In preparation for support default values when fetching variables, we
need to update the internal API to pass an extra argument to functions
vars_get_by_{name,desc} to provide an optional default value. This
patch does this and always passes NULL in this argument. var_to_smp()
was extended to fall back to this value when available.
The set-var() action is convenient because it preserves the input type
but it's a pain to deal with when trying to concatenate values. The
most recurring example is when it's needed to build a variable composed
of the source address and the source port. Usually it ends up like this:
tcp-request session set-var(sess.port) src_port
tcp-request session set-var(sess.addr) src,concat(":",sess.port)
This is even worse when trying to aggregate multiple fields from stick-table
data for example. Due to this a lot of users instead abuse headers from HTTP
rules:
http-request set-header(x-addr) %[src]:%[src_port]
But this requires some careful cleanups to make sure they won't leak, and
it's significantly more expensive to deal with. And generally speaking it's
not clean. Plus it must be performed for each and every request, which is
expensive for this common case of ip+port that doesn't change for the whole
session.
This patch addresses this limitation by implementing a new "set-var-fmt"
action which performs the same work as "set-var" but takes a format string
in argument instead of an expression. This way it becomes pretty simple to
just write:
tcp-request session set-var-fmt(sess.addr) %[src]:%[src_port]
It is usable in all rulesets that already support the "set-var" action.
It is not yet implemented for the global "set-var" directive (which already
takes a string) and the CLI's "set var" command, which would definitely
benefit from it but currently uses its own parser and engine, thus it
must be reworked.
The doc and regtests were updated.
For a long time we couldn't have arguments in expressions used in
tcp-request, tcp-response etc rules. But now due to the variables
it's possible, and their context in case of failure to resolve an
argument (e.g. backend name not found) is not properly reported
because there is no arg context values in ARGC_* to report them.
Let's add a number of missing ones for tcp-request {connection,
session,content}, tcp-response content, tcp-check, the config
parser (for "set-var" in the global section) and the CLI parser
(for "set-var" on the CLI).
Sometimes it is convenient to remap large sets of URIs to new ones (e.g.
after a site migration for example). This can be achieved using
"http-request redirect" combined with maps, but one difficulty there is
that non-matching entries will return an empty response. In order to
avoid this, duplicating the operation as an ACL condition ending in
"-m found" is possible but it becomes complex and error-prone while it's
known that an empty URL is not valid in a location header.
This patch addresses this by improving the redirect rules to be able to
simply ignore the rule and skip to the next one if the result of the
evaluation of the "location" expression is empty. However in order not
to break existing setups, it requires a new "ignore-empty" keyword.
There used to be an ACT_FLAG_FINAL on redirect rules that's used during
the parsing to emit a warning if followed by another rule, so here we
only set it if the option is not there. The http_apply_redirect_rule()
function now returns a 3rd value to mention that it did nothing and
that this was not an error, so that callers can just ignore the rule.
The regular "redirect" rules were not modified however since this does
not apply there.
The map_redirect VTC was completed with such a test and updated to 2.5
and an example was added into the documentation.
The locking in the dequeuing process was significantly improved by commit
49667c14b ("MEDIUM: queue: take the proxy lock only during the px queue
accesses") in that it tries hard to limit the time during which the
proxy's queue lock is held to the strict minimum. Unfortunately it's not
enough anymore, because we take up the task and manipulate a few pendconn
elements after releasing the proxy's lock (while we're under the server's
lock) but the task will not necessarily hold the server lock since it may
not have successfully found one (e.g. timeout in the backend queue). As
such, stream_free() calling pendconn_free() may release the pendconn
immediately after the proxy's lock is released while the other thread
currently proceeding with the dequeuing tries to wake up the owner's
task and dies in task_wakeup().
One solution consists in releasing le proxy's lock later. But tests have
shown that we'd have to sacrifice a significant share of the performance
gained with the patch above (roughly a 20% loss).
This patch takes another approach. It adds a "del_lock" to each pendconn
struct, that allows to keep it referenced while the proxy's lock is being
released. It's mostly a serialization lock like a refcount, just to maintain
the pendconn alive till the task_wakeup() call is complete. This way we can
continue to release the proxy's lock early while keeping this one. It had
to be added to the few points where we're about to free a pendconn, namely
in pendconn_dequeue() and pendconn_unlink(). This way we continue to
release the proxy's lock very early and there is no performance degradation.
