745 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Willy Tarreau
c24715e5f7 MAJOR: http: don't update msg->sov anymore while processing the body
We used to have msg->sov updated for every chunk that was parsed. The issue
is that we want to be able to rewind after chunks were parsed in case we need
to redispatch a request and perform a new hash on the request or insert a
different server header name.

Currently, msg->sov and msg->next make parallel progress. We reached a point
where they're always equal because msg->next is initialized from msg->sov,
and is subtracted msg->sov's value each time msg->sov bytes are forwarded.
So we can now ensure that msg->sov can always be replaced by msg->next for
every state after HTTP_MSG_BODY where it is used as a position counter.

This allows us to keep msg->sov untouched whatever the number of chunks that
are parsed, as is needed to extract data from POST request (eg: url_param).
However, we still need to know the starting position of the data relative to
the body, which differs by the chunk size length. We use msg->sol for this
since it's now always zero and unused in the body.

So with this patch, we have the following situation :

 - msg->sov = msg->eoh + msg->eol = size of the headers including last CRLF
 - msg->sol = length of the chunk size if any. So msg->sov + msg->sol = DATA.
 - msg->next corresponds to the byte being inspected based on the current
   state and is always >= msg->sov before starting to forward anything.

Since sov and next are updated in case of header rewriting, a rewind will
fix them both when needed. Of course, ->sol has no reason for changing in
such conditions, so it's fine to keep it relative to msg->sov.

In theory, even if a redispatch has to be performed, a transformation
occurring on the request would still work because the data moved would
still appear at the same place relative to bug->p.
2014-04-22 23:15:28 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
226071e0a7 MEDIUM: http: wait for the first chunk or message body length in http_process_body
This is the continuation of previous patch. Now that full buffers are
not rejected anymore, let's wait for at least the advertised chunk or
body length to be present or the buffer to be full. When either
condition is met, the message processing can go forward.

Thus we don't need to use url_param_post_limit anymore, which was passed
in the configuration as an optionnal <max_wait> parameter after the
"check_post" value. This setting was necessary when the feature was
implemented because there was no support for parsing message bodies.

The argument is now silently ignored if set in the configuration.
2014-04-22 23:15:27 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
36346247ac BUG/MEDIUM: http: continue to emit 503 on keep-alive to different server
Finn Arne Gangstad reported that commit 6b726adb35 ("MEDIUM: http: do
not report connection errors for second and further requests") breaks
support for serving static files by abusing the errorfile 503 statement.

Indeed, a second request over a connection sent to any server or backend
returning 503 would silently be dropped.

The proper solution consists in adding a flag on the session indicating
that the server connection was reused, and to only avoid the error code
in this case.
2014-02-24 18:26:30 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
2481d167ef BUG/MEDIUM: backend: prefer-last-server breaks redispatch
Since 1.5-dev20, we have a working server-side keep-alive and an option
"prefer-last-server" to indicate that we explicitly want to reuse the
same server as the last one. Unfortunately this breaks the redispatch
feature because assign_server() insists on reusing the same server as
the first one attempted even if the connection failed to establish.

A simple solution consists in only considering the last connection if
it was connected. Otherwise there is no reason for being interested in
reusing the same server.
2014-02-24 13:21:32 +01:00
Bhaskar Maddala
a20cb85eba MINOR: stats: Enhancement to stats page to provide information of last session time.
Summary:
Track and report last session time on the stats page for each server
in every backend, as well as the backend.

This attempts to address the requirement in the ROADMAP

  - add a last activity date for each server (req/resp) that will be
    displayed in the stats. It will be useful with soft stop.

