This simple patch only adds definitions to create a new stick-table
data type ID and a new standard type to store information in relation
wich dictionary entries (STD_T_DICT).
This patch adds minimalistic definitions to implement dictionary new data structure
which is an ebtree of ebpt_node structs with strings as keys. Note that this has nothing
to see with real dictionary data structure (maps of keys in association with values).
Have "socks4" and "check-via-socks4" server keyword added.
Implement handshake with SOCKS4 proxy server for tcp stream connection.
See issue #82.
I have the "SOCKS: A protocol for TCP proxy across firewalls" doc found
at "https://www.openssh.com/txt/socks4.protocol". Please reference to it.
[wt: for now connecting to the SOCKS4 proxy over unix sockets is not
supported, and mixing IPv4/IPv6 is discouraged; indeed, the control
layer is unique for a connection and will be used both for connecting
and for target address manipulation. As such it may for example report
incorrect destination addresses in logs if the proxy is reached over
IPv6]
Remove the active_tasks_mask variable, we can deduce if we've work to do
by other means, and it is costly to maintain. Instead, introduce a new
function, thread_has_tasks(), that returns non-zero if there's tasks
scheduled for the thread, zero otherwise.
The functions channel_htx_fwd_payload() and channel_htx_fwd_all() should now be
used to forward, respectively, a part of the HTX payload or all of it. These
functions forward data and update the first block position.
We don't store the start-line position anymore in the HTX message. Instead we
store the first block position to analyze. For now, it is almost the same. But
once all changes will be made on this part, this position will have to be used
by HTX analyzers, and only in the analysis context, to know where the analyse
should start.
When new blocks are added in an HTX message, if the first block position is not
defined, it is set. When the block pointed by it is removed, it is set to the
block following it. -1 remains the value to unset the position. the first block
position is unset when the HTX message is empty. It may also be unset on a
non-empty message, meaning every blocks were already analyzed.
From HTX analyzers point of view, this position is always set during headers
analysis. When they are waiting for a request or a response, if it is unset, it
means the analysis should wait. But once the analysis is started, and as long as
headers are not forwarded, it points to the message start-line.
As mentionned, outside the HTX analysis, no code must rely on the first block
position. So multiplexers and applets must always use the head position to start
a loop on an HTX message.
The function channel_htx_fwd_headers() should now be used by HTX analyzers to
forward all headers of an HTX message, from the start-line to the corresponding
EOH. It takes care to update the star-line position.
When channel_recv_max() is called for an HTX stream, we fall back on the HTX
version. This function is called from si_cs_recv(). This will let us pass the
max amount of bytes to read to HTX multiplexers.
Now, we only return the start-line. If not found, NULL is returned. No lookup is
performed and the HTX message is no more updated. It is now the caller
responsibility to update the position of the start-line to the right value. So
when it is not found, i.e sl_pos is set to -1, it means the last start-line has
been already processed and the next one has not been inserted yet.
It is mandatory to rely on this kind of warranty to store 1xx informational
responses and final reponse in the same HTX message.
It's amazing that the value was still incremented under the date lock,
let's first use an atomic increment for the counter and move it out of
the date lock to reduce contention. These are just counters, we don't
need to take locks if we're not rotating, atomic ops are enough. This
patch does this, and leaves the lock for when the period is over. It's
important to note that some values might be added just before or just
after a rotation but this is not a problem since we don't care if a
value is counted in the previous or next period when it's exactly on
the edge. Great care was taken to ensure that the current counter is
always atomically updated.
Other minor cleanups were performed, such as avoiding to reload the
value from memory after a CAS, or using &~1 instead of two shifts to
remove the lowest bit.
This function dumps a lot of information about a stream into the provided
buffer. It is now used by stream_dump_and_crash() and will be used by the
debugger as well.
The struct mworker_proc is not uniformly freed everywhere, sometimes leading
to leaks of the `id` string (and possibly the other strings).
Introduce a mworker_free_child function instead of duplicating the freeing
logic everywhere to prevent this kind of issues.
This leak was reported in issue #96.
It looks like the leaks have been introduced in commit 9a1ee7ac31,
which is specific to 2.0-dev. Backporting `mworker_free_child` might be
helpful to ease backporting other fixes, though.
Now that we have the guarantee that init calls happen before any other
thread starts, we don't need anymore the workaround installed by commit
1605c7ae6 ("BUG/MEDIUM: threads/mworker: fix a race on startup") and we
can instead rely on a regular per-thread initcall for this function. It
will only be performed on worker thread #0, the other ones and the master
have nothing to do, just like in the original code that was only moved
to the function.
With the thread debugger it becomes visible that we can leave some
wandering pointers for a while in curr_task, which is inappropriate.
This patch addresses this by resetting curr_task to NULL before really
freeing the area. This way it becomes safe even regarding signals.
In conn_xprt_close(), after calling xprt->close(), don't forget to set
conn->xprt_ctx to NULL, or we may attempt to reuse the now-free'd
conn->xprt_ctx if the connection failed and we're retrying it.
