haproxy/src/stream.c

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/*
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* Stream management functions.
*
* Copyright 2000-2012 Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
* 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
*/
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <import/ebistree.h>
#include <haproxy/acl.h>
#include <haproxy/action.h>
#include <haproxy/activity.h>
#include <haproxy/api.h>
#include <haproxy/applet.h>
#include <haproxy/arg.h>
#include <haproxy/backend.h>
#include <haproxy/capture.h>
#include <haproxy/cfgparse.h>
#include <haproxy/channel.h>
#include <haproxy/check.h>
#include <haproxy/cli.h>
#include <haproxy/connection.h>
#include <haproxy/dict.h>
#include <haproxy/dynbuf.h>
#include <haproxy/fd.h>
#include <haproxy/filters.h>
#include <haproxy/freq_ctr.h>
#include <haproxy/frontend.h>
#include <haproxy/global.h>
#include <haproxy/hlua.h>
#include <haproxy/http_ana.h>
#include <haproxy/http_rules.h>
#include <haproxy/htx.h>
#include <haproxy/istbuf.h>
#include <haproxy/log.h>
#include <haproxy/pipe.h>
#include <haproxy/pool.h>
#include <haproxy/proxy.h>
#include <haproxy/queue.h>
#include <haproxy/sc_strm.h>
#include <haproxy/server.h>
#include <haproxy/resolvers.h>
#include <haproxy/sample.h>
#include <haproxy/session.h>
#include <haproxy/stats-t.h>
#include <haproxy/stconn.h>
#include <haproxy/stick_table.h>
#include <haproxy/stream.h>
#include <haproxy/task.h>
#include <haproxy/tcp_rules.h>
#include <haproxy/thread.h>
#include <haproxy/tools.h>
#include <haproxy/trace.h>
#include <haproxy/vars.h>
DECLARE_POOL(pool_head_stream, "stream", sizeof(struct stream));
DECLARE_POOL(pool_head_uniqueid, "uniqueid", UNIQUEID_LEN);
/* incremented by each "show sess" to fix a delimiter between streams */
unsigned stream_epoch = 0;
/* List of all use-service keywords. */
static struct list service_keywords = LIST_HEAD_INIT(service_keywords);
/* trace source and events */
static void strm_trace(enum trace_level level, uint64_t mask,
const struct trace_source *src,
const struct ist where, const struct ist func,
const void *a1, const void *a2, const void *a3, const void *a4);
/* The event representation is split like this :
* strm - stream
* sc - stream connector
* http - http analyzis
* tcp - tcp analyzis
*
* STRM_EV_* macros are defined in <proto/stream.h>
*/
static const struct trace_event strm_trace_events[] = {
{ .mask = STRM_EV_STRM_NEW, .name = "strm_new", .desc = "new stream" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_STRM_FREE, .name = "strm_free", .desc = "release stream" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_STRM_ERR, .name = "strm_err", .desc = "error during stream processing" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, .name = "strm_ana", .desc = "stream analyzers" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_STRM_PROC, .name = "strm_proc", .desc = "stream processing" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_CS_ST, .name = "sc_state", .desc = "processing connector states" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_HTTP_ANA, .name = "http_ana", .desc = "HTTP analyzers" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_HTTP_ERR, .name = "http_err", .desc = "error during HTTP analyzis" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_TCP_ANA, .name = "tcp_ana", .desc = "TCP analyzers" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_TCP_ERR, .name = "tcp_err", .desc = "error during TCP analyzis" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_FLT_ANA, .name = "flt_ana", .desc = "Filter analyzers" },
{ .mask = STRM_EV_FLT_ERR, .name = "flt_err", .desc = "error during filter analyzis" },
{}
};
static const struct name_desc strm_trace_lockon_args[4] = {
/* arg1 */ { /* already used by the stream */ },
/* arg2 */ { },
/* arg3 */ { },
/* arg4 */ { }
};
static const struct name_desc strm_trace_decoding[] = {
#define STRM_VERB_CLEAN 1
{ .name="clean", .desc="only user-friendly stuff, generally suitable for level \"user\"" },
#define STRM_VERB_MINIMAL 2
{ .name="minimal", .desc="report info on streams and connectors" },
#define STRM_VERB_SIMPLE 3
{ .name="simple", .desc="add info on request and response channels" },
#define STRM_VERB_ADVANCED 4
{ .name="advanced", .desc="add info on channel's buffer for data and developer levels only" },
#define STRM_VERB_COMPLETE 5
{ .name="complete", .desc="add info on channel's buffer" },
{ /* end */ }
};
struct trace_source trace_strm = {
.name = IST("stream"),
.desc = "Applicative stream",
.arg_def = TRC_ARG1_STRM, // TRACE()'s first argument is always a stream
.default_cb = strm_trace,
.known_events = strm_trace_events,
.lockon_args = strm_trace_lockon_args,
.decoding = strm_trace_decoding,
.report_events = ~0, // report everything by default
};
#define TRACE_SOURCE &trace_strm
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, trace_register_source, TRACE_SOURCE);
/* the stream traces always expect that arg1, if non-null, is of a stream (from
* which we can derive everything), that arg2, if non-null, is an http
* transaction, that arg3, if non-null, is an http message.
*/
static void strm_trace(enum trace_level level, uint64_t mask, const struct trace_source *src,
const struct ist where, const struct ist func,
const void *a1, const void *a2, const void *a3, const void *a4)
{
const struct stream *s = a1;
const struct http_txn *txn = a2;
const struct http_msg *msg = a3;
struct task *task;
const struct channel *req, *res;
struct htx *htx;
if (!s || src->verbosity < STRM_VERB_CLEAN)
return;
task = s->task;
req = &s->req;
res = &s->res;
htx = (msg ? htxbuf(&msg->chn->buf) : NULL);
/* General info about the stream (htx/tcp, id...) */
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " : [%u,%s]",
s->uniq_id, ((s->flags & SF_HTX) ? "HTX" : "TCP"));
if (isttest(s->unique_id)) {
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " id=");
b_putist(&trace_buf, s->unique_id);
}
/* Front and back stream connector state */
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " SC=(%s,%s)",
sc_state_str(s->scf->state), sc_state_str(s->scb->state));
/* If txn is defined, HTTP req/rep states */
if (txn)
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " HTTP=(%s,%s)",
h1_msg_state_str(txn->req.msg_state), h1_msg_state_str(txn->rsp.msg_state));
if (msg)
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " %s", ((msg->chn->flags & CF_ISRESP) ? "RESPONSE" : "REQUEST"));
if (src->verbosity == STRM_VERB_CLEAN)
return;
/* If msg defined, display status-line if possible (verbosity > MINIMAL) */
if (src->verbosity > STRM_VERB_MINIMAL && htx && htx_nbblks(htx)) {
const struct htx_blk *blk = __htx_get_head_blk(htx);
const struct htx_sl *sl = htx_get_blk_ptr(htx, blk);
enum htx_blk_type type = htx_get_blk_type(blk);
if (type == HTX_BLK_REQ_SL || type == HTX_BLK_RES_SL)
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " - \"%.*s %.*s %.*s\"",
HTX_SL_P1_LEN(sl), HTX_SL_P1_PTR(sl),
HTX_SL_P2_LEN(sl), HTX_SL_P2_PTR(sl),
HTX_SL_P3_LEN(sl), HTX_SL_P3_PTR(sl));
}
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " - t=%p t.exp=%d s=(%p,0x%08x,0x%x)",
task, tick_isset(task->expire) ? TICKS_TO_MS(task->expire - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY, s, s->flags, s->conn_err_type);
/* If txn defined info about HTTP msgs, otherwise info about SI. */
if (txn) {
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " txn.flags=0x%08x, http.flags=(0x%08x,0x%08x) status=%d",
txn->flags, txn->req.flags, txn->rsp.flags, txn->status);
}
else {
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " scf=(%p,%d,0x%08x,0x%x) scb=(%p,%d,0x%08x,0x%x) scf.exp(r,w)=(%d,%d) scb.exp(r,w)=(%d,%d) retries=%d",
s->scf, s->scf->state, s->scf->flags, s->scf->sedesc->flags,
s->scb, s->scb->state, s->scb->flags, s->scb->sedesc->flags,
tick_isset(sc_ep_rcv_ex(s->scf)) ? TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_rcv_ex(s->scf) - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY,
tick_isset(sc_ep_snd_ex(s->scf)) ? TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_snd_ex(s->scf) - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY,
tick_isset(sc_ep_rcv_ex(s->scb)) ? TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_rcv_ex(s->scb) - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY,
tick_isset(sc_ep_snd_ex(s->scb)) ? TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_snd_ex(s->scb) - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY,
s->conn_retries);
}
if (src->verbosity == STRM_VERB_MINIMAL)
return;
/* If txn defined, don't display all channel info */
if (src->verbosity == STRM_VERB_SIMPLE || txn) {
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " req=(%p .fl=0x%08x .exp=%d)",
req, req->flags, tick_isset(req->analyse_exp) ? TICKS_TO_MS(req->analyse_exp - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY);
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " res=(%p .fl=0x%08x .exp=%d)",
res, res->flags, tick_isset(res->analyse_exp) ? TICKS_TO_MS(res->analyse_exp - now_ms) : TICK_ETERNITY);
}
else {
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " req=(%p .fl=0x%08x .ana=0x%08x .exp=%u .o=%lu .tot=%llu .to_fwd=%u)",
req, req->flags, req->analysers, req->analyse_exp,
(long)req->output, req->total, req->to_forward);
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " res=(%p .fl=0x%08x .ana=0x%08x .exp=%u .o=%lu .tot=%llu .to_fwd=%u)",
res, res->flags, res->analysers, res->analyse_exp,
(long)res->output, res->total, res->to_forward);
}
if (src->verbosity == STRM_VERB_SIMPLE ||
(src->verbosity == STRM_VERB_ADVANCED && src->level < TRACE_LEVEL_DATA))
return;
/* channels' buffer info */
if (s->flags & SF_HTX) {
struct htx *rqhtx = htxbuf(&req->buf);
struct htx *rphtx = htxbuf(&res->buf);
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " htx=(%u/%u#%u, %u/%u#%u)",
rqhtx->data, rqhtx->size, htx_nbblks(rqhtx),
rphtx->data, rphtx->size, htx_nbblks(rphtx));
}
else {
chunk_appendf(&trace_buf, " buf=(%u@%p+%u/%u, %u@%p+%u/%u)",
(unsigned int)b_data(&req->buf), b_orig(&req->buf),
(unsigned int)b_head_ofs(&req->buf), (unsigned int)b_size(&req->buf),
(unsigned int)b_data(&res->buf), b_orig(&res->buf),
(unsigned int)b_head_ofs(&res->buf), (unsigned int)b_size(&res->buf));
}
/* If msg defined, display htx info if defined (level > USER) */
if (src->level > TRACE_LEVEL_USER && htx && htx_nbblks(htx)) {
int full = 0;
/* Full htx info (level > STATE && verbosity > SIMPLE) */
if (src->level > TRACE_LEVEL_STATE) {
if (src->verbosity == STRM_VERB_COMPLETE)
full = 1;
}
chunk_memcat(&trace_buf, "\n\t", 2);
htx_dump(&trace_buf, htx, full);
}
}
/* Upgrade an existing stream for stream connector <sc>. Return < 0 on error. This
* is only valid right after a TCP to H1 upgrade. The stream should be
* "reativated" by removing SF_IGNORE flag. And the right mode must be set. On
* success, <input> buffer is transferred to the stream and thus points to
* BUF_NULL. On error, it is unchanged and it is the caller responsibility to
* release it (this never happens for now).
*/
int stream_upgrade_from_sc(struct stconn *sc, struct buffer *input)
{
struct stream *s = __sc_strm(sc);
const struct mux_ops *mux = sc_mux_ops(sc);
if (mux) {
if (mux->flags & MX_FL_HTX)
s->flags |= SF_HTX;
}
if (!b_is_null(input)) {
/* Xfer the input buffer to the request channel. <input> will
* than point to BUF_NULL. From this point, it is the stream
* responsibility to release it.
*/
s->req.buf = *input;
*input = BUF_NULL;
s->req.total = (IS_HTX_STRM(s) ? htxbuf(&s->req.buf)->data : b_data(&s->req.buf));
sc_ep_report_read_activity(s->scf);
}
s->req.flags |= CF_READ_EVENT; /* Always report a read event */
s->flags &= ~SF_IGNORE;
task_wakeup(s->task, TASK_WOKEN_INIT);
return 0;
}
/* Callback used to wake up a stream when an input buffer is available. The
* stream <s>'s stream connectors are checked for a failed buffer allocation
* as indicated by the presence of the SC_FL_NEED_BUFF flag and the lack of a
* buffer, and and input buffer is assigned there (at most one). The function
* returns 1 and wakes the stream up if a buffer was taken, otherwise zero.
* It's designed to be called from __offer_buffer().
*/
int stream_buf_available(void *arg)
{
struct stream *s = arg;
if (!s->req.buf.size && !sc_ep_have_ff_data(s->scb) && s->scf->flags & SC_FL_NEED_BUFF &&
b_alloc(&s->req.buf))
sc_have_buff(s->scf);
else if (!s->res.buf.size && !sc_ep_have_ff_data(s->scf) && s->scb->flags & SC_FL_NEED_BUFF &&
b_alloc(&s->res.buf))
sc_have_buff(s->scb);
else
return 0;
task_wakeup(s->task, TASK_WOKEN_RES);
return 1;
}
/* This function is called from the session handler which detects the end of
* handshake, in order to complete initialization of a valid stream. It must be
* called with a completely initialized session. It returns the pointer to
* the newly created stream, or NULL in case of fatal error. The client-facing
* end point is assigned to <origin>, which must be valid. The stream's task
* is configured with a nice value inherited from the listener's nice if any.
* The task's context is set to the new stream, and its function is set to
* process_stream(). Target and analysers are null. <input> is used as input
* buffer for the request channel and may contain data. On success, it is
* transfer to the stream and <input> is set to BUF_NULL. On error, <input>
* buffer is unchanged and it is the caller responsibility to release it.
*/
struct stream *stream_new(struct session *sess, struct stconn *sc, struct buffer *input)
{
struct stream *s;
struct task *t;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_NEW);
if (unlikely((s = pool_alloc(pool_head_stream)) == NULL))
goto out_fail_alloc;
/* minimum stream initialization required for an embryonic stream is
* fairly low. We need very little to execute L4 ACLs, then we need a
* task to make the client-side connection live on its own.
* - flags
* - stick-entry tracking
*/
s->flags = 0;
s->logs.logwait = sess->fe->to_log;
s->logs.level = 0;
s->logs.request_ts = 0;
s->logs.t_queue = -1;
s->logs.t_connect = -1;
s->logs.t_data = -1;
s->logs.t_close = 0;
s->logs.bytes_in = s->logs.bytes_out = 0;
s->logs.prx_queue_pos = 0; /* we get the number of pending conns before us */
s->logs.srv_queue_pos = 0; /* we will get this number soon */
s->obj_type = OBJ_TYPE_STREAM;
s->logs.accept_date = sess->accept_date;
s->logs.accept_ts = sess->accept_ts;
s->logs.t_handshake = sess->t_handshake;
s->logs.t_idle = sess->t_idle;
/* default logging function */
s->do_log = strm_log;
/* default error reporting function, may be changed by analysers */
s->srv_error = default_srv_error;
/* Initialise the current rule list pointer to NULL. We are sure that
* any rulelist match the NULL pointer.
*/
s->current_rule_list = NULL;
s->current_rule = NULL;
s->rules_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
s->last_rule_file = NULL;
s->last_rule_line = 0;
s->stkctr = NULL;
if (pool_head_stk_ctr) {
s->stkctr = pool_alloc(pool_head_stk_ctr);
if (!s->stkctr)
goto out_fail_alloc;
/* Copy SC counters for the stream. We don't touch refcounts because
* any reference we have is inherited from the session. Since the stream
* doesn't exist without the session, the session's existence guarantees
* we don't lose the entry. During the store operation, the stream won't
* touch these ones.
*/
memcpy(s->stkctr, sess->stkctr, sizeof(s->stkctr[0]) * global.tune.nb_stk_ctr);
}
s->sess = sess;
s->stream_epoch = _HA_ATOMIC_LOAD(&stream_epoch);
s->uniq_id = _HA_ATOMIC_FETCH_ADD(&global.req_count, 1);
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* OK, we're keeping the stream, so let's properly initialize the stream */
LIST_INIT(&s->back_refs);
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
LIST_INIT(&s->buffer_wait.list);
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
s->buffer_wait.target = s;
s->buffer_wait.wakeup_cb = stream_buf_available;
s->lat_time = s->cpu_time = 0;
s->call_rate.curr_tick = s->call_rate.curr_ctr = s->call_rate.prev_ctr = 0;
s->pcli_next_pid = 0;
s->pcli_flags = 0;
s->unique_id = IST_NULL;
if ((t = task_new_here()) == NULL)
goto out_fail_alloc;
s->task = t;
s->pending_events = 0;
s->conn_retries = 0;
s->conn_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
s->conn_err_type = STRM_ET_NONE;
s->prev_conn_state = SC_ST_INI;
t->process = process_stream;
t->context = s;
t->expire = TICK_ETERNITY;
if (sess->listener)
t->nice = sess->listener->bind_conf->nice;
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* Note: initially, the stream's backend points to the frontend.
* This changes later when switching rules are executed or
* when the default backend is assigned.
*/
s->be = sess->fe;
s->req_cap = NULL;
s->res_cap = NULL;
/* Initialize all the variables contexts even if not used.
* This permits to prune these contexts without errors.
*
* We need to make sure that those lists are not re-initialized
* by stream-dependant underlying code because we could lose
* track of already defined variables, leading to data inconsistency
* and memory leaks...
*
* For reference: we had a very old bug caused by vars_txn and
* vars_reqres being accidentally re-initialized in http_create_txn()
* (https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy/issues/1935)
*/
vars_init_head(&s->vars_txn, SCOPE_TXN);
vars_init_head(&s->vars_reqres, SCOPE_REQ);
/* Set SF_HTX flag for HTTP frontends. */
if (sess->fe->mode == PR_MODE_HTTP)
s->flags |= SF_HTX;
s->scf = sc;
if (sc_attach_strm(s->scf, s) < 0)
goto out_fail_attach_scf;
s->scb = sc_new_from_strm(s, SC_FL_ISBACK);
if (!s->scb)
goto out_fail_alloc_scb;
sc_set_state(s->scf, SC_ST_EST);
if (likely(sess->fe->options2 & PR_O2_INDEPSTR))
s->scf->flags |= SC_FL_INDEP_STR;
if (likely(sess->fe->options2 & PR_O2_INDEPSTR))
s->scb->flags |= SC_FL_INDEP_STR;
if (sc_ep_test(sc, SE_FL_WEBSOCKET))
s->flags |= SF_WEBSOCKET;
if (sc_conn(sc)) {
const struct mux_ops *mux = sc_mux_ops(sc);
if (mux && mux->flags & MX_FL_HTX)
s->flags |= SF_HTX;
}
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream_init_srv_conn(s);
s->target = sess->fe->default_target;
s->pend_pos = NULL;
s->priority_class = 0;
s->priority_offset = 0;
/* init store persistence */
s->store_count = 0;
channel_init(&s->req);
s->req.flags |= CF_READ_EVENT; /* the producer is already connected */
s->req.analysers = sess->listener ? sess->listener->bind_conf->analysers : sess->fe->fe_req_ana;
if (IS_HTX_STRM(s)) {
/* Be sure to have HTTP analysers because in case of
* "destructive" stream upgrade, they may be missing (e.g
* TCP>H2)
*/
s->req.analysers |= AN_REQ_WAIT_HTTP|AN_REQ_HTTP_PROCESS_FE;
}
if (!sess->fe->fe_req_ana) {
channel_auto_connect(&s->req); /* don't wait to establish connection */
channel_auto_close(&s->req); /* let the producer forward close requests */
}
s->scf->ioto = sess->fe->timeout.client;
s->req.analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
channel_init(&s->res);
s->res.flags |= CF_ISRESP;
s->res.analysers = 0;
if (sess->fe->options2 & PR_O2_NODELAY) {
s->scf->flags |= SC_FL_SND_NEVERWAIT;
s->scb->flags |= SC_FL_SND_NEVERWAIT;
[MEDIUM] http: add support for "http-no-delay" There are some very rare server-to-server applications that abuse the HTTP protocol and expect the payload phase to be highly interactive, with many interleaved data chunks in both directions within a single request. This is absolutely not supported by the HTTP specification and will not work across most proxies or servers. When such applications attempt to do this through haproxy, it works but they will experience high delays due to the network optimizations which favor performance by instructing the system to wait for enough data to be available in order to only send full packets. Typical delays are around 200 ms per round trip. Note that this only happens with abnormal uses. Normal uses such as CONNECT requests nor WebSockets are not affected. When "option http-no-delay" is present in either the frontend or the backend used by a connection, all such optimizations will be disabled in order to make the exchanges as fast as possible. Of course this offers no guarantee on the functionality, as it may break at any other place. But if it works via HAProxy, it will work as fast as possible. This option should never be used by default, and should never be used at all unless such a buggy application is discovered. The impact of using this option is an increase of bandwidth usage and CPU usage, which may significantly lower performance in high latency environments. This change should be backported to 1.4 since the first report of such a misuse was in 1.4. Next patch will also be needed.
2011-05-30 12:10:30 -04:00
}
s->scb->ioto = TICK_ETERNITY;
s->res.analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
s->txn = NULL;
s->hlua = NULL;
s->resolv_ctx.requester = NULL;
s->resolv_ctx.hostname_dn = NULL;
s->resolv_ctx.hostname_dn_len = 0;
s->resolv_ctx.parent = NULL;
s->tunnel_timeout = TICK_ETERNITY;
LIST_APPEND(&th_ctx->streams, &s->list);
if (flt_stream_init(s) < 0 || flt_stream_start(s) < 0)
MAJOR: filters: Add filters support This patch adds the support of filters in HAProxy. The main idea is to have a way to "easely" extend HAProxy by adding some "modules", called filters, that will be able to change HAProxy behavior in a programmatic way. To do so, many entry points has been added in code to let filters to hook up to different steps of the processing. A filter must define a flt_ops sutrctures (see include/types/filters.h for details). This structure contains all available callbacks that a filter can define: struct flt_ops { /* * Callbacks to manage the filter lifecycle */ int (*init) (struct proxy *p); void (*deinit)(struct proxy *p); int (*check) (struct proxy *p); /* * Stream callbacks */ void (*stream_start) (struct stream *s); void (*stream_accept) (struct stream *s); void (*session_establish)(struct stream *s); void (*stream_stop) (struct stream *s); /* * HTTP callbacks */ int (*http_start) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_start_body) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_start_chunk) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_data) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_last_chunk) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_end_chunk) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_chunk_trailers)(struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_end_body) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); void (*http_end) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); void (*http_reset) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_pre_process) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); int (*http_post_process) (struct stream *s, struct http_msg *msg); void (*http_reply) (struct stream *s, short status, const struct chunk *msg); }; To declare and use a filter, in the configuration, the "filter" keyword must be used in a listener/frontend section: frontend test ... filter <FILTER-NAME> [OPTIONS...] The filter referenced by the <FILTER-NAME> must declare a configuration parser on its own name to fill flt_ops and filter_conf field in the proxy's structure. An exemple will be provided later to make it perfectly clear. For now, filters cannot be used in backend section. But this is only a matter of time. Documentation will also be added later. This is the first commit of a long list about filters. It is possible to have several filters on the same listener/frontend. These filters are stored in an array of at most MAX_FILTERS elements (define in include/types/filters.h). Again, this will be replaced later by a list of filters. The filter API has been highly refactored. Main changes are: * Now, HA supports an infinite number of filters per proxy. To do so, filters are stored in list. * Because filters are stored in list, filters state has been moved from the channel structure to the filter structure. This is cleaner because there is no more info about filters in channel structure. * It is possible to defined filters on backends only. For such filters, stream_start/stream_stop callbacks are not called. Of course, it is possible to mix frontend and backend filters. * Now, TCP streams are also filtered. All callbacks without the 'http_' prefix are called for all kind of streams. In addition, 2 new callbacks were added to filter data exchanged through a TCP stream: - tcp_data: it is called when new data are available or when old unprocessed data are still waiting. - tcp_forward_data: it is called when some data can be consumed. * New callbacks attached to channel were added: - channel_start_analyze: it is called when a filter is ready to process data exchanged through a channel. 2 new analyzers (a frontend and a backend) are attached to channels to call this callback. For a frontend filter, it is called before any other analyzer. For a backend filter, it is called when a backend is attached to a stream. So some processing cannot be filtered in that case. - channel_analyze: it is called before each analyzer attached to a channel, expects analyzers responsible for data sending. - channel_end_analyze: it is called when all other analyzers have finished their processing. A new analyzers is attached to channels to call this callback. For a TCP stream, this is always the last one called. For a HTTP one, the callback is called when a request/response ends, so it is called one time for each request/response. * 'session_established' callback has been removed. Everything that is done in this callback can be handled by 'channel_start_analyze' on the response channel. * 'http_pre_process' and 'http_post_process' callbacks have been replaced by 'channel_analyze'. * 'http_start' callback has been replaced by 'http_headers'. This new one is called just before headers sending and parsing of the body. * 'http_end' callback has been replaced by 'channel_end_analyze'. * It is possible to set a forwarder for TCP channels. It was already possible to do it for HTTP ones. * Forwarders can partially consumed forwardable data. For this reason a new HTTP message state was added before HTTP_MSG_DONE : HTTP_MSG_ENDING. Now all filters can define corresponding callbacks (http_forward_data and tcp_forward_data). Each filter owns 2 offsets relative to buf->p, next and forward, to track, respectively, input data already parsed but not forwarded yet by the filter and parsed data considered as forwarded by the filter. A any time, we have the warranty that a filter cannot parse or forward more input than previous ones. And, of course, it cannot forward more input than it has parsed. 2 macros has been added to retrieve these offets: FLT_NXT and FLT_FWD. In addition, 2 functions has been added to change the 'next size' and the 'forward size' of a filter. When a filter parses input data, it can alter these data, so the size of these data can vary. This action has an effet on all previous filters that must be handled. To do so, the function 'filter_change_next_size' must be called, passing the size variation. In the same spirit, if a filter alter forwarded data, it must call the function 'filter_change_forward_size'. 'filter_change_next_size' can be called in 'http_data' and 'tcp_data' callbacks and only these ones. And 'filter_change_forward_size' can be called in 'http_forward_data' and 'tcp_forward_data' callbacks and only these ones. The data changes are the filter responsability, but with some limitation. It must not change already parsed/forwarded data or data that previous filters have not parsed/forwarded yet. Because filters can be used on backends, when we the backend is set for a stream, we add filters defined for this backend in the filter list of the stream. But we must only do that when the backend and the frontend of the stream are not the same. Else same filters are added a second time leading to undefined behavior. The HTTP compression code had to be moved. So it simplifies http_response_forward_body function. To do so, the way the data are forwarded has changed. Now, a filter (and only one) can forward data. In a commit to come, this limitation will be removed to let all filters take part to data forwarding. There are 2 new functions that filters should use to deal with this feature: * flt_set_http_data_forwarder: This function sets the filter (using its id) that will forward data for the specified HTTP message. It is possible if it was not already set by another filter _AND_ if no data was yet forwarded (msg->msg_state <= HTTP_MSG_BODY). It returns -1 if an error occurs. * flt_http_data_forwarder: This function returns the filter id that will forward data for the specified HTTP message. If there is no forwarder set, it returns -1. When an HTTP data forwarder is set for the response, the HTTP compression is disabled. Of course, this is not definitive.