This lock may only be held under the queue's lock to prevent lock
inversion.
No backport is needed since the patch above was merged in 2.5-dev only.
This option can be used to define a specific log format that will be
used in case of error, timeout, connection failure on a frontend... It
will be used for any log line concerned by the log-separate-errors
option. It will also replace the format of specific error messages
decribed in section 8.2.6.
If no "error-log-format" is defined, the legacy error messages are still
emitted and the other error logs keep using the regular log-format.
Other build warnings were emitted on LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER with -Wundef
under openssl < 1.1. Related to GH issue #1369. Seems like some of them
could be simplified a little bit.
Openssl-compat emits a warning for the test on LIBRESSL_VERSION that might
be underfined, if built with -Wundef. The fix is easy, let's do it. Related
to GH issue #1369.
As reported in GH issue #1369, there is a single case of #if with a
possibly undefined value in defaults.h which is on MAXHOSTNAMELEN. Let's
turn it to a #ifdef.
Before threads were introduced in 1.8, idle_pct used to be a global
variable indicating the overall process idle time. Threads made it
thread-local, meaning that its reporting in the stats made little
sense, though this was not easy to spot. In 2.0, the idle_pct variable
moved to the struct thread_info via commit 81036f273 ("MINOR: time:
move the cpu, mono, and idle time to thread_info"). It made it more
obvious that the idle_pct was per thread, and also allowed to more
accurately measure it. But no more effort was made in that direction.
This patch introduces a new report_idle() function that accurately
averages the per-thread idle time over all running threads (i.e. it
should remain valid even if some threads are paused or stopped), and
makes use of it in the stats / "show info" reports.
Sending traffic over only two connections of an 8-thread process
would previously show this erratic CPU usage pattern:
$ while :; do socat /tmp/sock1 - <<< "show info"|grep ^Idle;sleep 0.1;done
Idle_pct: 30
Idle_pct: 35
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 35
Idle_pct: 33
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Idle_pct: 100
Now it shows this more accurate measurement:
$ while :; do socat /tmp/sock1 - <<< "show info"|grep ^Idle;sleep 0.1;done
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
Idle_pct: 83
This is not technically a bug but this lack of precision definitely affects
some users who rely on the idle_pct measurement. This should at least be
backported to 2.4, and might be to some older releases depending on users
demand.
In 2.4 we extended the max poll time from 1s to 60s with commit
4f59d3861 ("MINOR: time: increase the minimum wakeup interval to 60s").
This had the consequence that the calculation of the idle time percentage
may overflow during the multiply by 100 if the thread had slept 43s or
more. Let's change this to a 64 bit computation. This will have no
performance impact since this is done at most twice per second.
This should fix github issue #1366.
This must be backported to 2.4.
To be able to provide JA3 compatible TLS Fingerprints we need to expose
all Client Hello captured data using fetchers. Patch provides new
and modifies existing fetchers to add ability to filter out GREASE values:
- ssl_fc_cipherlist_*
- ssl_fc_ecformats_bin
- ssl_fc_eclist_bin
- ssl_fc_extlist_bin
- ssl_fc_protocol_hello_id
When we set tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size to a non-zero value
we are able to capture cipherlist supported by the client. To be able to
provide JA3 compatible TLS fingerprinting we need to capture more
information from Client Hello message:
- SSL Version
- SSL Extensions
- Elliptic Curves
- Elliptic Curve Point Formats
This patch allows HAProxy to capture such information and store it for
later use.
There are regularly places, especially in config analysis, where we
need to report certain things (warnings or errors) only once, but
where implementing a counter is sufficiently deterrent so that it's
not done.
Let's add a simple ONLY_ONCE() macro that implements a static variable
(char) which is atomically turned on, and returns true if it's set for
the first time. This uses fairly compact code, a single byte of BSS
and is thread-safe. There are probably a number of places in the config
parser where this could be used. It may also be used to implement a
WARN_ON() similar to BUG_ON() but which would only warn once.
Define a flag to mark a server as non purgeable. This flag will be used
for "delete server" CLI handler. All servers without this flag will be
eligible to runtime suppression.
In a future patch, it will be possible to remove at runtime every
servers, both static and dynamic. This requires to extend the server
refcount for all instances.
