Flags to disable lingering and half-close are now handled at the conn-stream
level. Thus SI_FL_NOLINGER and SI_FL_NOHALF stream-int flags are replaced by
CS_FL_NOLINGER and CS_FL_NOHALF conn-stream flags.
Instead of setting a stream-interface flag to then set the corresponding
conn-stream endpoint flag, we now only rely the conn-stream endoint. Thus
SI_FL_KILL_CON is replaced by CS_EP_KILL_CONN.
In addition si_must_kill_conn() is replaced by cs_must_kill_conn().
When a tcp-request or tcp-response rule fails to parse, we currently
free only the rule without its contents, which makes ASAN complain.
Now that we have a new function for this, let's completely free the
rule. Reg-tests are now completely OK with ASAN. This relies on this
commit:
MINOR: actions: add new function free_act_rule() to free a single rule
It's probably not needed to backport this since we're on the exit path
anyway.
When a tcp-{request,response} content or http-request/http-response
rule delivers a final verdict (deny, accept, redirect etc), the last
evaluated one will now be recorded in the stream. The purpose is to
permit to log the last one that performed a final action. For now
the log is not produced.
TCP rules from defaults section are now evaluated. These rules are evaluated
before those of the proxy. For L7 TCP rules, the same default ruleset cannot
be attached to the frontend and the backend. However, at this stage, we take
care to not execute twice the same ruleset. So, in theory, a frontend and a
backend could use the same defaults section. In this case, the default
ruleset is executed before all others and only once.
TCP and HTTP rules can now be defined in defaults sections, but only those
with a name. Because these rules may use conditions based on ACLs, ACLs can
also be defined in defaults sections.
However there are some limitations:
* A defaults section defining TCP/HTTP rules cannot be used by a defaults
section
* A defaults section defining TCP/HTTP rules cannot be used bu a listen
section
* A defaults sections defining TCP/HTTP rules cannot be used by frontends
and backends at the same time
* A defaults sections defining 'tcp-request connection' or 'tcp-request
session' rules cannot be used by backends
* A defaults sections defining 'tcp-response content' rules cannot be used
by frontends
The TCP request/response inspect-delay of a proxy is now inherited from the
defaults section it uses. For now, these rules are only parsed. No evaluation is
performed.
Rules are currently allocated using calloc() by their caller, which does
not make it very convenient to pass more information such as the file
name and line number.
This patch introduces new_act_rule() which performs the malloc() and
already takes in argument the ruleset (ACT_F_*), the file name and the
line number. This saves the caller from having to assing ->from, and
will allow to improve the internal storage with more info.
For now, tcp-request and tcp-response content rules evaluation is
interrupted before the inspect-delay when the channel's buffer is full, the
RX path is blocked or when a shutdown for reads was received. To sum up, the
evaluation is interrupted when no more input data are expected. However, it
is not exhaustive. It also happens when end of input is reached (CF_EOI flag
set) or when a read error occurred (CF_READ_ERROR flag set).
Note that, AFAIK, it is only a problem on HAProy 2.3 and prior when a H1 to
H2 upgrade is performed. On newer versions, it works as expected because the
stream is not created at this stage.
This patch must be backported as far as 2.0.
If the stream-interface is waiting for more buffer room to store incoming
data, it is important at the stream level to stop to wait for more data to
continue. Thanks to the previous patch ("BUG/MEDIUM: stream-int: Notify
stream that the mux wants more room to xfer data"), the stream is woken up
when this happens. In this patch, we take care to interrupt the
corresponding tcp-content ruleset or to stop waiting for the HTTP message
payload.
To ease detection of the state, si_rx_blocked_room() helper function has
been added. It returns non-zero if the stream interface's Rx path is blocked
because of lack of room in the input buffer.
This patch is part of a series related to the issue #1362. It should be
backported as ar as 2.0, probably with some adaptations. So be careful
during backports.
A memory allocation failure happening in tcp_parse_request_rule while
processing the "capture" keyword and trying to allocate a cap_hdr
structure would have resulted in a crash. This function is only called
during configuration parsing.
It was raised in GitHub issue #1233.
It could be backported to all stable branches.
A memory allocation failure happening in tcp_parse_tcp_req or
tcp_parse_tcp_rep when trying to allocate an act_rule structure would
have resulted in a crash. These functions are only called during
configuration parsing.
It was raised in GitHub issue #1233.
It could be backported to all stable branches.
The current "ADD" vs "ADDQ" is confusing because when thinking in terms
of appending at the end of a list, "ADD" naturally comes to mind, but
here it does the opposite, it inserts. Several times already it's been
incorrectly used where ADDQ was expected, the latest of which was a
fortunate accident explained in 6fa922562 ("CLEANUP: stream: explain
why we queue the stream at the head of the server list").