2015-04-30 05:48:27 -04:00
goto out_fail_accept;
/* just in case the caller would have pre-disabled it */
se_will_consume(s->scf->sedesc);
if (sess->fe->accept && sess->fe->accept(s) < 0)
goto out_fail_accept;
if (!b_is_null(input)) {
/* Xfer the input buffer to the request channel. <input> will
* than point to BUF_NULL. From this point, it is the stream
* responsibility to release it.
*/
s->req.buf = *input;
*input = BUF_NULL;
s->req.total = (IS_HTX_STRM(s) ? htxbuf(&s->req.buf)->data : b_data(&s->req.buf));
sc_ep_report_read_activity(s->scf);
}
/* it is important not to call the wakeup function directly but to
* pass through task_wakeup(), because this one knows how to apply
* priorities to tasks. Using multi thread we must be sure that
* stream is fully initialized before calling task_wakeup. So
* the caller must handle the task_wakeup
*/
DBG_TRACE_LEAVE(STRM_EV_STRM_NEW, s);
task_wakeup(s->task, TASK_WOKEN_INIT);
return s;
/* Error unrolling */
out_fail_accept:
flt_stream_release(s, 0);
LIST_DELETE(&s->list);
sc_free(s->scb);
out_fail_alloc_scb:
out_fail_attach_scf:
task_destroy(t);
out_fail_alloc:
if (s)
pool_free(pool_head_stk_ctr, s->stkctr);
pool_free(pool_head_stream, s);
DBG_TRACE_DEVEL("leaving on error", STRM_EV_STRM_NEW|STRM_EV_STRM_ERR);
return NULL;
}
/*
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* frees the context associated to a stream. It must have been removed first.
*/
void stream_free(struct stream *s)
{
struct session *sess = strm_sess(s);
struct proxy *fe = sess->fe;
struct bref *bref, *back;
int i;
DBG_TRACE_POINT(STRM_EV_STRM_FREE, s);
/* detach the stream from its own task before even releasing it so
* that walking over a task list never exhibits a dying stream.
*/
s->task->context = NULL;
__ha_barrier_store();
pendconn_free(s);
if (objt_server(s->target)) { /* there may be requests left pending in queue */
if (s->flags & SF_CURR_SESS) {
s->flags &= ~SF_CURR_SESS;
_HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&__objt_server(s->target)->cur_sess);
}
if (may_dequeue_tasks(__objt_server(s->target), s->be))
process_srv_queue(__objt_server(s->target));
}
if (unlikely(s->srv_conn)) {
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* the stream still has a reserved slot on a server, but
* it should normally be only the same as the one above,
* so this should not happen in fact.
*/
sess_change_server(s, NULL);
}
/* We may still be present in the buffer wait queue */
if (LIST_INLIST(&s->buffer_wait.list))
LIST_DEL_INIT(&s->buffer_wait.list);
if (s->req.buf.size || s->res.buf.size) {
int count = !!s->req.buf.size + !!s->res.buf.size;
b_free(&s->req.buf);
b_free(&s->res.buf);
offer_buffers(NULL, count);
}
pool_free(pool_head_uniqueid, s->unique_id.ptr);
s->unique_id = IST_NULL;
flt_stream_stop(s);
flt_stream_release(s, 0);
hlua_ctx_destroy(s->hlua);
s->hlua = NULL;
if (s->txn)
http_destroy_txn(s);
/* ensure the client-side transport layer is destroyed */
/* Be sure it is useless !! */
/* if (cli_cs) */
/* cs_close(cli_cs); */
for (i = 0; i < s->store_count; i++) {
if (!s->store[i].ts)
continue;
stksess_free(s->store[i].table, s->store[i].ts);
s->store[i].ts = NULL;
}
if (s->resolv_ctx.requester) {
__decl_thread(struct resolvers *resolvers = s->resolv_ctx.parent->arg.resolv.resolvers);
HA_SPIN_LOCK(DNS_LOCK, &resolvers->lock);
ha_free(&s->resolv_ctx.hostname_dn);
s->resolv_ctx.hostname_dn_len = 0;
resolv_unlink_resolution(s->resolv_ctx.requester);
HA_SPIN_UNLOCK(DNS_LOCK, &resolvers->lock);
pool_free(resolv_requester_pool, s->resolv_ctx.requester);
s->resolv_ctx.requester = NULL;
}
if (fe) {
if (s->req_cap) {
struct cap_hdr *h;
for (h = fe->req_cap; h; h = h->next)
pool_free(h->pool, s->req_cap[h->index]);
pool_free(fe->req_cap_pool, s->req_cap);
}
if (s->res_cap) {
struct cap_hdr *h;
for (h = fe->rsp_cap; h; h = h->next)
pool_free(h->pool, s->res_cap[h->index]);
pool_free(fe->rsp_cap_pool, s->res_cap);
}
}
/* Cleanup all variable contexts. */
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&s->vars_txn.head))
vars_prune(&s->vars_txn, s->sess, s);
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&s->vars_reqres.head))
vars_prune(&s->vars_reqres, s->sess, s);
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream_store_counters(s);
pool_free(pool_head_stk_ctr, s->stkctr);
list_for_each_entry_safe(bref, back, &s->back_refs, users) {
/* we have to unlink all watchers. We must not relink them if
* this stream was the last one in the list. This is safe to do
* here because we're touching our thread's list so we know
* that other streams are not active, and the watchers will
* only touch their node under thread isolation.
*/
LIST_DEL_INIT(&bref->users);
if (s->list.n != &th_ctx->streams)
LIST_APPEND(&LIST_ELEM(s->list.n, struct stream *, list)->back_refs, &bref->users);
bref->ref = s->list.n;
__ha_barrier_store();
}
LIST_DELETE(&s->list);
sc_destroy(s->scb);
sc_destroy(s->scf);
pool_free(pool_head_stream, s);
/* We may want to free the maximum amount of pools if the proxy is stopping */
if (fe && unlikely(fe->flags & (PR_FL_DISABLED|PR_FL_STOPPED))) {
pool_flush(pool_head_buffer);
pool_flush(pool_head_http_txn);
pool_flush(pool_head_requri);
pool_flush(pool_head_capture);
pool_flush(pool_head_stream);
pool_flush(pool_head_session);
pool_flush(pool_head_connection);
pool_flush(pool_head_pendconn);
pool_flush(fe->req_cap_pool);
pool_flush(fe->rsp_cap_pool);
}
}
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* Allocates a work buffer for stream <s>. It is meant to be called inside
* process_stream(). It will only allocate the side needed for the function
* to work fine, which is the response buffer so that an error message may be
* built and returned. Response buffers may be allocated from the reserve, this
* is critical to ensure that a response may always flow and will never block a
* server from releasing a connection. Returns 0 in case of failure, non-zero
* otherwise.
*/
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
static int stream_alloc_work_buffer(struct stream *s)
{
if (b_alloc(&s->res.buf))
return 1;
return 0;
}
/* releases unused buffers after processing. Typically used at the end of the
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
* update() functions. It will try to wake up as many tasks/applets as the
* number of buffers that it releases. In practice, most often streams are
* blocked on a single buffer, so it makes sense to try to wake two up when two
* buffers are released at once.
*/
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
void stream_release_buffers(struct stream *s)
{
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
int offer = 0;
if (c_size(&s->req) && c_empty(&s->req)) {
offer++;
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
b_free(&s->req.buf);
}
if (c_size(&s->res) && c_empty(&s->res)) {
offer++;
b_free(&s->res.buf);
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
}
/* if we're certain to have at least 1 buffer available, and there is
* someone waiting, we can wake up a waiter and offer them.
*/
BUG/MAJOR: Fix how the list of entities waiting for a buffer is handled When an entity tries to get a buffer, if it cannot be allocted, for example because the number of buffers which may be allocated per process is limited, this entity is added in a list (called <buffer_wq>) and wait for an available buffer. Historically, the <buffer_wq> list was logically attached to streams because it were the only entities likely to be added in it. Now, applets can also be waiting for a free buffer. And with filters, we could imagine to have more other entities waiting for a buffer. So it make sense to have a generic list. Anyway, with the current design there is a bug. When an applet failed to get a buffer, it will wait. But we add the stream attached to the applet in <buffer_wq>, instead of the applet itself. So when a buffer is available, we wake up the stream and not the waiting applet. So, it is possible to have waiting applets and never awakened. So, now, <buffer_wq> is independant from streams. And we really add the waiting entity in <buffer_wq>. To be generic, the entity is responsible to define the callback used to awaken it. In addition, applets will still request an input buffer when they become active. But they will not be sleeped anymore if no buffer are available. So this is the responsibility to the applet I/O handler to check if this buffer is allocated or not. This way, an applet can decide if this buffer is required or not and can do additional processing if not. [wt: backport to 1.7 and 1.6]
2016-12-09 11:30:18 -05:00
if (offer)
offer_buffers(s, offer);
}
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
void stream_process_counters(struct stream *s)
{
struct session *sess = s->sess;
unsigned long long bytes;
int i;
bytes = s->req.total - s->logs.bytes_in;
s->logs.bytes_in = s->req.total;
if (bytes) {
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&sess->fe->fe_counters.bytes_in, bytes);
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&s->be->be_counters.bytes_in, bytes);
if (objt_server(s->target))
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&__objt_server(s->target)->counters.bytes_in, bytes);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&sess->listener->counters->bytes_in, bytes);
for (i = 0; i < global.tune.nb_stk_ctr; i++) {
if (!stkctr_inc_bytes_in_ctr(&s->stkctr[i], bytes))
stkctr_inc_bytes_in_ctr(&sess->stkctr[i], bytes);
}
}
bytes = s->res.total - s->logs.bytes_out;
s->logs.bytes_out = s->res.total;
if (bytes) {
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&sess->fe->fe_counters.bytes_out, bytes);
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&s->be->be_counters.bytes_out, bytes);
if (objt_server(s->target))
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&__objt_server(s->target)->counters.bytes_out, bytes);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&sess->listener->counters->bytes_out, bytes);
for (i = 0; i < global.tune.nb_stk_ctr; i++) {
if (!stkctr_inc_bytes_out_ctr(&s->stkctr[i], bytes))
stkctr_inc_bytes_out_ctr(&sess->stkctr[i], bytes);
}
}
}
/* Abort processing on the both channels in same time */
void stream_abort(struct stream *s)
{
channel_abort(&s->req);
channel_abort(&s->res);
}
/*
* Returns a message to the client ; the connection is shut down for read,
* and the request is cleared so that no server connection can be initiated.
* The buffer is marked for read shutdown on the other side to protect the
* message, and the buffer write is enabled. The message is contained in a
* "chunk". If it is null, then an empty message is used. The reply buffer does
* not need to be empty before this, and its contents will not be overwritten.
* The primary goal of this function is to return error messages to a client.
*/
void stream_retnclose(struct stream *s, const struct buffer *msg)
{
struct channel *ic = &s->req;
struct channel *oc = &s->res;
channel_auto_read(ic);
channel_abort(ic);
channel_erase(ic);
channel_truncate(oc);
if (likely(msg && msg->data))
co_inject(oc, msg->area, msg->data);
channel_auto_read(oc);
channel_auto_close(oc);
sc_schedule_abort(s->scb);
}
int stream_set_timeout(struct stream *s, enum act_timeout_name name, int timeout)
{
switch (name) {
case ACT_TIMEOUT_CLIENT:
s->scf->ioto = timeout;
return 1;
case ACT_TIMEOUT_SERVER:
s->scb->ioto = timeout;
return 1;
case ACT_TIMEOUT_TUNNEL:
s->tunnel_timeout = timeout;
return 1;
default:
return 0;
}
}
/*
* This function handles the transition between the SC_ST_CON state and the
* SC_ST_EST state. It must only be called after switching from SC_ST_CON (or
* SC_ST_INI or SC_ST_RDY) to SC_ST_EST, but only when a ->proto is defined.
* Note that it will switch the interface to SC_ST_DIS if we already have
* the SC_FL_ABRT_DONE flag, it means we were able to forward the request, and
* receive the response, before process_stream() had the opportunity to
* make the switch from SC_ST_CON to SC_ST_EST. When that happens, we want
* to go through back_establish() anyway, to make sure the analysers run.
MEDIUM: stream: re-arrange the connection setup status reporting Till now when a wakeup happens after a connection is attempted, we go through sess_update_st_con_tcp() to deal with the various possible events, then to sess_update_st_cer() to deal with a possible error detected by the former, or to sess_establish() to complete the connection validation. There are multiple issues in the way this is handled, which have accumulated over time. One of them is that any spurious wakeup during SI_ST_CON would validate the READ_ATTACHED flag and wake the analysers up. Another one is that nobody feels responsible for clearing SI_FL_EXP if it happened at the same time as a success (and it is present in all reports of loops to date). And another issue is that aborts cannot happen after a clean connection setup with no data transfer (since CF_WRITE_NULL is part of CF_WRITE_ACTIVITY). Last, the flags cleanup work was hackish, added here and there to please the next function (typically what had to be donne in commit 7a3367cca to work around the url_param+reuse issue by moving READ_ATTACHED to CON). This patch performs a significant lift up of this setup code. First, it makes sure that the state handlers are the ones responsible for the cleanup of the stuff they rely on. Typically sess_sestablish() will clean up the SI_FL_EXP flag because if we decided to validate the connection it means that we want to ignore this late timeout. Second, it splits the CON and RDY state handlers because the former only has to deal with failures, timeouts and non-events, while the latter has to deal with partial or total successes. Third, everything related to connection success was moved to sess_establish() since it's the only safe place to do so, and this function is also called at a few places to deal with synchronous connections, which are not seen by intermediary state handlers. The code was made a bit more robust, for example by making sure we always set SI_FL_NOLINGER when aborting a connection so that we don't have any risk to leave a connection in SHUTW state in case it was validated late. The useless return codes of some of these functions were dropped so that callers only rely on the stream-int's state now (which was already partially the case anyway). The code is now a bit cleaner, could be further improved (and functions renamed) but given the sensitivity of this part, better limit changes to strictly necessary. It passes all reg tests.
2019-06-05 12:02:04 -04:00
* Timeouts are cleared. Error are reported on the channel so that analysers
* can handle them.
*/
static void back_establish(struct stream *s)
{
struct connection *conn = sc_conn(s->scb);
struct channel *req = &s->req;
struct channel *rep = &s->res;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_PROC|STRM_EV_CS_ST, s);
MEDIUM: stream: re-arrange the connection setup status reporting Till now when a wakeup happens after a connection is attempted, we go through sess_update_st_con_tcp() to deal with the various possible events, then to sess_update_st_cer() to deal with a possible error detected by the former, or to sess_establish() to complete the connection validation. There are multiple issues in the way this is handled, which have accumulated over time. One of them is that any spurious wakeup during SI_ST_CON would validate the READ_ATTACHED flag and wake the analysers up. Another one is that nobody feels responsible for clearing SI_FL_EXP if it happened at the same time as a success (and it is present in all reports of loops to date). And another issue is that aborts cannot happen after a clean connection setup with no data transfer (since CF_WRITE_NULL is part of CF_WRITE_ACTIVITY). Last, the flags cleanup work was hackish, added here and there to please the next function (typically what had to be donne in commit 7a3367cca to work around the url_param+reuse issue by moving READ_ATTACHED to CON). This patch performs a significant lift up of this setup code. First, it makes sure that the state handlers are the ones responsible for the cleanup of the stuff they rely on. Typically sess_sestablish() will clean up the SI_FL_EXP flag because if we decided to validate the connection it means that we want to ignore this late timeout. Second, it splits the CON and RDY state handlers because the former only has to deal with failures, timeouts and non-events, while the latter has to deal with partial or total successes. Third, everything related to connection success was moved to sess_establish() since it's the only safe place to do so, and this function is also called at a few places to deal with synchronous connections, which are not seen by intermediary state handlers. The code was made a bit more robust, for example by making sure we always set SI_FL_NOLINGER when aborting a connection so that we don't have any risk to leave a connection in SHUTW state in case it was validated late. The useless return codes of some of these functions were dropped so that callers only rely on the stream-int's state now (which was already partially the case anyway). The code is now a bit cleaner, could be further improved (and functions renamed) but given the sensitivity of this part, better limit changes to strictly necessary. It passes all reg tests.
2019-06-05 12:02:04 -04:00
/* First, centralize the timers information, and clear any irrelevant
* timeout.
*/
MEDIUM: clock: replace timeval "now" with integer "now_ns" This puts an end to the occasional confusion between the "now" date that is internal, monotonic and not synchronized with the system's date, and "date" which is the system's date and not necessarily monotonic. Variable "now" was removed and replaced with a 64-bit integer "now_ns" which is a counter of nanoseconds. It wraps every 585 years, so if all goes well (i.e. if humanity does not need haproxy anymore in 500 years), it will just never wrap. This implies that now_ns is never nul and that the zero value can reliably be used as "not set yet" for a timestamp if needed. This will also simplify date checks where it becomes possible again to do "date1<date2". All occurrences of "tv_to_ns(&now)" were simply replaced by "now_ns". Due to the intricacies between now, global_now and now_offset, all 3 had to be turned to nanoseconds at once. It's not a problem since all of them were solely used in 3 functions in clock.c, but they make the patch look bigger than it really is. The clock_update_local_date() and clock_update_global_date() functions are now much simpler as there's no need anymore to perform conversions nor to round the timeval up or down. The wrapping continues to happen by presetting the internal offset in the short future so that the 32-bit now_ms continues to wrap 20 seconds after boot. The start_time used to calculate uptime can still be turned to nanoseconds now. One interrogation concerns global_now_ms which is used only for the freq counters. It's unclear whether there's more value in using two variables that need to be synchronized sequentially like today or to just use global_now_ns divided by 1 million. Both approaches will work equally well on modern systems, the difference might come from smaller ones. Better not change anyhting for now. One benefit of the new approach is that we now have an internal date with a resolution of the nanosecond and the precision of the microsecond, which can be useful to extend some measurements given that timestamps also have this resolution.
2023-04-28 03:16:15 -04:00
s->logs.t_connect = ns_to_ms(now_ns - s->logs.accept_ts);
s->conn_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
s->flags &= ~SF_CONN_EXP;
MEDIUM: stream: re-arrange the connection setup status reporting Till now when a wakeup happens after a connection is attempted, we go through sess_update_st_con_tcp() to deal with the various possible events, then to sess_update_st_cer() to deal with a possible error detected by the former, or to sess_establish() to complete the connection validation. There are multiple issues in the way this is handled, which have accumulated over time. One of them is that any spurious wakeup during SI_ST_CON would validate the READ_ATTACHED flag and wake the analysers up. Another one is that nobody feels responsible for clearing SI_FL_EXP if it happened at the same time as a success (and it is present in all reports of loops to date). And another issue is that aborts cannot happen after a clean connection setup with no data transfer (since CF_WRITE_NULL is part of CF_WRITE_ACTIVITY). Last, the flags cleanup work was hackish, added here and there to please the next function (typically what had to be donne in commit 7a3367cca to work around the url_param+reuse issue by moving READ_ATTACHED to CON). This patch performs a significant lift up of this setup code. First, it makes sure that the state handlers are the ones responsible for the cleanup of the stuff they rely on. Typically sess_sestablish() will clean up the SI_FL_EXP flag because if we decided to validate the connection it means that we want to ignore this late timeout. Second, it splits the CON and RDY state handlers because the former only has to deal with failures, timeouts and non-events, while the latter has to deal with partial or total successes. Third, everything related to connection success was moved to sess_establish() since it's the only safe place to do so, and this function is also called at a few places to deal with synchronous connections, which are not seen by intermediary state handlers. The code was made a bit more robust, for example by making sure we always set SI_FL_NOLINGER when aborting a connection so that we don't have any risk to leave a connection in SHUTW state in case it was validated late. The useless return codes of some of these functions were dropped so that callers only rely on the stream-int's state now (which was already partially the case anyway). The code is now a bit cleaner, could be further improved (and functions renamed) but given the sensitivity of this part, better limit changes to strictly necessary. It passes all reg tests.
2019-06-05 12:02:04 -04:00
/* errors faced after sending data need to be reported */
if ((s->scb->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) && req->flags & CF_WROTE_DATA) {
s->req.flags |= CF_WRITE_EVENT;
s->res.flags |= CF_READ_EVENT;
s->conn_err_type = STRM_ET_DATA_ERR;
DBG_TRACE_STATE("read/write error", STRM_EV_STRM_PROC|STRM_EV_CS_ST|STRM_EV_STRM_ERR, s);
MEDIUM: stream: re-arrange the connection setup status reporting Till now when a wakeup happens after a connection is attempted, we go through sess_update_st_con_tcp() to deal with the various possible events, then to sess_update_st_cer() to deal with a possible error detected by the former, or to sess_establish() to complete the connection validation. There are multiple issues in the way this is handled, which have accumulated over time. One of them is that any spurious wakeup during SI_ST_CON would validate the READ_ATTACHED flag and wake the analysers up. Another one is that nobody feels responsible for clearing SI_FL_EXP if it happened at the same time as a success (and it is present in all reports of loops to date). And another issue is that aborts cannot happen after a clean connection setup with no data transfer (since CF_WRITE_NULL is part of CF_WRITE_ACTIVITY). Last, the flags cleanup work was hackish, added here and there to please the next function (typically what had to be donne in commit 7a3367cca to work around the url_param+reuse issue by moving READ_ATTACHED to CON). This patch performs a significant lift up of this setup code. First, it makes sure that the state handlers are the ones responsible for the cleanup of the stuff they rely on. Typically sess_sestablish() will clean up the SI_FL_EXP flag because if we decided to validate the connection it means that we want to ignore this late timeout. Second, it splits the CON and RDY state handlers because the former only has to deal with failures, timeouts and non-events, while the latter has to deal with partial or total successes. Third, everything related to connection success was moved to sess_establish() since it's the only safe place to do so, and this function is also called at a few places to deal with synchronous connections, which are not seen by intermediary state handlers. The code was made a bit more robust, for example by making sure we always set SI_FL_NOLINGER when aborting a connection so that we don't have any risk to leave a connection in SHUTW state in case it was validated late. The useless return codes of some of these functions were dropped so that callers only rely on the stream-int's state now (which was already partially the case anyway). The code is now a bit cleaner, could be further improved (and functions renamed) but given the sensitivity of this part, better limit changes to strictly necessary. It passes all reg tests.