First, refcount manipulation functions have been renamed to better
express the API usage.
* srv_refcount_use -> srv_take
The refcount is always initialize to 1 on the server creation in
new_server. It's also incremented for each check/agent configured on a
server instance.
* free_server -> srv_drop
This decrements the refcount and if null, the server is freed, so code
calling it must not use the server reference after it. As a bonus, this
function now returns the next server instance. This is useful when
calling on the server loop without having to save the next pointer
before each invocation.
In these functions, remove the checks that prevent refcount on
non-dynamic servers. Each reference to "dynamic" in variable/function
naming have been eliminated as well.
A dynamic server may be deleted at runtime at the same moment when the
stats applet is pointing to it. Use the server refcount to prevent
deletion in this case.
This should be backported up to 2.4, with an observability period of 2
weeks. Note that it requires the dynamic server refcounting feature
which has been implemented on 2.5; the following commits are required :
- MINOR: server: implement a refcount for dynamic servers
- BUG/MINOR: server: do not use refcount in free_server in stopping mode
- MINOR: server: return the next srv instance on free_server
As a convenience, return the next server instance from servers list on
free_server.
This is particularily useful when using this function on the servers
list without having to save of the next pointer before calling it.
Implements a way of checking the running openssl version:
If the OpenSSL support was not compiled within HAProxy it will returns a
error, so it's recommanded to do a SSL feature check before:
$ ./haproxy -cc 'feature(OPENSSL) && openssl_version_atleast(0.9.8zh) && openssl_version_before(3.0.0)'
This will allow to select the SSL reg-tests more carefully.
Include the correct .h files in http_client.c and http_client.h.
The api.h is needed in http_client.c and http_client-t.h is now include
directly from http_client.h
The X509_STORE_CTX_get0_cert did not exist yet on OpenSSL 1.0.2 and
neither did X509_STORE_CTX_get0_chain, which was not actually needed
since its get1 equivalent already existed.
Most of the SSL sample fetches related to the client certificate were
based on the SSL_get_peer_certificate function which returns NULL when
the verification process failed. This made it impossible to use those
fetches in a log format since they would always be empty.
The patch adds a reference to the X509 object representing the client
certificate in the SSL structure and makes use of this reference in the
fetches.
The reference can only be obtained in ssl_sock_bind_verifycbk which
means that in case of an SSL error occurring before the verification
process ("no shared cipher" for instance, which happens while processing
the Client Hello), we won't ever start the verification process and it
will be impossible to get information about the client certificate.
This patch also allows most of the ssl_c_XXX fetches to return a usable
value in case of connection failure (because of a verification error for
instance) by making the "conn->flags & CO_FL_WAIT_XPRT" test (which
requires a connection to be established) less strict.
Thanks to this patch, a log-format such as the following should return
usable information in case of an error occurring during the verification
process :
log-format "DN=%{+Q}[ssl_c_s_dn] serial=%[ssl_c_serial,hex] \
hash=%[ssl_c_sha1,hex]"
It should answer to GitHub issue #693.
This commit implements a very simple HTTP Client API.
A client can be operated by several functions:
- httpclient_new(), httpclient_destroy(): create
and destroy the struct httpclient instance.
- httpclient_req_gen(): generate a complete HTX request using the
the absolute URL, the method and a list of headers. This request
is complete and sets the HTX End of Message flag. This is limited
to small request we don't need a body.
- httpclient_start() fill a sockaddr storage with a IP extracted
from the URL (it cannot resolve an fqdm for now), start the
applet. It also stores the ptr of the caller which could be an
appctx or something else.
- hc->ops contains a list of callbacks used by the
HTTPClient, they should be filled manually after an
httpclient_new():
* res_stline(): the client received a start line, its content
will be stored in hc->res.vsn, hc->res.status, hc->res.reason
* res_headers(): the client received headers, they are stored in
hc->res.hdrs.
* res_payload(): the client received some payload data, they are
stored in the hc->res.buf buffer and could be extracted with the
httpclient_res_xfer() function, which takes a destination buffer
as a parameter
* res_end(): this callback is called once we finished to receive
the response.
While http_parse_scheme() extracts a scheme from a URI by extracting
exactly the valid characters and stopping on delimiters, this new
function performs the same on a fixed-size string.