The stats page reports this as time elapsed since last session. This
change does not adequately address the requirement for long running
session (websocket, RDP... etc).
2014-02-08 01:19:58 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
068621e4ad MINOR: http: try to stick to same server after status 401/407
In HTTP keep-alive mode, if we receive a 401, we still have a chance
of being able to send the visitor again to the same server over the
same connection. This is required by some broken protocols such as
NTLM, and anyway whenever there is an opportunity for sending the
challenge to the proper place, it's better to do it (at least it
helps with debugging).
2013-12-23 15:12:44 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
ff605db510 BUG/MEDIUM: backend: do not re-initialize the connection's context upon reuse
If we reuse a server-side connection, we must not reinitialize its context nor
try to enable send_proxy. At the moment HTTP keep-alive over SSL fails on the
first attempt because the SSL context was cleared, so it only worked after a
retry.
2013-12-20 11:09:51 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
9420b1271d MINOR: http: add option prefer-last-server
When the load balancing algorithm in use is not deterministic, and a previous
request was sent to a server to which haproxy still holds a connection, it is
sometimes desirable that subsequent requests on a same session go to the same
server as much as possible. Note that this is different from persistence, as
we only indicate a preference which haproxy tries to apply without any form
of warranty. The real use is for keep-alive connections sent to servers. When
this option is used, haproxy will try to reuse the same connection that is
attached to the server instead of rebalancing to another server, causing a
close of the connection. This can make sense for static file servers. It does
not make much sense to use this in combination with hashing algorithms.
2013-12-16 02:23:54 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
34601a8f98 MAJOR: backend: enable connection reuse
This commit allows an existing server-side connection to be reused if
it matches the same target. Basic controls are performed ; right now
we do not allow to reuse a connection when dynamic source binding is
in use or when the destination address or port is dynamic (eg: proxy
mode). Later we'll have to also disable connection sharing when PROXY
protocol is being used or when non-idempotent requests are processed.
2013-12-16 02:23:54 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
9471b8ced9 MEDIUM: connection: inform si_alloc_conn() whether existing conn is OK or not
When allocating a new connection, only the caller knows whether it's
acceptable to reuse the previous one or not. Let's pass this information
to si_alloc_conn() which will do the cleanup if the connection is not
acceptable.
2013-12-16 02:23:53 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
ff5ae35b9f MINOR: checks: use check->state instead of srv->state & SRV_CHECKED
Having the check state partially stored in the server doesn't help.
Some functions such as srv_getinter() rely on the server being checked
to decide what check frequency to use, instead of relying on the check
being configured. So let's get rid of SRV_CHECKED and SRV_AGENT_CHECKED
and only use the check's states instead.
2013-12-14 16:02:19 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
b8020cefed MEDIUM: connection: move the send_proxy offset to the connection
Till now the send_proxy_ofs field remained in the stream interface,
but since the dynamic allocation of the connection, it makes a lot
of sense to move that into the connection instead of the stream
interface, since it will not be statically allocated for each
session.

Also, it turns out that moving it to the connection fils an alignment
hole on 64 bit architectures so it does not consume more memory, and
removing it from the stream interface was an opportunity to correctly
reorder fields and reduce the stream interface's size from 160 to 144
bytes (-10%). This is 32 bytes saved per session.
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
32e3c6a607 MAJOR: stream interface: dynamically allocate the outgoing connection
The outgoing connection is now allocated dynamically upon the first attempt
to touch the connection's source or destination address. If this allocation
fails, we fail on SN_ERR_RESOURCE.

As we didn't use si->conn anymore, it was removed. The endpoints are released
upon session_free(), on the error path, and upon a new transaction. That way
we are able to carry the existing server's address across retries.

The stream interfaces are not initialized anymore before session_complete(),
so we could even think about allocating them dynamically as well, though
that would not provide much savings.

The session initialization now makes use of conn_new()/conn_free(). This
slightly simplifies the code and makes it more logical. The connection
initialization code is now shorter by about 120 bytes because it's done
at once, allowing the compiler to remove all redundant initializations.

The si_attach_applet() function now takes care of first detaching the
existing endpoint, and it is called from stream_int_register_handler(),
so we can safely remove the calls to si_release_endpoint() in the
application code around this call.

A call to si_detach() was made upon stream_int_unregister_handler() to
ensure we always free the allocated connection if one was allocated in
parallel to setting an applet (eg: detect HTTP proxy while proceeding
with stats maybe).
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
2a6e8802c0 MEDIUM: stream-interface: introduce si_attach_conn to replace si_prepare_conn
si_prepare_conn() is not appropriate in our case as it both initializes and
attaches the connection to the stream interface. Due to the asymmetry between
accept() and connect(), it causes some fields such as the control and transport
layers to be reinitialized.

Now that we can separately initialize these fields using conn_prepare(), let's
break this function to only attach the connection to the stream interface.