2019-06-05 12:02:04 -04:00
}
if (objt_server(s->target))
health_adjust(__objt_server(s->target), HANA_STATUS_L4_OK);
if (!IS_HTX_STRM(s)) { /* let's allow immediate data connection in this case */
/* if the user wants to log as soon as possible, without counting
* bytes from the server, then this is the right moment. */
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&strm_fe(s)->logformat) && !(s->logs.logwait & LW_BYTES)) {
/* note: no pend_pos here, session is established */
s->logs.t_close = s->logs.t_connect; /* to get a valid end date */
s->do_log(s);
}
}
else {
s->scb->flags |= SC_FL_RCV_ONCE; /* a single read is enough to get response headers */
}
rep->analysers |= strm_fe(s)->fe_rsp_ana | s->be->be_rsp_ana;
se_have_more_data(s->scb->sedesc);
rep->flags |= CF_READ_EVENT; /* producer is now attached */
sc_ep_report_read_activity(s->scb);
if (conn) {
/* real connections have timeouts
* if already defined, it means that a set-timeout rule has
* been executed so do not overwrite them
*/
if (!tick_isset(s->scb->ioto))
s->scb->ioto = s->be->timeout.server;
if (!tick_isset(s->tunnel_timeout))
s->tunnel_timeout = s->be->timeout.tunnel;
/* The connection is now established, try to read data from the
* underlying layer, and subscribe to recv events. We use a
* delayed recv here to give a chance to the data to flow back
* by the time we process other tasks.
*/
sc_chk_rcv(s->scb);
}
/* If we managed to get the whole response, and we don't have anything
* left to send, or can't, switch to SC_ST_DIS now. */
if ((s->scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) || (s->scf->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) {
s->scb->state = SC_ST_DIS;
DBG_TRACE_STATE("response channel shutdwn for read/write", STRM_EV_STRM_PROC|STRM_EV_CS_ST|STRM_EV_STRM_ERR, s);
}
DBG_TRACE_LEAVE(STRM_EV_STRM_PROC|STRM_EV_CS_ST, s);
}
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* Set correct stream termination flags in case no analyser has done it. It
* also counts a failed request if the server state has not reached the request
* stage.
*/
void sess_set_term_flags(struct stream *s)
{
if (!(s->flags & SF_FINST_MASK)) {
if (s->scb->state == SC_ST_INI) {
/* anything before REQ in fact */
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&strm_fe(s)->fe_counters.failed_req);
if (strm_li(s) && strm_li(s)->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&strm_li(s)->counters->failed_req);
s->flags |= SF_FINST_R;
}
else if (s->scb->state == SC_ST_QUE)
s->flags |= SF_FINST_Q;
else if (sc_state_in(s->scb->state, SC_SB_REQ|SC_SB_TAR|SC_SB_ASS|SC_SB_CON|SC_SB_CER|SC_SB_RDY))
s->flags |= SF_FINST_C;
else if (s->scb->state == SC_ST_EST || s->prev_conn_state == SC_ST_EST)
s->flags |= SF_FINST_D;
else
s->flags |= SF_FINST_L;
}
}
/* This function parses the use-service action ruleset. It executes
* the associated ACL and set an applet as a stream or txn final node.
* it returns ACT_RET_ERR if an error occurs, the proxy left in
* consistent state. It returns ACT_RET_STOP in success case because
* use-service must be a terminal action. Returns ACT_RET_YIELD
* if the initialisation function require more data.
*/
enum act_return process_use_service(struct act_rule *rule, struct proxy *px,
struct session *sess, struct stream *s, int flags)
{
struct appctx *appctx;
/* Initialises the applet if it is required. */
if (flags & ACT_OPT_FIRST) {
/* Register applet. this function schedules the applet. */
s->target = &rule->applet.obj_type;
appctx = sc_applet_create(s->scb, objt_applet(s->target));
if (unlikely(!appctx))
return ACT_RET_ERR;
/* Finish initialisation of the context. */
appctx->rule = rule;
if (appctx_init(appctx) == -1)
return ACT_RET_ERR;
}
else
appctx = __sc_appctx(s->scb);
if (rule->from != ACT_F_HTTP_REQ) {
if (sess->fe == s->be) /* report it if the request was intercepted by the frontend */
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.intercepted_req);
/* The flag SF_ASSIGNED prevent from server assignment. */
s->flags |= SF_ASSIGNED;
}
/* Now we can schedule the applet. */
applet_need_more_data(appctx);
appctx_wakeup(appctx);
return ACT_RET_STOP;
}
/* This stream analyser checks the switching rules and changes the backend
* if appropriate. The default_backend rule is also considered, then the
* target backend's forced persistence rules are also evaluated last if any.
* It returns 1 if the processing can continue on next analysers, or zero if it
* either needs more data or wants to immediately abort the request.
*/
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
static int process_switching_rules(struct stream *s, struct channel *req, int an_bit)
{
struct persist_rule *prst_rule;
struct session *sess = s->sess;
struct proxy *fe = sess->fe;
req->analysers &= ~an_bit;
req->analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
/* now check whether we have some switching rules for this request */
if (!(s->flags & SF_BE_ASSIGNED)) {
struct switching_rule *rule;
list_for_each_entry(rule, &fe->switching_rules, list) {
int ret = 1;
if (rule->cond) {
ret = acl_exec_cond(rule->cond, fe, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_REQ|SMP_OPT_FINAL);
ret = acl_pass(ret);
if (rule->cond->pol == ACL_COND_UNLESS)
ret = !ret;
}
if (ret) {
MEDIUM: proxy: support use_backend with dynamic names We have a use case where we look up a customer ID in an HTTP header and direct it to the corresponding server. This can easily be done using ACLs and use_backend rules, but the configuration becomes painful to maintain when the number of customers grows to a few tens or even a several hundreds. We realized it would be nice if we could make the use_backend resolve its name at run time instead of config parsing time, and use a similar expression as http-request add-header to decide on the proper backend to use. This permits the use of prefixes or even complex names in backend expressions. If no name matches, then the default backend is used. Doing so allowed us to get rid of all the use_backend rules. Since there are some config checks on the use_backend rules to see if the referenced backend exists, we want to keep them to detect config errors in normal config. So this patch does not modify the default behaviour and proceeds this way : - if the backend name in the use_backend directive parses as a log format rule, it's used as-is and is resolved at run time ; - otherwise it's a static name which must be valid at config time. There was the possibility of doing this with the use-server directive instead of use_backend, but it seems like use_backend is more suited to this task, as it can be used for other purposes. For example, it becomes easy to serve a customer-specific proxy.pac file based on the customer ID by abusing the errorfile primitive : use_backend bk_cust_%[hdr(X-Cust-Id)] if { hdr(X-Cust-Id) -m found } default_backend bk_err_404 backend bk_cust_1 errorfile 200 /etc/haproxy/static/proxy.pac.cust1 Signed-off-by: Bertrand Jacquin <bjacquin@exosec.fr>
2013-11-19 05:43:06 -05:00
/* If the backend name is dynamic, try to resolve the name.
* If we can't resolve the name, or if any error occurs, break
* the loop and fallback to the default backend.
*/
struct proxy *backend = NULL;
MEDIUM: proxy: support use_backend with dynamic names We have a use case where we look up a customer ID in an HTTP header and direct it to the corresponding server. This can easily be done using ACLs and use_backend rules, but the configuration becomes painful to maintain when the number of customers grows to a few tens or even a several hundreds. We realized it would be nice if we could make the use_backend resolve its name at run time instead of config parsing time, and use a similar expression as http-request add-header to decide on the proper backend to use. This permits the use of prefixes or even complex names in backend expressions. If no name matches, then the default backend is used. Doing so allowed us to get rid of all the use_backend rules. Since there are some config checks on the use_backend rules to see if the referenced backend exists, we want to keep them to detect config errors in normal config. So this patch does not modify the default behaviour and proceeds this way : - if the backend name in the use_backend directive parses as a log format rule, it's used as-is and is resolved at run time ; - otherwise it's a static name which must be valid at config time. There was the possibility of doing this with the use-server directive instead of use_backend, but it seems like use_backend is more suited to this task, as it can be used for other purposes. For example, it becomes easy to serve a customer-specific proxy.pac file based on the customer ID by abusing the errorfile primitive : use_backend bk_cust_%[hdr(X-Cust-Id)] if { hdr(X-Cust-Id) -m found } default_backend bk_err_404 backend bk_cust_1 errorfile 200 /etc/haproxy/static/proxy.pac.cust1 Signed-off-by: Bertrand Jacquin <bjacquin@exosec.fr>
2013-11-19 05:43:06 -05:00
if (rule->dynamic) {
struct buffer *tmp;
tmp = alloc_trash_chunk();
if (!tmp)
goto sw_failed;
if (build_logline(s, tmp->area, tmp->size, &rule->be.expr))
backend = proxy_be_by_name(tmp->area);
free_trash_chunk(tmp);
tmp = NULL;
MEDIUM: proxy: support use_backend with dynamic names We have a use case where we look up a customer ID in an HTTP header and direct it to the corresponding server. This can easily be done using ACLs and use_backend rules, but the configuration becomes painful to maintain when the number of customers grows to a few tens or even a several hundreds. We realized it would be nice if we could make the use_backend resolve its name at run time instead of config parsing time, and use a similar expression as http-request add-header to decide on the proper backend to use. This permits the use of prefixes or even complex names in backend expressions. If no name matches, then the default backend is used. Doing so allowed us to get rid of all the use_backend rules. Since there are some config checks on the use_backend rules to see if the referenced backend exists, we want to keep them to detect config errors in normal config. So this patch does not modify the default behaviour and proceeds this way : - if the backend name in the use_backend directive parses as a log format rule, it's used as-is and is resolved at run time ; - otherwise it's a static name which must be valid at config time. There was the possibility of doing this with the use-server directive instead of use_backend, but it seems like use_backend is more suited to this task, as it can be used for other purposes. For example, it becomes easy to serve a customer-specific proxy.pac file based on the customer ID by abusing the errorfile primitive : use_backend bk_cust_%[hdr(X-Cust-Id)] if { hdr(X-Cust-Id) -m found } default_backend bk_err_404 backend bk_cust_1 errorfile 200 /etc/haproxy/static/proxy.pac.cust1 Signed-off-by: Bertrand Jacquin <bjacquin@exosec.fr>
2013-11-19 05:43:06 -05:00
if (!backend)
break;
}
else
backend = rule->be.backend;
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
if (!stream_set_backend(s, backend))
goto sw_failed;
break;
}
}
/* To ensure correct connection accounting on the backend, we
* have to assign one if it was not set (eg: a listen). This
* measure also takes care of correctly setting the default
* backend if any. Don't do anything if an upgrade is already in
* progress.
*/
if (!(s->flags & (SF_BE_ASSIGNED|SF_IGNORE)))
if (!stream_set_backend(s, fe->defbe.be ? fe->defbe.be : s->be))
goto sw_failed;
/* No backend assigned but no error reported. It happens when a
* TCP stream is upgraded to HTTP/2.
*/
if ((s->flags & (SF_BE_ASSIGNED|SF_IGNORE)) == SF_IGNORE) {
DBG_TRACE_DEVEL("leaving with no backend because of a destructive upgrade", STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
return 0;
}
}
/* we don't want to run the TCP or HTTP filters again if the backend has not changed */
if (fe == s->be) {
s->req.analysers &= ~AN_REQ_INSPECT_BE;
s->req.analysers &= ~AN_REQ_HTTP_PROCESS_BE;
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
s->req.analysers &= ~AN_REQ_FLT_START_BE;
}
/* as soon as we know the backend, we must check if we have a matching forced or ignored
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* persistence rule, and report that in the stream.
*/
list_for_each_entry(prst_rule, &s->be->persist_rules, list) {
int ret = 1;
if (prst_rule->cond) {
ret = acl_exec_cond(prst_rule->cond, s->be, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_REQ|SMP_OPT_FINAL);
ret = acl_pass(ret);
if (prst_rule->cond->pol == ACL_COND_UNLESS)
ret = !ret;
}
if (ret) {
/* no rule, or the rule matches */
if (prst_rule->type == PERSIST_TYPE_FORCE) {
s->flags |= SF_FORCE_PRST;
} else {
s->flags |= SF_IGNORE_PRST;
}
break;
}
}
DBG_TRACE_LEAVE(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
return 1;
sw_failed:
/* immediately abort this request in case of allocation failure */
stream_abort(s);
if (!(s->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_ERR_RESOURCE;
if (!(s->flags & SF_FINST_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_FINST_R;
if (s->txn)
s->txn->status = 500;
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
s->req.analysers &= AN_REQ_FLT_END;
s->req.analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
DBG_TRACE_DEVEL("leaving on error", STRM_EV_STRM_ANA|STRM_EV_STRM_ERR, s);
return 0;
}
/* This stream analyser works on a request. It applies all use-server rules on
* it then returns 1. The data must already be present in the buffer otherwise
* they won't match. It always returns 1.
*/
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
static int process_server_rules(struct stream *s, struct channel *req, int an_bit)
{
struct proxy *px = s->be;
struct session *sess = s->sess;
struct server_rule *rule;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
if (!(s->flags & SF_ASSIGNED)) {
list_for_each_entry(rule, &px->server_rules, list) {
int ret;
ret = acl_exec_cond(rule->cond, s->be, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_REQ|SMP_OPT_FINAL);
ret = acl_pass(ret);
if (rule->cond->pol == ACL_COND_UNLESS)
ret = !ret;
if (ret) {
struct server *srv;
if (rule->dynamic) {
struct buffer *tmp = get_trash_chunk();
if (!build_logline(s, tmp->area, tmp->size, &rule->expr))
break;
srv = findserver(s->be, tmp->area);
if (!srv)
break;
}
else
srv = rule->srv.ptr;
if ((srv->cur_state != SRV_ST_STOPPED) ||
(px->options & PR_O_PERSIST) ||
(s->flags & SF_FORCE_PRST)) {
s->flags |= SF_DIRECT | SF_ASSIGNED;
s->target = &srv->obj_type;
break;
}
/* if the server is not UP, let's go on with next rules
* just in case another one is suited.
*/
}
}
}
req->analysers &= ~an_bit;
req->analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
DBG_TRACE_LEAVE(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
return 1;
}
static inline void sticking_rule_find_target(struct stream *s,
struct stktable *t, struct stksess *ts)
{
struct proxy *px = s->be;
struct eb32_node *node;
struct dict_entry *de;
void *ptr;
struct server *srv;
/* Look for the server name previously stored in <t> stick-table */
HA_RWLOCK_RDLOCK(STK_SESS_LOCK, &ts->lock);
ptr = __stktable_data_ptr(t, ts, STKTABLE_DT_SERVER_KEY);
de = stktable_data_cast(ptr, std_t_dict);
HA_RWLOCK_RDUNLOCK(STK_SESS_LOCK, &ts->lock);
if (de) {
struct ebpt_node *node;
if (t->server_key_type == STKTABLE_SRV_NAME) {
node = ebis_lookup(&px->conf.used_server_name, de->value.key);
if (node) {
srv = container_of(node, struct server, conf.name);
goto found;
}
} else if (t->server_key_type == STKTABLE_SRV_ADDR) {
HA_RWLOCK_RDLOCK(PROXY_LOCK, &px->lock);
node = ebis_lookup(&px->used_server_addr, de->value.key);
HA_RWLOCK_RDUNLOCK(PROXY_LOCK, &px->lock);
if (node) {
srv = container_of(node, struct server, addr_node);
goto found;
}
}
}
/* Look for the server ID */
HA_RWLOCK_RDLOCK(STK_SESS_LOCK, &ts->lock);
ptr = __stktable_data_ptr(t, ts, STKTABLE_DT_SERVER_ID);
node = eb32_lookup(&px->conf.used_server_id, stktable_data_cast(ptr, std_t_sint));
HA_RWLOCK_RDUNLOCK(STK_SESS_LOCK, &ts->lock);
if (!node)
return;
srv = container_of(node, struct server, conf.id);
found:
if ((srv->cur_state != SRV_ST_STOPPED) ||
(px->options & PR_O_PERSIST) || (s->flags & SF_FORCE_PRST)) {
s->flags |= SF_DIRECT | SF_ASSIGNED;
s->target = &srv->obj_type;
}
}
/* This stream analyser works on a request. It applies all sticking rules on
* it then returns 1. The data must already be present in the buffer otherwise
* they won't match. It always returns 1.
*/
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
static int process_sticking_rules(struct stream *s, struct channel *req, int an_bit)
{
struct proxy *px = s->be;
struct session *sess = s->sess;
struct sticking_rule *rule;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
list_for_each_entry(rule, &px->sticking_rules, list) {
int ret = 1 ;
int i;
/* Only the first stick store-request of each table is applied
* and other ones are ignored. The purpose is to allow complex
* configurations which look for multiple entries by decreasing
* order of precision and to stop at the first which matches.
* An example could be a store of the IP address from an HTTP
* header first, then from the source if not found.
*/
if (rule->flags & STK_IS_STORE) {
for (i = 0; i < s->store_count; i++) {
if (rule->table.t == s->store[i].table)
break;
}
if (i != s->store_count)
continue;
}
if (rule->cond) {
ret = acl_exec_cond(rule->cond, px, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_REQ|SMP_OPT_FINAL);
ret = acl_pass(ret);
if (rule->cond->pol == ACL_COND_UNLESS)
ret = !ret;
}
if (ret) {
struct stktable_key *key;
key = stktable_fetch_key(rule->table.t, px, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_REQ|SMP_OPT_FINAL, rule->expr, NULL);
if (!key)
continue;
if (rule->flags & STK_IS_MATCH) {
struct stksess *ts;
if ((ts = stktable_lookup_key(rule->table.t, key)) != NULL) {
if (!(s->flags & SF_ASSIGNED))
sticking_rule_find_target(s, rule->table.t, ts);
stktable_touch_local(rule->table.t, ts, 1);
}
}
if (rule->flags & STK_IS_STORE) {
if (s->store_count < (sizeof(s->store) / sizeof(s->store[0]))) {
struct stksess *ts;
ts = stksess_new(rule->table.t, key);
if (ts) {
s->store[s->store_count].table = rule->table.t;
s->store[s->store_count++].ts = ts;
}
}
}
}
}
req->analysers &= ~an_bit;
req->analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
DBG_TRACE_LEAVE(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
return 1;
}
/* This stream analyser works on a response. It applies all store rules on it
* then returns 1. The data must already be present in the buffer otherwise
* they won't match. It always returns 1.
*/
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
static int process_store_rules(struct stream *s, struct channel *rep, int an_bit)
{
struct proxy *px = s->be;
struct session *sess = s->sess;
struct sticking_rule *rule;
int i;
int nbreq = s->store_count;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
list_for_each_entry(rule, &px->storersp_rules, list) {
int ret = 1 ;
/* Only the first stick store-response of each table is applied
* and other ones are ignored. The purpose is to allow complex
* configurations which look for multiple entries by decreasing
* order of precision and to stop at the first which matches.
* An example could be a store of a set-cookie value, with a
* fallback to a parameter found in a 302 redirect.
*
* The store-response rules are not allowed to override the
* store-request rules for the same table, but they may coexist.
* Thus we can have up to one store-request entry and one store-
* response entry for the same table at any time.
*/
for (i = nbreq; i < s->store_count; i++) {
if (rule->table.t == s->store[i].table)
break;
}
/* skip existing entries for this table */
if (i < s->store_count)
continue;
if (rule->cond) {
ret = acl_exec_cond(rule->cond, px, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_RES|SMP_OPT_FINAL);
ret = acl_pass(ret);
if (rule->cond->pol == ACL_COND_UNLESS)
ret = !ret;
}
if (ret) {
struct stktable_key *key;
key = stktable_fetch_key(rule->table.t, px, sess, s, SMP_OPT_DIR_RES|SMP_OPT_FINAL, rule->expr, NULL);
if (!key)
continue;
if (s->store_count < (sizeof(s->store) / sizeof(s->store[0]))) {
struct stksess *ts;
ts = stksess_new(rule->table.t, key);
if (ts) {
s->store[s->store_count].table = rule->table.t;
s->store[s->store_count++].ts = ts;
}
}
}
}
/* process store request and store response */
for (i = 0; i < s->store_count; i++) {
struct stksess *ts;
void *ptr;
char *key;
struct dict_entry *de;
struct stktable *t = s->store[i].table;
if (!objt_server(s->target) || (__objt_server(s->target)->flags & SRV_F_NON_STICK)) {
stksess_free(s->store[i].table, s->store[i].ts);
s->store[i].ts = NULL;
continue;
}
ts = stktable_set_entry(t, s->store[i].ts);
if (ts != s->store[i].ts) {
/* the entry already existed, we can free ours */
stksess_free(t, s->store[i].ts);
}
s->store[i].ts = NULL;
if (t->server_key_type == STKTABLE_SRV_NAME)
key = __objt_server(s->target)->id;
else if (t->server_key_type == STKTABLE_SRV_ADDR)
key = __objt_server(s->target)->addr_node.key;
else
key = NULL;
HA_RWLOCK_WRLOCK(STK_SESS_LOCK, &ts->lock);
ptr = __stktable_data_ptr(t, ts, STKTABLE_DT_SERVER_ID);
stktable_data_cast(ptr, std_t_sint) = __objt_server(s->target)->puid;
if (key) {
de = dict_insert(&server_key_dict, key);
if (de) {
ptr = __stktable_data_ptr(t, ts, STKTABLE_DT_SERVER_KEY);
stktable_data_cast(ptr, std_t_dict) = de;
}
}
HA_RWLOCK_WRUNLOCK(STK_SESS_LOCK, &ts->lock);
stktable_touch_local(t, ts, 1);
}
s->store_count = 0; /* everything is stored */
rep->analysers &= ~an_bit;
rep->analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
DBG_TRACE_LEAVE(STRM_EV_STRM_ANA, s);
return 1;
}
/* Set the stream to HTTP mode, if necessary. The minimal request HTTP analysers
* are set and the client mux is upgraded. It returns 1 if the stream processing
* may continue or 0 if it should be stopped. It happens on error or if the
* upgrade required a new stream. The mux protocol may be specified.
*/
int stream_set_http_mode(struct stream *s, const struct mux_proto_list *mux_proto)
{
struct stconn *sc = s->scf;
struct connection *conn;
/* Already an HTTP stream */
if (IS_HTX_STRM(s))
return 1;
s->req.analysers |= AN_REQ_WAIT_HTTP|AN_REQ_HTTP_PROCESS_FE;
if (unlikely(!s->txn && !http_create_txn(s)))
return 0;
conn = sc_conn(sc);
if (conn) {
se_have_more_data(s->scf->sedesc);
/* Make sure we're unsubscribed, the the new
* mux will probably want to subscribe to
* the underlying XPRT
*/
if (s->scf->wait_event.events)
conn->mux->unsubscribe(sc, s->scf->wait_event.events, &(s->scf->wait_event));
if (conn->mux->flags & MX_FL_NO_UPG)
return 0;
sc_conn_prepare_endp_upgrade(sc);
if (conn_upgrade_mux_fe(conn, sc, &s->req.buf,
(mux_proto ? mux_proto->token : ist("")),
PROTO_MODE_HTTP) == -1) {
sc_conn_abort_endp_upgrade(sc);
return 0;
}
sc_conn_commit_endp_upgrade(sc);
s->req.flags &= ~(CF_READ_EVENT|CF_AUTO_CONNECT);
s->req.total = 0;
s->flags |= SF_IGNORE;
if (sc_ep_test(sc, SE_FL_DETACHED)) {
/* If stream connector is detached, it means it was not
* reused by the new mux. Son destroy it, disable
* logging, and abort the stream process. Thus the
* stream will be silently destroyed. The new mux will
* create new streams.
*/
s->logs.logwait = 0;
s->logs.level = 0;
stream_abort(s);
s->req.analysers &= AN_REQ_FLT_END;
s->req.analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
}
}
return 1;
}
/* Updates at once the channel flags, and timers of both stream connectors of a
* same stream, to complete the work after the analysers, then updates the data
* layer below. This will ensure that any synchronous update performed at the
* data layer will be reflected in the channel flags and/or stream connector.
* Note that this does not change the stream connector's current state, though
* it updates the previous state to the current one.
*/
static void stream_update_both_sc(struct stream *s)
{
struct stconn *scf = s->scf;
struct stconn *scb = s->scb;
struct channel *req = &s->req;
struct channel *res = &s->res;
req->flags &= ~(CF_READ_EVENT|CF_WRITE_EVENT);
res->flags &= ~(CF_READ_EVENT|CF_WRITE_EVENT);
s->prev_conn_state = scb->state;
/* let's recompute both sides states */
if (sc_state_in(scf->state, SC_SB_RDY|SC_SB_EST))
sc_update(scf);
if (sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_RDY|SC_SB_EST))
sc_update(scb);
/* stream connectors are processed outside of process_stream() and must be
* handled at the latest moment.