It's always a pain to have to stuff lots of #ifdef USE_OPENSSL around
ssl headers, it even results in some of them appearing in a random order
and multiple times just to benefit form an existing ifdef block. Let's
make these headers safe for inclusion when USE_OPENSSL is not defined,
they now perform the test themselves and do nothing if USE_OPENSSL is
not defined. This allows to remove no less than 8 such ifdef blocks
and make include blocks more readable.
Since we're providing a compatibility layer for multiple OpenSSL
implementations and their derivatives, it is important that no C file
directly includes openssl headers but only passes via openssl-compat
instead. As a bonus this also gets rid of redundant complex rules for
inclusion of certain files (engines etc).
LibreSSL causes lots of build issues by pretending to be OpenSSL 2.0.0,
and it requires lots of care for each #if added to cover any specific
OpenSSL features.
This commit addresses the problem by making LibreSSL only advertise the
version it forked from (1.0.1g) and by starting to use tests based on
its real version to enable features instead of working by exclusion.
Most tests on OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER have become complex and break all
the time because this number is fake for some derivatives like LibreSSL.
This patch creates a new macro, HA_OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER, which will
carry the real openssl version defining the compatibility level, and
this version will be adjusted depending on the variants.
When a sample fetch is encoded, we use its context to set info about the
fragmentation. But if the sample is not found, the function sample_process()
returns NULL. So we me be sure the sample exists before setting its context.
This patch must be backported to 1.9 and 1.8.
This patch implements a new global parameter for the master-worker mode.
When setting the mworker-max-reloads value, a worker receive a SIGTERM
if its number of reloads is greater than this value.
Since previous commit it's not needed anymore to test a task pointer
before calling task_destory() so let's just remove these tests from
the various callers before they become confusing. The function's
arguments were also documented. The same should probably be done
with tasklet_free() which involves a test in roughly half of the
call places.
Commit 3f795f7 ("MEDIUM: tasks: Merge task_delete() and task_free() into
task_destroy().") replaced task_delete() and task_free() with a single
function named task_destroy().
This patch adds a check for struct task* argument in function
task_destroy() to prevent a possible segfault on NULL and also to make
the function safer for use in other cases.
With this patch we add a prefix to stick-table names declared in "peers" sections
concatenating the "peers" section name followed by a '/' character with
the stick-table name. Consequently, "peers" sections have their own
namespace for their stick-tables. Obviously, these stick-table names are not the
ones which should be sent over the network. So these configurations must be
compatible and should make A and B peers communicate with peers protocol:
# haproxy A config, old way stick-table declerations
peers mypeers
peer A ...
peer B ...
backend t1
stick-table type string size 10m store gpc0 peers mypeers
# haproxy B config, new way stick-table declerations
peers mypeers
peer A ...
peer B ...
table t1 type string size store gpc0 10m
This "network" name is stored in ->nid new field of stktable struct. The "local"
stktable-name is still stored in ->id.
This patch adds the support for the "table" line parsing in "peers" sections
to declare stick-table in such sections. This also prevents the user from having
to declare dummy backends sections with a unique stick-table inside.
Even if still supported, this usage will become deprecated.
To do so, the ->table member of proxy struct which is a stktable struct is replaced
by a pointer to a stktable struct allocated at parsing time in src/cfgparse-listen.c
for the dummy stick-table backends and in src/cfgparse.c for "peers" sections.
This has an impact on the code for stick-table sample converters and on the stickiness
rules parsers which first store the name of the dummy before resolving the rules.
This patch replaces proxy_tbl_by_name() calls by stktable_find_by_name() calls
to lookup for stick-tables stored in "stktable_by_name" ebtree at parsing time.
There is only one remaining place where proxy_tbl_by_name() is used: src/hlua.c.
At several places in the code we relied on the fact that ->size member of stick-table
was equal to zero to consider the stick-table was present by not configured,
this do not make sense anymore as ->table member of struct proxyis fow now on a pointer.
These tests are replaced by a test on ->table value itself.
In "peers" section we do not have to temporary store the name of the section the
stick-table are attached to because this name is obviously already known just after
having entered this "peers" section.
About the CLI stick-table I/O handler, the pointer to proxy struct is replaced by
a pointer to a stktable struct.
With this patch we move the code responsible of parsing "stick-table"
lines to implement parse_stick_table() function in src/stick-tabble.c
so that to be able to parse "stick-table" elsewhere than in proxy sections.
We have have also added a conf struct to stktable struct to store the filename
and the line in the file the stick-table has been parsed to help in
diagnosing and displaying any configuration issue.
This implements support for the new API which relies on a call to
setsockopt().
On systems that support it (currently, only Linux >= 4.11), this enables
using TCP fast open when connecting to server.
Please note that you should use the retry-on "conn-failure", "empty-response"
and "response-timeout" keywords, or the request won't be able to be retried
on failure.
