This one is common to the TCPv4 and UDPv4 code, it retrieves the
destination address of a socket, taking care of the possiblity that for
an incoming connection the traffic was possibly redirected. The TCP and
UDP definitions were updated to rely on it and remove duplicated code.
The new addrcmp() protocol member points to the function to be used to
compare two addresses of the same family.
When picking an FD from a previous process, we can now use the address
specific address comparison functions instead of having to rely on a
local implementation. This will help move that code to a more central
place.
The new file sock.c will contain generic code for standard sockets
relying on file descriptors. We currently have way too much duplication
between proto_uxst, proto_tcp, proto_sockpair and proto_udp.
For now only get_src, get_dst and sock_create_server_socket were moved,
and are used where appropriate.
This patch introduce a new fd handler used to parse syslog
message on udp.
The parsing function returns level, facility and metadata that
can be immediatly reused to forward message to a log server.
This handler is enabled on udp listeners if proxy is internally set
to mode PR_MODE_SYSLOG
This patch introduce proto_udp.c targeting a further support of
log forwarding feature.
This code was originally produced by Frederic Lecaille working on
QUIC support and only minimal requirements for syslog support
have been merged.
The set of files proto_udp.{c,h} were misleadingly named, as they do not
provide anything related to the UDP protocol but to datagram handling
instead, since currently all UDP processing is hard-coded where it's used
(dns, logs). They are to UDP what connection.{c,h} are to proto_tcp. This
was causing confusion about how to insert UDP socket management code,
so let's rename them right now to dgram.{c,h} which more accurately
matches what's inside since every function and type is already prefixed
with "dgram_".
This patch fixes all the leftovers from the include cleanup campaign. There
were not that many (~400 entries in ~150 files) but it was definitely worth
doing it as it revealed a few duplicates.
global.h was one of the messiest files, it has accumulated tons of
implicit dependencies and declares many globals that make almost all
other file include it. It managed to silence a dependency loop between
server.h and proxy.h by being well placed to pre-define the required
structs, forcing struct proxy and struct server to be forward-declared
in a significant number of files.
It was split in to, one which is the global struct definition and the
few macros and flags, and the rest containing the functions prototypes.
The UNIX_MAX_PATH definition was moved to compat.h.
A few includes were missing in each file. A definition of
struct polled_mask was moved to fd-t.h. The MAX_POLLERS macro was
moved to defaults.h
Stdio used to be silently inherited from whatever path but it's needed
for list_pollers() which takes a FILE* and which can thus not be
forward-declared.
This is a complement to previous fix for bug #399. The exclusion between
the recv() and send() calls prevents send handlers from being called if
rx readiness is reported. The DNS code can trigger this situations with
threads where the fd_recv_ready() flag disappears between the test in
dgram_fd_handler() and the second test in dns_resolve_recv() while a
thread calls fd_cant_recv(), and this situation can sustain itself for
a while. With 8 threads and an error in the socket queue, placing a
printf on the return statement in dns_resolve_recv() scrolls very fast.
Simply removing the "else" in dgram_fd_handler() addresses the issue.
This fix must be backported as far as 1.6.
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.
Basic introduction of a UDP layer in HAProxy. It can be used as a
client only and manages UDP exchanges with servers.
It can't be used to load-balance UDP protocols, but only used by
internal features such as DNS resolution.