Also, by analogy, si_prepare_none() was renamed si_detach(), and
si_prepare_applet() was renamed si_attach_applet().
2013-12-09 15:40:23 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
b363a1f469 MAJOR: stream-int: stop using si->conn and use si->end instead
The connection will only remain there as a pre-allocated entity whose
goal is to be placed in ->end when establishing an outgoing connection.
All connection initialization can be made on this connection, but all
information retrieved should be applied to the end point only.

This change is huge because there were many users of si->conn. Now the
only users are those who initialize the new connection. The difficulty
appears in a few places such as backend.c, proto_http.c, peers.c where
si->conn is used to hold the connection's target address before assigning
the connection to the stream interface. This is why we have to keep
si->conn for now. A future improvement might consist in dynamically
allocating the connection when it is needed.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
691b1f429e CLEANUP: stream-int: remove obsolete si_ctrl function
This function makes no sense anymore and will cause trouble to convert
the remains of connection/applet to end points. Let's replace it now
with its contents.
2013-12-09 15:40:22 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
08382955fe CLEANUP: stream_interface: remove unused field err_loc
This field was still fed with a pointer to the server that caught an
error but was not used anymore. Let's remove it.
2013-12-09 15:40:21 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
1903acdf3a BUG/MINOR: backend: fix target address retrieval in transparent mode
A very old bug resulting from some code refactoring causes
assign_server_address() to refrain from retrieving the destination
address from the client-side connection when transparent mode is
enabled and we're connecting to a server which has address 0.0.0.0.

The impact is low since such configurations are unlikely to ever
be encountered. The fix should be backported to older branches.
2013-12-01 21:46:24 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
a0f4271497 MEDIUM: backend: add support for the wt6 hash
This function was designed for haproxy while testing other functions
in the past. Initially it was not planned to be used given the not
very interesting numbers it showed on real URL data : it is not as
smooth as the other ones. But later tests showed that the other ones
are extremely sensible to the server count and the type of input data,
especially DJB2 which must not be used on numeric input. So in fact
this function is still a generally average performer and it can make
sense to merge it in the end, as it can provide an alternative to
sdbm+avalanche or djb2+avalanche for consistent hashing or when hashing
on numeric data such as a source IP address or a visitor identifier in
a URL parameter.
2013-11-14 16:37:50 +01:00
Bhaskar Maddala
b6c0ac94a4 MEDIUM: backend: Implement avalanche as a modifier of the hashing functions.
Summary:
Avalanche is supported not as a native hashing choice, but a modifier
on the hashing function. Note that this means that possible configs
written after 1.5-dev4 using "hash-type avalanche" will get an informative
error instead. But as discussed on the mailing list it seems nobody ever
used it anyway, so let's fix it before the final 1.5 release.

The default values were selected for backward compatibility with previous
releases, as discussed on the mailing list, which means that the consistent
hashing will still apply the avalanche hash by default when no explicit
algorithm is specified.

Examples
  (default) hash-type map-based
	Map based hashing using sdbm without avalanche

  (default) hash-type consistent
	Consistent hashing using sdbm with avalanche

Additional Examples:

  (a) hash-type map-based sdbm
	Same as default for map-based above
  (b) hash-type map-based sdbm avalanche
	Map based hashing using sdbm with avalanche
  (c) hash-type map-based djb2
	Map based hashing using djb2 without avalanche
  (d) hash-type map-based djb2 avalanche
	Map based hashing using djb2 with avalanche
  (e) hash-type consistent sdbm avalanche
	Same as default for consistent above
  (f) hash-type consistent sdbm
	Consistent hashing using sdbm without avalanche
  (g) hash-type consistent djb2
	Consistent hashing using djb2 without avalanche
  (h) hash-type consistent djb2 avalanche
	Consistent hashing using djb2 with avalanche
2013-11-14 16:37:50 +01:00
Bhaskar
98634f0c7b MEDIUM: backend: Enhance hash-type directive with an algorithm options
Summary:
In testing at tumblr, we found that using djb2 hashing instead of the
default sdbm hashing resulted is better workload distribution to our backends.

This commit implements a change, that allows the user to specify the hash
function they want to use. It does not limit itself to consistent hashing
scenarios.

The supported hash functions are sdbm (default), and djb2.