*/
if (sc_appctx(scf)) {
if (sc_is_recv_allowed(scf) || sc_is_send_allowed(scf))
appctx_wakeup(__sc_appctx(scf));
}
if (sc_appctx(scb)) {
if (sc_is_recv_allowed(scb) || sc_is_send_allowed(scb))
appctx_wakeup(__sc_appctx(scb));
}
}
/* check SC and channel timeouts, and close the corresponding stream connectors
* for future reads or writes.
* Note: this will also concern upper layers but we do not touch any other
* flag. We must be careful and correctly detect state changes when calling
* them.
*/
static void stream_handle_timeouts(struct stream *s)
{
stream_check_conn_timeout(s);
sc_check_timeouts(s->scf);
channel_check_timeout(&s->req);
sc_check_timeouts(s->scb);
channel_check_timeout(&s->res);
if (unlikely(!(s->scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE) && (s->req.flags & CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT))) {
s->scb->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_shutdown(s->scb);
}
if (unlikely(!(s->scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) && (s->req.flags & CF_READ_TIMEOUT))) {
if (s->scf->flags & SC_FL_NOHALF)
s->scf->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_abort(s->scf);
}
if (unlikely(!(s->scf->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE) && (s->res.flags & CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT))) {
s->scf->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_shutdown(s->scf);
}
if (unlikely(!(s->scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) && (s->res.flags & CF_READ_TIMEOUT))) {
if (s->scb->flags & SC_FL_NOHALF)
s->scb->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_abort(s->scb);
}
if (HAS_FILTERS(s))
flt_stream_check_timeouts(s);
}
/* if the current task's wake_date was set, it's being profiled, thus we may
* report latencies and CPU usages in logs, so it's desirable to update the
* latency when entering process_stream().
*/
static void stream_cond_update_cpu_latency(struct stream *s)
{
uint32_t lat = th_ctx->sched_call_date - th_ctx->sched_wake_date;
s->lat_time += lat;
}
/* if the current task's wake_date was set, it's being profiled, thus we may
* report latencies and CPU usages in logs, so it's desirable to do that before
* logging in order to report accurate CPU usage. In this case we count that
* final part and reset the wake date so that the scheduler doesn't do it a
* second time, and by doing so we also avoid an extra call to clock_gettime().
* The CPU usage will be off by the little time needed to run over stream_free()
* but that's only marginal.
*/
static void stream_cond_update_cpu_usage(struct stream *s)
{
uint32_t cpu;
/* stats are only registered for non-zero wake dates */
if (likely(!th_ctx->sched_wake_date))
return;
cpu = (uint32_t)now_mono_time() - th_ctx->sched_call_date;
s->cpu_time += cpu;
HA_ATOMIC_ADD(&th_ctx->sched_profile_entry->cpu_time, cpu);
th_ctx->sched_wake_date = 0;
}
/* this functions is called directly by the scheduler for tasks whose
* ->process points to process_stream(), and is used to keep latencies
* and CPU usage measurements accurate.
*/
void stream_update_timings(struct task *t, uint64_t lat, uint64_t cpu)
{
struct stream *s = t->context;
s->lat_time += lat;
s->cpu_time += cpu;
}
/* This macro is very specific to the function below. See the comments in
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* process_stream() below to understand the logic and the tests.
*/
#define UPDATE_ANALYSERS(real, list, back, flag) { \
list = (((list) & ~(flag)) | ~(back)) & (real); \
back = real; \
if (!(list)) \
break; \
if (((list) ^ ((list) & ((list) - 1))) < (flag)) \
continue; \
}
/* These 2 following macros call an analayzer for the specified channel if the
* right flag is set. The first one is used for "filterable" analyzers. If a
* stream has some registered filters, pre and post analyaze callbacks are
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
* called. The second are used for other analyzers (AN_REQ/RES_FLT_* and
* AN_REQ/RES_HTTP_XFER_BODY) */
#define FLT_ANALYZE(strm, chn, fun, list, back, flag, ...) \
{ \
if ((list) & (flag)) { \
if (HAS_FILTERS(strm)) { \
if (!flt_pre_analyze((strm), (chn), (flag))) \
break; \
if (!fun((strm), (chn), (flag), ##__VA_ARGS__)) \
break; \
if (!flt_post_analyze((strm), (chn), (flag))) \
break; \
} \
else { \
if (!fun((strm), (chn), (flag), ##__VA_ARGS__)) \
break; \
} \
UPDATE_ANALYSERS((chn)->analysers, (list), \
(back), (flag)); \
} \
}
#define ANALYZE(strm, chn, fun, list, back, flag, ...) \
{ \
if ((list) & (flag)) { \
if (!fun((strm), (chn), (flag), ##__VA_ARGS__)) \
break; \
UPDATE_ANALYSERS((chn)->analysers, (list), \
(back), (flag)); \
} \
}
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* Processes the client, server, request and response jobs of a stream task,
* then puts it back to the wait queue in a clean state, or cleans up its
* resources if it must be deleted. Returns in <next> the date the task wants
* to be woken up, or TICK_ETERNITY. In order not to call all functions for
* nothing too many times, the request and response buffers flags are monitored
* and each function is called only if at least another function has changed at
* least one flag it is interested in.
*/
struct task *process_stream(struct task *t, void *context, unsigned int state)
{
struct server *srv;
struct stream *s = context;
struct session *sess = s->sess;
unsigned int scf_flags, scb_flags;
unsigned int rqf_last, rpf_last;
unsigned int rq_prod_last, rq_cons_last;
unsigned int rp_cons_last, rp_prod_last;
unsigned int req_ana_back, res_ana_back;
struct channel *req, *res;
struct stconn *scf, *scb;
unsigned int rate;
DBG_TRACE_ENTER(STRM_EV_STRM_PROC, s);
activity[tid].stream_calls++;
stream_cond_update_cpu_latency(s);
req = &s->req;
res = &s->res;
scf = s->scf;
scb = s->scb;
/* First, attempt to receive pending data from I/O layers */
sc_conn_sync_recv(scf);
sc_conn_sync_recv(scb);
BUG/MINOR: stream: make the call_rate only count the no-progress calls We have an anti-looping protection in process_stream() that detects bugs that used to affect a few filters like compression in the past which sometimes forgot to handle a read0 or a particular error, leaving a thread looping at 100% CPU forever. When such a condition is detected, an alert it emitted and the process is killed so that it can be replaced by a sane one: [ALERT] (19061) : A bogus STREAM [0x274abe0] is spinning at 2057156 calls per second and refuses to die, aborting now! Please report this error to developers [strm=0x274abe0,3 src=unix fe=MASTER be=MASTER dst=<MCLI> txn=(nil),0 txn.req=-,0 txn.rsp=-,0 rqf=c02000 rqa=10000 rpf=88000021 rpa=8000000 sif=EST,40008 sib=DIS,84018 af=(nil),0 csf=0x274ab90,8600 ab=0x272fd40,1 csb=(nil),0 cof=0x25d5d80,1300:PASS(0x274aaf0)/RAW((nil))/unix_stream(9) cob=(nil),0:NONE((nil))/NONE((nil))/NONE(0) filters={}] call trace(11): | 0x4dbaab [c7 04 25 01 00 00 00 00]: stream_dump_and_crash+0x17b/0x1b4 | 0x4df31f [e9 bd c8 ff ff 49 83 7c]: process_stream+0x382f/0x53a3 (...) One problem with this detection is that it used to only count the call rate because we weren't sure how to make it more accurate, but the threshold was high enough to prevent accidental false positives. There is actually one case that manages to trigger it, which is when sending huge amounts of requests pipelined on the master CLI. Some short requests such as "show version" are sufficient to be handled extremely fast and to cause a wake up of an analyser to parse the next request, then an applet to handle it, back and forth. But this condition is not an error, since some data are being forwarded by the stream, and it's easy to detect it. This patch modifies the detection so that update_freq_ctr() only applies to calls made without CF_READ_PARTIAL nor CF_WRITE_PARTIAL set on any of the channels, which really indicates that nothing is happening at all. This is greatly sufficient and extremely effective, as the call above is still caught (shutr being ignored by an analyser) while a loop on the master CLI now has no effect. The "call_rate" field in the detailed "show sess" output will now be much lower, except for bogus streams, which may help spot them. This field is only there for developers anyway so it's pretty fine to slightly adjust its meaning. This patch could be backported to stable versions in case of reports of such an issue, but as that's unlikely, it's not really needed.
2022-01-20 12:42:16 -05:00
/* Let's check if we're looping without making any progress, e.g. due
* to a bogus analyser or the fact that we're ignoring a read0. The
* call_rate counter only counts calls with no progress made.
*/
if (!((req->flags | res->flags) & (CF_READ_EVENT|CF_WRITE_EVENT))) {
BUG/MINOR: stream: make the call_rate only count the no-progress calls We have an anti-looping protection in process_stream() that detects bugs that used to affect a few filters like compression in the past which sometimes forgot to handle a read0 or a particular error, leaving a thread looping at 100% CPU forever. When such a condition is detected, an alert it emitted and the process is killed so that it can be replaced by a sane one: [ALERT] (19061) : A bogus STREAM [0x274abe0] is spinning at 2057156 calls per second and refuses to die, aborting now! Please report this error to developers [strm=0x274abe0,3 src=unix fe=MASTER be=MASTER dst=<MCLI> txn=(nil),0 txn.req=-,0 txn.rsp=-,0 rqf=c02000 rqa=10000 rpf=88000021 rpa=8000000 sif=EST,40008 sib=DIS,84018 af=(nil),0 csf=0x274ab90,8600 ab=0x272fd40,1 csb=(nil),0 cof=0x25d5d80,1300:PASS(0x274aaf0)/RAW((nil))/unix_stream(9) cob=(nil),0:NONE((nil))/NONE((nil))/NONE(0) filters={}] call trace(11): | 0x4dbaab [c7 04 25 01 00 00 00 00]: stream_dump_and_crash+0x17b/0x1b4 | 0x4df31f [e9 bd c8 ff ff 49 83 7c]: process_stream+0x382f/0x53a3 (...) One problem with this detection is that it used to only count the call rate because we weren't sure how to make it more accurate, but the threshold was high enough to prevent accidental false positives. There is actually one case that manages to trigger it, which is when sending huge amounts of requests pipelined on the master CLI. Some short requests such as "show version" are sufficient to be handled extremely fast and to cause a wake up of an analyser to parse the next request, then an applet to handle it, back and forth. But this condition is not an error, since some data are being forwarded by the stream, and it's easy to detect it. This patch modifies the detection so that update_freq_ctr() only applies to calls made without CF_READ_PARTIAL nor CF_WRITE_PARTIAL set on any of the channels, which really indicates that nothing is happening at all. This is greatly sufficient and extremely effective, as the call above is still caught (shutr being ignored by an analyser) while a loop on the master CLI now has no effect. The "call_rate" field in the detailed "show sess" output will now be much lower, except for bogus streams, which may help spot them. This field is only there for developers anyway so it's pretty fine to slightly adjust its meaning. This patch could be backported to stable versions in case of reports of such an issue, but as that's unlikely, it's not really needed.
2022-01-20 12:42:16 -05:00
rate = update_freq_ctr(&s->call_rate, 1);
if (rate >= 100000 && s->call_rate.prev_ctr) // make sure to wait at least a full second
stream_dump_and_crash(&s->obj_type, read_freq_ctr(&s->call_rate));
}
/* this data may be no longer valid, clear it */
if (s->txn)
memset(&s->txn->auth, 0, sizeof(s->txn->auth));
BUG/MAJOR: session: revert all the crappy client-side timeout changes This is the 3rd regression caused by the changes below. The latest to date was reported by Finn Arne Gangstad. If a server responds with no content-length and the client's FIN is never received, either we leak the client-side FD or we spin at 100% CPU if timeout client-fin is set. Enough is enough. The amount of tricks needed to cover these side-effects starts to look like used toilet paper stacked over a chocolate cake. I don't want to eat that cake anymore! All this to avoid reporting a server-side timeout when a client stops uploading data and haproxy expires faster than the server... A lot of "ifs" resulting in a technically valid log that doesn't always please users, and whose alternative causes that many issues for all others users. So let's revert this crap merged since 1.5-dev25 : Revert "CLEANUP: http: don't clear CF_READ_NOEXP twice" This reverts commit 1592d1e72a4a2d25a554c299ae95a3e6cad80bf1. Revert "BUG/MEDIUM: http: clear CF_READ_NOEXP when preparing a new transaction" This reverts commit 77d29029af1c44216b190dd7442964b9d8f45257. Revert "BUG/MEDIUM: session: don't clear CF_READ_NOEXP if analysers are not called" This reverts commit 0943757a2144761c60e416b5ed07baa76934f5a4. Revert "BUG/MEDIUM: http: disable server-side expiration until client has sent the body" This reverts commit 3bed5e9337fd6eeab0f0006ebefcbe98ee5c4f9f. Revert "BUG/MEDIUM: http: correctly report request body timeouts" This reverts commit b9edf8fbecc9d1b5c82794735adcc367a80a4ae2. Revert "BUG/MEDIUM: http/session: disable client-side expiration only after body" This reverts commit b1982e27aaff2a92a389a9f1bc847e3bb8fdb4f2. If a cleaner AND SAFER way to do something equivalent in 1.6-dev, we *might* consider backporting it to 1.5, but given the vicious bugs that have surfaced since, I doubt it will happen any time soon. Fortunately, that crap never made it into 1.4 so no backport is needed.
2014-06-23 09:22:31 -04:00
/* This flag must explicitly be set every time */
req->flags &= ~CF_WAKE_WRITE;
res->flags &= ~CF_WAKE_WRITE;
/* Keep a copy of req/rep flags so that we can detect shutdowns */
rqf_last = req->flags & ~CF_MASK_ANALYSER;
rpf_last = res->flags & ~CF_MASK_ANALYSER;
/* we don't want the stream connector functions to recursively wake us up */
scf->flags |= SC_FL_DONT_WAKE;
scb->flags |= SC_FL_DONT_WAKE;
/* Keep a copy of SC flags */
scf_flags = scf->flags;
scb_flags = scb->flags;
/* update pending events */
s->pending_events |= (state & TASK_WOKEN_ANY);
/* 1a: Check for low level timeouts if needed. We just set a flag on
* stream connectors when their timeouts have expired.
*/
if (unlikely(s->pending_events & TASK_WOKEN_TIMER)) {
stream_handle_timeouts(s);
/* Once in a while we're woken up because the task expires. But
* this does not necessarily mean that a timeout has been reached.
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* So let's not run a whole stream processing if only an expiration
* timeout needs to be refreshed.
*/
if (!((scf->flags | scb->flags) & (SC_FL_ERROR|SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) &&
!((req->flags | res->flags) & (CF_READ_EVENT|CF_READ_TIMEOUT|CF_WRITE_EVENT|CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT)) &&
!(s->flags & SF_CONN_EXP) &&
((s->pending_events & TASK_WOKEN_ANY) == TASK_WOKEN_TIMER)) {
scf->flags &= ~SC_FL_DONT_WAKE;
scb->flags &= ~SC_FL_DONT_WAKE;
goto update_exp_and_leave;
}
}
resync_stconns:
/* below we may emit error messages so we have to ensure that we have
* our buffers properly allocated. If the allocation failed, an error is
* triggered.
*
* NOTE: An error is returned because the mechanism to queue entities
* waiting for a buffer is totally broken for now. However, this
* part must be refactored. When it will be handled, this part
* must be be reviewed too.
*/
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
if (!stream_alloc_work_buffer(s)) {
scf->flags |= SC_FL_ERROR;
s->conn_err_type = STRM_ET_CONN_RES;
scb->flags |= SC_FL_ERROR;
s->conn_err_type = STRM_ET_CONN_RES;
if (!(s->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_ERR_RESOURCE;
sess_set_term_flags(s);
}
/* 1b: check for low-level errors reported at the stream connector.
* First we check if it's a retryable error (in which case we don't
* want to tell the buffer). Otherwise we report the error one level
* upper by setting flags into the buffers. Note that the side towards
* the client cannot have connect (hence retryable) errors. Also, the
* connection setup code must be able to deal with any type of abort.
*/
srv = objt_server(s->target);
if (unlikely(scf->flags & SC_FL_ERROR)) {
if (sc_state_in(scf->state, SC_SB_EST|SC_SB_DIS)) {
sc_abort(scf);
sc_shutdown(scf);
//sc_report_error(scf); TODO: Be sure it is useless
if (!(req->analysers) && !(res->analysers)) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.cli_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.cli_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->cli_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.cli_aborts);
if (!(s->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_ERR_CLICL;
if (!(s->flags & SF_FINST_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_FINST_D;
}
}
}
if (unlikely(scb->flags & SC_FL_ERROR)) {
if (sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_EST|SC_SB_DIS)) {
sc_abort(scb);
sc_shutdown(scb);
//sc_report_error(scb); TODO: Be sure it is useless
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.failed_resp);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.failed_resp);
if (!(req->analysers) && !(res->analysers)) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.srv_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.srv_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->srv_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.srv_aborts);
if (!(s->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_ERR_SRVCL;
if (!(s->flags & SF_FINST_MASK))
s->flags |= SF_FINST_D;
}
}
/* note: maybe we should process connection errors here ? */
}
if (sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_CON|SC_SB_RDY)) {
/* we were trying to establish a connection on the server side,
* maybe it succeeded, maybe it failed, maybe we timed out, ...
*/
if (scb->state == SC_ST_RDY)
back_handle_st_rdy(s);
else if (s->scb->state == SC_ST_CON)
back_handle_st_con(s);
MEDIUM: stream: re-arrange the connection setup status reporting Till now when a wakeup happens after a connection is attempted, we go through sess_update_st_con_tcp() to deal with the various possible events, then to sess_update_st_cer() to deal with a possible error detected by the former, or to sess_establish() to complete the connection validation. There are multiple issues in the way this is handled, which have accumulated over time. One of them is that any spurious wakeup during SI_ST_CON would validate the READ_ATTACHED flag and wake the analysers up. Another one is that nobody feels responsible for clearing SI_FL_EXP if it happened at the same time as a success (and it is present in all reports of loops to date). And another issue is that aborts cannot happen after a clean connection setup with no data transfer (since CF_WRITE_NULL is part of CF_WRITE_ACTIVITY). Last, the flags cleanup work was hackish, added here and there to please the next function (typically what had to be donne in commit 7a3367cca to work around the url_param+reuse issue by moving READ_ATTACHED to CON). This patch performs a significant lift up of this setup code. First, it makes sure that the state handlers are the ones responsible for the cleanup of the stuff they rely on. Typically sess_sestablish() will clean up the SI_FL_EXP flag because if we decided to validate the connection it means that we want to ignore this late timeout. Second, it splits the CON and RDY state handlers because the former only has to deal with failures, timeouts and non-events, while the latter has to deal with partial or total successes. Third, everything related to connection success was moved to sess_establish() since it's the only safe place to do so, and this function is also called at a few places to deal with synchronous connections, which are not seen by intermediary state handlers. The code was made a bit more robust, for example by making sure we always set SI_FL_NOLINGER when aborting a connection so that we don't have any risk to leave a connection in SHUTW state in case it was validated late. The useless return codes of some of these functions were dropped so that callers only rely on the stream-int's state now (which was already partially the case anyway). The code is now a bit cleaner, could be further improved (and functions renamed) but given the sensitivity of this part, better limit changes to strictly necessary. It passes all reg tests.
2019-06-05 12:02:04 -04:00
if (scb->state == SC_ST_CER)
back_handle_st_cer(s);
else if (scb->state == SC_ST_EST)
back_establish(s);
/* state is now one of SC_ST_CON (still in progress), SC_ST_EST
* (established), SC_ST_DIS (abort), SC_ST_CLO (last error),
* SC_ST_ASS/SC_ST_TAR/SC_ST_REQ for retryable errors.
*/
}
rq_prod_last = scf->state;
rq_cons_last = scb->state;
rp_cons_last = scf->state;
rp_prod_last = scb->state;
/* Check for connection closure */
DBG_TRACE_POINT(STRM_EV_STRM_PROC, s);
/* nothing special to be done on client side */
if (unlikely(scf->state == SC_ST_DIS)) {
scf->state = SC_ST_CLO;
/* This is needed only when debugging is enabled, to indicate
* client-side close.
*/
if (unlikely((global.mode & MODE_DEBUG) &&
(!(global.mode & MODE_QUIET) ||
(global.mode & MODE_VERBOSE)))) {
chunk_printf(&trash, "%08x:%s.clicls[%04x:%04x]\n",
s->uniq_id, s->be->id,
(unsigned short)conn_fd(sc_conn(scf)),
(unsigned short)conn_fd(sc_conn(scb)));
DISGUISE(write(1, trash.area, trash.data));
}
}
/* When a server-side connection is released, we have to count it and
* check for pending connections on this server.
*/
if (unlikely(scb->state == SC_ST_DIS)) {
scb->state = SC_ST_CLO;
srv = objt_server(s->target);
if (srv) {
if (s->flags & SF_CURR_SESS) {
s->flags &= ~SF_CURR_SESS;
_HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&srv->cur_sess);
}
sess_change_server(s, NULL);
if (may_dequeue_tasks(srv, s->be))
process_srv_queue(srv);
}
/* This is needed only when debugging is enabled, to indicate
* server-side close.
*/
if (unlikely((global.mode & MODE_DEBUG) &&
(!(global.mode & MODE_QUIET) ||
(global.mode & MODE_VERBOSE)))) {
if (s->prev_conn_state == SC_ST_EST) {
chunk_printf(&trash, "%08x:%s.srvcls[%04x:%04x]\n",
s->uniq_id, s->be->id,
(unsigned short)conn_fd(sc_conn(scf)),
(unsigned short)conn_fd(sc_conn(scb)));
DISGUISE(write(1, trash.area, trash.data));
}
}
}
/*
* Note: of the transient states (REQ, CER, DIS), only REQ may remain
* at this point.
*/
resync_request:
/* Analyse request */
if (((req->flags & ~rqf_last) & CF_MASK_ANALYSER) ||
((scf->flags ^ scf_flags) & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) ||
((scb->flags ^ scb_flags) & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) ||
(req->analysers && (scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) ||
scf->state != rq_prod_last ||
scb->state != rq_cons_last ||
s->pending_events & TASK_WOKEN_MSG) {
unsigned int scf_flags_ana = scf->flags;
unsigned int scb_flags_ana = scb->flags;
if (sc_state_in(scf->state, SC_SB_EST|SC_SB_DIS|SC_SB_CLO)) {
int max_loops = global.tune.maxpollevents;
unsigned int ana_list;
unsigned int ana_back;
/* it's up to the analysers to stop new connections,
* disable reading or closing. Note: if an analyser
* disables any of these bits, it is responsible for
* enabling them again when it disables itself, so
* that other analysers are called in similar conditions.
*/
channel_auto_read(req);
channel_auto_connect(req);
channel_auto_close(req);
/* We will call all analysers for which a bit is set in
* req->analysers, following the bit order from LSB
* to MSB. The analysers must remove themselves from
* the list when not needed. Any analyser may return 0
* to break out of the loop, either because of missing
* data to take a decision, or because it decides to
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* kill the stream. We loop at least once through each
* analyser, and we may loop again if other analysers
* are added in the middle.
*
* We build a list of analysers to run. We evaluate all
* of these analysers in the order of the lower bit to
* the higher bit. This ordering is very important.
* An analyser will often add/remove other analysers,
* including itself. Any changes to itself have no effect
* on the loop. If it removes any other analysers, we
* want those analysers not to be called anymore during
* this loop. If it adds an analyser that is located
* after itself, we want it to be scheduled for being
* processed during the loop. If it adds an analyser
* which is located before it, we want it to switch to
* it immediately, even if it has already been called
* once but removed since.
*
* In order to achieve this, we compare the analyser
* list after the call with a copy of it before the
* call. The work list is fed with analyser bits that
* appeared during the call. Then we compare previous
* work list with the new one, and check the bits that
* appeared. If the lowest of these bits is lower than
* the current bit, it means we have enabled a previous
* analyser and must immediately loop again.
*/
ana_list = ana_back = req->analysers;
while (ana_list && max_loops--) {
/* Warning! ensure that analysers are always placed in ascending order! */
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, req, flt_start_analyze, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_FLT_START_FE);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, tcp_inspect_request, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_INSPECT_FE);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, http_wait_for_request, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_WAIT_HTTP);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, http_wait_for_request_body, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_HTTP_BODY);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, http_process_req_common, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_HTTP_PROCESS_FE, sess->fe);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, process_switching_rules, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_SWITCHING_RULES);
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, req, flt_start_analyze, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_FLT_START_BE);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, tcp_inspect_request, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_INSPECT_BE);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, http_process_req_common, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_HTTP_PROCESS_BE, s->be);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, http_process_tarpit, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, process_server_rules, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_SRV_RULES);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, http_process_request, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_HTTP_INNER);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, tcp_persist_rdp_cookie, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, req, process_sticking_rules, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES);
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, req, flt_analyze_http_headers, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_FLT_HTTP_HDRS);
ANALYZE (s, req, http_request_forward_body, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_HTTP_XFER_BODY);
ANALYZE (s, req, pcli_wait_for_request, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_WAIT_CLI);
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, req, flt_xfer_data, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_FLT_XFER_DATA);
ANALYZE (s, req, flt_end_analyze, ana_list, ana_back, AN_REQ_FLT_END);
break;
}
}
rq_prod_last = scf->state;
rq_cons_last = scb->state;
req->flags &= ~CF_WAKE_ONCE;
rqf_last = req->flags;
scf_flags = (scf_flags & ~(SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) | (scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED));
scb_flags = (scb_flags & ~(SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) | (scb->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED));
if (((scf->flags ^ scf_flags_ana) & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) || ((scb->flags ^ scb_flags_ana) & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE))
goto resync_request;
}
/* we'll monitor the request analysers while parsing the response,
* because some response analysers may indirectly enable new request
* analysers (eg: HTTP keep-alive).
