The connection's h2c context is now allocated and initialized on mux
initialization, and released on mux destruction. Note that for now the
release() code is never called.
We need to deal with stream error notifications (RST_STREAM) as well as
internal reporting. The problem is that we don't know in which order
this will be done so we can't unilaterally decide to deallocate the
stream. In order to help, we add two extra stream states, H2_SS_ERROR
and H2_SS_RESET. The former mentions that the stream has an error pending
and the latter indicates that the error was already sent and that the
stream is now closed. It's equivalent to H2_SS_CLOSED except that in this
state we'll avoid sending new RST_STREAM as per RFC7540#5.4.2.
With this it will be possible to only detach or deallocate the h2s once
the stream is closed.
This describes an HTTP/2 stream with its relation to the connection
and to the conn_stream on the other side.
For now we also allocate request and response state for HTTP/1 because
the internal HTTP representation is HTTP/1 at the moment. Later this
should evolve towards a version-agnostic representation and this H1
message state will disappear.
It's important to consider that the streams are necessarily polarized
depending on h2c : if the connection is incoming, streams initiated by
the connection receive requests and send responses. Otherwise it's the
other way around. Such information is known during the connection
instanciation by h2c_frt_init() and will normally be reflected in the
stream ID (odd=demux from client, even=demux from server). The initial
H2_CS_PREFACE state will also depend on the direction. The current h2c
state machine doesn't allow for outgoing connections as it uses a single
state for both (rx state only). It should be the demux state only.
The h2c struct describes an H2 connection context and is assigned as the
mux's context. It has its own pool, allocated at boot time and released
after deinit().