A few ACL keyword used to reference pat_delete_gen() as the deletion
function but this is not needed since it's the default one now. Let's
just remove this reference.
pat_del_tree_gen() was already chained onto pat_del_list_gen() to deal
with remaining cases, so let's complete the merge and have a generic
pattern deletion function acting on the reference and taking care of
reliably removing all elements.
Now we have a single prune() function to act on an expression, and one
delete function for the lists and one for the trees. The presence of a
pointer in the lists is enough to warrant a free, and we rely on the
PAT_SF_REGFREE flag to decide whether to free using free() or regfree().
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 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.
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.
It was moved as-is, except for extern declaration of pattern_reference.
A few C files used to include it but didn't need it anymore after having
been split apart so this was cleaned.
The STATS_DEFAULT_REALM and STATS_DEFAULT_URI were moved to defaults.h.
It was required to include types/pattern.h and types/sample.h since they
are mentioned in function prototypes.
It would be wise to merge this with uri_auth.h later.
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.
So the enums and structs were placed into http-t.h and the functions
into http.h. This revealed that several files were dependeng on http.h
but not including it, as it was silently inherited via other files.
Now the file is ready to be stored into its final destination. A few
minor reorderings were performed to keep the file properly organized,
making the various sections more visible (cache & lockless).
In addition and to stay consistent, memory.c was renamed to pool.c.
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.
This switches explicit calls to various trivial registration methods for
keywords, muxes or protocols from constructors to INITCALL1 at stage
STG_REGISTER. All these calls have in common to consume a single pointer
and return void. Doing this removes 26 constructors. The following calls
were addressed :
- acl_register_keywords
- bind_register_keywords
- cfg_register_keywords
- cli_register_kw
- flt_register_keywords
- http_req_keywords_register
- http_res_keywords_register
- protocol_register
- register_mux_proto
- sample_register_convs
- sample_register_fetches
- srv_register_keywords
- tcp_req_conn_keywords_register
- tcp_req_cont_keywords_register
- tcp_req_sess_keywords_register
- tcp_res_cont_keywords_register
- flt_register_keywords
The current proto_http.c file is huge and contains different processing
domains making it very difficult to work on an alternative representation.
This commit moves some parts to other files :
- ACL registration code => http_acl.c
This code only creates some ACL mappings and doesn't know anything
about HTTP nor about the representation. This code could even have
moved to acl.c but it was not worth polluting it again.
- HTTP sample conversion => http_conv.c
This code doesn't depend on the internal representation but definitely
manipulates some HTTP elements, such as dates. It also has access to
captures.
- HTTP sample fetching => http_fetch.c
This code does depend entirely on the internal representation but is
totally independent on the analysers. Placing it into a different
file will ease the transition to the new representation and the
creation of a wrapper if required. An include file was created due
to CHECK_HTTP_MESSAGE_FIRST() being used at various places.
- HTTP action registration => http_act.c
This code doesn't directly interact with the messages nor the
transaction but it does so via some exported http functions like
http_replace_req_line() or http_set_status() so it will be easier
to change only this after the conversion.
- a few very generic parts were found and moved to http.{c,h} as
relevant.
It is worth noting that the functions moved to these new files are not
referenced anywhere outside of the files and are only called as registered
callbacks, so these files do not even require associated include files.