The proxy used by the master CLI is an internal proxy and no filter are
registered on it. Thus, there is no reason to take care to set or unset
filter analyzers in the master CLI analyzers. AN_REQ_FLT_END was set on the
request channel to prevent the infinite forward and be sure to be able to
process one commande at a time. However, the only work because
CF_FLT_ANALYZE flag was used by error as a channel analyzer instead of a
channel flag. This erroneously set AN_RES_FLT_END on the request channel,
that really prevent the infinite forward, be side effet.
In fact, We must avoid this kind of trick because this only work by chance
and may be source of bugs in future. Instead, we must always keep the CLI
request analyzer and add an early return if the response is not fully
processed. It happens when the CLI response analyzer is set.
This patch must be backported as far as 2.0.
With the master worker, the seamless reload was still requiring an
external stats socket to the previous process, which is a pain to
configure.
This patch implements a way to use the internal socketpair between the
master and the workers to transfer the sockets during the reload.
This way, the master will always try to transfer the socket, even
without any configuration.
The master will still reload with the -x argument, followed by the
sockpair@ syntax. ( ex -x sockpair@4 ). Which use the FD of internal CLI
to the worker.
Since recent 2.5 commit c8cac04bd ("MEDIUM: listener: deprecate "process"
in favor of "thread" on bind lines"), the "process" bind keyword may
report a warning. However some parts like the "stats socket" parser
will call such bind keywords and do not expect to face warnings, so
this will instantly cause a fatal error to be reported. A concrete
effect is that "stats socket ... process 1" will hard-fail indicating
the keyword is deprecated and will be removed in 2.7.
We must relax this test, but the code isn't designed to report warnings,
it uses a single string and only supports reporting an error code (-1).
This patch makes a special case of the ERR_WARN code and uses ha_warning()
to report it, and keeps the rest of the existing error code for other
non-warning codes. Now "process" on the "stats socket" is properly
reported as a warning.
No backport is needed.
The SHOW_TOT() and SHOW_AVG() macros used in cli_io_handler_show_activity()
produce a warning on gcc 4.7 on MIPS with threads disabled because the
compiler doesn't know that global.nbthread is necessarily non-null, hence
that at least one iteration is performed. Let's just change the loop for
a do {} while () that lets the compiler know it's always initialized. It
also has the tiny benefit of making the code shorter.
The ReloadFailed prompt in the master CLI is shown only when
failedreloads > 0. It was previously using a check on the wait mode, but
we always use the wait mode now.
The CLI's payload parser is over-complicated and as such contains more
bugs than needed. One of them is that it uses strstr() to find the
ending tag, ignoring spaces before it, while the argument locator
creates a new arg on each space, without checking if the end of the
word appears past the previously found end. This results in "<<" being
considered as the start of a new argument if preceeded by more than
one space, and the payload being damaged with a \0 inserted at the
first space or tab.
Let's make an easily backportable fix for now. This fix makes sure that
the trailing zero from the first line is properly kept after '<<' and
that the end tag is looked for only as an isolated argument and nothing
else. This also gets rid of the unsuitable strstr() call and now makes
sure that strcspn() will not return elements that are found in the
payload.
For the long term the loop must be rewritten to get rid of those
unsuitable strcspn() and strstr() calls which work past each other, and
the cli_parse_request() function should be split into a tokenizer and
an executor that are used from the caller instead of letting the caller
play games with what it finds there.
This should be backported wherever CLI payload is supported, i.e. 2.0+.
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.
Cleanup the mworker_cli_proxy_create() function by removing the
allocation and init of the proxy which is done manually, and replace it
by alloc_new_proxy(). Do the same with the free_proxy() function.
This patch also move the insertion at the end of the function.
A server name was displayed as <srv>/<proxy> instead of the reverse.
It only confuses diagnostics. This was introduced by commit 7a4a0ac71
("MINOR: cli: add a new "show fd" command") so this fix can be backport
down to 1.8.
This basically undoes the API changes that were performed by commit
0274286dd ("BUG/MAJOR: server: fix deadlock when changing maxconn via
agent-check") to address the deadlock issue: since process_srv_queue()
doesn't use the server lock anymore, it doesn't need the "server_locked"
argument, so let's get rid of it before it gets used again.
This reverts commit c83e45e9b0.
The recent changes since 5304669e1 MEDIUM: queue: make
pendconn_process_next_strm() only return the pendconn opened a tiny race
condition between stream_free() and process_srv_queue(), as the pendconn
is accessed outside of the lock, possibly while it's being freed. A
different approach is required.
This basically undoes the API changes that were performed by commit
0274286dd ("BUG/MAJOR: server: fix deadlock when changing maxconn via
agent-check") to address the deadlock issue: since process_srv_queue()
doesn't use the server lock anymore, it doesn't need the "server_locked"
argument, so let's get rid of it before it gets used again.
The server_parse_maxconn_change_request locks the server lock. However,
this function can be called via agent-checks or lua code which already
lock it. This bug has been introduced by the following commit :
commit 79a88ba3d0
BUG/MAJOR: server: prevent deadlock when using 'set maxconn server'
This commit tried to fix another deadlock with can occur because
previoulsy server_parse_maxconn_change_request requires the server lock
to be held. However, it may call internally process_srv_queue which also
locks the server lock. The locking policy has thus been updated. The fix
is functional for the CLI 'set maxconn' but fails to address the
agent-check / lua counterparts.
This new issue is fixed in two steps :
- changes from the above commit have been reverted. This means that
server_parse_maxconn_change_request must again be called with the
server lock.
- to counter the deadlock fixed by the above commit, process_srv_queue
now takes an argument to render the server locking optional if the
caller already held it. This is only used by
server_parse_maxconn_change_request.
The above commit was subject to backport up to 1.8. Thus this commit
must be backported in every release where it is already present.
The relative_pid is always 1. In mworker mode we also have a
child->relative_pid which is always equalt relative_pid, except for a
master (0) or external process (-1), but these types are usually tested
for, except for one place that was amended to carefully check for the
PROC_O_TYPE_WORKER option.
Changes were pretty limited as most usages of relative_pid were for
designating a process in stats output and peers protocol.
Lots of places iterating over nbproc or comparing with nbproc could be
simplified. Further, "bind-process" and "process" parsing that was
already limited to process 1 or "all" or "odd" resulted in a bind_proc
field that was either 0 or 1 during the init phase and later always 1.
All the checks for compatibilities were removed since it's not possible
anymore to run a frontend and a backend on different processes or to
have peers and stick-tables bound on different ones. This is the largest
part of this patch.
The bind_proc field was removed from both the proxy and the receiver
structs.
Since the "process" and "bind-process" directives are still parsed,
configs making use of correct values allowing process 1 will continue
to work.
The compiler sees the possibility of null-deref for which a path is
possible but which doesn't exist as we didn't pass a null args outside
of the help request. The test was introduced by the simplified test on
ishelp variable, so let's add it to shut the warning.
