In the various takeover() methods, make sure we schedule the old tasklet
on the old thread, as we don't want it to run on our own thread! This
was causing a very rare crash when building with DEBUG_STRICT, seeing
that either an FD's thread mask didn't match the thread ID in h1_io_cb(),
or that stream_int_notify() would try to queue a task with the wrong
tid_bit.
In order to reproduce this, it is necessary to maintain many connections
(typically 30k) at a high request rate flowing over H1+SSL between two
proxies, the second of which would randomly reject ~1% of the incoming
connection and randomly killing some idle ones using a very short client
timeout. The request rate must be adjusted so that the CPUs are nearly
saturated, but never reach 100%. It's easier to reproduce this by skipping
local connections and always picking from other threads. The issue
should happen in less than 20s otherwise it's necessary to restart to
reset the idle connections lists.
No backport is needed, takeover() is 2.2 only.
We used to have 3 thread-based arrays for toremove_lock, idle_cleanup,
and toremove_connections. The problem is that these items are small,
and that this creates false sharing between threads since it's possible
to pack up to 8-16 of these values into a single cache line. This can
cause real damage where there is contention on the lock.
This patch creates a new array of struct "idle_conns" that is aligned
on a cache line and which contains all three members above. This way
each thread has access to its variables without hindering the other
ones. Just doing this increased the HTTP/1 request rate by 5% on a
16-thread machine.
The definition was moved to connection.{c,h} since it appeared a more
natural evolution of the ongoing changes given that there was already
one of them declared in connection.h previously.
There are list definitions everywhere in the code, let's drop the need
for including list-t.h to declare them. The rest of the list manipulation
is huge however and not needed everywhere so using the list walking macros
still requires to include list.h.
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.
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.