*/
req_ana_back = req->analysers;
resync_response:
/* Analyse response */
if (((res->flags & ~rpf_last) & CF_MASK_ANALYSER) ||
((scb->flags ^ scb_flags) & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) ||
((scf->flags ^ scf_flags) & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) ||
(res->analysers && (scf->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) ||
scf->state != rp_cons_last ||
scb->state != rp_prod_last ||
s->pending_events & TASK_WOKEN_MSG) {
unsigned int scb_flags_ana = scb->flags;
unsigned int scf_flags_ana = scf->flags;
if (sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_EST|SC_SB_DIS|SC_SB_CLO)) {
int max_loops = global.tune.maxpollevents;
unsigned int ana_list;
unsigned int ana_back;
/* it's up to the analysers to stop disable reading or
* closing. Note: if an analyser disables any of these
* bits, it is responsible for enabling them again when
* it disables itself, so that other analysers are called
* in similar conditions.
*/
channel_auto_read(res);
channel_auto_close(res);
/* We will call all analysers for which a bit is set in
* res->analysers, following the bit order from LSB
* to MSB. The analysers must remove themselves from
* the list when not needed. Any analyser may return 0
* to break out of the loop, either because of missing
* data to take a decision, or because it decides to
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* kill the stream. We loop at least once through each
* analyser, and we may loop again if other analysers
* are added in the middle.
*/
ana_list = ana_back = res->analysers;
while (ana_list && max_loops--) {
/* Warning! ensure that analysers are always placed in ascending order! */
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, res, flt_start_analyze, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_FLT_START_FE);
ANALYZE (s, res, flt_start_analyze, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_FLT_START_BE);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, res, tcp_inspect_response, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_INSPECT);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, res, http_wait_for_response, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, res, process_store_rules, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_STORE_RULES);
FLT_ANALYZE(s, res, http_process_res_common, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_HTTP_PROCESS_BE, s->be);
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, res, flt_analyze_http_headers, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_FLT_HTTP_HDRS);
ANALYZE (s, res, http_response_forward_body, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_HTTP_XFER_BODY);
ANALYZE (s, res, pcli_wait_for_response, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_WAIT_CLI);
BUG/MAJOR: channel: Fix the definition order of channel analyzers It is important to defined analyzers (AN_REQ_* and AN_RES_*) in the same order they are evaluated in process_stream. This order is really important because during analyzers evaluation, we run them in the order of the lower bit to the higher one. This way, when an analyzer adds/removes another one during its evaluation, we know if it is located before or after it. So, when it adds an analyzer which is located before it, we can switch to it immediately, even if it has already been called once but removed since. With the time, and introduction of new analyzers, this order was broken up. the main problems come from the filter analyzers. We used values not related with their evaluation order. Furthermore, we used same values for request and response analyzers. So, to fix the bug, filter analyzers have been splitted in 2 distinct lists to have different analyzers for the request channel than those for the response channel. And of course, we have moved them to the right place. Some other analyzers have been reordered to respect the evaluation order: * AN_REQ_HTTP_TARPIT has been moved just before AN_REQ_SRV_RULES * AN_REQ_PRST_RDP_COOKIE has been moved just before AN_REQ_STICKING_RULES * AN_RES_STORE_RULES has been moved just after AN_RES_WAIT_HTTP Note today we have 29 analyzers, all stored into a 32 bits bitfield. So we can still add 4 more analyzers before having a problem. A good way to fend off the problem for a while could be to have a different bitfield for request and response analyzers. [wt: all of this must be backported to 1.7, and part of it must be backported to 1.6 and 1.5]
2017-01-05 08:06:34 -05:00
ANALYZE (s, res, flt_xfer_data, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_FLT_XFER_DATA);
ANALYZE (s, res, flt_end_analyze, ana_list, ana_back, AN_RES_FLT_END);
break;
}
}
rp_cons_last = scf->state;
rp_prod_last = scb->state;
res->flags &= ~CF_WAKE_ONCE;
rpf_last = res->flags;
scb_flags = (scb_flags & ~(SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) | (scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED));
scf_flags = (scf_flags & ~(SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) | (scf->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED));
if (((scb->flags ^ scb_flags_ana) & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) || ((scf->flags ^ scf_flags_ana) & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE))
goto resync_response;
}
/* we'll monitor the response analysers because some response analysers
* may be enabled/disabled later
*/
res_ana_back = res->analysers;
/* maybe someone has added some request analysers, so we must check and loop */
if (req->analysers & ~req_ana_back)
goto resync_request;
if ((req->flags & ~rqf_last) & CF_MASK_ANALYSER)
goto resync_request;
/* FIXME: here we should call protocol handlers which rely on
* both buffers.
*/
/*
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* Now we propagate unhandled errors to the stream. Normally
* we're just in a data phase here since it means we have not
* seen any analyser who could set an error status.
*/
srv = objt_server(s->target);
if (unlikely(!(s->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))) {
if ((scf->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) || req->flags & (CF_READ_TIMEOUT|CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT)) {
/* Report it if the client got an error or a read timeout expired */
req->analysers &= AN_REQ_FLT_END;
channel_auto_close(req);
if (scf->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.cli_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.cli_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->cli_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.cli_aborts);
s->flags |= SF_ERR_CLICL;
}
else if (req->flags & CF_READ_TIMEOUT) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.cli_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.cli_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->cli_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.cli_aborts);
s->flags |= SF_ERR_CLITO;
}
else {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.srv_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.srv_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->srv_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.srv_aborts);
s->flags |= SF_ERR_SRVTO;
}
sess_set_term_flags(s);
/* Abort the request if a client error occurred while
* the backend stream connector is in the SC_ST_INI
* state. It is switched into the SC_ST_CLO state and
* the request channel is erased. */
if (scb->state == SC_ST_INI) {
s->scb->state = SC_ST_CLO;
channel_abort(req);
if (IS_HTX_STRM(s))
channel_htx_erase(req, htxbuf(&req->buf));
else
channel_erase(req);
}
}
else if ((scb->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) || res->flags & (CF_READ_TIMEOUT|CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT)) {
/* Report it if the server got an error or a read timeout expired */
res->analysers &= AN_RES_FLT_END;
channel_auto_close(res);
if (scb->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.srv_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.srv_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->srv_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.srv_aborts);
s->flags |= SF_ERR_SRVCL;
}
else if (res->flags & CF_READ_TIMEOUT) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.srv_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.srv_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->srv_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.srv_aborts);
s->flags |= SF_ERR_SRVTO;
}
else {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.cli_aborts);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.cli_aborts);
if (sess->listener && sess->listener->counters)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->listener->counters->cli_aborts);
if (srv)
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&srv->counters.cli_aborts);
s->flags |= SF_ERR_CLITO;
}
sess_set_term_flags(s);
}
}
/*
* Here we take care of forwarding unhandled data. This also includes
* connection establishments and shutdown requests.
*/
/* If no one is interested in analysing data, it's time to forward
* everything. We configure the buffer to forward indefinitely.
* Note that we're checking SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED as an indication of a possible
CLEANUP: channel: use "channel" instead of "buffer" in function names This is a massive rename of most functions which should make use of the word "channel" instead of the word "buffer" in their names. In concerns the following ones (new names) : unsigned long long channel_forward(struct channel *buf, unsigned long long bytes); static inline void channel_init(struct channel *buf) static inline int channel_input_closed(struct channel *buf) static inline int channel_output_closed(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_check_timeouts(struct channel *b) static inline void channel_erase(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_shutr_now(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_shutw_now(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_abort(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_stop_hijacker(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_auto_connect(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_dont_connect(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_auto_close(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_dont_close(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_auto_read(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_dont_read(struct channel *buf) unsigned long long channel_forward(struct channel *buf, unsigned long long bytes) Some functions provided by channel.[ch] have kept their "buffer" name because they are really designed to act on the buffer according to some information gathered from the channel. They have been moved together to the same place in the file for better readability but they were not changed at all. The "buffer" memory pool was also renamed "channel".
2012-08-27 18:06:31 -04:00
* recent call to channel_abort().
*/
if (unlikely((!req->analysers || (req->analysers == AN_REQ_FLT_END && !(req->flags & CF_FLT_ANALYZE))) &&
!(scf->flags & SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED) && !(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE) &&
(sc_state_in(scf->state, SC_SB_EST|SC_SB_DIS|SC_SB_CLO)) &&
(req->to_forward != CHN_INFINITE_FORWARD))) {
/* This buffer is freewheeling, there's no analyser
* attached to it. If any data are left in, we'll permit them to
* move.
*/
channel_auto_read(req);
channel_auto_connect(req);
channel_auto_close(req);
if (IS_HTX_STRM(s)) {
struct htx *htx = htxbuf(&req->buf);
/* We'll let data flow between the producer (if still connected)
* to the consumer.
*/
co_set_data(req, htx->data);
if ((global.tune.options & GTUNE_USE_FAST_FWD) &&
!(scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) && !(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED))
channel_htx_forward_forever(req, htx);
}
else {
/* We'll let data flow between the producer (if still connected)
* to the consumer (which might possibly not be connected yet).
*/
c_adv(req, ci_data(req));
if ((global.tune.options & GTUNE_USE_FAST_FWD) &&
!(scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) && !(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED))
channel_forward_forever(req);
}
}
/* reflect what the L7 analysers have seen last */
rqf_last = req->flags;
scf_flags = (scf_flags & ~(SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) | (scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED));
scb_flags = (scb_flags & ~(SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) | (scb->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED));
/* it's possible that an upper layer has requested a connection setup or abort.
* There are 2 situations where we decide to establish a new connection :
* - there are data scheduled for emission in the buffer
* - the CF_AUTO_CONNECT flag is set (active connection)
*/
if (scb->state == SC_ST_INI) {
if (!(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) {
if ((req->flags & CF_AUTO_CONNECT) || co_data(req)) {
/* If we have an appctx, there is no connect method, so we
* immediately switch to the connected state, otherwise we
* perform a connection request.
*/
scb->state = SC_ST_REQ; /* new connection requested */
s->conn_retries = 0;
if ((s->be->retry_type &~ PR_RE_CONN_FAILED) &&
(s->be->mode == PR_MODE_HTTP) &&
!(s->txn->flags & TX_D_L7_RETRY))
s->txn->flags |= TX_L7_RETRY;
BUG/MEDIUM: stream: Properly handle abortonclose when set on backend only Since the 2.2 and the commit dedd30610 ("MEDIUM: h1: Don't wake the H1 tasklet if we got the whole request."), we avoid to subscribe for reads if the H1 message is fully received. However, this broke the abortonclose option. To fix the issue, a CO_RFL flag was added to instruct the mux it should still wait for read events to properly handle read0. Only the H1 mux was concerned. But since then, most of time, the option is only handled if it is set on the frontend proxy because the request is fully received before selecting the backend. If the backend is selected before the end of the request there is no issue. But otherwise, because the backend is not known yet, we are unable to properly handle the option and we miss to subscribe for reads. Of course the option cannot be set on a frontend proxy. So concretly it means the option is properly handled if it is enabled in the defaults section (if common to frontend and backend) or a listen proxy, but it is ignored if it is set on backend only. Thanks to previous patches, we can now instruct the mux it should subscribe for reads if not already done. We use this mechanism in process_stream() when the connection is set up, ie when backend SC is set to SC_ST_REQ state. This patch relies on following patches: * MINOR: connection: Add a CTL flag to notify mux it should wait for reads again * MEDIUM: mux-h1: Handle MUX_SUBS_RECV flag in h1_ctl() and susbscribe for reads This patch should be the issue #2344. All the series must be backported as far as 2.2.
2023-11-14 01:47:52 -05:00
if (s->be->options & PR_O_ABRT_CLOSE) {
struct connection *conn = sc_conn(scf);
if (conn && conn->mux && conn->mux->ctl)
BUG/MEDIUM: stream: Properly handle abortonclose when set on backend only Since the 2.2 and the commit dedd30610 ("MEDIUM: h1: Don't wake the H1 tasklet if we got the whole request."), we avoid to subscribe for reads if the H1 message is fully received. However, this broke the abortonclose option. To fix the issue, a CO_RFL flag was added to instruct the mux it should still wait for read events to properly handle read0. Only the H1 mux was concerned. But since then, most of time, the option is only handled if it is set on the frontend proxy because the request is fully received before selecting the backend. If the backend is selected before the end of the request there is no issue. But otherwise, because the backend is not known yet, we are unable to properly handle the option and we miss to subscribe for reads. Of course the option cannot be set on a frontend proxy. So concretly it means the option is properly handled if it is enabled in the defaults section (if common to frontend and backend) or a listen proxy, but it is ignored if it is set on backend only. Thanks to previous patches, we can now instruct the mux it should subscribe for reads if not already done. We use this mechanism in process_stream() when the connection is set up, ie when backend SC is set to SC_ST_REQ state. This patch relies on following patches: * MINOR: connection: Add a CTL flag to notify mux it should wait for reads again * MEDIUM: mux-h1: Handle MUX_SUBS_RECV flag in h1_ctl() and susbscribe for reads This patch should be the issue #2344. All the series must be backported as far as 2.2.
2023-11-14 01:47:52 -05:00
conn->mux->ctl(conn, MUX_SUBS_RECV, NULL);
}
}
}
else {
s->scb->state = SC_ST_CLO; /* shutw+ini = abort */
sc_schedule_shutdown(scb);
sc_schedule_abort(scb);
}
}
/* we may have a pending connection request, or a connection waiting
* for completion.
*/
if (sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_REQ|SC_SB_QUE|SC_SB_TAR|SC_SB_ASS)) {
/* prune the request variables and swap to the response variables. */
if (s->vars_reqres.scope != SCOPE_RES) {
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&s->vars_reqres.head))
vars_prune(&s->vars_reqres, s->sess, s);
vars_init_head(&s->vars_reqres, SCOPE_RES);
}
do {
/* nb: step 1 might switch from QUE to ASS, but we first want
* to give a chance to step 2 to perform a redirect if needed.
*/
if (scb->state != SC_ST_REQ)
back_try_conn_req(s);
if (scb->state == SC_ST_REQ)
back_handle_st_req(s);
/* get a chance to complete an immediate connection setup */
if (scb->state == SC_ST_RDY)
goto resync_stconns;
/* applets directly go to the ESTABLISHED state. Similarly,
* servers experience the same fate when their connection
* is reused.
*/
if (unlikely(scb->state == SC_ST_EST))
back_establish(s);
srv = objt_server(s->target);
if (scb->state == SC_ST_ASS && srv && srv->rdr_len && (s->flags & SF_REDIRECTABLE))
http_perform_server_redirect(s, scb);
} while (scb->state == SC_ST_ASS);
}
/* Let's see if we can send the pending request now */
sc_conn_sync_send(scb);
/*
* Now forward all shutdown requests between both sides of the request buffer
*/
/* first, let's check if the request buffer needs to shutdown(write), which may
* happen either because the input is closed or because we want to force a close
* once the server has begun to respond. If a half-closed timeout is set, we adjust
BUG/MEDIUM: stream: do not abort connection setup too early Github issue #472 reports a problem with short client connections making stick-table entries disappear. The problem is in fact totally different and stems at the connection establishment step. What happens is that the stick-table there has a single entry. The "stick-on" directive is forced to purge an existing entry before being able to create a new one. The new entry will be committed during the call to process_store_rules() on the response path. But if the client sends the FIN immediately after the connection is set up (e.g. using nc -z) then the SHUTR is received and will cancel the connection setup just after it starts. This cancellation will induce a call to cs_shutw() which will in turn leave the server-side state in ST_DIS. This transition from ST_CON to ST_DIS doesn't belong to the list of handled transition during the connection setup so it will be handled right after on the regular path, causing the connection to be closed. Because of this, we never pass through back_establish() and the backend's analysers are never set on the response channel, which is why process_store_rules() is not called and the stick-tables entry never committed. The comment above the code that causes this transition clearly says that the function is to be used after the connection is established with the server, but there's no such protection, and we always have the AUTO_CLOSE flag there (but there's hardly any available condition to eliminate it). This patch adds a test for the connection not being in ST_CON or for option abortonclose being set. It's sufficient to do the job and it should not cause issues. One concern was that the transition could happen during cs_recv() after the connection switches from CON to RDY then the read0 would be taken into account and would cause DIS to appear, which is not handled either. But that cannot happen because cs_recv() doesn't do anything until it's in ST_EST state, hence the read0() cannot be called from CON/RDY. Thus the transition from CON to DIS is only possible in back_handle_st_con() and back_handle_st_rdy() both of which are called when dealing with the transition already, or when abortonclose is set and the client aborts before connect() succeeds. It's possible that some further improvements could be made to detect this specific transition but it doesn't seem like anything would have to be added. This issue was first reported on 2.1. The abortonclose area is very sensitive so it would be wise to backport slowly, and probably no further than 2.4.
2022-04-14 11:39:48 -04:00
* the other side's timeout as well. However this doesn't have effect during the
* connection setup unless the backend has abortonclose set.
*/
if (unlikely((req->flags & CF_AUTO_CLOSE) && (scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) &&
!(scb->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) &&
(scb->state != SC_ST_CON || (s->be->options & PR_O_ABRT_CLOSE)))) {
sc_schedule_shutdown(scb);
}
/* shutdown(write) pending */
if (unlikely((scb->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) == SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED &&
(!co_data(req) || (req->flags & CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT)))) {
if (scf->flags & SC_FL_ERROR)
scb->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_shutdown(scb);
}
/* shutdown(write) done on server side, we must stop the client too */
if (unlikely((scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE) && !(scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED))) &&
!req->analysers)
sc_schedule_abort(scf);
/* shutdown(read) pending */
if (unlikely((scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) == SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) {
if (scf->flags & SC_FL_NOHALF)
scf->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_abort(scf);
}
/* Benchmarks have shown that it's optimal to do a full resync now */
if (scf->state == SC_ST_DIS ||
sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_RDY|SC_SB_DIS) ||
((scf->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) && scf->state != SC_ST_CLO) ||
((scb->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) && scb->state != SC_ST_CLO))
goto resync_stconns;
/* otherwise we want to check if we need to resync the req buffer or not */
if (((scf->flags ^ scf_flags) & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) || ((scb->flags ^ scb_flags) & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE))
goto resync_request;
/* perform output updates to the response buffer */
/* If no one is interested in analysing data, it's time to forward
* everything. We configure the buffer to forward indefinitely.
* Note that we're checking SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED as an indication of a possible
CLEANUP: channel: use "channel" instead of "buffer" in function names This is a massive rename of most functions which should make use of the word "channel" instead of the word "buffer" in their names. In concerns the following ones (new names) : unsigned long long channel_forward(struct channel *buf, unsigned long long bytes); static inline void channel_init(struct channel *buf) static inline int channel_input_closed(struct channel *buf) static inline int channel_output_closed(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_check_timeouts(struct channel *b) static inline void channel_erase(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_shutr_now(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_shutw_now(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_abort(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_stop_hijacker(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_auto_connect(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_dont_connect(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_auto_close(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_dont_close(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_auto_read(struct channel *buf) static inline void channel_dont_read(struct channel *buf) unsigned long long channel_forward(struct channel *buf, unsigned long long bytes) Some functions provided by channel.[ch] have kept their "buffer" name because they are really designed to act on the buffer according to some information gathered from the channel. They have been moved together to the same place in the file for better readability but they were not changed at all. The "buffer" memory pool was also renamed "channel".
2012-08-27 18:06:31 -04:00
* recent call to channel_abort().
*/
if (unlikely((!res->analysers || (res->analysers == AN_RES_FLT_END && !(res->flags & CF_FLT_ANALYZE))) &&
!(scf->flags & SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED) && !(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED) &&
sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_EST|SC_SB_DIS|SC_SB_CLO) &&
(res->to_forward != CHN_INFINITE_FORWARD))) {
/* This buffer is freewheeling, there's no analyser
* attached to it. If any data are left in, we'll permit them to
* move.
*/
channel_auto_read(res);
channel_auto_close(res);
if (IS_HTX_STRM(s)) {
struct htx *htx = htxbuf(&res->buf);
/* We'll let data flow between the producer (if still connected)
* to the consumer.
*/
co_set_data(res, htx->data);
if ((global.tune.options & GTUNE_USE_FAST_FWD) &&
!(scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) && !(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED))
channel_htx_forward_forever(res, htx);
}
else {
/* We'll let data flow between the producer (if still connected)
* to the consumer.
*/
c_adv(res, ci_data(res));
if ((global.tune.options & GTUNE_USE_FAST_FWD) &&
!(scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) && !(scb->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED))
channel_forward_forever(res);
}
/* if we have no analyser anymore in any direction and have a
* tunnel timeout set, use it now. Note that we must respect
* the half-closed timeouts as well.
*/
if (!req->analysers && s->tunnel_timeout) {
scf->ioto = scb->ioto = s->tunnel_timeout;
BUG/MINOR: stream: do not use client-fin/server-fin with HTX Historically the client-fin and server-fin timeouts were made to allow a connection closure to be effective quickly if the last data were sent down a socket and the client didn't close, something that can happen when the peer's FIN is lost and retransmits are blocked by a firewall for example. This made complete sense in 1.5 for TCP and HTTP in close mode. But nowadays with muxes, it's not done at the right layer anymore and even the description doesn't match what is being done, because what happens is that the stream will abort the whole transfer after it's done sending to the mux and this timeout expires. We've seen in GH issue 2095 that this can happen with very short timeout values, and while this didn't trigger often before, now that the muxes (h2 & quic) properly report an end of stream before even the first sc_conn_sync_recv(), it seems that it can happen more often, and have two undesirable effects: - logging a timeout when that's not the case - aborting the request channel, hence the server-side conn, possibly before it had a chance to be put back to the idle list, causing this connection to be closed and not reusable. Unfortunately for TCP (mux_pt) this remains necessary because the mux doesn't have a timeout task. So here we're adding tests to only do this through an HTX mux. But to be really clean we should in fact completely drop all of this and implement these timeouts in the mux itself. This needs to be backported to 2.8 where the issue was discovered, and maybe carefully to older versions, though that is not sure at all. In any case, using a higher timeout or removing client-fin in HTTP proxies is sufficient to make the issue disappear.
2023-06-02 10:19:51 -04:00
if (!IS_HTX_STRM(s)) {
if ((scf->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) && tick_isset(sess->fe->timeout.clientfin))
scf->ioto = sess->fe->timeout.clientfin;
if ((scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) && tick_isset(s->be->timeout.serverfin))
scb->ioto = s->be->timeout.serverfin;
}
}
}
/* reflect what the L7 analysers have seen last */
rpf_last = res->flags;
scb_flags = (scb_flags & ~(SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) | (scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED));
scf_flags = (scf_flags & ~(SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) | (scf->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED));
/* Let's see if we can send the pending response now */
sc_conn_sync_send(scf);
/*
* Now forward all shutdown requests between both sides of the buffer
*/
/*
* FIXME: this is probably where we should produce error responses.