It's still very difficult to find all commands starting with a given
keyword like "set", "show" etc. Let's sort the lines by usage message,
this is much more convenient.
With ~100 commands on the CLI, it's particularly difficult to find a
specific one in the "help" output. The function used to display the
help already supports filtering on certain commands, so in the end it's
just needed to pass the argument of the help command to enable the
automatic filtering. That's what this patch does so that "help clear"
only lists commands starting with "clear" and that "help map" lists
commands containing "map" in them.
There were 102 CLI commands whose help were zig-zagging all along the dump
making them unreadable. This patch realigns all these messages so that the
command now uses up to 40 characters before the delimiting colon. About a
third of the commands did not correctly list their arguments which were
added after the first version, so they were all updated. Some abuses of
the term "id" were fixed to use a more explanatory term. The
"set ssl ocsp-response" command was not listed because it lacked a help
message, this was fixed as well. The deprecated enable/disable commands
for agent/health/server were prominently written as deprecated. Whenever
possible, clearer explanations were provided.
Since the introduction of payload support on the CLI in 1.9-dev1 by
commit abbf60710 ("MEDIUM: cli: Add payload support"), a chunk is
temporarily allocated for the CLI to support defragmenting a payload
passed with a command. However it's only released when passing via
the CLI_ST_END state (i.e. on clean shutdown), but not on errors.
Something as trivial as:
$ while :; do ncat --send-only -U /path/to/cli <<< "show stat"; done
with a few hundreds of servers is enough see the number of allocated
trash chunks go through the roof in "show pools".
This needs to be backported as far as 2.0.
The current "ADD" vs "ADDQ" is confusing because when thinking in terms
of appending at the end of a list, "ADD" naturally comes to mind, but
here it does the opposite, it inserts. Several times already it's been
incorrectly used where ADDQ was expected, the latest of which was a
fortunate accident explained in 6fa922562 ("CLEANUP: stream: explain
why we queue the stream at the head of the server list").
Let's use more explicit (but slightly longer) names now:
LIST_ADD -> LIST_INSERT
LIST_ADDQ -> LIST_APPEND
LIST_ADDED -> LIST_INLIST
LIST_DEL -> LIST_DELETE
The same is true for MT_LISTs, including their "TRY" variant.
LIST_DEL_INIT keeps its short name to encourage to use it instead of the
lazier LIST_DELETE which is often less safe.
The change is large (~674 non-comment entries) but is mechanical enough
to remain safe. No permutation was performed, so any out-of-tree code
can easily map older names to new ones.
The list doc was updated.
Allocation error are now handled in bind_conf_alloc() functions. Thus
callers, when not already done, are also updated to catch NULL return value.
This patch may be backported (at least partially) to all stable
versions. However, it only fix errors durung configuration parsing. Thus it
is not mandatory.
This patch replaces roughly all occurrences of an HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&foo, 1)
or HA_ATOMIC_SUB(&foo, 1) with the equivalent HA_ATOMIC_INC(&foo) and
HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&foo) respectively. These are 507 changes over 45 files.
Slightly reorder the status flags to better match their order in the
"state" field, and also decode the "shut" state which is particularly
useful and already part of this field.
No need to keep this flag apart any more, let's merge it into the global
state. The CLI's output state was extended to 6 digits and the linger/cloned
flags moved inside the parenthesis.
For a long time we've had fdtab[].ev and fdtab[].state which contain two
arbitrary sets of information, one is mostly the configuration plus some
shutdown reports and the other one is the latest polling status report
which also contains some sticky error and shutdown reports.
These ones used to be stored into distinct chars, complicating certain
operations and not even allowing to clearly see concurrent accesses (e.g.
fd_delete_orphan() would set the state to zero while fd_insert() would
only set the event to zero).
This patch creates a single uint with the two sets in it, still delimited
at the byte level for better readability. The original FD_EV_* values
remained at the lowest bit levels as they are also known by their bit
value. The next step will consist in merging the remaining bits into it.
The whole bits are now cleared both in fd_insert() and _fd_delete_orphan()
because after a complete check, it is certain that in both cases these
functions are the only ones touching these areas. Indeed, for
_fd_delete_orphan(), the thread_mask has already been zeroed before a
poller can call fd_update_event() which would touch the state, so it
is certain that _fd_delete_orphan() is alone. Regarding fd_insert(),
only one thread will get an FD at any moment, and it as this FD has
already been released by _fd_delete_orphan() by definition it is certain
that previous users have definitely stopped touching it.
Strictly speaking there's no need for clearing the state again in
fd_insert() but it's cheap and will remove some doubts during some
troubleshooting sessions.
In preparation of merging FD_POLL* and FD_EV*, this only changes the
value of FD_POLL_* to use bits 8-15 (the second byte). The size of the
field has been temporarily extended to 32 bits already, as well as
the temporary variables that carry the new composite value inside
fd_update_events(). The resulting fdtab entry becomes temporarily
unaligned. All places making access to .ev or FD_POLL_* were carefully
inspected to make sure they were safe regarding this change. Only one
temporary update was needed for the "show fd" code. The code was only
slightly inflated at this step.
If the configuration file contains a 'unix-bind prefix' directive, and
if we use the -S option and specify a UNIX socket path, the path of the
socket will be prepended with the value of the unix-bind prefix.
For instance, if we have 'unix-bind prefix /tmp/sockets/' and we use
'-S /tmp/master-socket' on the command line, we will get this error:
Starting proxy MASTER:
cannot bind UNIX socket (No such file or directory) [/tmp/sockets/tmp/master-socket]
So this patch adds an exception, and will ignore the unix-bind prefix
for the master CLI socket.
This patch can be backported as far as 1.9.
Now the suggested keywords are sorted with the most relevant ones first
instead of scanning them all in registration order and only dumping the
proposed ones:
- "tra"
trace <module> [cmd [args...]] : manage live tracing
operator : lower the level of the current CLI session to operator
user : lower the level of the current CLI session to user
show trace [<module>] : show live tracing state
- "pool"
show pools : report information about the memory pools usage
add acl : add acl entry
del map : delete map entry
user : lower the level of the current CLI session to user
del acl : delete acl entry
- "sh ta"
show stat : report counters for each proxy and server [desc|json|no-maint|typed|up]*
show tasks : show running tasks
set table [id] : update or create a table entry's data
show table [id]: report table usage stats or dump this table's contents
trace <module> [cmd [args...]] : manage live tracing
- "sh state"
show stat : report counters for each proxy and server [desc|json|no-maint|typed|up]*
set table [id] : update or create a table entry's data
show table [id]: report table usage stats or dump this table's contents
show servers state [id]: dump volatile server information (for backend <id>)
show sess [id] : report the list of current sessions or dump this session
Till now the fuzzy matching would only work on the same number of words,
but this doesn't account for commands like "show servers conn" which
involve 3 words and were not proposed when entering only "show conn".