For a discussion of the feature and analysis, see mailing list thread
"Consistent hashing alternative to sdbm" :

      http://marc.info/?l=haproxy&m=138213693909219

Note: This change does NOT make changes to new features, for instance,
applying an avalance hashing always being performed before applying
consistent hashing.
2013-11-14 16:37:50 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
cadd8c9ec3 MINOR: payload: split smp_fetch_rdp_cookie()
This function is also called directly from backend.c, so let's stop
building fake args to call it as a sample fetch, and have a lower
layer more generic function instead.
2013-08-01 21:17:13 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
ef38c39287 MEDIUM: sample: systematically pass the keyword pointer to the keyword
We're having a lot of duplicate code just because of minor variants between
fetch functions that could be dealt with if the functions had the pointer to
the original keyword, so let's pass it as the last argument. An earlier
version used to pass a pointer to the sample_fetch element, but this is not
the best solution for two reasons :
  - fetch functions will solely rely on the keyword string
  - some other smp_fetch_* users do not have the pointer to the original
    keyword and were forced to pass NULL.

So finally we're passing a pointer to the keyword as a const char *, which
perfectly fits the original purpose.
2013-08-01 21:17:13 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
dc13c11c1e BUG/MEDIUM: prevent gcc from moving empty keywords lists into BSS
Benoit Dolez reported a failure to start haproxy 1.5-dev19. The
process would immediately report an internal error with missing
fetches from some crap instead of ACL names.

The cause is that some versions of gcc seem to trim static structs
containing a variable array when moving them to BSS, and only keep
the fixed size, which is just a list head for all ACL and sample
fetch keywords. This was confirmed at least with gcc 3.4.6. And we
can't move these structs to const because they contain a list element
which is needed to link all of them together during the parsing.

The bug indeed appeared with 1.5-dev19 because it's the first one
to have some empty ACL keyword lists.

One solution is to impose -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss to everyone
but this is not really nice. Another solution consists in ensuring
the struct is never empty so that it does not move there. The easy
solution consists in having a non-null list head since it's not yet
initialized.

A new "ILH" list head type was thus created for this purpose : create
an Initialized List Head so that gcc cannot move the struct to BSS.
This fixes the issue for this version of gcc and does not create any
burden for the declarations.
2013-06-21 23:29:02 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
6d4e4e8dd2 MEDIUM: acl: remove a lot of useless ACLs that are equivalent to their fetches
The following 116 ACLs were removed because they're redundant with their
fetch function since last commit which allows the fetch function to be
used instead for types BOOL, INT and IP. Most places are now left with
an empty ACL keyword list that was not removed so that it's easier to
add other ACLs later.

always_false, always_true, avg_queue, be_conn, be_id, be_sess_rate, connslots,
nbsrv, queue, srv_conn, srv_id, srv_is_up, srv_sess_rate, res.comp, fe_conn,
fe_id, fe_sess_rate, dst_conn, so_id, wait_end, http_auth, http_first_req,
status, dst, dst_port, src, src_port, sc1_bytes_in_rate, sc1_bytes_out_rate,
sc1_clr_gpc0, sc1_conn_cnt, sc1_conn_cur, sc1_conn_rate, sc1_get_gpc0,
sc1_gpc0_rate, sc1_http_err_cnt, sc1_http_err_rate, sc1_http_req_cnt,
sc1_http_req_rate, sc1_inc_gpc0, sc1_kbytes_in, sc1_kbytes_out, sc1_sess_cnt,
sc1_sess_rate, sc1_tracked, sc1_trackers, sc2_bytes_in_rate,
sc2_bytes_out_rate, sc2_clr_gpc0, sc2_conn_cnt, sc2_conn_cur, sc2_conn_rate,
sc2_get_gpc0, sc2_gpc0_rate, sc2_http_err_cnt, sc2_http_err_rate,
sc2_http_req_cnt, sc2_http_req_rate, sc2_inc_gpc0, sc2_kbytes_in,
sc2_kbytes_out, sc2_sess_cnt, sc2_sess_rate, sc2_tracked, sc2_trackers,
sc3_bytes_in_rate, sc3_bytes_out_rate, sc3_clr_gpc0, sc3_conn_cnt,
sc3_conn_cur, sc3_conn_rate, sc3_get_gpc0, sc3_gpc0_rate, sc3_http_err_cnt,
sc3_http_err_rate, sc3_http_req_cnt, sc3_http_req_rate, sc3_inc_gpc0,
sc3_kbytes_in, sc3_kbytes_out, sc3_sess_cnt, sc3_sess_rate, sc3_tracked,
sc3_trackers, src_bytes_in_rate, src_bytes_out_rate, src_clr_gpc0,
src_conn_cnt, src_conn_cur, src_conn_rate, src_get_gpc0, src_gpc0_rate,
src_http_err_cnt, src_http_err_rate, src_http_req_cnt, src_http_req_rate,
src_inc_gpc0, src_kbytes_in, src_kbytes_out, src_sess_cnt, src_sess_rate,
src_updt_conn_cnt, table_avl, table_cnt, ssl_c_ca_err, ssl_c_ca_err_depth,
ssl_c_err, ssl_c_used, ssl_c_verify, ssl_c_version, ssl_f_version, ssl_fc,
ssl_fc_alg_keysize, ssl_fc_has_crt, ssl_fc_has_sni, ssl_fc_use_keysize,
2013-06-11 21:22:58 +02:00
Pieter Baauw
d551fb5a8d REORG: tproxy: prepare the transparent proxy defines for accepting other OSes
This patch does not change the logic of the code, it only changes the
way OS-specific defines are tested.