*/
/* first, let's check if the response buffer needs to shutdown(write) */
if (unlikely((res->flags & CF_AUTO_CLOSE) && (scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE)) &&
!(scf->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)))) {
sc_schedule_shutdown(scf);
}
/* shutdown(write) pending */
if (unlikely((scf->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) == SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED &&
(!co_data(res) || (res->flags & CF_WRITE_TIMEOUT)))) {
sc_shutdown(scf);
}
/* shutdown(write) done on the client side, we must stop the server too */
if (unlikely((scf->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE) && !(scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED))) &&
!res->analysers)
sc_schedule_abort(scb);
/* shutdown(read) pending */
if (unlikely((scb->flags & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) == SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) {
if (scb->flags & SC_FL_NOHALF)
scb->flags |= SC_FL_NOLINGER;
sc_abort(scb);
}
if (scf->state == SC_ST_DIS ||
sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_RDY|SC_SB_DIS) ||
((scf->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) && scf->state != SC_ST_CLO) ||
((scb->flags & SC_FL_ERROR) && scb->state != SC_ST_CLO))
goto resync_stconns;
if ((req->flags & ~rqf_last) & CF_MASK_ANALYSER)
goto resync_request;
if (((scb->flags ^ scb_flags) & (SC_FL_EOS|SC_FL_ABRT_DONE|SC_FL_ABRT_WANTED)) ||
((scf->flags ^ scf_flags) & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED)) ||
(res->analysers ^ res_ana_back))
goto resync_response;
if ((((req->flags ^ rqf_last) | (res->flags ^ rpf_last)) & CF_MASK_ANALYSER) ||
(req->analysers ^ req_ana_back))
goto resync_request;
/* we're interested in getting wakeups again */
scf->flags &= ~SC_FL_DONT_WAKE;
scb->flags &= ~SC_FL_DONT_WAKE;
if (likely((scf->state != SC_ST_CLO) || !sc_state_in(scb->state, SC_SB_INI|SC_SB_CLO) ||
(req->analysers & AN_REQ_FLT_END) || (res->analysers & AN_RES_FLT_END))) {
if ((sess->fe->options & PR_O_CONTSTATS) && (s->flags & SF_BE_ASSIGNED) && !(s->flags & SF_IGNORE))
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream_process_counters(s);
stream_update_both_sc(s);
/* Reset pending events now */
s->pending_events = 0;
update_exp_and_leave:
/* Note: please ensure that if you branch here you disable SC_FL_DONT_WAKE */
MINOR: stream: make option contstats usable again Quite a lot of people have been complaining about option contstats not working correctly anymore since about 1.4. The reason was that one reason for the significant performance boost between 1.3 and 1.4 was the ability to forward data between a server and a client without waking up the stream manager. And we couldn't afford to force sessions to constantly wake it up given that most of the people interested in contstats are also those interested in high performance transmission. An idea was experimented with in the past, consisting in limiting the amount of transmissible data before waking it up, but it was not usable on slow connections (eg: FTP over modem lines, RDP, SSH) as stats would be updated too rarely if at all, so that idea was dropped. During a discussion today another idea came up : ensure that stats are updated once in a while, since it's the only thing that matters. It happens that we have the request channel's analyse_exp timeout that is used to wake the stream up after a configured delay, and that by definition this timeout is not used when there's no more analyser (otherwise the stream would wake up and the stats would be updated). Thus here the idea is to reuse this timeout when there's no analyser and set it to now+5 seconds so that a stream wakes up at least once every 5 seconds to update its stats. It should be short enough to provide smooth traffic graphs and to allow to debug outputs of "show sess" more easily without inflicting too much load even for very large number of concurrent connections. This patch is simple enough and safe enough to be backportable to 1.6 if there is some demand.
2016-11-08 16:03:00 -05:00
if (!req->analysers)
req->analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
if (!res->analysers)
res->analyse_exp = TICK_ETERNITY;
MINOR: stream: make option contstats usable again Quite a lot of people have been complaining about option contstats not working correctly anymore since about 1.4. The reason was that one reason for the significant performance boost between 1.3 and 1.4 was the ability to forward data between a server and a client without waking up the stream manager. And we couldn't afford to force sessions to constantly wake it up given that most of the people interested in contstats are also those interested in high performance transmission. An idea was experimented with in the past, consisting in limiting the amount of transmissible data before waking it up, but it was not usable on slow connections (eg: FTP over modem lines, RDP, SSH) as stats would be updated too rarely if at all, so that idea was dropped. During a discussion today another idea came up : ensure that stats are updated once in a while, since it's the only thing that matters. It happens that we have the request channel's analyse_exp timeout that is used to wake the stream up after a configured delay, and that by definition this timeout is not used when there's no more analyser (otherwise the stream would wake up and the stats would be updated). Thus here the idea is to reuse this timeout when there's no analyser and set it to now+5 seconds so that a stream wakes up at least once every 5 seconds to update its stats. It should be short enough to provide smooth traffic graphs and to allow to debug outputs of "show sess" more easily without inflicting too much load even for very large number of concurrent connections. This patch is simple enough and safe enough to be backportable to 1.6 if there is some demand.
2016-11-08 16:03:00 -05:00
if ((sess->fe->options & PR_O_CONTSTATS) && (s->flags & SF_BE_ASSIGNED) &&
(!tick_isset(req->analyse_exp) || tick_is_expired(req->analyse_exp, now_ms)))
req->analyse_exp = tick_add(now_ms, 5000);
t->expire = (tick_is_expired(t->expire, now_ms) ? 0 : t->expire);
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, sc_ep_rcv_ex(scf));
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, sc_ep_snd_ex(scf));
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, sc_ep_rcv_ex(scb));
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, sc_ep_snd_ex(scb));
MINOR: stream: make option contstats usable again Quite a lot of people have been complaining about option contstats not working correctly anymore since about 1.4. The reason was that one reason for the significant performance boost between 1.3 and 1.4 was the ability to forward data between a server and a client without waking up the stream manager. And we couldn't afford to force sessions to constantly wake it up given that most of the people interested in contstats are also those interested in high performance transmission. An idea was experimented with in the past, consisting in limiting the amount of transmissible data before waking it up, but it was not usable on slow connections (eg: FTP over modem lines, RDP, SSH) as stats would be updated too rarely if at all, so that idea was dropped. During a discussion today another idea came up : ensure that stats are updated once in a while, since it's the only thing that matters. It happens that we have the request channel's analyse_exp timeout that is used to wake the stream up after a configured delay, and that by definition this timeout is not used when there's no more analyser (otherwise the stream would wake up and the stats would be updated). Thus here the idea is to reuse this timeout when there's no analyser and set it to now+5 seconds so that a stream wakes up at least once every 5 seconds to update its stats. It should be short enough to provide smooth traffic graphs and to allow to debug outputs of "show sess" more easily without inflicting too much load even for very large number of concurrent connections. This patch is simple enough and safe enough to be backportable to 1.6 if there is some demand.
2016-11-08 16:03:00 -05:00
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, req->analyse_exp);
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, res->analyse_exp);
t->expire = tick_first(t->expire, s->conn_exp);
if (unlikely(tick_is_expired(t->expire, now_ms))) {
/* Some events prevented the timeouts to be handled but nothing evolved.
So do it now and resyunc the stconns
*/
stream_handle_timeouts(s);
goto resync_stconns;
}
s->pending_events &= ~(TASK_WOKEN_TIMER | TASK_WOKEN_RES);
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream_release_buffers(s);
DBG_TRACE_DEVEL("queuing", STRM_EV_STRM_PROC, s);
return t; /* nothing more to do */
}
DBG_TRACE_DEVEL("releasing", STRM_EV_STRM_PROC, s);
if (s->flags & SF_BE_ASSIGNED)
_HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&s->be->beconn);
if (unlikely((global.mode & MODE_DEBUG) &&
(!(global.mode & MODE_QUIET) || (global.mode & MODE_VERBOSE)))) {
chunk_printf(&trash, "%08x:%s.closed[%04x:%04x]\n",
s->uniq_id, s->be->id,
(unsigned short)conn_fd(sc_conn(scf)),
(unsigned short)conn_fd(sc_conn(scb)));
DISGUISE(write(1, trash.area, trash.data));
}
if (!(s->flags & SF_IGNORE)) {
MEDIUM: clock: replace timeval "now" with integer "now_ns" This puts an end to the occasional confusion between the "now" date that is internal, monotonic and not synchronized with the system's date, and "date" which is the system's date and not necessarily monotonic. Variable "now" was removed and replaced with a 64-bit integer "now_ns" which is a counter of nanoseconds. It wraps every 585 years, so if all goes well (i.e. if humanity does not need haproxy anymore in 500 years), it will just never wrap. This implies that now_ns is never nul and that the zero value can reliably be used as "not set yet" for a timestamp if needed. This will also simplify date checks where it becomes possible again to do "date1<date2". All occurrences of "tv_to_ns(&now)" were simply replaced by "now_ns". Due to the intricacies between now, global_now and now_offset, all 3 had to be turned to nanoseconds at once. It's not a problem since all of them were solely used in 3 functions in clock.c, but they make the patch look bigger than it really is. The clock_update_local_date() and clock_update_global_date() functions are now much simpler as there's no need anymore to perform conversions nor to round the timeval up or down. The wrapping continues to happen by presetting the internal offset in the short future so that the 32-bit now_ms continues to wrap 20 seconds after boot. The start_time used to calculate uptime can still be turned to nanoseconds now. One interrogation concerns global_now_ms which is used only for the freq counters. It's unclear whether there's more value in using two variables that need to be synchronized sequentially like today or to just use global_now_ns divided by 1 million. Both approaches will work equally well on modern systems, the difference might come from smaller ones. Better not change anyhting for now. One benefit of the new approach is that we now have an internal date with a resolution of the nanosecond and the precision of the microsecond, which can be useful to extend some measurements given that timestamps also have this resolution.
2023-04-28 03:16:15 -04:00
s->logs.t_close = ns_to_ms(now_ns - s->logs.accept_ts);
stream_process_counters(s);
if (s->txn && s->txn->status) {
int n;
n = s->txn->status / 100;
if (n < 1 || n > 5)
n = 0;
if (sess->fe->mode == PR_MODE_HTTP) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&sess->fe->fe_counters.p.http.rsp[n]);
}
if ((s->flags & SF_BE_ASSIGNED) &&
(s->be->mode == PR_MODE_HTTP)) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.p.http.rsp[n]);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&s->be->be_counters.p.http.cum_req);
}
}
/* let's do a final log if we need it */
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&sess->fe->logformat) && s->logs.logwait &&
!(s->flags & SF_MONITOR) &&
(!(sess->fe->options & PR_O_NULLNOLOG) || req->total)) {
/* we may need to know the position in the queue */
pendconn_free(s);
stream_cond_update_cpu_usage(s);
s->do_log(s);
}
/* update time stats for this stream */
stream_update_time_stats(s);
}
/* the task MUST not be in the run queue anymore */
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream_free(s);
task_destroy(t);
return NULL;
}
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
/* Update the stream's backend and server time stats */
void stream_update_time_stats(struct stream *s)
{
int t_request;
int t_queue;
int t_connect;
int t_data;
int t_close;
struct server *srv;
unsigned int samples_window;
t_request = 0;
t_queue = s->logs.t_queue;
t_connect = s->logs.t_connect;
t_close = s->logs.t_close;
t_data = s->logs.t_data;
if (s->be->mode != PR_MODE_HTTP)
t_data = t_connect;
if (t_connect < 0 || t_data < 0)
return;
if ((llong)(s->logs.request_ts - s->logs.accept_ts) >= 0)
t_request = ns_to_ms(s->logs.request_ts - s->logs.accept_ts);
t_data -= t_connect;
t_connect -= t_queue;
t_queue -= t_request;
srv = objt_server(s->target);
if (srv) {
samples_window = (((s->be->mode == PR_MODE_HTTP) ?
srv->counters.p.http.cum_req : srv->counters.cum_lbconn) > TIME_STATS_SAMPLES) ? TIME_STATS_SAMPLES : 0;
swrate_add_dynamic(&srv->counters.q_time, samples_window, t_queue);
swrate_add_dynamic(&srv->counters.c_time, samples_window, t_connect);
swrate_add_dynamic(&srv->counters.d_time, samples_window, t_data);
swrate_add_dynamic(&srv->counters.t_time, samples_window, t_close);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&srv->counters.qtime_max, t_queue);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&srv->counters.ctime_max, t_connect);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&srv->counters.dtime_max, t_data);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&srv->counters.ttime_max, t_close);
}
samples_window = (((s->be->mode == PR_MODE_HTTP) ?
s->be->be_counters.p.http.cum_req : s->be->be_counters.cum_lbconn) > TIME_STATS_SAMPLES) ? TIME_STATS_SAMPLES : 0;
swrate_add_dynamic(&s->be->be_counters.q_time, samples_window, t_queue);
swrate_add_dynamic(&s->be->be_counters.c_time, samples_window, t_connect);
swrate_add_dynamic(&s->be->be_counters.d_time, samples_window, t_data);
swrate_add_dynamic(&s->be->be_counters.t_time, samples_window, t_close);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&s->be->be_counters.qtime_max, t_queue);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&s->be->be_counters.ctime_max, t_connect);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&s->be->be_counters.dtime_max, t_data);
HA_ATOMIC_UPDATE_MAX(&s->be->be_counters.ttime_max, t_close);
}
/*
* This function adjusts sess->srv_conn and maintains the previous and new
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* server's served stream counts. Setting newsrv to NULL is enough to release
* current connection slot. This function also notifies any LB algo which might
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* expect to be informed about any change in the number of active streams on a
* server.
*/
void sess_change_server(struct stream *strm, struct server *newsrv)
{
struct server *oldsrv = strm->srv_conn;
if (oldsrv == newsrv)
return;
if (oldsrv) {
_HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&oldsrv->served);
_HA_ATOMIC_DEC(&oldsrv->proxy->served);
__ha_barrier_atomic_store();
if (oldsrv->proxy->lbprm.server_drop_conn)
oldsrv->proxy->lbprm.server_drop_conn(oldsrv);
stream_del_srv_conn(strm);
}
if (newsrv) {
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&newsrv->served);
_HA_ATOMIC_INC(&newsrv->proxy->served);
__ha_barrier_atomic_store();
if (newsrv->proxy->lbprm.server_take_conn)
newsrv->proxy->lbprm.server_take_conn(newsrv);
stream_add_srv_conn(strm, newsrv);
}
}
/* Handle server-side errors for default protocols. It is called whenever a a
* connection setup is aborted or a request is aborted in queue. It sets the
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
* stream termination flags so that the caller does not have to worry about
* them. It's installed as ->srv_error for the server-side stream connector.
*/
void default_srv_error(struct stream *s, struct stconn *sc)
{
int err_type = s->conn_err_type;
int err = 0, fin = 0;
if (err_type & STRM_ET_QUEUE_ABRT) {
err = SF_ERR_CLICL;
fin = SF_FINST_Q;
}
else if (err_type & STRM_ET_CONN_ABRT) {
err = SF_ERR_CLICL;
fin = SF_FINST_C;
}
else if (err_type & STRM_ET_QUEUE_TO) {
err = SF_ERR_SRVTO;
fin = SF_FINST_Q;
}
else if (err_type & STRM_ET_QUEUE_ERR) {
err = SF_ERR_SRVCL;
fin = SF_FINST_Q;
}
else if (err_type & STRM_ET_CONN_TO) {
err = SF_ERR_SRVTO;
fin = SF_FINST_C;
}
else if (err_type & STRM_ET_CONN_ERR) {
err = SF_ERR_SRVCL;
fin = SF_FINST_C;
}
else if (err_type & STRM_ET_CONN_RES) {
err = SF_ERR_RESOURCE;
fin = SF_FINST_C;
}
else /* STRM_ET_CONN_OTHER and others */ {
err = SF_ERR_INTERNAL;
fin = SF_FINST_C;
}
if (!(s->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))
s->flags |= err;
if (!(s->flags & SF_FINST_MASK))
s->flags |= fin;
}
/* kill a stream and set the termination flags to <why> (one of SF_ERR_*) */
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
void stream_shutdown(struct stream *stream, int why)
{
if (stream->scb->flags & (SC_FL_SHUT_DONE|SC_FL_SHUT_WANTED))
return;
sc_schedule_shutdown(stream->scb);
sc_schedule_abort(stream->scb);
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream->task->nice = 1024;
if (!(stream->flags & SF_ERR_MASK))
REORG/MAJOR: session: rename the "session" entity to "stream" With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers, logs, etc. In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session. The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed. The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain only what we need in an embryonic session. Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called "L4" which is in fact L6 for now. Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this : L7 - http_txn L6 - stream L5 - session L4 - connection | applet There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream. Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager. Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like any of them will need to move to the session.
2015-04-02 18:22:06 -04:00
stream->flags |= why;
task_wakeup(stream->task, TASK_WOKEN_OTHER);
}
/* dumps an error message for type <type> at ptr <ptr> related to stream <s>,
* having reached loop rate <rate>, then aborts hoping to retrieve a core.
*/
void stream_dump_and_crash(enum obj_type *obj, int rate)
{
MEDIUM: stream: now provide full stream dumps in case of loops When a stream is caught looping, we produce some output to help figure its internal state explaining why it's looping. The problem is that this debug output is quite old and the info it provides are quite insufficient to debug a modern process, and since such bugs happen only once or twice a year the situation doesn't improve. On the other hand the output of "show sess all" is extremely detailed and kept up to date with code evolutions since it's a heavily used debugging tool. This commit replaces the call to the totally outdated stream_dump() with a call to strm_dump_to_buffer(), and removes the filters dump since they are already emitted there, and it now produces much more exploitable output: [ALERT] (5936) : A bogus STREAM [0x7fa8dc02f660] is spinning at 5653514 calls per second and refuses to die, aborting now! Please report this error to developers: 0x7fa8dc02f660: [28/Sep/2023:09:53:08.811818] id=2 proto=tcpv4 source=127.0.0.1:58306 flags=0xc4a, conn_retries=0, conn_exp=<NEVER> conn_et=0x000 srv_conn=0x133f220, pend_pos=(nil) waiting=0 epoch=0x1 frontend=public (id=2 mode=http), listener=? (id=1) addr=127.0.0.1:4080 backend=public (id=2 mode=http) addr=127.0.0.1:61932 server=s1 (id=1) addr=127.0.0.1:7443 task=0x7fa8dc02fa40 (state=0x01 nice=0 calls=5749559 rate=5653514 exp=3s tid=1(1/1) age=1s) txn=0x7fa8dc02fbf0 flags=0x3000 meth=1 status=-1 req.st=MSG_DONE rsp.st=MSG_RPBEFORE req.f=0x4c rsp.f=0x00 scf=0x7fa8dc02f5f0 flags=0x00000482 state=EST endp=CONN,0x7fa8dc02b4b0,0x05004001 sub=1 rex=58s wex=<NEVER> h1s=0x7fa8dc02b4b0 h1s.flg=0x100010 .sd.flg=0x5004001 .req.state=MSG_DONE .res.state=MSG_RPBEFORE .meth=GET status=0 .sd.flg=0x05004001 .sc.flg=0x00000482 .sc.app=0x7fa8dc02f660 .subs=0x7fa8dc02f608(ev=1 tl=0x7fa8dc02fae0 tl.calls=0 tl.ctx=0x7fa8dc02f5f0 tl.fct=sc_conn_io_cb) h1c=0x7fa8dc0272d0 h1c.flg=0x0 .sub=0 .ibuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .obuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .task=0x7fa8dc0273f0 .exp=<NEVER> co0=0x7fa8dc027040 ctrl=tcpv4 xprt=RAW mux=H1 data=STRM target=LISTENER:0x12840c0 flags=0x00000300 fd=32 fd.state=20 updt=0 fd.tmask=0x2 scb=0x7fa8dc02fb30 flags=0x00001411 state=EST endp=CONN,0x7fa8dc0300c0,0x05000001 sub=1 rex=58s wex=<NEVER> h1s=0x7fa8dc0300c0 h1s.flg=0x4010 .sd.flg=0x5000001 .req.state=MSG_DONE .res.state=MSG_RPBEFORE .meth=GET status=0 .sd.flg=0x05000001 .sc.flg=0x00001411 .sc.app=0x7fa8dc02f660 .subs=0x7fa8dc02fb48(ev=1 tl=0x7fa8dc02feb0 tl.calls=2 tl.ctx=0x7fa8dc02fb30 tl.fct=sc_conn_io_cb) h1c=0x7fa8dc02ff00 h1c.flg=0x80000000 .sub=1 .ibuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .obuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .task=0x7fa8dc030020 .exp=<NEVER> co1=0x7fa8dc02fcd0 ctrl=tcpv4 xprt=RAW mux=H1 data=STRM target=SERVER:0x133f220 flags=0x10000300 fd=33 fd.state=10421 updt=0 fd.tmask=0x2 req=0x7fa8dc02f680 (f=0x1840000 an=0x8000 pipe=0 tofwd=0 total=79) an_exp=<NEVER> buf=0x7fa8dc02f688 data=(nil) o=0 p=0 i=0 size=0 htx=0xc18f60 flags=0x0 size=0 data=0 used=0 wrap=NO extra=0 res=0x7fa8dc02f6d0 (f=0x80000000 an=0x1400000 pipe=0 tofwd=0 total=0) an_exp=<NEVER> buf=0x7fa8dc02f6d8 data=(nil) o=0 p=0 i=0 size=0 htx=0xc18f60 flags=0x0 size=0 data=0 used=0 wrap=NO extra=0 call trace(10): | 0x59f2b7 [0f 0b 0f 1f 80 00 00 00]: stream_dump_and_crash+0x1f7/0x2bf | 0x5a0d71 [e9 af e6 ff ff ba 40 00]: process_stream+0x19f1/0x3a56 | 0x68d7bb [49 89 c7 4d 85 ff 74 77]: run_tasks_from_lists+0x3ab/0x924 | 0x68e0b4 [29 44 24 14 8b 4c 24 14]: process_runnable_tasks+0x374/0x6d6 | 0x656f67 [83 3d f2 75 84 00 01 0f]: run_poll_loop+0x127/0x5a8 | 0x6575d7 [48 8b 1d 42 50 5c 00 48]: main+0x1b22f7 | 0x7fa8e0f35e45 [64 48 89 04 25 30 06 00]: libpthread:+0x7e45 | 0x7fa8e0e5a4af [48 89 c7 b8 3c 00 00 00]: libc:clone+0x3f/0x5a Note that the output is subject to the global anon key so that IPs and object names can be anonymized if required. It could make sense to backport this and the few related previous patches next time such an issue is reported.
2023-09-29 02:17:49 -04:00
struct stream *s;
char *msg = NULL;
const void *ptr;
ptr = s = objt_stream(obj);
if (!s) {
const struct appctx *appctx = objt_appctx(obj);
if (!appctx)
return;
ptr = appctx;
s = appctx_strm(appctx);
if (!s)
return;
}
chunk_reset(&trash);
MEDIUM: stream: now provide full stream dumps in case of loops When a stream is caught looping, we produce some output to help figure its internal state explaining why it's looping. The problem is that this debug output is quite old and the info it provides are quite insufficient to debug a modern process, and since such bugs happen only once or twice a year the situation doesn't improve. On the other hand the output of "show sess all" is extremely detailed and kept up to date with code evolutions since it's a heavily used debugging tool. This commit replaces the call to the totally outdated stream_dump() with a call to strm_dump_to_buffer(), and removes the filters dump since they are already emitted there, and it now produces much more exploitable output: [ALERT] (5936) : A bogus STREAM [0x7fa8dc02f660] is spinning at 5653514 calls per second and refuses to die, aborting now! Please report this error to developers: 0x7fa8dc02f660: [28/Sep/2023:09:53:08.811818] id=2 proto=tcpv4 source=127.0.0.1:58306 flags=0xc4a, conn_retries=0, conn_exp=<NEVER> conn_et=0x000 srv_conn=0x133f220, pend_pos=(nil) waiting=0 epoch=0x1 frontend=public (id=2 mode=http), listener=? (id=1) addr=127.0.0.1:4080 backend=public (id=2 mode=http) addr=127.0.0.1:61932 server=s1 (id=1) addr=127.0.0.1:7443 task=0x7fa8dc02fa40 (state=0x01 nice=0 calls=5749559 rate=5653514 exp=3s tid=1(1/1) age=1s) txn=0x7fa8dc02fbf0 flags=0x3000 meth=1 status=-1 req.st=MSG_DONE rsp.st=MSG_RPBEFORE req.f=0x4c rsp.f=0x00 scf=0x7fa8dc02f5f0 flags=0x00000482 state=EST endp=CONN,0x7fa8dc02b4b0,0x05004001 sub=1 rex=58s wex=<NEVER> h1s=0x7fa8dc02b4b0 h1s.flg=0x100010 .sd.flg=0x5004001 .req.state=MSG_DONE .res.state=MSG_RPBEFORE .meth=GET status=0 .sd.flg=0x05004001 .sc.flg=0x00000482 .sc.app=0x7fa8dc02f660 .subs=0x7fa8dc02f608(ev=1 tl=0x7fa8dc02fae0 tl.calls=0 tl.ctx=0x7fa8dc02f5f0 tl.fct=sc_conn_io_cb) h1c=0x7fa8dc0272d0 h1c.flg=0x0 .sub=0 .ibuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .obuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .task=0x7fa8dc0273f0 .exp=<NEVER> co0=0x7fa8dc027040 ctrl=tcpv4 xprt=RAW mux=H1 data=STRM target=LISTENER:0x12840c0 flags=0x00000300 fd=32 fd.state=20 updt=0 fd.tmask=0x2 scb=0x7fa8dc02fb30 flags=0x00001411 state=EST endp=CONN,0x7fa8dc0300c0,0x05000001 sub=1 rex=58s wex=<NEVER> h1s=0x7fa8dc0300c0 h1s.flg=0x4010 .sd.flg=0x5000001 .req.state=MSG_DONE .res.state=MSG_RPBEFORE .meth=GET status=0 .sd.flg=0x05000001 .sc.flg=0x00001411 .sc.app=0x7fa8dc02f660 .subs=0x7fa8dc02fb48(ev=1 tl=0x7fa8dc02feb0 tl.calls=2 tl.ctx=0x7fa8dc02fb30 tl.fct=sc_conn_io_cb) h1c=0x7fa8dc02ff00 h1c.flg=0x80000000 .sub=1 .ibuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .obuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .task=0x7fa8dc030020 .exp=<NEVER> co1=0x7fa8dc02fcd0 ctrl=tcpv4 xprt=RAW mux=H1 data=STRM target=SERVER:0x133f220 flags=0x10000300 fd=33 fd.state=10421 updt=0 fd.tmask=0x2 req=0x7fa8dc02f680 (f=0x1840000 an=0x8000 pipe=0 tofwd=0 total=79) an_exp=<NEVER> buf=0x7fa8dc02f688 data=(nil) o=0 p=0 i=0 size=0 htx=0xc18f60 flags=0x0 size=0 data=0 used=0 wrap=NO extra=0 res=0x7fa8dc02f6d0 (f=0x80000000 an=0x1400000 pipe=0 tofwd=0 total=0) an_exp=<NEVER> buf=0x7fa8dc02f6d8 data=(nil) o=0 p=0 i=0 size=0 htx=0xc18f60 flags=0x0 size=0 data=0 used=0 wrap=NO extra=0 call trace(10): | 0x59f2b7 [0f 0b 0f 1f 80 00 00 00]: stream_dump_and_crash+0x1f7/0x2bf | 0x5a0d71 [e9 af e6 ff ff ba 40 00]: process_stream+0x19f1/0x3a56 | 0x68d7bb [49 89 c7 4d 85 ff 74 77]: run_tasks_from_lists+0x3ab/0x924 | 0x68e0b4 [29 44 24 14 8b 4c 24 14]: process_runnable_tasks+0x374/0x6d6 | 0x656f67 [83 3d f2 75 84 00 01 0f]: run_poll_loop+0x127/0x5a8 | 0x6575d7 [48 8b 1d 42 50 5c 00 48]: main+0x1b22f7 | 0x7fa8e0f35e45 [64 48 89 04 25 30 06 00]: libpthread:+0x7e45 | 0x7fa8e0e5a4af [48 89 c7 b8 3c 00 00 00]: libc:clone+0x3f/0x5a Note that the output is subject to the global anon key so that IPs and object names can be anonymized if required. It could make sense to backport this and the few related previous patches next time such an issue is reported.