Let's improve the situation by building the two fingerprints separately
for the correct keyword sequence and the entered one, then compare them.
This can result in slightly larger variations due to the different string
lengths but is easily compensated for. Thanks to this, we can now see
"show servers conn" when entering "show conn", and the following choices
are relevant to correct typos:
- "show foo"
show sess [id] : report the list of current sessions or dump this session
show info : report information about the running process [desc|json|typed]*
show env [var] : dump environment variables known to the process
show fd [num] : dump list of file descriptors in use
show pools : report information about the memory pools usage
- "show stuff"
show sess [id] : report the list of current sessions or dump this session
show info : report information about the running process [desc|json|typed]*
show stat : report counters for each proxy and server [desc|json|no-maint|typed|up]*
show fd [num] : dump list of file descriptors in use
show tasks : show running tasks
- "show stafe"
show sess [id] : report the list of current sessions or dump this session
show stat : report counters for each proxy and server [desc|json|no-maint|typed|up]*
show fd [num] : dump list of file descriptors in use
show table [id]: report table usage stats or dump this table's contents
show tasks : show running tasks
- "show state"
show stat : report counters for each proxy and server [desc|json|no-maint|typed|up]*
show servers state [id]: dump volatile server information (for backend <id>)
It's still visible that the shorter ones continue to easily match, such
as "show sess" not having much in common with "show foo" but what matters
is that the best candidates are definitely relevant. Probably that listing
them in match order would further help.
I somehow managed to re-break the "help" command in b736458bf ("MEDIUM:
cli: apply spelling fixes for known commands before listing them")
after fixing it once. A null-deref happens when checking the args
early in the processing.
No backport is needed as this was introduced in 2.4-dev12.
There were still a very small list of functions, variables and fields
called "stats_" while they were really purely CLI-centric. There's the
frontend called "stats_fe" in the global section, which instantiates a
"cli_applet" called "<CLI>" so it was renamed "cli_fe".
The "alloc_stats_fe" function cas renamed to "cli_alloc_fe" which also
better matches the naming convention of all cli-specific functions.
Finally the "stats_permission_denied_msg" used to return an error on
the CLI was renamed "cli_permission_denied_msg".
Now there's no more "stats_something" that designates the CLI.
This is the number of args accepted on a command received on the CLI,
is has long been totally independent of stats and should not carry
this misleading "stats" name anymore.
Now instead of comparing words at an exact position, we build a fingerprint
made of all of them, so that we can check for them in any position. For
example, "show conn serv" finds "show servers conn" and that "set servers
maxconn" proposes both "set server" and "set maxconn servers".
Entering "show tls" would still emit 35 entries. By measuring the distance
between all unknown words and the candidates, we can sort them and pick the
10 most likely candidates. This works reasonably well, as now "show tls"
only proposes "show tls-keys", "show threads", "show pools" and "show tasks".
If the distance is still too high or if a word is missing, the whole
prefix list continues to be dumped, thus "show" alone will still report
the entire list of commands beginning with "show".
It's still impossible to skip a word, for example "show conn" will not
propose "show servers conn" because the distance is calculated for each
word individually. Some changes to the distance calculation to support
updating an existing map could easily address this. But this is already
a great improvement.
The error message on the CLI has become unreadable due to the long list
and it's not even sorted, making it even harder to figure the right
command.
This patch starts by looking if some of the words match something known,
and if so, will limit the listing only to those commands that start like
the current one. The "help", "prompt" and "quit" commands are always
shown to help the user try something else. Now thanks to this, typing
"add" or "del" will only list "add acl", "add map" and not 50 lines
anymore.
As a small bonus, we won't print "Unknown command" anymore in response
to the "help" command.
By doing so we can report more accurate information about what's wrong.
As a first step, we already distinguish the case of expert-only commands
from other ones.
Now that the appctx contains the master level, it greatly simplifies
all the tests, as we can simply verify that keyword levels match the
effective level without having to cheat with applet pointers. This
also allows to fold the expert test in them.
Right now the code is a bit hackish, it tests for the keyword's level
flags but checks the applet's origin to compare the bits. Let's start
by properly setting the ACCESS_MASTER_ONLY and ACCESS_MASTER flags on
the master CLI's bind_conf so that they are automatically present
all the time.
These 3 commands are functionally valid both in master and worker CLIs.
However, while they do have a valid handler, they are not permitted by
the code and work partially by chance in the master:
- "prompt" and "quit" are intercepted by the request analyser
- "help" triggers an error, which results in displaying the error
message
Let's make sure they are permitted so that we don't count errors there and
that we can report appropriate help.
This bug has always been there but it doesn't have any functional effect
at the moment since "help" can only show the error message. As such, there
is no need to backport it.
Just like with the server keywords, now's the turn of "bind" keywords.
The difference is that 100% of the bind keywords are registered, thus
we do not need the list of extra keywords.
There are multiple bind line parsers today, all were updated:
- peers
- log
- dgram-bind
- cli
$ printf "listen f\nbind :8000 tcut\n" | ./haproxy -c -f /dev/stdin
[NOTICE] 070/101358 (25146) : haproxy version is 2.4-dev11-7b8787-26
[NOTICE] 070/101358 (25146) : path to executable is ./haproxy
[ALERT] 070/101358 (25146) : parsing [/dev/stdin:2] : 'bind :8000' unknown keyword 'tcut'; did you mean 'tcp-ut' maybe ?
[ALERT] 070/101358 (25146) : Error(s) found in configuration file : /dev/stdin
[ALERT] 070/101358 (25146) : Fatal errors found in configuration.
The default proxy was passed as a variable to all parsers instead of a
const, which is not without risk, especially when some timeout parsers used
to make some int pointers point to the default values for comparisons. We
want to be certain that none of these parsers will modify the defaults
sections by accident, so it's important to mark this proxy as const.
This patch touches all occurrences found (89).
This makes the code more readable and less prone to copy-paste errors.
In addition, it allows to place some __builtin_constant_p() predicates
to trigger a link-time error in case the compiler knows that the freed
area is constant. It will also produce compile-time error if trying to
free something that is not a regular pointer (e.g. a function).
The DEBUG_MEM_STATS macro now also defines an instance for ha_free()
so that all these calls can be checked.
178 occurrences were converted. The vast majority of them were handled
by the following Coccinelle script, some slightly refined to better deal
with "&*x" or with long lines:
@ rule @
expression E;
@@
- free(E);
- E = NULL;
+ ha_free(&E);
It was verified that the resulting code is the same, more or less a
handful of cases where the compiler optimized slightly differently
the temporary variable that holds the copy of the pointer.
