks even on a continue statement, but the
initial intention must be changed too]. In fact we should limit the
number of times we loop on analysers in order to limit latency.
Using maxpollevents as a limit makes sense since this tunable is
used for the exact same purposes. We may add another tunable later
if that ever makes sense, so it's very unlikely.
2010-01-08 00:36:57 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
4602363f6a [BUG] http: fix for capture memory leak was incorrect
That patch was incorrect because under some circumstances, the
capture memory could be freed by session_free() and then again
by http_end_txn(), causing a double free and an eventual segfault.
The pool use count was also reported wrong due to this bug.

The cleanup code was removed from session_free() to remain only
in http_end_txn().
2010-01-07 22:51:47 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
90deb18916 [MEDIUM] http: make safer use of the DONT_READ and AUTO_CLOSE flags
Several HTTP analysers used to set those flags to values that
were useful but without considering the possibility that they
were not called again to clean what they did. First, replace
direct flag manipulation with more explicit macros. Second,
enforce a rule stating that any buffer which changes one of
these flags from the default must restore it after completion,
so that other analysers see correct flags.

With both this fix and the previous one about analyser bits,
we should not see any more stuck sessions.
2010-01-07 00:20:41 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
576507f4c5 [MEDIUM] session: also consider request analysers added during response
A request analyser may very well be added while processing a response
(eg: end of an HTTP keep-alive response). It's very dangerous to only
rely on flags that ought to change in order to loop back, so let's
correctly detect a possible new analyser addition instead of guessing.
2010-01-07 00:09:04 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
1e0bbafcbe [MAJOR] session: fix the order by which the analysers are run
With the introduction of keep-alive, we have created situations
where an analyser can add other analysers to the current list,
which are behind it, which have already been processed once, and
which are needed immediately because without them there will be
no more I/O activity. This is typically the case for enabling
reading of a new request after preparing for a new request.

Instead of creating specific cases for some analysers (there was
already one such before), we now use a little bit of algorithmics
to create an ordered bit chain supporting priorities and fast
operations.

Another advantage of this new construction is that it's not a
real loop anymore, so if an analyser is unknown, it will not
loop but just ignore it.

Note that it is easy to skip multiple analysers at once now in
order to speed up the checking a bit. Some test code has shown
a minor gain though.

This change has been carefully re-read and has no direct reason
of causing a regression. However it has been tagged "major"
because the fact that it runs the analysers correctly might
trigger an old sleeping bug somewhere in one of the analysers.
2010-01-07 00:01:03 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
1464140fce [MEDIUM] session: set SI_FL_NOLINGER when aborting on write timeouts
Doing this helps us flush the system buffers from all unread data. This
avoids having orphans when clients suddenly get off the net without
reading their entire response.
2009-12-29 14:49:56 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
82eeaf2fae [MEDIUM] http: properly handle "option forceclose"
The "forceclose" option used to close the output channel to the
server once it started to respond. While this happened to work with
most servers, some of them considered this as a connection abort and
immediately stopped responding.

Now that we're aware of the end of a request and response, we're able
to trivially handle this option and properly close both sides when the
server's response is complete.

During this change it appeared that forwarding could be allowed when
the BF_SHUTW_NOW flag was set on a buffer, which obviously is not
acceptable and was causing some trouble. This has been fixed too and
is the reason for the MEDIUM status on this patch.
2009-12-29 14:26:42 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
d98cf93395 [MAJOR] http: implement body parser
The body parser will be used in close and keep-alive modes. It follows
the stream to keep in sync with both the request and the response message.
Both chunked transfer-coding and content-length are supported according to
RFC2616.

The multipart/byterange encoding has not yet been implemented and if not
seconded by any of the two other ones, will be forwarded till the close,
as requested by the specification.

Both the request and the response analysers converge into an HTTP_MSG_DONE
state where it will be possible to force a close (option forceclose) or to
restart with a fresh new transaction and maintain keep-alive.

This change is important. All tests are OK but any possible behaviour
change with "option httpclose" might find its root here.
2009-12-27 22:54:55 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
0937bc43cf [MINOR] http: move the http transaction init/cleanup code to proto_http
This code really belongs to the http part since it's transaction-specific.
This will also make it easier to later reinitialize a transaction in order
to support keepalive.
2009-12-22 15:03:09 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
7c3c54177a [MAJOR] buffers: automatically compute the maximum buffer length
We used to apply a limit to each buffer's size in order to leave
some room to rewrite headers, then we used to remove this limit
once the session switched to a data state.

Proceeding that way becomes a problem with keepalive because we
have to know when to stop reading too much data into the buffer
so that we can leave some room again to process next requests.

The principle we adopt here consists in only relying on to_forward+send_max.
Indeed, both of those data define how many bytes will leave the buffer.
So as long as their sum is larger than maxrewrite, we can safely
fill the buffers. If they are smaller, then we refrain from filling
the buffer. This means that we won't risk to fill buffers when
reading last data chunk followed by a POST request and its contents.

The only impact identified so far is that we must ensure that the
BF_FULL flag is correctly dropped when starting to forward. Right
now this is OK because nobody inflates to_forward without using
buffer_forward().
2009-12-22 10:06:34 +01:00
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki
97f07b832f [MEDIUM] Decrease server health based on http responses / events, version 3
Implement decreasing health based on observing communication between
HAProxy and servers.

Changes in this version 2:
 - documentation
 - close race between a started check and health analysis event
 - don't force fastinter if it is not set
 - better names for options
 - layer4 support

Changes in this version 3:
 - add stats
 - port to the current 1.4 tree
2009-12-16 00:29:27 +01:00