Let's use more explicit (but slightly longer) names now:
LIST_ADD -> LIST_INSERT
LIST_ADDQ -> LIST_APPEND
LIST_ADDED -> LIST_INLIST
LIST_DEL -> LIST_DELETE
The same is true for MT_LISTs, including their "TRY" variant.
LIST_DEL_INIT keeps its short name to encourage to use it instead of the
lazier LIST_DELETE which is often less safe.
The change is large (~674 non-comment entries) but is mechanical enough
to remain safe. No permutation was performed, so any out-of-tree code
can easily map older names to new ones.
The list doc was updated.
This patch replaces roughly all occurrences of an HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&foo, 1)
or HA_ATOMIC_SUB(&foo, 1) with the equivalent HA_ATOMIC_INC(&foo) and
HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&foo) respectively. These are 507 changes over 45 files.
It was misspelled (expect-netscaler-ip instead of expect-netscaler-cip). 2
commits are concerned :
* db67b0ed7 MINOR: tcp-rules: suggest approaching action names on mismatch
* 72d012fbd CLEANUP: tcp-rules: add missing actions in the tcp-request error message
The first one will not be backported, but the second one was backported as
far as 1.8. Thus this one may also be backported, but only the 2nd part
about the list of accepted keywords.
The tcp-request error message only mentions "accept", "reject" and
track-sc*, but there are a few other ones that were missing, so let's
add them.
This could be backported, though it's not likely that it will help anyone
with an existing config.
When implementing a client applet, a NULL dereference was encountered on
the error path which increment the counters.
Indeed, the counters incremented are the one in the listener which does
not exist in the case of client applets, so in sess->listener->counters,
listener is NULL.
This patch fixes the access to the listener structure when accessing
from a sesssion, most of the access are the counters in error paths.
Must be backported as far as 1.8.
The default proxy was passed as a variable to all parsers instead of a
const, which is not without risk, especially when some timeout parsers used
to make some int pointers point to the default values for comparisons. We
want to be certain that none of these parsers will modify the defaults
sections by accident, so it's important to mark this proxy as const.
This patch touches all occurrences found (89).
These functions will be useful to check if a keyword is already registered.
This will be needed by a next patch to fix a bug, and will need to be
backported.
A dedicated expiration date is now used to apply the inspect-delay of the
tcp-request or tcp-response rulesets. Before, the analyse expiratation date was
used but it may also be updated by the lua (at least). So a lua script may
extend or reduce the inspect-delay by side effect. This is not expected. If it
becomes necessary, a specific function will be added to do this. Because, for
now, it is a bit confusing.
On a tcp-response content ruleset evaluation, the inspect-delay is engaged when
rule's conditions are not validated but not when the rule's action yields.
This patch must be backported to all supported versions.
When a tcp-request or a tcp-response content ruleset evaluation is aborted, the
corresponding FLT_END analyser must be preserved, if any. But because of a typo
error, on the tcp-response content ruleset evaluation, we try to preserve the
request analyser instead of the response one.
This patch must be backported to 2.2.
On a final evaluation of a tcp-request or tcp-response content ruleset, it is
forbidden for an action to yield. To quickly identify bugs an internal error is
now returned if it happens and a warning log message is emitted.
It's unclear why the buffer length wasn't considered when tcp-response
rules were added in 1.5-dev3 with commit 97679e790 ("[MEDIUM] Implement
tcp inspect response rules"). But it's impossible to write working
tcp-response content rules as they're always waiting for the expiration
and do not consider the fact that the buffer is full. It's likely that
tcp-response content rules were only used with HTTP traffic.
This may be backported to stable versions, though it's not very
important considering that that nobody reported this in 10 years.
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.
There's no point splitting the file in two since only cfgparse uses the
types defined there. A few call places were updated and cleaned up. All
of them were in C files which register keywords.
There is nothing left in common/ now so this directory must not be used
anymore.
This one was not easy because it was embarking many includes with it,
which other files would automatically find. At least global.h, arg.h
and tools.h were identified. 93 total locations were identified, 8
additional includes had to be added.
In the rare files where it was possible to finalize the sorting of
includes by adjusting only one or two extra lines, it was done. But
all files would need to be rechecked and cleaned up now.
It was the last set of files in types/ and proto/ and these directories
must not be reused anymore.
This one is particularly difficult to split because it provides all the
functions used to manipulate a proxy state and to retrieve names or IDs
for error reporting, and as such, it was included in 73 files (down to
68 after cleanup). It would deserve a small cleanup though the cut points
are not obvious at the moment given the number of structs involved in
the struct proxy itself.