A non-negligible amount of {free(str);str=NULL;str_len=0;} are still
present in the config part (mostly header names in proxies). These
ones should also be cleaned for the same reasons, and probably be
turned into ist strings.
this is pure cleanup, no need to backport
2116 if ((end - 1) == (payload + strlen(PAYLOAD_PATTERN))) {
2117 /* if the payload pattern is at the end */
2118 s->pcli_flags |= PCLI_F_PAYLOAD;
CID 1399833 (#1 of 1): Unused value (UNUSED_VALUE)assigned_value: Assigning value from reql to ret here, but that stored value is overwritten before it can be used.
2119 ret = reql;
2120 }
This patch fixes the issue #1048.
FD dumps are not always easy to match against netstat dumps, and often
require an lsof as a third dump. Let's emit the socket family, and the
local and remore ports when the FD is an IPv4/IPv6 socket, this will
significantly ease the matching.
A file descriptor which maps to a connection but has more than one
thread in its mask, or an FD handle that doesn't correspond to the FD,
or wiht no mux context, or an FD with no thread in its mask, or with
more than 1 million events is flagged as suspicious.
Now the show_fd helpers at the transport and mux levels return an integer
which indicates whether or not the inspected entry looks suspicious. When
an entry is reported as suspicious, "show fd" will suffix it with an
exclamation mark ('!') in the dump, that is supposed to help detecting
them.
For now, helpers were adjusted to adapt to the new API but none of them
reports any suspicious entry yet.
Just like we did for the muxes, now the transport layers will have the
ability to provide helpers to report more detailed information about their
internal context. When the helper is not known, the pointer continues to
be dumped as-is if it's not NULL. This way a transport with no context nor
dump function will not add a useless "xprt_ctx=(nil)" but the pointer will
be emitted if valid or if a helper is defined.
These ones are definitely missing from some dumps, let's report them! We
print the xprt's name instead of its useless pointer, as well as its ctx
when xprt is not NULL.
Over time the code has uglified, casting fdt.owner as a struct connection
for about everything. Let's have a const struct connection* there and take
this opportunity for passing all fields as const as well.
Additionally a misplaced closing parenthesis on the output was fixed.
conn_fd_handler() is 100% specific to socket code. It's about time
it moves to sock.c which manipulates socket FDs. With it comes
conn_fd_check() which tests for the socket's readiness. The ugly
connection status check at the end of the iocb was moved to an inlined
function in connection.h so that if we need it for other socket layers
it's not too hard to reuse.
The code was really only moved and not changed at all.
This function will be useful to check if the keyword is already registered.
Also add a define for the max number of args.
This will be needed by a next patch to fix a bug and will have to be
backported.
Following the patch b4daee ("MINOR: sock: add a check against cross
worker<->master socket activities"), this patch adds a dedicated applet
for the master CLI. It ensures that the CLI connection can't be
used with the master rights in the case of bugs.
Now we define a new sock_accept_iocb() for socket-based stream protocols
and use it as a wrapper for listener_accept() which now takes a listener
and not an FD anymore. This will allow the receiver's I/O cb to be
redefined during registration, and more specifically to get rid of the
hard-coded hacks in protocol_bind_all() made for syslog.
The previous ->accept() callback in the protocol was removed since it
doesn't have anything to do with accept() anymore but is more generic.
A few places where listener_accept() was compared against the FD's IO
callback for debugging purposes on the CLI were updated.
This listener flag indicates whether the receiver part of the listener
is specific to the master or to the workers. In practice it's only used
by the master's CLI right now. It's used to know whether or not the FD
must be closed before forking the workers. For this reason it's way more
of a receiver's property than a listener's property, so let's move it
there under the name RX_F_MWORKER. The rest of the code remains
unchanged.
We have to count unstoppable jobs which correspond to worker sockpairs, in
order to know when to count. However the way it's currently done is quite
awkward because these are counted when stopping making the stop mechanism
non-idempotent. This is definitely something we want to fix before stopping
by protocol or our listeners count will quickly go wrong. Now they are
counted when the listeners are created.
The remaining proxy states were only used to distinguish an enabled
proxy from a disabled one. Due to the initialization order, both
PR_STNEW and PR_STREADY were equivalent after startup, and they
would only differ from PR_STSTOPPED when the proxy is disabled or
shutdown (which is effectively another way to disable it).
Now we just have a "disabled" field which allows to distinguish them.
It's becoming obvious that start_proxies() is only used to print a
greeting message now, that we'd rather get rid of. Probably that
zombify_proxy() and stop_proxy() should be merged once their
differences move to the right place.
We'll need this so that it can return pointers to stacked protocol in
the future (for QUIC). In addition this removes a lot of tests for
protocol validity in the callers.
Some of them were checked further apart, or after a call to
str2listener() and they were simplified as well.
There's still a trick, we can fail to return a protocol in case the caller
accepts an fqdn for use later. This is what servers do and in this case it
is valid to return no protocol. A typical example is:
server foo localhost:1111
If a file descriptor was passed, we can optionally return it. This will
be useful for listening sockets which are both a pre-bound FD and a ready
socket.
These flags indicate whether the call is made to fill a bind or a server
line, or even just send/recv calls (like logs or dns). Some special cases
are made for outgoing FDs (e.g. pipes for logs) or socket FDs (e.g external
listeners), and there's a distinction between stream or dgram usage that's
expected to significantly help str2sa_range() proceed appropriately with
the input information. For now they are not used yet.
It's the receiver's FD that's inherited from the parent process, not
the listener's so the flag must move to the receiver so that appropriate
actions can be taken.
Some socket settings used to be retrieved via the listener and the
bind_conf. Now instead we use the receiver and its settings whenever
appropriate. This will simplify the removal of the dependency on the
listener.
The netns is common to all listeners/receivers and is used to bind the
listening socket so it must be in the receiver settings and not in the
listener. This removes some yet another set of unnecessary loops.
The interface is common to all listeners/receivers and is used to bind
the listening socket so it must be in the receiver settings and not in
the listener. This removes some unnecessary loops.
Now we don't limit ourselves to listeners found in proxies nor peers
anymore, we're instead scanning all known FDs for those marked with
".exported=1". Just doing so has significantly simplified the code,
and will later allow to yield while sending FDs if desired.
When it comes to retrieving a possible namespace name or interface
name, for now this is only performed on listeners since these are the
only ones carrying such info. Once this moves somewhere else, we'll
be able to also pass these info for UDP receivers for example, with
only tiny changes.
During a reload operation, we used to send listener options associated
with each passed file descriptor. These were passed as binary contents
for the size of the "options" field in the struct listener. This means
that any flag value change or field size change would be problematic,
the former failing to properly grab certain options, the latter possibly
causing permanent failures during this operation.
Since these two previous commits:
MINOR: reload: determine the foreing binding status from the socket
BUG/MINOR: reload: detect the OS's v6only status before choosing an old socket
we don't need this anymore as the values are determined from the file
descriptor itself.