2023-09-29 02:17:49 -04:00
chunk_printf(&trash, " ");
strm_dump_to_buffer(&trash, s, " ", HA_ATOMIC_LOAD(&global.anon_key));
if (ptr != s) { // that's an appctx
const struct appctx *appctx = ptr;
chunk_appendf(&trash, " applet=%p(", appctx->applet);
resolve_sym_name(&trash, NULL, appctx->applet);
chunk_appendf(&trash, ")");
chunk_appendf(&trash, " handler=%p(", appctx->applet->fct);
resolve_sym_name(&trash, NULL, appctx->applet->fct);
chunk_appendf(&trash, ")");
}
memprintf(&msg,
"A bogus %s [%p] is spinning at %d calls per second and refuses to die, "
"aborting now! Please report this error to developers:\n"
"%s\n",
obj_type_name(obj), ptr, rate, trash.area);
ha_alert("%s", msg);
send_log(NULL, LOG_EMERG, "%s", msg);
ABORT_NOW();
}
/* initialize the require structures */
static void init_stream()
{
int thr;
for (thr = 0; thr < MAX_THREADS; thr++)
LIST_INIT(&ha_thread_ctx[thr].streams);
}
INITCALL0(STG_INIT, init_stream);
/* Generates a unique ID based on the given <format>, stores it in the given <strm> and
* returns the unique ID.
*
* If this function fails to allocate memory IST_NULL is returned.
*
* If an ID is already stored within the stream nothing happens existing unique ID is
* returned.
*/
struct ist stream_generate_unique_id(struct stream *strm, struct list *format)
{
if (isttest(strm->unique_id)) {
return strm->unique_id;
}
else {
char *unique_id;
int length;
if ((unique_id = pool_alloc(pool_head_uniqueid)) == NULL)
return IST_NULL;
length = build_logline(strm, unique_id, UNIQUEID_LEN, format);
strm->unique_id = ist2(unique_id, length);
return strm->unique_id;
}
}
/************************************************************************/
/* All supported ACL keywords must be declared here. */
/************************************************************************/
static enum act_return stream_action_set_log_level(struct act_rule *rule, struct proxy *px,
struct session *sess, struct stream *s, int flags)
{
s->logs.level = (uintptr_t)rule->arg.act.p[0];
return ACT_RET_CONT;
}
/* Parse a "set-log-level" action. It takes the level value as argument. It
* returns ACT_RET_PRS_OK on success, ACT_RET_PRS_ERR on error.
*/
static enum act_parse_ret stream_parse_set_log_level(const char **args, int *cur_arg, struct proxy *px,
struct act_rule *rule, char **err)
{
int level;
if (!*args[*cur_arg]) {
bad_log_level:
memprintf(err, "expects exactly 1 argument (log level name or 'silent')");
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
if (strcmp(args[*cur_arg], "silent") == 0)
level = -1;
else if ((level = get_log_level(args[*cur_arg]) + 1) == 0)
goto bad_log_level;
(*cur_arg)++;
/* Register processing function. */
rule->action_ptr = stream_action_set_log_level;
rule->action = ACT_CUSTOM;
rule->arg.act.p[0] = (void *)(uintptr_t)level;
return ACT_RET_PRS_OK;
}
static enum act_return stream_action_set_nice(struct act_rule *rule, struct proxy *px,
struct session *sess, struct stream *s, int flags)
{
s->task->nice = (uintptr_t)rule->arg.act.p[0];
return ACT_RET_CONT;
}
/* Parse a "set-nice" action. It takes the nice value as argument. It returns
* ACT_RET_PRS_OK on success, ACT_RET_PRS_ERR on error.
*/
static enum act_parse_ret stream_parse_set_nice(const char **args, int *cur_arg, struct proxy *px,
struct act_rule *rule, char **err)
{
int nice;
if (!*args[*cur_arg]) {
bad_log_level:
memprintf(err, "expects exactly 1 argument (integer value)");
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
nice = atoi(args[*cur_arg]);
if (nice < -1024)
nice = -1024;
else if (nice > 1024)
nice = 1024;
(*cur_arg)++;
/* Register processing function. */
rule->action_ptr = stream_action_set_nice;
rule->action = ACT_CUSTOM;
rule->arg.act.p[0] = (void *)(uintptr_t)nice;
return ACT_RET_PRS_OK;
}
static enum act_return tcp_action_switch_stream_mode(struct act_rule *rule, struct proxy *px,
struct session *sess, struct stream *s, int flags)
{
enum pr_mode mode = (uintptr_t)rule->arg.act.p[0];
const struct mux_proto_list *mux_proto = rule->arg.act.p[1];
if (!IS_HTX_STRM(s) && mode == PR_MODE_HTTP) {
if (!stream_set_http_mode(s, mux_proto)) {
stream_abort(s);
return ACT_RET_ABRT;
}
}
return ACT_RET_STOP;
}
static int check_tcp_switch_stream_mode(struct act_rule *rule, struct proxy *px, char **err)
{
const struct mux_proto_list *mux_ent;
const struct mux_proto_list *mux_proto = rule->arg.act.p[1];
enum pr_mode pr_mode = (uintptr_t)rule->arg.act.p[0];
enum proto_proxy_mode mode = conn_pr_mode_to_proto_mode(pr_mode);
if (pr_mode == PR_MODE_HTTP)
px->options |= PR_O_HTTP_UPG;
if (mux_proto) {
mux_ent = conn_get_best_mux_entry(mux_proto->token, PROTO_SIDE_FE, mode);
if (!mux_ent || !isteq(mux_ent->token, mux_proto->token)) {
memprintf(err, "MUX protocol '%.*s' is not compatible with the selected mode",
(int)mux_proto->token.len, mux_proto->token.ptr);
return 0;
}
}
else {
mux_ent = conn_get_best_mux_entry(IST_NULL, PROTO_SIDE_FE, mode);
if (!mux_ent) {
memprintf(err, "Unable to find compatible MUX protocol with the selected mode");
return 0;
}
}
/* Update the mux */
rule->arg.act.p[1] = (void *)mux_ent;
return 1;
}
static enum act_parse_ret stream_parse_switch_mode(const char **args, int *cur_arg,
struct proxy *px, struct act_rule *rule,
char **err)
{
const struct mux_proto_list *mux_proto = NULL;
struct ist proto;
enum pr_mode mode;
/* must have at least the mode */
if (*(args[*cur_arg]) == 0) {
memprintf(err, "'%s %s' expects a mode as argument.", args[0], args[*cur_arg-1]);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
if (!(px->cap & PR_CAP_FE)) {
memprintf(err, "'%s %s' not allowed because %s '%s' has no frontend capability",
args[0], args[*cur_arg-1], proxy_type_str(px), px->id);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
/* Check if the mode. For now "tcp" is disabled because downgrade is not
* supported and PT is the only TCP mux.
*/
if (strcmp(args[*cur_arg], "http") == 0)
mode = PR_MODE_HTTP;
else {
memprintf(err, "'%s %s' expects a valid mode (got '%s').", args[0], args[*cur_arg-1], args[*cur_arg]);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
/* check the proto, if specified */
if (*(args[*cur_arg+1]) && strcmp(args[*cur_arg+1], "proto") == 0) {
if (*(args[*cur_arg+2]) == 0) {
memprintf(err, "'%s %s': '%s' expects a protocol as argument.",
args[0], args[*cur_arg-1], args[*cur_arg+1]);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
proto = ist(args[*cur_arg + 2]);
mux_proto = get_mux_proto(proto);
if (!mux_proto) {
memprintf(err, "'%s %s': '%s' expects a valid MUX protocol, if specified (got '%s')",
args[0], args[*cur_arg-1], args[*cur_arg+1], args[*cur_arg+2]);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
*cur_arg += 2;
}
(*cur_arg)++;
/* Register processing function. */
rule->action_ptr = tcp_action_switch_stream_mode;
rule->check_ptr = check_tcp_switch_stream_mode;
rule->action = ACT_CUSTOM;
rule->arg.act.p[0] = (void *)(uintptr_t)mode;
rule->arg.act.p[1] = (void *)mux_proto;
return ACT_RET_PRS_OK;
}
/* 0=OK, <0=Alert, >0=Warning */
static enum act_parse_ret stream_parse_use_service(const char **args, int *cur_arg,
struct proxy *px, struct act_rule *rule,
char **err)
{
struct action_kw *kw;
/* Check if the service name exists. */
if (*(args[*cur_arg]) == 0) {
memprintf(err, "'%s' expects a service name.", args[0]);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
/* lookup for keyword corresponding to a service. */
kw = action_lookup(&service_keywords, args[*cur_arg]);
if (!kw) {
memprintf(err, "'%s' unknown service name.", args[1]);
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
}
(*cur_arg)++;
/* executes specific rule parser. */
rule->kw = kw;
if (kw->parse((const char **)args, cur_arg, px, rule, err) == ACT_RET_PRS_ERR)
return ACT_RET_PRS_ERR;
/* Register processing function. */
rule->action_ptr = process_use_service;
rule->action = ACT_CUSTOM;
return ACT_RET_PRS_OK;
}
void service_keywords_register(struct action_kw_list *kw_list)
{
LIST_APPEND(&service_keywords, &kw_list->list);
}
struct action_kw *service_find(const char *kw)
{
return action_lookup(&service_keywords, kw);
}
/* Lists the known services on <out>. If <out> is null, emit them on stdout one
* per line.
*/
void list_services(FILE *out)
{
const struct action_kw *akwp, *akwn;
struct action_kw_list *kw_list;
int found = 0;
int i;
if (out)
fprintf(out, "Available services :");
for (akwn = akwp = NULL;; akwp = akwn) {
list_for_each_entry(kw_list, &service_keywords, list) {
for (i = 0; kw_list->kw[i].kw != NULL; i++) {
if (strordered(akwp ? akwp->kw : NULL,
kw_list->kw[i].kw,
akwn != akwp ? akwn->kw : NULL))
akwn = &kw_list->kw[i];
found = 1;
}
}
if (akwn == akwp)
break;
if (out)
fprintf(out, " %s", akwn->kw);
else
printf("%s\n", akwn->kw);
}
if (!found && out)
fprintf(out, " none\n");
}
/* appctx context used by the "show sess" command */
struct show_sess_ctx {
struct bref bref; /* back-reference from the session being dumped */
void *target; /* session we want to dump, or NULL for all */
unsigned int thr; /* the thread number being explored (0..MAX_THREADS-1) */
unsigned int uid; /* if non-null, the uniq_id of the session being dumped */
int section; /* section of the session being dumped */
int pos; /* last position of the current session's buffer */
};
/* This function appends a complete dump of a stream state onto the buffer,
* possibly anonymizing using the specified anon_key. The caller is responsible
* for ensuring that enough room remains in the buffer to dump a complete
* stream at once. Each new output line will be prefixed with <pfx> if non-null,
* which is used to preserve indenting.
*/
MEDIUM: stream: now provide full stream dumps in case of loops When a stream is caught looping, we produce some output to help figure its internal state explaining why it's looping. The problem is that this debug output is quite old and the info it provides are quite insufficient to debug a modern process, and since such bugs happen only once or twice a year the situation doesn't improve. On the other hand the output of "show sess all" is extremely detailed and kept up to date with code evolutions since it's a heavily used debugging tool. This commit replaces the call to the totally outdated stream_dump() with a call to strm_dump_to_buffer(), and removes the filters dump since they are already emitted there, and it now produces much more exploitable output: [ALERT] (5936) : A bogus STREAM [0x7fa8dc02f660] is spinning at 5653514 calls per second and refuses to die, aborting now! Please report this error to developers: 0x7fa8dc02f660: [28/Sep/2023:09:53:08.811818] id=2 proto=tcpv4 source=127.0.0.1:58306 flags=0xc4a, conn_retries=0, conn_exp=<NEVER> conn_et=0x000 srv_conn=0x133f220, pend_pos=(nil) waiting=0 epoch=0x1 frontend=public (id=2 mode=http), listener=? (id=1) addr=127.0.0.1:4080 backend=public (id=2 mode=http) addr=127.0.0.1:61932 server=s1 (id=1) addr=127.0.0.1:7443 task=0x7fa8dc02fa40 (state=0x01 nice=0 calls=5749559 rate=5653514 exp=3s tid=1(1/1) age=1s) txn=0x7fa8dc02fbf0 flags=0x3000 meth=1 status=-1 req.st=MSG_DONE rsp.st=MSG_RPBEFORE req.f=0x4c rsp.f=0x00 scf=0x7fa8dc02f5f0 flags=0x00000482 state=EST endp=CONN,0x7fa8dc02b4b0,0x05004001 sub=1 rex=58s wex=<NEVER> h1s=0x7fa8dc02b4b0 h1s.flg=0x100010 .sd.flg=0x5004001 .req.state=MSG_DONE .res.state=MSG_RPBEFORE .meth=GET status=0 .sd.flg=0x05004001 .sc.flg=0x00000482 .sc.app=0x7fa8dc02f660 .subs=0x7fa8dc02f608(ev=1 tl=0x7fa8dc02fae0 tl.calls=0 tl.ctx=0x7fa8dc02f5f0 tl.fct=sc_conn_io_cb) h1c=0x7fa8dc0272d0 h1c.flg=0x0 .sub=0 .ibuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .obuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .task=0x7fa8dc0273f0 .exp=<NEVER> co0=0x7fa8dc027040 ctrl=tcpv4 xprt=RAW mux=H1 data=STRM target=LISTENER:0x12840c0 flags=0x00000300 fd=32 fd.state=20 updt=0 fd.tmask=0x2 scb=0x7fa8dc02fb30 flags=0x00001411 state=EST endp=CONN,0x7fa8dc0300c0,0x05000001 sub=1 rex=58s wex=<NEVER> h1s=0x7fa8dc0300c0 h1s.flg=0x4010 .sd.flg=0x5000001 .req.state=MSG_DONE .res.state=MSG_RPBEFORE .meth=GET status=0 .sd.flg=0x05000001 .sc.flg=0x00001411 .sc.app=0x7fa8dc02f660 .subs=0x7fa8dc02fb48(ev=1 tl=0x7fa8dc02feb0 tl.calls=2 tl.ctx=0x7fa8dc02fb30 tl.fct=sc_conn_io_cb) h1c=0x7fa8dc02ff00 h1c.flg=0x80000000 .sub=1 .ibuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .obuf=0@(nil)+0/0 .task=0x7fa8dc030020 .exp=<NEVER> co1=0x7fa8dc02fcd0 ctrl=tcpv4 xprt=RAW mux=H1 data=STRM target=SERVER:0x133f220 flags=0x10000300 fd=33 fd.state=10421 updt=0 fd.tmask=0x2 req=0x7fa8dc02f680 (f=0x1840000 an=0x8000 pipe=0 tofwd=0 total=79) an_exp=<NEVER> buf=0x7fa8dc02f688 data=(nil) o=0 p=0 i=0 size=0 htx=0xc18f60 flags=0x0 size=0 data=0 used=0 wrap=NO extra=0 res=0x7fa8dc02f6d0 (f=0x80000000 an=0x1400000 pipe=0 tofwd=0 total=0) an_exp=<NEVER> buf=0x7fa8dc02f6d8 data=(nil) o=0 p=0 i=0 size=0 htx=0xc18f60 flags=0x0 size=0 data=0 used=0 wrap=NO extra=0 call trace(10): | 0x59f2b7 [0f 0b 0f 1f 80 00 00 00]: stream_dump_and_crash+0x1f7/0x2bf | 0x5a0d71 [e9 af e6 ff ff ba 40 00]: process_stream+0x19f1/0x3a56 | 0x68d7bb [49 89 c7 4d 85 ff 74 77]: run_tasks_from_lists+0x3ab/0x924 | 0x68e0b4 [29 44 24 14 8b 4c 24 14]: process_runnable_tasks+0x374/0x6d6 | 0x656f67 [83 3d f2 75 84 00 01 0f]: run_poll_loop+0x127/0x5a8 | 0x6575d7 [48 8b 1d 42 50 5c 00 48]: main+0x1b22f7 | 0x7fa8e0f35e45 [64 48 89 04 25 30 06 00]: libpthread:+0x7e45 | 0x7fa8e0e5a4af [48 89 c7 b8 3c 00 00 00]: libc:clone+0x3f/0x5a Note that the output is subject to the global anon key so that IPs and object names can be anonymized if required. It could make sense to backport this and the few related previous patches next time such an issue is reported.
2023-09-29 02:17:49 -04:00
void strm_dump_to_buffer(struct buffer *buf, const struct stream *strm, const char *pfx, uint32_t anon_key)
{
struct stconn *scf, *scb;
struct tm tm;
extern const char *monthname[12];
char pn[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
struct connection *conn;
struct appctx *tmpctx;
pfx = pfx ? pfx : "";
get_localtime(strm->logs.accept_date.tv_sec, &tm);
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%p: [%02d/%s/%04d:%02d:%02d:%02d.%06d] id=%u proto=%s",
strm,
tm.tm_mday, monthname[tm.tm_mon], tm.tm_year+1900,
tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec, (int)(strm->logs.accept_date.tv_usec),
strm->uniq_id,
strm_li(strm) ? strm_li(strm)->rx.proto->name : "?");
conn = objt_conn(strm_orig(strm));
switch (conn && conn_get_src(conn) ? addr_to_str(conn->src, pn, sizeof(pn)) : AF_UNSPEC) {
case AF_INET:
case AF_INET6:
chunk_appendf(buf, " source=%s:%d\n",
HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, pn), get_host_port(conn->src));
break;
case AF_UNIX:
chunk_appendf(buf, " source=unix:%d\n", strm_li(strm)->luid);
break;
default:
/* no more information to print right now */
chunk_appendf(buf, "\n");
break;
}
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s flags=0x%x, conn_retries=%d, conn_exp=%s conn_et=0x%03x srv_conn=%p, pend_pos=%p waiting=%d epoch=%#x\n", pfx,
strm->flags, strm->conn_retries,
strm->conn_exp ?
tick_is_expired(strm->conn_exp, now_ms) ? "<PAST>" :
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(strm->conn_exp - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>",
strm->conn_err_type, strm->srv_conn, strm->pend_pos,
LIST_INLIST(&strm->buffer_wait.list), strm->stream_epoch);
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s frontend=%s (id=%u mode=%s), listener=%s (id=%u)", pfx,
HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, strm_fe(strm)->id), strm_fe(strm)->uuid, proxy_mode_str(strm_fe(strm)->mode),
strm_li(strm) ? strm_li(strm)->name ? strm_li(strm)->name : "?" : "?",
strm_li(strm) ? strm_li(strm)->luid : 0);
switch (conn && conn_get_dst(conn) ? addr_to_str(conn->dst, pn, sizeof(pn)) : AF_UNSPEC) {
case AF_INET:
case AF_INET6:
chunk_appendf(buf, " addr=%s:%d\n",
HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, pn), get_host_port(conn->dst));
break;
case AF_UNIX:
chunk_appendf(buf, " addr=unix:%d\n", strm_li(strm)->luid);
break;
default:
/* no more information to print right now */
chunk_appendf(buf, "\n");
break;
}
if (strm->be->cap & PR_CAP_BE)
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s backend=%s (id=%u mode=%s)", pfx,
HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, strm->be->id),
strm->be->uuid, proxy_mode_str(strm->be->mode));
else
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s backend=<NONE> (id=-1 mode=-)", pfx);
conn = sc_conn(strm->scb);
switch (conn && conn_get_src(conn) ? addr_to_str(conn->src, pn, sizeof(pn)) : AF_UNSPEC) {
case AF_INET:
case AF_INET6:
chunk_appendf(buf, " addr=%s:%d\n",
HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, pn), get_host_port(conn->src));
break;
case AF_UNIX:
chunk_appendf(buf, " addr=unix\n");
break;
default:
/* no more information to print right now */
chunk_appendf(buf, "\n");
break;
}
if (strm->be->cap & PR_CAP_BE)
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s server=%s (id=%u)", pfx,
objt_server(strm->target) ? HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, __objt_server(strm->target)->id) : "<none>",
objt_server(strm->target) ? __objt_server(strm->target)->puid : 0);
else
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s server=<NONE> (id=-1)", pfx);
switch (conn && conn_get_dst(conn) ? addr_to_str(conn->dst, pn, sizeof(pn)) : AF_UNSPEC) {
case AF_INET:
case AF_INET6:
chunk_appendf(buf, " addr=%s:%d\n",
HA_ANON_STR(anon_key, pn), get_host_port(conn->dst));
break;
case AF_UNIX:
chunk_appendf(buf, " addr=unix\n");
break;
default:
/* no more information to print right now */
chunk_appendf(buf, "\n");
break;
}
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s task=%p (state=0x%02x nice=%d calls=%u rate=%u exp=%s tid=%d(%d/%d)%s", pfx,
strm->task,
strm->task->state,
strm->task->nice, strm->task->calls, read_freq_ctr(&strm->call_rate),
strm->task->expire ?