This new class exposes methods to manipulate HTTP messages from a filter
written in lua. Like for the HTTP class, there is a bunch of methods to
manipulate the message headers. But there are also methods to manipulate the
message payload. This part is similar to what is available in the Channel
class. Thus the payload can be duplicated, erased, modified or
forwarded. For now, only DATA blocks can be retrieved and modified because
the current API is limited. No HTTPMessage method is able to yield. Those
manipulating the headers are always called on messages containing all the
headers, so there is no reason to yield. Those manipulating the payload are
called from the http_payload filters callback function where yielding is
forbidden.
When an HTTPMessage object is instantiated, the underlying Channel object
can be retrieved via the ".channel" field.
For now this class is not used because the HTTP filtering is not supported
yet. It will be the purpose of another commit.
There is no documentation for now.
A lua TXN can be created when a sample fetch, an action or a filter callback
function is executed. A flag is now used to track the execute context.
Respectively, HLUA_TXN_SMP_CTX, HLUA_TXN_ACT_CTX and HLUA_TXN_FLT_CTX. The
filter flag is not used for now.
When a script is executed, a flag is used to allow it to yield. An error is
returned if a lua function yield, explicitly or not. But there is no way to
get this capability in C functions. So there is no way to choose to yield or
not depending on this capability.
To fill this gap, the flag HLUA_NOYIELD is introduced and added on the lua
context if the current script execution is not authorized to yield. Macros
to set, clear and test this flags are also added.
This feature will be usefull to fix some bugs in lua actions execution.
Implement a mechanism to free a started check on runtime for dynamic
servers. A new function check_purge is created for this. The check task
will be marked for deletion and scheduled to properly close connection
elements and free the task/tasklet/buf_wait elements.
This function will be useful to delete a dynamic server wich checks.
It is necessary to have a refcount mechanism on dynamic servers to be
able to enable check support. Indeed, when deleting a dynamic server
with check activated, the check will be asynchronously removed. This is
mandatory to properly free the check resources in a thread-safe manner.
The server instance must be kept alive for this.
Remove static qualifier on init_srv_check, init_srv_agent_check and
start_check_task. These functions will be called in server.c for dynamic
servers with checks.
Implement an equivalent of task_kill for tasklets. This function can be
used to request a tasklet deletion in a thread-safe way.
Currently this function is unused.
There was no way to access the SPOE filter configuration from the agent
object. However it could be handy to have it. And in fact, this will be
required to fix a bug.
Right now we're using a DWCAS to atomically set the running_mask while
being constrained by the thread_mask. This DWCAS is annoying because we
may seriously need it later when adding support for thread groups, for
checking that the running_mask applies to the correct group.
It turns out that the DWCAS is not strictly necessary because we never
need it to set the thread_mask based on the running_mask, only the other
way around. And in fact, the running_mask is always cleared alone, and
the thread_mask is changed alone as well. The running_mask is only
relevant to indicate a takeover when the thread_mask matches it. Any
bit set in running and not present in thread_mask indicates a transition
in progress.
As such, it is possible to re-arrange this by using a regular CAS around a
consistency check between running_mask and thread_mask in fd_update_events
and by making a CAS on running_mask then an atomic store on the thread_mask
in fd_takeover(). The only other case is fd_delete() but that one already
sets the running_mask before clearing the thread_mask, which is compatible
with the consistency check above.
This change has happily survived 10 billion takeovers on a 16-thread
machine at 800k requests/s.
The fd-migration doc was updated to reflect this change.
This one is set whenever an FD is reported by a poller with a null owner,
regardless of the thread_mask. It has become totally meaningless because
it only indicates a migrated FD that was not yet reassigned to a thread,
but as soon as a thread uses it, the status will change to skip_fd. Thus
there is no reason to distinguish between the two, it adds more confusion
than it helps. Let's simply drop it.
The current principle of running under isolation was made to access
sensitive data while being certain that no other thread was using them
in parallel, without necessarily having to place locks everywhere. The
main use case are "show sess" and "show fd" which run over long chains
of pointers.
The thread_isolate() call relies on the "harmless" bit that indicates
for a given thread that it's not currently doing such sensitive things,
which is advertised using thread_harmless_now() and which ends usings
thread_harmless_end(), which also waits for possibly concurrent threads
to complete their work if they took this opportunity for starting
something tricky.