At the moment the transparent proxy code heavily depends on Linux-specific
defines. This first patch introduces a new define "CONFIG_HAP_TRANSPARENT"
which is set every time the defines used by transparent proxy are present.
This also means that with an up-to-date libc, it should not be necessary
anymore to force CONFIG_HAP_LINUX_TPROXY during the build, as the flags
will automatically be detected.

The CTTPROXY flags still remain separate because this older API doesn't
work the same way.

A new line has been added in the version output for haproxy -vv to indicate
what transparent proxy support is available.
2013-05-11 08:03:37 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
d86e29d2a1 CLEANUP: acl: remove unused references to ACL_USE_*
Now that acl->requires is not used anymore, we can remove all references
to it as well as all ACL_USE_* flags.
2013-04-03 02:13:00 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
c48c90dfa5 MAJOR: acl: remove the arg_mask from the ACL definition and use the sample fetch's
Now that ACLs solely rely on sample fetch functions, make them use the
same arg mask. All inconsistencies have been fixed separately prior to
this patch, so this patch almost only adds a new pointer indirection
and removes all references to ARG*() in the definitions.

The parsing is still performed by the ACL code though.
2013-04-03 02:12:58 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
8ed669b12a MAJOR: acl: make all ACLs reference the fetch function via a sample.
ACL fetch functions used to directly reference a fetch function. Now
that all ACL fetches have their sample fetches equivalent, we can make
ACLs reference a sample fetch keyword instead.

In order to simplify the code, a sample keyword name may be NULL if it
is the same as the ACL's, which is the most common case.

A minor change appeared, http_auth always expects one argument though
the ACL allowed it to be missing and reported as such afterwards, so
fix the ACL to match this. This is not really a bug.
2013-04-03 02:12:58 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
1a7eca19b8 MINOR: backend: rename sample fetch functions and declare the sample keywords
The following sample fetch functions were only usable by ACLs but are now
usable by sample fetches too :

  avg_queue, be_conn, be_id, be_sess_rate, connslots, nbsrv,
  queue, srv_conn, srv_id, srv_is_up, srv_sess_rate

The fetch functions have been renamed "smp_fetch_*".
2013-04-03 02:12:57 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
d4c33c8889 MEDIUM: samples: move payload-based fetches and ACLs to their own file
The file acl.c is a real mess, it both contains functions to parse and
process ACLs, and some sample extraction functions which act on buffers.
Some other payload analysers were arbitrarily dispatched to proto_tcp.c.

So now we're moving all payload-based fetches and ACLs to payload.c
which is capable of extracting data from buffers and rely on everything
that is protocol-independant. That way we can safely inflate this file
and only use the other ones when some fetches are really specific (eg:
HTTP, SSL, ...).

As a result of this cleanup, the following new sample fetches became
available even if they're not really useful :

  always_false, always_true, rep_ssl_hello_type, rdp_cookie_cnt,
  req_len, req_ssl_hello_type, req_ssl_sni, req_ssl_ver, wait_end

The function 'acl_fetch_nothing' was wrong and never used anywhere so it
was removed.