tick_is_expired(strm->task->expire, now_ms) ? "<PAST>" :
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(strm->task->expire - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>",
strm->task->tid,
ha_thread_info[strm->task->tid].tgid,
ha_thread_info[strm->task->tid].ltid,
task_in_rq(strm->task) ? ", running" : "");
chunk_appendf(buf,
" age=%s)\n",
human_time(ns_to_sec(now_ns) - ns_to_sec(strm->logs.request_ts), 1));
if (strm->txn)
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s txn=%p flags=0x%x meth=%d status=%d req.st=%s rsp.st=%s req.f=0x%02x rsp.f=0x%02x\n", pfx,
strm->txn, strm->txn->flags, strm->txn->meth, strm->txn->status,
h1_msg_state_str(strm->txn->req.msg_state), h1_msg_state_str(strm->txn->rsp.msg_state),
strm->txn->req.flags, strm->txn->rsp.flags);
scf = strm->scf;
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s scf=%p flags=0x%08x state=%s endp=%s,%p,0x%08x sub=%d", pfx,
scf, scf->flags, sc_state_str(scf->state),
(sc_ep_test(scf, SE_FL_T_MUX) ? "CONN" : (sc_ep_test(scf, SE_FL_T_APPLET) ? "APPCTX" : "NONE")),
scf->sedesc->se, sc_ep_get(scf), scf->wait_event.events);
chunk_appendf(buf, " rex=%s",
sc_ep_rcv_ex(scf) ? human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_rcv_ex(scf) - now_ms), TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>");
chunk_appendf(buf, " wex=%s\n",
sc_ep_snd_ex(scf) ? human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_snd_ex(scf) - now_ms), TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>");
chunk_appendf(&trash, "%s iobuf.flags=0x%08x .pipe=%d .buf=%u@%p+%u/%u\n", pfx,
scf->sedesc->iobuf.flags,
scf->sedesc->iobuf.pipe ? scf->sedesc->iobuf.pipe->data : 0,
scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? (unsigned int)b_data(scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf): 0,
scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? b_orig(scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf): NULL,
scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? (unsigned int)b_head_ofs(scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf): 0,
scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? (unsigned int)b_size(scf->sedesc->iobuf.buf): 0);
if ((conn = sc_conn(scf)) != NULL) {
if (conn->mux && conn->mux->show_sd) {
char muxpfx[100] = "";
snprintf(muxpfx, sizeof(muxpfx), "%s ", pfx);
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s ", pfx);
conn->mux->show_sd(buf, scf->sedesc, muxpfx);
chunk_appendf(buf, "\n");
}
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s co0=%p ctrl=%s xprt=%s mux=%s data=%s target=%s:%p\n", pfx,
conn,
conn_get_ctrl_name(conn),
conn_get_xprt_name(conn),
conn_get_mux_name(conn),
sc_get_data_name(scf),
obj_type_name(conn->target),
obj_base_ptr(conn->target));
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s flags=0x%08x fd=%d fd.state=%02x updt=%d fd.tmask=0x%lx\n", pfx,
conn->flags,
conn_fd(conn),
conn_fd(conn) >= 0 ? fdtab[conn->handle.fd].state : 0,
conn_fd(conn) >= 0 ? !!(fdtab[conn->handle.fd].update_mask & ti->ltid_bit) : 0,
conn_fd(conn) >= 0 ? fdtab[conn->handle.fd].thread_mask: 0);
}
else if ((tmpctx = sc_appctx(scf)) != NULL) {
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s app0=%p st0=%d st1=%d applet=%s tid=%d nice=%d calls=%u rate=%u\n", pfx,
tmpctx,
tmpctx->st0,
tmpctx->st1,
tmpctx->applet->name,
tmpctx->t->tid,
tmpctx->t->nice, tmpctx->t->calls, read_freq_ctr(&tmpctx->call_rate));
}
scb = strm->scb;
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s scb=%p flags=0x%08x state=%s endp=%s,%p,0x%08x sub=%d", pfx,
scb, scb->flags, sc_state_str(scb->state),
(sc_ep_test(scb, SE_FL_T_MUX) ? "CONN" : (sc_ep_test(scb, SE_FL_T_APPLET) ? "APPCTX" : "NONE")),
scb->sedesc->se, sc_ep_get(scb), scb->wait_event.events);
chunk_appendf(buf, " rex=%s",
sc_ep_rcv_ex(scb) ? human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_rcv_ex(scb) - now_ms), TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>");
chunk_appendf(buf, " wex=%s\n",
sc_ep_snd_ex(scb) ? human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_snd_ex(scb) - now_ms), TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>");
chunk_appendf(&trash, "%s iobuf.flags=0x%08x .pipe=%d .buf=%u@%p+%u/%u\n", pfx,
scb->sedesc->iobuf.flags,
scb->sedesc->iobuf.pipe ? scb->sedesc->iobuf.pipe->data : 0,
scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? (unsigned int)b_data(scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf): 0,
scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? b_orig(scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf): NULL,
scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? (unsigned int)b_head_ofs(scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf): 0,
scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf ? (unsigned int)b_size(scb->sedesc->iobuf.buf): 0);
if ((conn = sc_conn(scb)) != NULL) {
if (conn->mux && conn->mux->show_sd) {
char muxpfx[100] = "";
snprintf(muxpfx, sizeof(muxpfx), "%s ", pfx);
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s ", pfx);
conn->mux->show_sd(buf, scb->sedesc, muxpfx);
chunk_appendf(buf, "\n");
}
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s co1=%p ctrl=%s xprt=%s mux=%s data=%s target=%s:%p\n", pfx,
conn,
conn_get_ctrl_name(conn),
conn_get_xprt_name(conn),
conn_get_mux_name(conn),
sc_get_data_name(scb),
obj_type_name(conn->target),
obj_base_ptr(conn->target));
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s flags=0x%08x fd=%d fd.state=%02x updt=%d fd.tmask=0x%lx\n", pfx,
conn->flags,
conn_fd(conn),
conn_fd(conn) >= 0 ? fdtab[conn->handle.fd].state : 0,
conn_fd(conn) >= 0 ? !!(fdtab[conn->handle.fd].update_mask & ti->ltid_bit) : 0,
conn_fd(conn) >= 0 ? fdtab[conn->handle.fd].thread_mask: 0);
}
else if ((tmpctx = sc_appctx(scb)) != NULL) {
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s app1=%p st0=%d st1=%d applet=%s tid=%d nice=%d calls=%u rate=%u\n", pfx,
tmpctx,
tmpctx->st0,
tmpctx->st1,
tmpctx->applet->name,
tmpctx->t->tid,
tmpctx->t->nice, tmpctx->t->calls, read_freq_ctr(&tmpctx->call_rate));
}
if (HAS_FILTERS(strm)) {
const struct filter *flt;
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s filters={", pfx);
list_for_each_entry(flt, &strm->strm_flt.filters, list) {
if (flt->list.p != &strm->strm_flt.filters)
chunk_appendf(buf, ", ");
chunk_appendf(buf, "%p=\"%s\"", flt, FLT_ID(flt));
}
chunk_appendf(buf, "}\n");
}
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s req=%p (f=0x%06x an=0x%x tofwd=%d total=%lld)\n"
"%s an_exp=%s buf=%p data=%p o=%u p=%u i=%u size=%u\n",
pfx,
&strm->req,
strm->req.flags, strm->req.analysers,
strm->req.to_forward, strm->req.total,
pfx,
strm->req.analyse_exp ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(strm->req.analyse_exp - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>",
&strm->req.buf,
b_orig(&strm->req.buf), (unsigned int)co_data(&strm->req),
(unsigned int)ci_head_ofs(&strm->req), (unsigned int)ci_data(&strm->req),
(unsigned int)strm->req.buf.size);
if (IS_HTX_STRM(strm)) {
struct htx *htx = htxbuf(&strm->req.buf);
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s htx=%p flags=0x%x size=%u data=%u used=%u wrap=%s extra=%llu\n", pfx,
htx, htx->flags, htx->size, htx->data, htx_nbblks(htx),
(htx->tail >= htx->head) ? "NO" : "YES",
(unsigned long long)htx->extra);
}
if (HAS_FILTERS(strm) && strm->strm_flt.current[0]) {
const struct filter *flt = strm->strm_flt.current[0];
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s current_filter=%p (id=\"%s\" flags=0x%x pre=0x%x post=0x%x) \n", pfx,
flt, flt->config->id, flt->flags, flt->pre_analyzers, flt->post_analyzers);
}
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s res=%p (f=0x%06x an=0x%x tofwd=%d total=%lld)\n"
"%s an_exp=%s buf=%p data=%p o=%u p=%u i=%u size=%u\n",
pfx,
&strm->res,
strm->res.flags, strm->res.analysers,
strm->res.to_forward, strm->res.total,
pfx,
strm->res.analyse_exp ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(strm->res.analyse_exp - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "<NEVER>",
&strm->res.buf,
b_orig(&strm->res.buf), (unsigned int)co_data(&strm->res),
(unsigned int)ci_head_ofs(&strm->res), (unsigned int)ci_data(&strm->res),
(unsigned int)strm->res.buf.size);
if (IS_HTX_STRM(strm)) {
struct htx *htx = htxbuf(&strm->res.buf);
chunk_appendf(buf,
"%s htx=%p flags=0x%x size=%u data=%u used=%u wrap=%s extra=%llu\n", pfx,
htx, htx->flags, htx->size, htx->data, htx_nbblks(htx),
(htx->tail >= htx->head) ? "NO" : "YES",
(unsigned long long)htx->extra);
}
if (HAS_FILTERS(strm) && strm->strm_flt.current[1]) {
const struct filter *flt = strm->strm_flt.current[1];
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s current_filter=%p (id=\"%s\" flags=0x%x pre=0x%x post=0x%x) \n", pfx,
flt, flt->config->id, flt->flags, flt->pre_analyzers, flt->post_analyzers);
}
if (strm->current_rule_list && strm->current_rule) {
const struct act_rule *rule = strm->current_rule;
chunk_appendf(buf, "%s current_rule=\"%s\" [%s:%d]\n", pfx, rule->kw->kw, rule->conf.file, rule->conf.line);
}
}
/* This function dumps a complete stream state onto the stream connector's
* read buffer. The stream has to be set in strm. It returns 0 if the output
* buffer is full and it needs to be called again, otherwise non-zero. It is
* designed to be called from stats_dump_strm_to_buffer() below.
*/
static int stats_dump_full_strm_to_buffer(struct stconn *sc, struct stream *strm)
{
struct appctx *appctx = __sc_appctx(sc);
struct show_sess_ctx *ctx = appctx->svcctx;
chunk_reset(&trash);
if (ctx->section > 0 && ctx->uid != strm->uniq_id) {
/* stream changed, no need to go any further */
chunk_appendf(&trash, " *** session terminated while we were watching it ***\n");
if (applet_putchk(appctx, &trash) == -1)
goto full;
goto done;
}
switch (ctx->section) {
case 0: /* main status of the stream */
ctx->uid = strm->uniq_id;
ctx->section = 1;
__fallthrough;
case 1:
strm_dump_to_buffer(&trash, strm, "", appctx->cli_anon_key);
if (applet_putchk(appctx, &trash) == -1)
goto full;
/* use other states to dump the contents */
}
/* end of dump */
done:
ctx->uid = 0;
ctx->section = 0;
return 1;
full:
return 0;
}
static int cli_parse_show_sess(char **args, char *payload, struct appctx *appctx, void *private)
{
struct show_sess_ctx *ctx = applet_reserve_svcctx(appctx, sizeof(*ctx));
if (!cli_has_level(appctx, ACCESS_LVL_OPER))
return 1;
if (*args[2] && strcmp(args[2], "all") == 0)
ctx->target = (void *)-1;
else if (*args[2])
ctx->target = (void *)strtoul(args[2], NULL, 0);
else
ctx->target = NULL;
ctx->section = 0; /* start with stream status */
ctx->pos = 0;
ctx->thr = 0;
/* The back-ref must be reset, it will be detected and set by
* the dump code upon first invocation.
*/
LIST_INIT(&ctx->bref.users);
/* let's set our own stream's epoch to the current one and increment
* it so that we know which streams were already there before us.
*/
appctx_strm(appctx)->stream_epoch = _HA_ATOMIC_FETCH_ADD(&stream_epoch, 1);
return 0;
}
/* This function dumps all streams' states onto the stream connector's
* read buffer. It returns 0 if the output buffer is full and it needs
* to be called again, otherwise non-zero. It proceeds in an isolated
* thread so there is no thread safety issue here.
*/
static int cli_io_handler_dump_sess(struct appctx *appctx)
{
struct show_sess_ctx *ctx = appctx->svcctx;
struct stconn *sc = appctx_sc(appctx);
struct connection *conn;
thread_isolate();
if (ctx->thr >= global.nbthread) {
/* already terminated */
goto done;
}
/* FIXME: Don't watch the other side !*/
if (unlikely(sc_opposite(sc)->flags & SC_FL_SHUT_DONE)) {
/* If we're forced to shut down, we might have to remove our
* reference to the last stream being dumped.
*/
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&ctx->bref.users)) {
LIST_DELETE(&ctx->bref.users);
LIST_INIT(&ctx->bref.users);
}
goto done;
}
chunk_reset(&trash);
/* first, let's detach the back-ref from a possible previous stream */
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&ctx->bref.users)) {
LIST_DELETE(&ctx->bref.users);
LIST_INIT(&ctx->bref.users);
} else if (!ctx->bref.ref) {
/* first call, start with first stream */
ctx->bref.ref = ha_thread_ctx[ctx->thr].streams.n;
}
/* and start from where we stopped */
while (1) {
char pn[INET6_ADDRSTRLEN];
struct stream *curr_strm;
int done= 0;
if (ctx->bref.ref == &ha_thread_ctx[ctx->thr].streams)
done = 1;
else {
/* check if we've found a stream created after issuing the "show sess" */
curr_strm = LIST_ELEM(ctx->bref.ref, struct stream *, list);
if ((int)(curr_strm->stream_epoch - appctx_strm(appctx)->stream_epoch) > 0)
done = 1;
}
if (done) {
ctx->thr++;
if (ctx->thr >= global.nbthread)
break;
ctx->bref.ref = ha_thread_ctx[ctx->thr].streams.n;
continue;
}
if (ctx->target) {
if (ctx->target != (void *)-1 && ctx->target != curr_strm)
goto next_sess;
LIST_APPEND(&curr_strm->back_refs, &ctx->bref.users);
/* call the proper dump() function and return if we're missing space */
if (!stats_dump_full_strm_to_buffer(sc, curr_strm))
goto full;
/* stream dump complete */
LIST_DELETE(&ctx->bref.users);
LIST_INIT(&ctx->bref.users);
if (ctx->target != (void *)-1) {
ctx->target = NULL;
break;
}
else
goto next_sess;
}
chunk_appendf(&trash,
"%p: proto=%s",
curr_strm,
strm_li(curr_strm) ? strm_li(curr_strm)->rx.proto->name : "?");
conn = objt_conn(strm_orig(curr_strm));
switch (conn && conn_get_src(conn) ? addr_to_str(conn->src, pn, sizeof(pn)) : AF_UNSPEC) {
case AF_INET:
case AF_INET6:
chunk_appendf(&trash,
" src=%s:%d fe=%s be=%s srv=%s",
HA_ANON_CLI(pn),
get_host_port(conn->src),
HA_ANON_CLI(strm_fe(curr_strm)->id),
(curr_strm->be->cap & PR_CAP_BE) ? HA_ANON_CLI(curr_strm->be->id) : "<NONE>",
objt_server(curr_strm->target) ? HA_ANON_CLI(__objt_server(curr_strm->target)->id) : "<none>"
);
break;
case AF_UNIX:
chunk_appendf(&trash,
" src=unix:%d fe=%s be=%s srv=%s",
strm_li(curr_strm)->luid,
HA_ANON_CLI(strm_fe(curr_strm)->id),
(curr_strm->be->cap & PR_CAP_BE) ? HA_ANON_CLI(curr_strm->be->id) : "<NONE>",
objt_server(curr_strm->target) ? HA_ANON_CLI(__objt_server(curr_strm->target)->id) : "<none>"
);
break;
}
chunk_appendf(&trash,
" ts=%02x epoch=%#x age=%s calls=%u rate=%u cpu=%llu lat=%llu",
curr_strm->task->state, curr_strm->stream_epoch,
human_time(ns_to_sec(now_ns) - ns_to_sec(curr_strm->logs.request_ts), 1),
curr_strm->task->calls, read_freq_ctr(&curr_strm->call_rate),
(unsigned long long)curr_strm->cpu_time, (unsigned long long)curr_strm->lat_time);
chunk_appendf(&trash,
" rq[f=%06xh,i=%u,an=%02xh",
curr_strm->req.flags,
(unsigned int)ci_data(&curr_strm->req),
curr_strm->req.analysers);
chunk_appendf(&trash,
",ax=%s]",
curr_strm->req.analyse_exp ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(curr_strm->req.analyse_exp - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
chunk_appendf(&trash,
" rp[f=%06xh,i=%u,an=%02xh",
curr_strm->res.flags,
(unsigned int)ci_data(&curr_strm->res),
curr_strm->res.analysers);
chunk_appendf(&trash,
",ax=%s]",
curr_strm->res.analyse_exp ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(curr_strm->res.analyse_exp - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
conn = sc_conn(curr_strm->scf);
chunk_appendf(&trash," scf=[%d,%1xh,fd=%d",
curr_strm->scf->state, curr_strm->scf->flags, conn_fd(conn));
chunk_appendf(&trash, ",rex=%s",
sc_ep_rcv_ex(curr_strm->scf) ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_rcv_ex(curr_strm->scf) - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
chunk_appendf(&trash,",wex=%s]",
sc_ep_snd_ex(curr_strm->scf) ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_snd_ex(curr_strm->scf) - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
conn = sc_conn(curr_strm->scb);
chunk_appendf(&trash, " scb=[%d,%1xh,fd=%d",
curr_strm->scb->state, curr_strm->scb->flags, conn_fd(conn));
chunk_appendf(&trash, ",rex=%s",
sc_ep_rcv_ex(curr_strm->scb) ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_rcv_ex(curr_strm->scb) - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
chunk_appendf(&trash, ",wex=%s]",
sc_ep_snd_ex(curr_strm->scb) ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(sc_ep_snd_ex(curr_strm->scb) - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
chunk_appendf(&trash,
" exp=%s rc=%d c_exp=%s",
curr_strm->task->expire ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(curr_strm->task->expire - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "",
curr_strm->conn_retries,
curr_strm->conn_exp ?
human_time(TICKS_TO_MS(curr_strm->conn_exp - now_ms),
TICKS_TO_MS(1000)) : "");
if (task_in_rq(curr_strm->task))
chunk_appendf(&trash, " run(nice=%d)", curr_strm->task->nice);
chunk_appendf(&trash, "\n");
if (applet_putchk(appctx, &trash) == -1) {
/* let's try again later from this stream. We add ourselves into
* this stream's users so that it can remove us upon termination.
*/
LIST_APPEND(&curr_strm->back_refs, &ctx->bref.users);
goto full;
}
next_sess:
ctx->bref.ref = curr_strm->list.n;
}
if (ctx->target && ctx->target != (void *)-1) {
/* specified stream not found */
if (ctx->section > 0)
chunk_appendf(&trash, " *** session terminated while we were watching it ***\n");
else
chunk_appendf(&trash, "Session not found.\n");
if (applet_putchk(appctx, &trash) == -1)
goto full;
ctx->target = NULL;
ctx->uid = 0;
goto done;
}
done:
thread_release();
return 1;
full:
thread_release();
return 0;
}
static void cli_release_show_sess(struct appctx *appctx)
{
struct show_sess_ctx *ctx = appctx->svcctx;
if (ctx->thr < global.nbthread) {
/* a dump was aborted, either in error or timeout. We need to
* safely detach from the target stream's list. It's mandatory
* to lock because a stream on the target thread could be moving
* our node.
*/
thread_isolate();
if (!LIST_ISEMPTY(&ctx->bref.users))
LIST_DELETE(&ctx->bref.users);
thread_release();
}
}
/* Parses the "shutdown session" directive, it always returns 1 */
static int cli_parse_shutdown_session(char **args, char *payload, struct appctx *appctx, void *private)
{
struct stream *strm, *ptr;
int thr;
if (!cli_has_level(appctx, ACCESS_LVL_ADMIN))
return 1;
ptr = (void *)strtoul(args[2], NULL, 0);
if (!ptr)
return cli_err(appctx, "Session pointer expected (use 'show sess').\n");
strm = NULL;
thread_isolate();
/* first, look for the requested stream in the stream table */
for (thr = 0; strm != ptr && thr < global.nbthread; thr++) {
list_for_each_entry(strm, &ha_thread_ctx[thr].streams, list) {
if (strm == ptr) {
stream_shutdown(strm, SF_ERR_KILLED);
break;
}
}
}
thread_release();
/* do we have the stream ? */
if (strm != ptr)
return cli_err(appctx, "No such session (use 'show sess').\n");
return 1;
}
/* Parses the "shutdown session server" directive, it always returns 1 */
static int cli_parse_shutdown_sessions_server(char **args, char *payload, struct appctx *appctx, void *private)
{
struct server *sv;
if (!cli_has_level(appctx, ACCESS_LVL_ADMIN))
return 1;
sv = cli_find_server(appctx, args[3]);
if (!sv)
return 1;
/* kill all the stream that are on this server */
HA_SPIN_LOCK(SERVER_LOCK, &sv->lock);
srv_shutdown_streams(sv, SF_ERR_KILLED);
HA_SPIN_UNLOCK(SERVER_LOCK, &sv->lock);
return 1;
}
/* register cli keywords */
static struct cli_kw_list cli_kws = {{ },{
{ { "show", "sess", NULL }, "show sess [id] : report the list of current sessions or dump this exact session", cli_parse_show_sess, cli_io_handler_dump_sess, cli_release_show_sess },
{ { "shutdown", "session", NULL }, "shutdown session [id] : kill a specific session", cli_parse_shutdown_session, NULL, NULL },
{ { "shutdown", "sessions", "server" }, "shutdown sessions server <bk>/<srv> : kill sessions on a server", cli_parse_shutdown_sessions_server, NULL, NULL },
{{},}
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, cli_register_kw, &cli_kws);
/* main configuration keyword registration. */
static struct action_kw_list stream_tcp_req_keywords = { ILH, {
{ "set-log-level", stream_parse_set_log_level },
{ "set-nice", stream_parse_set_nice },
{ "switch-mode", stream_parse_switch_mode },
{ "use-service", stream_parse_use_service },
{ /* END */ }
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, tcp_req_cont_keywords_register, &stream_tcp_req_keywords);
/* main configuration keyword registration. */
static struct action_kw_list stream_tcp_res_keywords = { ILH, {
{ "set-log-level", stream_parse_set_log_level },
{ "set-nice", stream_parse_set_nice },
{ /* END */ }
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, tcp_res_cont_keywords_register, &stream_tcp_res_keywords);
static struct action_kw_list stream_http_req_keywords = { ILH, {
{ "set-log-level", stream_parse_set_log_level },
{ "set-nice", stream_parse_set_nice },
{ "use-service", stream_parse_use_service },
{ /* END */ }
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, http_req_keywords_register, &stream_http_req_keywords);
static struct action_kw_list stream_http_res_keywords = { ILH, {
{ "set-log-level", stream_parse_set_log_level },
{ "set-nice", stream_parse_set_nice },
{ /* END */ }
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, http_res_keywords_register, &stream_http_res_keywords);
static struct action_kw_list stream_http_after_res_actions = { ILH, {
{ "set-log-level", stream_parse_set_log_level },
{ /* END */ }
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, http_after_res_keywords_register, &stream_http_after_res_actions);
static int smp_fetch_cur_client_timeout(const struct arg *args, struct sample *smp, const char *km, void *private)
{
smp->flags = SMP_F_VOL_TXN;
smp->data.type = SMP_T_SINT;
if (!smp->strm)
return 0;
smp->data.u.sint = TICKS_TO_MS(smp->strm->scf->ioto);
return 1;
}
static int smp_fetch_cur_server_timeout(const struct arg *args, struct sample *smp, const char *km, void *private)
{
smp->flags = SMP_F_VOL_TXN;
smp->data.type = SMP_T_SINT;
if (!smp->strm)
return 0;
smp->data.u.sint = TICKS_TO_MS(smp->strm->scb->ioto);
return 1;
}
static int smp_fetch_cur_tunnel_timeout(const struct arg *args, struct sample *smp, const char *km, void *private)
{
smp->flags = SMP_F_VOL_TXN;
smp->data.type = SMP_T_SINT;
if (!smp->strm)
return 0;
smp->data.u.sint = TICKS_TO_MS(smp->strm->tunnel_timeout);
return 1;
}
static int smp_fetch_last_rule_file(const struct arg *args, struct sample *smp, const char *km, void *private)
{
smp->flags = SMP_F_VOL_TXN;
smp->data.type = SMP_T_STR;
if (!smp->strm || !smp->strm->last_rule_file)
return 0;
smp->flags |= SMP_F_CONST;
smp->data.u.str.area = (char *)smp->strm->last_rule_file;
smp->data.u.str.data = strlen(smp->strm->last_rule_file);
return 1;
}
static int smp_fetch_last_rule_line(const struct arg *args, struct sample *smp, const char *km, void *private)
{
smp->flags = SMP_F_VOL_TXN;
smp->data.type = SMP_T_SINT;
if (!smp->strm || !smp->strm->last_rule_line)
return 0;
smp->data.u.sint = smp->strm->last_rule_line;
return 1;
}
/* Note: must not be declared <const> as its list will be overwritten.
* Please take care of keeping this list alphabetically sorted.
*/
static struct sample_fetch_kw_list smp_kws = {ILH, {
{ "cur_client_timeout", smp_fetch_cur_client_timeout, 0, NULL, SMP_T_SINT, SMP_USE_FTEND, },
{ "cur_server_timeout", smp_fetch_cur_server_timeout, 0, NULL, SMP_T_SINT, SMP_USE_BKEND, },
{ "cur_tunnel_timeout", smp_fetch_cur_tunnel_timeout, 0, NULL, SMP_T_SINT, SMP_USE_BKEND, },
{ "last_rule_file", smp_fetch_last_rule_file, 0, NULL, SMP_T_STR, SMP_USE_INTRN, },
{ "last_rule_line", smp_fetch_last_rule_line, 0, NULL, SMP_T_SINT, SMP_USE_INTRN, },
{ NULL, NULL, 0, 0, 0 },
}};
INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, sample_register_fetches, &smp_kws);
/*
* Local variables:
* c-indent-level: 8
* c-basic-offset: 8
* End:
*/