As some system calls were notoriously slow (e.g. mmap()), a bunch of
thread_harmless_now() / thread_harmless_end() were placed around them
to let waiting threads do their work while such other threads were not
able to modify memory contents.
But this is not sufficient for performing memory modifications. One such
example is the server deletion code. By modifying memory, it not only
requires that other threads are not playing with it, but are not either
in the process of touching it. The fact that a pool_alloc() or pool_free()
on some structure may call thread_harmless_now() and let another thread
start to release the same object's memory is not acceptable.
This patch introduces the concept of "idle threads". Threads entering
the polling loop are idle, as well as those that are waiting for all
others to become idle via the new function thread_isolate_full(). Once
thread_isolate_full() is granted, the thread is not idle anymore, and
it is released using thread_release() just like regular isolation. Its
users have to keep in mind that across this call nothing is granted as
another thread might have performed shared memory modifications. But
such users are extremely rare and are actually expecting this from their
peers as well.
Note that that in case of backport, this patch depends on previous patch:
MINOR: threads: make thread_release() not wait for other ones to complete
This patch splits the disabled state of a proxy into a PR_DISABLED and a
PR_STOPPED state.
The first one is set when the proxy is disabled in the configuration
file, and the second one is set upon a stop_proxy().
Rename the 'dontloglegacyconnerr' option to 'log-error-via-logformat'
which is much more self-explanatory and readable.
Note: only legacy keywords don't use hyphens, it is recommended to
separate words with them in new keywords.
The x86-tso model makes the load and store barriers unneeded for our
usage as long as they perform at least a compiler barrier: the CPU
will respect store ordering and store vs load ordering. It's thus
safe to remove the lfence and sfence which are normally needed only
to communicate with external devices. Let's keep the mfence though,
to make sure that reads of same memory location after writes report
the value from memory and not the one snooped from the write buffer
for too long.
An in-depth review of all use cases tends to indicate that this is
okay in the rest of the code. Some parts could be cleaned up to
use atomic stores and atomic loads instead of explicit barriers
though.
Doing this reliably increases the overall performance by about 2-2.5%
on a 8c-16t Xeon thanks to less frequent flushes (it's likely that the
biggest gain is in the MT lists which use them a lot, and that this
results in less cache line flushes).
The atomic_load/atomic_store/atomic_xchg operations were all forced to
__ATOMIC_SEQ_CST, which results in explicit store or even full barriers
even on x86-tso while we do not need them: we're not communicating with
external devices for example and are only interested in respecting the
proper ordering of loads and stores between each other.
These ones being rarely used, the emitted code on x86 remains almost the
same (barring a handful of locations). However they will allow to place
correct barriers at other places where atomics are accessed a bit lightly.
The patch is marked medium because we can never rule out the risk of some
bugs on more relaxed platforms due to the rest of the code.
update_freq_ctr_period() was using relaxed atomics without using barriers,
which usually works fine on x86 but not everywhere else. In addition, some
values were read without being enclosed by barriers, allowing the compiler
to possibly prefetch them a bit earlier. Finally, freq_ctr_total() was also
reading these without enough barriers. Let's make explicit use of atomic
loads and atomic stores to get rid of this situation. This required to
slightly rearrange the freq_ctr_total() loop, which could possibly slightly
improve performance under extreme contention by avoiding to reread all
fields.
A backport may be done to 2.4 if a problem is encountered, but last tests
on arm64 with LSE didn't show any issue so this can possibly stay as-is.
This function already performs a number of checks prior to calling the
IOCB, and detects the change of thread (FD migration). Half of the
controls are still in each poller, and these pollers also maintain
activity counters for various cases.
Note that the unreliable test on thread_mask was removed so that only
the one performed by fd_set_running() is now used, since this one is
reliable.
Let's centralize all that fd-specific logic into the function and make
it return a status among:
FD_UPDT_DONE, // update done, nothing else to be done
FD_UPDT_DEAD, // FD was already dead, ignore it
FD_UPDT_CLOSED, // FD was closed
FD_UPDT_MIGRATED, // FD was migrated, ignore it now
Some pollers already used to call it last and have nothing to do after
it, regardless of the result. epoll has to delete the FD in case a
migration is detected. Overall this removes more code than it adds.