Co-authored-by: Olivier Houchard <ohouchard@haproxy.com>
The connect() method had 2 arguments, "data", that tells if there's pending
data to be sent, and "delack" that tells if we have to use a delayed ack
inconditionally, or if the backend is configured with tcp-smart-connect.
Turn that into one argument, "flags".
That way it'll be easier to provide more informations to connect() without
adding extra arguments.
SSL_SESSION_get0_id_context is introduced in LibreSSL-2.7.0
async operations are not supported by LibreSSL
early data is not supported by LibreSSL
packet_length is removed from SSL struct in LibreSSL
When running in HTX mode, if we sent the request, but failed to get the
answer, either because the server just closed its socket, we hit a server
timeout, or we get a 404, 408, 425, 500, 501, 502, 503 or 504 error,
attempt to retry the request, exactly as if we just failed to connect to
the server.
To do so, add a new backend keyword, "retry-on".
It accepts a list of keywords, which can be "none" (never retry),
"conn-failure" (we failed to connect, or to do the SSL handshake),
"empty-response" (the server closed the connection without answering),
"response-timeout" (we timed out while waiting for the server response),
or "404", "408", "425", "500", "501", "502", "503" and "504".
The default is "conn-failure".
When for some reason the session is not the owner of the connection anymore,
make sure we remove CO_FL_SESS_IDLE, even if we're about to call
conn->mux->destroy(), as the destroy may not destroy the connection
immediately if it's still in use.
This should be backported to 1.9.
u
In channel_erase(), don't forget to set output to 0, otherwise the
channel won't seem empty, when it really is, and that could lead to
stream never closing properly.
This should be backported to 1.9.
Port range uses a ring buffer, and unfortunately, when making haproxy
multithreaded, it's been overlooked, and the ring buffer is not thread-safe.
When specifying a source range, 2 or more threads could pick the same
port, and of course only one of them could use the port, the others would
always fail the connection.
To fix this, make it a lock-free ring buffer. This is easier than usual
because we know the ring buffer can never be full.
This should be backported to 1.8 and 1.9.
This patch implements the sampling and load-balancing of log servers configured
with "sample" new keyword implemented by this commit:
'MINOR: log: Add "sample" new keyword to "log" lines'.
As the list of ranges used to sample the log to balance is ordered, we only
have to maintain ->curr_idx member of smp_info struct which is the index of
the sample and check if it belongs or not to the current range to decide if we
must send it to the log server or not.
This simplifies the API and hide the details in the sample. This way, only
string and binary are aware of these info, because other types cannot be
partially encoded.
This patch may be backported to 1.9 and 1.8.
Fragmented arg will do fetch at every encode time, each fetch may get
different result if SMP_F_MAY_CHANGE, for example res.payload, but
the length already encoded in first fragment of the frame, that will
cause SPOA decode failed and waste resources.
This patch must be backported to 1.9 and 1.8.
During 1.9 development (and even a bit after) we've started to face a
significant number of situations where streams were abusively spinning
due to an uncaught error flag or complex conditions that couldn't be
correctly identified. Sometimes streams wake appctx up and conversely
as well. More importantly when this happens the only fix is to restart.
This patch adds a new function to report a serious error, some relevant
info and to crash the process using abort() so that a core dump is
available. The purpose will be for this function to be called in various
situations where the process is unfixable. It will help detect these
issues much earlier during development and may even help fixing test
platforms which are able to automatically restart when such a condition
happens, though this is not the primary purpose.
This patch only provides the function and doesn't use it yet.
We have various functions like conn_get_ctrl_name() to retrieve
some information reported in "show sess" for debugging, which
assume that the connection is valid. This is really not convenient
in code aimed at debugging and is error-prone. Let's add a validity
test first.
Instead of having to manually turn task profiling on/off in the
configuration, by default it will work in "auto" mode, which
automatically turns on on any thread experiencing sustained loop
latencies over one millisecond averaged over the last 1024 samples.
This may happen with configs using lots of regex (thing map_reg for
example, which is the lazy way to convert Apache's rewrite rules but
must not be abused), and such high latencies affect all the process
and the problem is most often intermittent (e.g. hitting a map which
is only used for certain host names).
Thus now by default, with profiling set to "auto", it remains off all
the time until something bad happens. This also helps better focus on
the issues when looking at the logs as well as in "show sess" output.
It automatically turns off when the average loop latency over the last
1024 calls goes below 990 microseconds (which typically takes a while
when in idle).
This patch could be backported to stable versions after a bit more
exposure, as it definitely improves observability and the ability to
quickly spot the culprit. In this case, previous patch ("MINOR:
activity: make the profiling status per thread and not global") must
also be taken.
In order to later support automatic profiling turn on/off, we need to
have it per-thread. We're keeping the global option to know whether to
turn it or on off, but the profiling status is now set per thread. We're
updating the status in activity_count_runtime() which is called before
entering poll(). The reason is that we'll extend this with run time
measurement when deciding to automatically turn it on or off.