Let's just turn the previous 32 bits to vestigal space, send them as
zeroes and ignore them on receipt. The only possible side effect is if
someone would want to roll back from a 2.3 to 2.2 or earlier, such options
might be ignored during this reload. But other forthcoming changes might
make this fail as well anyway so that's not a reason for keeping this
behavior.
The FD takeover operation might have certain impacts explaining
unexpected activities, so it's important to report such a counter
there. We thus count the number of times a thread has stolen an
FD from another thread.
DEBUG_FD was added by commit 38e8a1c in 2.2-dev, and "show fd" was
slightly modified to still allow to print orphaned/closed FDs if their
count is non-null. But bypassing the existing test made it possible
to dereference fdt.owner which can be null. Let's adjust the condition
to avoid this.
No backport is needed.
When DEBUG_FD is set at build time, we'll keep a counter of per-FD events
in the fdtab. This counter is reported in "show fd" even for closed FDs if
not zero. The purpose is to help spot situations where an apparently closed
FD continues to be reported in loops, or where some events are dismissed.
Fix the semicolon escaping which must be handled in the master CLI,
the commands were wrongly splitted and could be forwarded partially to
the target CLI.
The master CLI must not do the escaping since it forwards the commands
to another CLI. It should be able to split into words by taking care of
the escaping, but must not remove the forwarded backslashes.
This fix do the same thing as the previous patch applied to the
cli_parse_request() function, by taking care of the escaping during the
word split, but it also remove the part which was removing the
backslashes from the forwarded command.
It was not possible to escape spaces over the CLI, making impossible the
insertion of new ACL entries with spaces from the CLI.
This patch fixes the escaping of spaces over the CLI.
It is now possible to launch "add acl agents.acl My\ User\ Agent" over
the CLI.
Could be backported in all stable branches.
Should fix issue #400.
This one was confusingly called, I thought it was the cumulated number
of streams but it's the number of calls to process_stream(). Let's make
this clearer.
empty_rq and long_rq are per-loop so it makes sense to group them
together with the loop count. In addition since ctxsw and tasksw
apply in the context of these counters, let's move them as well.
More precisely the difference between wake_tasks and long_rq should
roughly correspond to the number of inter-task messages. Visually
it's much easier to spot ratios of wakeup causes now.
We have poll_drop, poll_dead and poll_skip which are confusingly named
like their poll_io and poll_exp counterparts except that they are not
per poll() call but per-fd. This patch renames them to poll_drop_fd(),
poll_dead_fd() and poll_skip_fd() for this reason.
The "show activity" output mentions a number of indicators to explain
wake up reasons but doesn't have the number of times poll() sees some
I/O. And given that multiple events can happen simultaneously, it's
not always possible to deduce this metric by subtracting.
This patch adds a new "poll_io" counter that allows one to see how
often poll() returns with at least one active FD. This should help
detect stuck events and measure various ratios of poll sub-metrics.
Since 2.1-dev2, with commit 305d5ab46 ("MAJOR: fd: Get rid of the fd cache.")
we don't have the fd_lock anymore and as such its acitvity counter is always
zero. Let's remove it from the struct and from "show activity" output, as
there are already plenty of indicators to look at.
The cache line comment in the struct activity was updated to reflect
reality as it looks like another one already got removed in the past.
Getting rid of this warning is cleaner solved using a 'fall through' comment,
because it clarifies intent to a human reader.
This patch adjust a few places that cause -Wimplicit-fallthrough to trigger:
- Fix typos in the comment.
- Remove redundant 'no break' that trips up gcc from comment.
- Move the comment out of the block when the 'case' is completely surrounded
by braces.
- Add comments where I could determine that the fall through was intentional.
Changes tested on
gcc (Debian 9.3.0-13) 9.3.0
Copyright (C) 2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
using
make -j4 all TARGET=linux-glibc USE_OPENSSL=1 USE_LUA=1 USE_ZLIB=1 USE_PCRE2=1 USE_PCRE2_JIT=1 USE_GETADDRINFO=1
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.
Most of the files dealing with error reports have to include log.h in order
to access ha_alert(), ha_warning() etc. But while these functions don't
depend on anything, log.h depends on a lot of stuff because it deals with
log-formats and samples. As a result it's impossible not to embark long
dependencies when using ha_warning() or qfprintf().
This patch moves these low-level functions to errors.h, which already
defines the error codes used at the same places. About half of the users
of log.h could be adjusted, sometimes revealing other issues such as
missing tools.h. Interestingly the total preprocessed size shrunk by
4%.
There's no point splitting the file in two since only cfgparse uses the
types defined there. A few call places were updated and cleaned up. All
of them were in C files which register keywords.
There is nothing left in common/ now so this directory must not be used
anymore.
This one was not easy because it was embarking many includes with it,
which other files would automatically find. At least global.h, arg.h
and tools.h were identified. 93 total locations were identified, 8
additional includes had to be added.
In the rare files where it was possible to finalize the sorting of
includes by adjusting only one or two extra lines, it was done. But
all files would need to be rechecked and cleaned up now.
It was the last set of files in types/ and proto/ and these directories
must not be reused anymore.
extern struct dict server_name_dict was moved from the type file to the
main file. A handful of inlined functions were moved at the bottom of
the file. Call places were updated to use server-t.h when relevant, or
to simply drop the entry when not needed.
The files remained mostly unchanged since they were OK. However, half of
the users didn't need to include them, and about as many actually needed
to have it and used to find functions like srv_currently_usable() through
a long chain that broke when moving the file.
This one is particularly difficult to split because it provides all the
functions used to manipulate a proxy state and to retrieve names or IDs
for error reporting, and as such, it was included in 73 files (down to
68 after cleanup). It would deserve a small cleanup though the cut points
are not obvious at the moment given the number of structs involved in
the struct proxy itself.
The current state of the logging is a real mess. The main problem is
that almost all files include log.h just in order to have access to
the alert/warning functions like ha_alert() etc, and don't care about
logs. But log.h also deals with real logging as well as log-format and
depends on stream.h and various other things. As such it forces a few
heavy files like stream.h to be loaded early and to hide missing
dependencies depending where it's loaded. Among the missing ones is
syslog.h which was often automatically included resulting in no less
than 3 users missing it.
Among 76 users, only 5 could be removed, and probably 70 don't need the
full set of dependencies.
A good approach would consist in splitting that file in 3 parts:
- one for error output ("errors" ?).
- one for log_format processing
- and one for actual logging.
Almost no change except moving the cli_kw struct definition after the
defines. Almost all users had both types&proto included, which is not
surprizing since this code is old and it used to be the norm a decade
ago. These places were cleaned.
Just some minor reordering, and the usual cleanup of call places for
those which didn't need it. We don't include the whole tools.h into
stats-t anymore but just tools-t.h.