The "rdp_cookie" sample fetch used to have a mandatory argument while it
was optional in ACLs, which are supposed to iterate over RDP cookies. So
we're making it optional as a fetch too, and it will return the first one.
2013-04-03 02:12:57 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
9cd7d6ccfe CLEANUP: backend: use the same tproxy address selection code for servers and backends
This is just like previous commit, but for the backend this time. All this
code did not need to remain duplicated. These are 500 more bytes shaved off.
2012-12-09 10:06:01 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
ef9a360555 MEDIUM: connection: introduce "struct conn_src" for servers and proxies
Both servers and proxies share a common set of parameters for outgoing
connections, and since they're not stored in a similar structure, a lot
of code is duplicated in the connection setup, which is one sensible
area.

Let's first define a common struct for these settings and make use of it.
Next patches will de-duplicate code.

This change also fixes a build breakage that happens when USE_LINUX_TPROXY
is not set but USE_CTTPROXY is set, which seem to be very unlikely
considering that the issue was introduced almost 2 years ago an never
reported.
2012-12-09 10:04:39 +01:00
Tait Clarridge
7896d5293d MINOR: acl: add fetch for server session rate
Considering there is no option yet for maxconnrate for servers, I wrote
an ACL to check a backend server session rate which we use to send to an
"overflow" backend to prevent latency responses to our clients (very
sensitive latency requirements).
2012-12-06 07:52:09 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
3fdb366885 MAJOR: connection: replace struct target with a pointer to an enum
Instead of storing a couple of (int, ptr) in the struct connection
and the struct session, we use a different method : we only store a
pointer to an integer which is stored inside the target object and
which contains a unique type identifier. That way, the pointer allows
us to retrieve the object type (by dereferencing it) and the object's
address (by computing the displacement in the target structure). The
NULL pointer always corresponds to OBJ_TYPE_NONE.

This reduces the size of the connection and session structs. It also
simplifies target assignment and compare.

In order to improve the generated code, we try to put the obj_type
element at the beginning of all the structs (listener, server, proxy,
si_applet), so that the original and target pointers are always equal.

A lot of code was touched by massive replaces, but the changes are not
that important.
2012-11-12 00:42:33 +01:00
Willy Tarreau
f2943dccd0 MAJOR: session: detach the connections from the stream interfaces
We will need to be able to switch server connections on a session and
to keep idle connections. In order to achieve this, the preliminary
requirement is that the connections can survive the session and be
detached from them.

Right now they're still allocated at exactly the same place, so when
there is a session, there are always 2 connections. We could soon
improve on this by allocating the outgoing connection only during a
connect().

This current patch touches a lot of code and intentionally does not
change any functionnality. Performance tests show no regression (even
a very minor improvement). The doc has not yet been updated.
2012-10-26 20:15:20 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
9b28e03b66 MAJOR: channel: replace the struct buffer with a pointer to a buffer
With this commit, we now separate the channel from the buffer. This will
allow us to replace buffers on the fly without touching the channel. Since
nobody is supposed to keep a reference to a buffer anymore, doing so is not
a problem and will also permit some copy-less data manipulation.

Interestingly, these changes have shown a 2% performance increase on some
workloads, probably due to a better cache placement of data.
2012-10-13 09:07:52 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
f7bc57ca6e REORG: connection: rename the data layer the "transport layer"
While working on the changes required to make the health checks use the
new connections, it started to become obvious that some naming was not
logical at all in the connections. Specifically, it is not logical to
call the "data layer" the layer which is in charge for all the handshake
and which does not yet provide a data layer once established until a
session has allocated all the required buffers.

In fact, it's more a transport layer, which makes much more sense. The
transport layer offers a medium on which data can transit, and it offers
the functions to move these data when the upper layer requests this. And
it is the upper layer which iterates over the transport layer's functions
to move data which should be called the data layer.

The use case where it's obvious is with embryonic sessions : an incoming
SSL connection is accepted. Only the connection is allocated, not the
buffers nor stream interface, etc... The connection handles the SSL
handshake by itself. Once this handshake is complete, we can't use the
data functions because the buffers and stream interface are not there
yet. Hence we have to first call a specific function to complete the
session initialization, after which we'll be able to use the data
functions. This clearly proves that SSL here is only a transport layer
and that the stream interface constitutes the data layer.