The current state of the logging is a real mess. The main problem is
that almost all files include log.h just in order to have access to
the alert/warning functions like ha_alert() etc, and don't care about
logs. But log.h also deals with real logging as well as log-format and
depends on stream.h and various other things. As such it forces a few
heavy files like stream.h to be loaded early and to hide missing
dependencies depending where it's loaded. Among the missing ones is
syslog.h which was often automatically included resulting in no less
than 3 users missing it.
Among 76 users, only 5 could be removed, and probably 70 don't need the
full set of dependencies.
A good approach would consist in splitting that file in 3 parts:
- one for error output ("errors" ?).
- one for log_format processing
- and one for actual logging.
The files were moved almost as-is, just dropping arg-t and auth-t from
acl-t but keeping arg-t in acl.h. It was useful to revisit the call places
since a handful of files used to continue to include acl.h while they did
not need it at all. Struct stream was only made a forward declaration
since not otherwise needed.
The stktable_types[] array declaration was moved to the main file as
it had nothing to do in the types. A few declarations were reordered
in the types file so that defines were before the structs. Thread-t
was added since there are a few __decl_thread(). The loss of peers.h
revealed that cfgparse-listen needed it.
The type file is becoming a mess, half of it is for the proxy protocol,
another good part describes conn_streams and mux ops, it would deserve
being split again. At least it was reordered so that elements are easier
to find, with the PP-stuff left at the end. The MAX_SEND_FD macro was moved
to compat.h as it's said to be the value for Linux.
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.
This one is particularly tricky to move because everyone uses it
and it depends on a lot of other types. For example it cannot include
arg-t.h and must absolutely only rely on forward declarations to avoid
dependency loops between vars -> sample_data -> arg. In order to address
this one, it would be nice to split the sample_data part out of sample.h.
List.h was missing for LIST_ADDQ(). A few unneeded includes of action.h
were removed from certain files.
This one still relies on applet.h and stick-table.h.
And also rename standard.c to tools.c. The original split between
tools.h and standard.h dates from version 1.3-dev and was mostly an
accident. This patch moves the files back to what they were expected
to be, and takes care of not changing anything else. However this
time tools.h was split between functions and types, because it contains
a small number of commonly used macros and structures (e.g. name_desc)
which in turn cause the massive list of includes of tools.h to conflict
with the callers.
They remain the ugliest files of the whole project and definitely need
to be cleaned and split apart. A few types are defined there only for
functions provided there, and some parts are even OS-specific and should
move somewhere else, such as the symbol resolution code.
This one is included almost everywhere and used to rely on a few other
.h that are not needed (unistd, stdlib, standard.h). It could possibly
make sense to split it into multiple parts to distinguish operations
performed on timers and the internal time accounting, but at this point
it does not appear much important.
Half of the users of this include only need the type definitions and
not the manipulation macros nor the inline functions. Moves the various
types into mini-clist-t.h makes the files cleaner. The other one had all
its includes grouped at the top. A few files continued to reference it
without using it and were cleaned.
In addition it was about time that we'd rename that file, it's not
"mini" anymore and contains a bit more than just circular lists.
This one used to be stored into debug.h but the debug tools got larger
and require a lot of other includes, which can't use BUG_ON() anymore
because of this. It does not make sense and instead this macro should
be placed into the lower includes and given its omnipresence, the best
solution is to create a new bug.h with the few surrounding macros needed
to trigger bugs and place assertions anywhere.
Another benefit is that it won't be required to add include <debug.h>
anymore to use BUG_ON, it will automatically be covered by api.h. No
less than 32 occurrences were dropped.
The FSM_PRINTF macro was dropped since not used at all anymore (probably
since 1.6 or so).
All files that were including one of the following include files have
been updated to only include haproxy/api.h or haproxy/api-t.h once instead:
- common/config.h
- common/compat.h
- common/compiler.h
- common/defaults.h
- common/initcall.h
- common/tools.h
The choice is simple: if the file only requires type definitions, it includes
api-t.h, otherwise it includes the full api.h.
In addition, in these files, explicit includes for inttypes.h and limits.h
were dropped since these are now covered by api.h and api-t.h.
No other change was performed, given that this patch is large and
affects 201 files. At least one (tools.h) was already freestanding and
didn't get the new one added.
When an end pointer is passed, instead of complaining that a comma is
missing after a keyword, sample_parse_expr() will silently return the
pointer to the current location into this return pointer so that the
caller can continue its parsing. This will be used by more complex
expressions which embed sample expressions, and may even permit to
embed sample expressions into arguments of other expressions.