The type file was slightly tidied. The cli-specific APPCTX_CLI_ST1_* flag
definitions were moved to cli.h. The type file was adjusted to include
buf-t.h and not the huge buf.h. A few call places were fixed because they
did not need this include.
Initially it looked like this could have been placed into auth.h or
stats.h but it's not the case as it's what makes the link between them
and the HTTP layer. However the file needed to be split in two. Quite
a number of call places were dropped because these were mostly leftovers
from the early days where the stats and cli were packed together.
The cfg_peers external declaration was moved to the main file instead
of the type one. A few types were still missing from the proto, causing
warnings in the functions prototypes (proxy, stick_table).
All includes that were not absolutely necessary were removed because
checks.h happens to very often be part of dependency loops. A warning
was added about this in check-t.h. The fields, enums and structs were
a bit tidied because it's particularly tedious to find anything there.
It would make sense to split this in two or more files (at least
extract tcp-checks).
The file was renamed to the singular because it was one of the rare
exceptions to have an "s" appended to its name compared to the struct
name.
The TASK_IS_TASKLET() macro was moved to the proto file instead of the
type one. The proto part was a bit reordered to remove a number of ugly
forward declaration of static inline functions. About a tens of C and H
files had their dependency dropped since they were not using anything
from task.h.
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.
This one is particularly tricky to move because everyone uses it
and it depends on a lot of other types. For example it cannot include
arg-t.h and must absolutely only rely on forward declarations to avoid
dependency loops between vars -> sample_data -> arg. In order to address
this one, it would be nice to split the sample_data part out of sample.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.
One function prototype makes reference to struct mworker_proc which was
not defined there but in global.h instead. This definition, along with
the PROC_O_* fields were moved to mworker-t.h instead.
A few includes were missing in each file. A definition of
struct polled_mask was moved to fd-t.h. The MAX_POLLERS macro was
moved to defaults.h
Stdio used to be silently inherited from whatever path but it's needed
for list_pollers() which takes a FILE* and which can thus not be
forward-declared.
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.
The protocol.h files are pretty low in the dependency and (sadly) used
by some files from common/. Almost nothing was changed except lifting a
few comments.
This moves types/activity.h to haproxy/activity-t.h and
proto/activity.h to haproxy/activity.h.
The macros defining the bit field values for the profiling variable
were moved to the type file to be more future-proof.
This is the beginning of the move and cleanup of memory.h. This first
step only extracts type definitions and basic macros that are needed
by the files which reference a pool. They're moved to pool-t.h (since
"pool" is more obvious than "memory" when looking for pool-related
stuff). 3 files which didn't need to include the whole memory.h were
updated.
types/freq_ctr.h was moved to haproxy/freq_ctr-t.h and proto/freq_ctr.h
was moved to haproxy/freq_ctr.h. Files were updated accordingly, no other
change was applied.
This one is included almost everywhere and used to rely on a few other
.h that are not needed (unistd, stdlib, standard.h). It could possibly
make sense to split it into multiple parts to distinguish operations
performed on timers and the internal time accounting, but at this point
it does not appear much important.
Half of the users of this include only need the type definitions and
not the manipulation macros nor the inline functions. Moves the various
types into mini-clist-t.h makes the files cleaner. The other one had all
its includes grouped at the top. A few files continued to reference it
without using it and were cleaned.
In addition it was about time that we'd rename that file, it's not
"mini" anymore and contains a bit more than just circular lists.
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.
A few fields, including a generic list entry, were added to the CLI context
by commit 300decc8d9 ("MINOR: cli: extend the CLI context with a list and
two offsets"). It turns out that the list entry (l0) is solely used to
consult rings and that the generic ring_write() code is restricted to a
consumer on the CLI due to this, which was not the initial intent. Let's
make it a general purpose wait_entry field that is properly initialized
during appctx_init(). This will allow any applet to wait on a ring, not
just the CLI.
Since the fix 5fd3b28 ("BUG/MEDIUM: cli: _getsocks must send the peers
sockets") for bug #443. The code which sends the socket for the peers
and the proxies is duplicated. This patch move this code in a separated
function.
This bug prevents to reload HAProxy when you have both the seamless
reload (-x / expose-fd listeners) and the peers.
Indeed the _getsocks command does not send the FDs of the peers
listeners, so if no reuseport is possible during the bind, the new
process will fail to bind and exits.
With this feature, it is not possible to fallback on the SIGTTOU method
if we didn't receive all the sockets, because you can't close() the
sockets of the new process without closing those of the previous
process, they are the same.
Should fix bug #443.
Must be backported as far as 1.8.
When trying to start HAProxy with the master CLI and more than one
program in the configuration, it refuses to start with:
[ALERT] 013/132926 (1378) : parsing [cur--1:0] : proxy 'MASTER', another server named 'cur--1' was already defined at line 0, please use distinct names.
[ALERT] 013/132926 (1378) : Fatal errors found in configuration.
The problem is that haproxy tries to create a server for the MASTER
proxy but only the worker are supposed to be in the server list.
Fix issue #446.
Must be backported as far as 2.0.
We use it half times for the global_listener_queue and half times
for a proxy's queue and this requires the callers to take care of
these. Let's split it in two versions, the current one working only
on the global queue and another one dedicated to proxies for the
per-proxy queues. This cleans up quite a bit of code.
The io_release() callback of the cli_kw is supposed to be used to clean
what an io_handler() has made. It is called once the work in the IO
handler is finished, or when the connection was aborted by the client.
This patch fixes a bug where the io_release callback was called even
when the parse() callback failed. Which means that the io_release() could
called even if the io_handler() was not called.
Should be backported in every versions that have a cli_kw->release().
(as far as 1.7)
Some commands like the debug ones are not enabled by default but can be
useful on some production environments. In order to avoid the temptation
of using them incorrectly, let's introduce an "expert" mode for a CLI
connection, which allows some commands to appear and be used. It is
enabled by command "expert-mode on" which is not listed by default.
Instead of using the same type for regular linked lists and "autolocked"
linked lists, use a separate type, "struct mt_list", for the autolocked one,
and introduce a set of macros, similar to the LIST_* macros, with the
MT_ prefix.
When we use the same entry for both regular list and autolocked list, as
is done for the "list" field in struct connection, we know have to explicitely
cast it to struct mt_list when using MT_ macros.
Since commit 7ac0e35f2 in 1.9-dev1 ("MAJOR: fd: compute the new fd polling
state out of the fd lock") we've started to update the FD POLLED bit a
bit more aggressively. Lately with the removal of the FD cache, this bit
is always equal to the ACTIVE bit. There's no point continuing to watch
it and update it anymore, all it does is create confusion and complicate
the code. One interesting side effect is that it now becomes visible that
all fd_*_{send,recv}() operations systematically call updt_fd_polling(),
except fd_cant_recv()/fd_cant_send() which never saw it change.