A similar change will be performed to rename app_cb => data, but the
two could not be in the same commit for obvious reasons.
2012-10-04 22:26:09 +02:00
Cyril Bonté
3aaba440a2 BUILD: fix compilation error with DEBUG_FULL
Recent changes in structures broke the compilation when using DEBUG_FULL.
Let's update apply the changes also to the variables used in DPRINTF calls.
2012-09-24 20:36:39 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
ce39bfb7c4 BUG: backend: balance hdr was broken since 1.5-dev11
Alex Markham reported and diagnosed a bug appearing on 1.5-dev11,
causing a crash on x86_64 when header hashing is used. The cause is
a missing (int) cast causing a negative offset to appear positive
and the resulting pointer to go out of bounds.

The crash is not possible anymore since 1.5-dev12 because a second
bug caused the negative sign to disappear so the pointer is always
within range but always wrong, so balance hdr() never works anymore.

This fix restores the correct behaviour and ensures the sign is
correct.
2012-09-22 18:36:29 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
d1d5454180 REORG: split "protocols" files into protocol and listener
It was becoming confusing to have protocols and listeners in the same
files, split them.
2012-09-15 22:29:32 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
14f8e86da5 MEDIUM: proto_tcp: remove any dependence on stream_interface
The last uses of the stream interfaces were in tcp_connect_server() and
could easily and more appropriately be moved to its callers, si_connect()
and connect_server(), making a lot more sense.

Now the function should theorically be usable for health checks.

It also appears more obvious that the file is split into two distinct
parts :
  - the protocol layer used at the connection level
  - the tcp analysers executing tcp-* rules and their samples/acls.
2012-09-03 20:47:34 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
986a9d2d12 MAJOR: connection: move the addr field from the stream_interface
We need to have the source and destination addresses in the connection.
They were lying in the stream interface so let's move them. The flags
SI_FL_FROM_SET and SI_FL_TO_SET have been moved as well.

It's worth noting that tcp_connect_server() almost does not use the
stream interface anymore except for a few flags.

It has been identified that once we detach the connection from the SI,
it will probably be needed to keep a copy of the server-side addresses
in the SI just for logging purposes. This has not been implemented right
now though.
2012-09-03 20:47:34 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
3cefd521fa REORG: connection: move the target pointer from si to connection
The target is per connection and is directly used by the connection, so
we need it there. It's not needed anymore in the SI however.
2012-09-03 20:47:34 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
a75bcef867 REORG: buffer: move buffer_flush, b_adv and b_rew to buffer.h
These one now operate over real buffers, not channels anymore.
2012-09-03 20:47:32 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
c7e4238df0 REORG: buffers: split buffers into chunk,buffer,channel
Many parts of the channel definition still make use of the "buffer" word.
2012-09-03 20:47:32 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
c578891112 CLEANUP: connection: split sock_ops into data_ops, app_cp and si_ops
Some parts of the sock_ops structure were only used by the stream
interface and have been moved into si_ops. Some of them were callbacks
to the stream interface from the connection and have been moved into
app_cp as they're the application seen from the connection (later,
health-checks will need to use them). The rest has moved to data_ops.

Normally at this point the connection could live without knowing about
stream interfaces at all.
2012-09-03 20:47:31 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
75bf2c925f REORG: sock_raw: rename the files raw_sock*
The "raw_sock" prefix will be more convenient for naming functions as
it will be prefixed with the data layer and suffixed with the data
direction. So let's rename the files now to avoid any further confusion.

The #include directive was also removed from a number of files which do
not need it anymore.
2012-09-02 21:54:56 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
572bf9095d REORG/MAJOR: extract "struct buffer" from "struct channel"
At the moment, the struct is still embedded into the struct channel, but
all the functions have been updated to use struct buffer only when possible,
otherwise struct channel. Some functions would likely need to be splitted
between a buffer-layer primitive and a channel-layer function.

Later the buffer should become a pointer in the struct buffer, but doing so
requires a few changes to the buffer allocation calls.
2012-09-02 21:54:56 +02:00
Willy Tarreau
7421efb85f REORG/MAJOR: use "struct channel" instead of "struct buffer"
This is a massive rename. We'll then split channel and buffer.

This change needs a lot of cleanups. At many locations, the parameter
or variable is still called "buf" which will become ambiguous. Also,
the "struct channel" is still defined in buffers.h.
2012-09-02 21:54:55 +02:00