Some CLI parsers are currently abusing the CLI context types such as
pointers to stuff longs into them by lack of room. But the context is
80 bytes while cli is only 48, thus there's some room left. This patch
adds a list element and two size_t usable as various offsets. The list
element is initialized.
There were 221 places where a status message or an error message were built
to be returned on the CLI. All of them were replaced to use cli_err(),
cli_msg(), cli_dynerr() or cli_dynmsg() depending on what was expected.
This removed a lot of duplicated code because most of the times, 4 lines
are replaced by a single, safer one.
Right now we used to have extremely inconsistent states to report output,
one is CLI_ST_PRINT which prints constant message cli->msg with the
assigned severity, and CLI_ST_PRINT_FREE which prints dynamically
allocated cli->err with severity LOG_ERR, and nothing in between,
eventhough it's useful to be able to report dynamically allocated
messages as well as constant error messages.
This patch adds two extra states, which are not particularly well named
given the constraints imposed by existing ones. One is CLI_ST_PRINT_ERR
which prints a constant error message. The other one is CLI_ST_PRINT_DYN
which prints a dynamically allocated message. By doing so we maintain
the compatibility with current code.
It is important to keep in mind that we cannot pre-initialize pointers
and automatically detect what message type it is based on the assigned
fields, because the CLI's context is in a union shared with all other
users, thus unused fields contain anything upon return. This is why we
have no choice but using 4 states. Keeping the two fields <msg> and
<err> remains useful because one is const and not the other one, and
this catches may copy-paste mistakes. It's just that <err> is pretty
confusing here, it should be renamed.
Now that the architecture was changed so that attempts to receive/send data
always come from the upper layers, instead of them only trying to do so when
the lower layer let them know they could try, we can finally get rid of the
fd cache. We don't really need it anymore, and removing it gives us a small
performance boost.
When forcing the outgoing address of a connection, till now we used to
allocate this outgoing connection and set the address into it, then set
SF_ADDR_SET. With connection reuse this causes a whole lot of issues and
difficulties in the code.
Thanks to the previous changes, it is now possible to store the target
address into the stream instead, and copy the address from the stream to
the connection when initializing the connection. assign_server_address()
does this and as a result SF_ADDR_SET now reflects the presence of the
target address in the stream, not in the connection. The http_proxy mode,
the peers and the master's CLI now use the same mechanism. For now the
existing connection code was not removed to limit the amount of tricky
changes, but the allocated connection is not used anymore.
This change also revealed a latent issue that we've been having around
option http_proxy : the address was set in the connection but neither the
SF_ADDR_SET nor the SF_ASSIGNED flags were set. It looks like the connection
could establish only due to the fact that it existed with a non-null
destination address.
When using a level lower than admin on the master CLI, a \n is output
before the response, this is caused by the response of the "operator" or
"user" that are sent before the actual command.
To fix this problem we introduce the flag APPCTX_CLI_ST1_NOLF which ask
a command response to not be followed by the final \n.
This patch made a special case with the command operator and user
followed by a - so they are not followed by \n.
This patch must be backported to 2.0 and 1.9.
Since commit 829bd471 ("MEDIUM: stream: rearrange the events to remove
the loop"), the pipelining in the master CLI does not work anymore.
Indeed when doing:
echo "@1 show info; @2 show info; @3 show info" | socat /tmp/haproxy.master -
the CLI will only show the response of the first command.
When debugging we can observe that the command is sent, but the client
closes the connection before receiving the response.
The problem is that the flag CF_READ_NULL is not cleared when we
reiniate the flags of the response and we rely on this flag to close.
Must be backported in 2.0
As reported in GH issue #109 and in discourse issue
https://discourse.haproxy.org/t/haproxy-returns-408-or-504-error-when-timeout-client-value-is-every-25d
the time parser doesn't error on overflows nor underflows. This is a
recurring problem which additionally has the bad taste of taking a long
time before hitting the user.
This patch makes parse_time_err() return special error codes for overflows
and underflows, and adds the control in the call places to report suitable
errors depending on the requested unit. In practice, underflows are almost
never returned as the parsing function takes care of rounding values up,
so this might possibly happen on 64-bit overflows returning exactly zero
after rounding though. It is not really possible to cut the patch into
pieces as it changes the function's API, hence all callers.
Tests were run on about every relevant part (cookie maxlife/maxidle,
server inter, stats timeout, timeout*, cli's set timeout command,
tcp-request/response inspect-delay).
Haproxy is designed to be able to continue to run even under very low
memory conditions. However this can sometimes have a serious impact on
performance that it hard to diagnose. Let's report counters of failed
pool and buffer allocations per thread in show activity.
Most of the time we find ourselves adding per-thread fields to observe
activity, so let's compute these on the fly and display them. Now the
output shows "field: total [ thr0 thr1 ... thrn ]".
The unused fd_del and fd_skip were being abused during debugging sessions
as general purpose event counters. With their removal, let's officially
have dedicated counters for such use cases. These counters are called
"ctr0".."ctr2" and are listed at the end when DEBUG_DEV is set.
We still have quite a number of build macros which are mapped 1:1 to a
USE_something setting in the makefile but which have a different name.
This patch cleans this up by renaming them to use the USE_something
one, allowing to clean up the makefile and make it more obvious when
reading the code what build option needs to be added.
The following renames were done :
ENABLE_POLL -> USE_POLL
ENABLE_EPOLL -> USE_EPOLL
ENABLE_KQUEUE -> USE_KQUEUE
ENABLE_EVPORTS -> USE_EVPORTS
TPROXY -> USE_TPROXY
NETFILTER -> USE_NETFILTER
NEED_CRYPT_H -> USE_CRYPT_H
CONFIG_HAP_CRYPT -> USE_LIBCRYPT
CONFIG_HAP_NS -> DUSE_NS
CONFIG_HAP_LINUX_SPLICE -> USE_LINUX_SPLICE
CONFIG_HAP_LINUX_TPROXY -> USE_LINUX_TPROXY
CONFIG_HAP_LINUX_VSYSCALL -> USE_LINUX_VSYSCALL
Both the config and gdb report thread IDs starting at 1, so better do the
same in "show activity" to limit confusion. We also display the full
permitted range.
This could be backported to 1.9 since it was present there.
It's always a pain to have to stuff lots of #ifdef USE_OPENSSL around
ssl headers, it even results in some of them appearing in a random order
and multiple times just to benefit form an existing ifdef block. Let's
make these headers safe for inclusion when USE_OPENSSL is not defined,
they now perform the test themselves and do nothing if USE_OPENSSL is
not defined. This allows to remove no less than 8 such ifdef blocks
and make include blocks more readable.
They were all check to comply with the advertised openssl version. Now
that libressl doesn't pretend to be a more recent openssl anymore, we
can simply rely on the regular openssl version tests without having to
deal with exceptions for libressl.
Most tests on OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER have become complex and break all
the time because this number is fake for some derivatives like LibreSSL.
This patch creates a new macro, HA_OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER, which will
carry the real openssl version defining the compatibility level, and
this version will be adjusted depending on the variants.
SSL_SESSION_get0_id_context is introduced in LibreSSL-2.7.0
async operations are not supported by LibreSSL
early data is not supported by LibreSSL
packet_length is removed from SSL struct in LibreSSL
It's not logical to report context switch rates per thread in show activity
because everything else is a counter and it's not even possible to compare
values. Let's only report counts. Further, this simplifies the scheduler's
code.
It's particularly useful to spot runaway tasks to see this. The context
switch rate covers all tasklet calls (tasks and I/O handlers) while the
task wakeups only covers tasks picked from the run queue to be executed.
High values there will indicate either an intense traffic or a bug that
mades a task go wild.
Since the introduction of the options field, we can use it to store the
type of process.
type = 'm' is replaced by PROC_O_TYPE_MASTER
type = 'w' is replaced by PROC_O_TYPE_WORKER
type = 'e' is replaced by PROC_O_TYPE_PROG
The old values are still used in the HAPROXY_PROCESSES environment
variable to pass the information during a reload.
Commit a8f57d51a ("MINOR: cli/activity: report the accept queue sizes
in "show activity"") broke the single-threaded build because the
accept-rings are not implemented there. Let's ifdef this out. Ideally
we should start to think about always having such elements initialized
even without threads to improve the test coverage.
Seeing the size of each ring helps understand which threads are
overloaded and why some of them are less often elected than others
by the multi-queue load balancer.
The "show activity" command reports the number of incoming connections
dispatched per thread but doesn't report the number of connections
received by each thread. It is important to be able to monitor this
value as it can show that for whatever reason a smaller set of threads
is receiving the connections and dispatching them to all other ones.
Displays a prefix for every addresses in 'show cli sockets'.
It could be 'unix@', 'ipv4@', 'ipv6@', 'abns@' or 'sockpair@'.
Could be backported in 1.9 and 1.8.
The 'show cli sockets' was not handling the abns sockets. This is a
problem since it uses the AF_UNIX family, it displays nothing
in the path column because the path starts by \0.
Should be backported to 1.9 and 1.8.
It's pointless to always set and maintain l->maxconn because the accept
loop already enforces the frontend's limit anyway. Thus let's stop setting
this value by default and keep it to zero meaning "no limit". This way the
frontend's maxconn will be used by default. Of course if a value is set,
it will be enforced.
In an attempt to try to provide automatic maxconn settings, we need to
decorrelate a listner's backlog and maxconn so that these values can be
independent. This introduces a listener_backlog() function which retrieves
the backlog value from the listener's backlog, the frontend's, the
listener's maxconn, the frontend's or falls back to 1024. This
corresponds to what was done in cfgparse.c to force a value there except
the last fallback which was not set since the frontend's maxconn is always
known.
global.maxsock used to be augmented by the frontend's maxconn value
for each frontend listener, which is absurd when there are many
listeners in a frontend because the frontend's maxconn fixes an
upper limit to how many connections will be accepted on all of its
listeners anyway. What is needed instead is to add one to count the
listening socket.
In addition, the CLI's and peers' value was incremented twice, the
first time when creating the listener and the second time in the
main init code.
Let's now make sure we only increment global.maxsock by the required
amount of sockets. This means not adding maxconn for each listener,
and relying on the global values when they are correct.
It's important to monitor the accept queues to know if some incoming
connections had to be handled by their originating thread due to an
overflow. It's also important to be able to confirm thread fairness.
This patch adds "accq_pushed" to activity reporting, which reports
the number of connections that were successfully pushed into each
thread's queue, and "accq_full", which indicates the number of
connections that couldn't be pushed because the thread's queue was
full.
For some embedded systems, it's pointless to have 32- or even 64- large
arrays of processes when it's known that much fewer processes will be
used in the worst case. Let's introduce this MAX_PROCS define which
contains the highest number of processes allowed to run at once. It
still defaults to LONGBITS but may be lowered.
As long-time changes have accumulated over time, the exported functions
of the stream-interface were almost all prefixed "si_<something>" while
most private ones (mostly callbacks) were called "stream_int_<something>".
There were still a few confusing exceptions, which were addressed to
follow this shcme :
- stream_sock_read0(), only used internally, was renamed stream_int_read0()
and made static
- stream_int_notify() is only private and was made static
- stream_int_{check_timeouts,report_error,retnclose,register_handler,update}
were renamed si_<something>.
Now it is clearer when checking one of these if it risks to be used outside
or not.
We most often store the mux context there but it can also be something
else while setting up the connection. Better call it "ctx" and know
that it's the owner's context than misleadingly call it mux_ctx and
get caught doing suspicious tricks.
It takes ages to proceed with "show fd" when there is sustained activity
because it uses the rendez-vous point for each and every file descriptor
in the loop. It's very common to see socat timeout there.
Instead of doing this, let's just isolate the function when entering the
loop. Its duration is limited by the number of FDs that may be emitted in
a single buffer anyway, so it's much lighter and responds much faster.
If a reload was issued to the master process and failed, it is critical
that the admin sees it because it means that the saved configuration
does not work anymore and might not be usable after a full restart. For
this reason in this case we modify the "master" prompt to explicitly
indicate that a reload failed.
In the master CLI, the commands and the prefix were still parsed and
trimmed after the pattern payload. Don't parse anything but the end of a
line till we are in payload mode.
Put the search of the pattern after the trim so we can use correctly a
payload with a command which is prefixed by @.
Handle the CLI level in the master CLI. In order to do this, the master
CLI stores the level in the stream. Each command are prefixed by a
"user" or "operator" command before they are forwarded to the target
CLI.
The level can be configured in the haproxy program arguments with the
level keyword: -S /tmp/sock,level,admin -S /tmp/sock2,level,user.
Implement "show cli level" which show the level of the current CLI
session.
Implement "operator" and "user" which lower the permissions of the
current CLI session.
Change the output of the relative pid for the old processes, displays
"[was: X]" instead of just "X" which was confusing if you want to
connect to the CLI of an old PID.
The CLI proxy was not handling payload. To do that, we needed to keep a
connection active on a server and to transfer each new line over that
connection until we receive a empty line.
The CLI proxy handles the payload in the same way that the CLI do it.
Examples:
$ echo -e "@1;add map #-1 <<\n$(cat data)\n" | socat /tmp/master-socket -
$ socat /tmp/master-socket readline
prompt
master> @1
25130> add map #-1 <<
+ test test
+ test2 test2
+ test3 test3
+
25130>
During a payload transfer, we need to wait for the data even when we are
not in interactive mode. Indeed, the data could be received line per
line progressively instead of in one recv.
Previously the CLI was doing a SHUTW just after the first line if it was
not in interactive mode. We now check if we are in payload mode to do
a SHUTW.
Should be backported in 1.8.