This flag is set by HTTP analyzers to notify that more data are epxected. It is
used to know if the CO_SFL_MSG_MORE flag must be set on the connection when data
are sent. Historically, it was set on chuncked messages and on compressed
responses. But in HTX, the chunked messages are parsed by the H1 multipexer. So
for this case, the infinite forwarding is enabled and the flag must no longer be
set. For the compression, the test must be extended and be applied on all data
filters. Thus it is also true for the request channel.
So, now, CF_EXPECT_MORE flag is set on a request or a response channel if there
is at least one data filter attached to the stream. In addition, the flag is
removed when the HTTP message analysis is finished.
This patch should partially fix the issue #756. It must be backported to 2.1.
The HTX_FL_EOI flag must now be set on a HTX message when no more data are
expected. Most of time, it must be set before adding the EOM block. Thus, if
there is no space for the EOM, there is still an information to know all data
were received and pushed in the HTX message. There is only an exception for the
HTTP replies (deny, return...). For these messages, the flag is set after all
blocks are pushed in the message, including the EOM block, because, on error,
we remove all inserted data.
When a connection is marked as private, it is now added in the session server
list. We don't wait a stream is detached from the mux to do so. When the
connection is created, this happens after the mux creation. Otherwise, it is
performed when the connection is marked as private.
To allow that, when a connection is created, the session is systematically set
as the connectin owner. Thus, a backend connection has always a owner during its
creation. And a private connection has always a owner until its death.
Note that outside the detach() callback, if the call to session_add_conn()
failed, the error is ignored. In this situation, we retry to add the connection
into the session server list in the detach() callback. If this fails at this
step, the multiplexer is destroyed and the connection is closed.
To set a connection as private, the conn_set_private() function must now be
called. It sets the CO_FL_PRIVATE flags, but it also remove the connection from
the available connection list, if necessary. For now, it never happens because
only HTTP/1 connections may be set as private after their creation. And these
connections are never inserted in the available connection list.
When an informational response (1xx) is returned by HAProxy, we must be sure to
send it ASAP. To do so, CF_SEND_DONTWAIT flag must be set on the response
channel to instruct the stream-interface to not set the CO_SFL_MSG_MORE flag on
the transport layer. Otherwise the response delivery may be delayed, because of
the commit 8945bb6c0 ("BUG/MEDIUM: stream-int: fix loss of CO_SFL_MSG_MORE flag
in forwarding").
This patch may be backported as far as 1.9, for HTX part only. But this part has
changed in the 2.2, so it may be a bit tricky. Note it does not fix any known
bug on previous versions because the CO_SFL_MSG_MORE flag is ignored by the h1
mux.
To be consistent with other processings on the channels, when HAProxy generates
a final response, the CF_EOI flag must be set on the response channel. This flag
is used to know that a full message was pushed into the channel (HTX messages
with an EOM block). It is used in conjunction with other channel's flags in
stream-interface functions. Especially when si_cs_send() is called, to know if
we must set or not the CO_SFL_MSG_MORE flag. Without CF_EOI, the CO_SFL_MSG_MORE
flag is always set and the message forwarding is delayed.
This patch may be backported as far as 1.9, for HTX part only. But this part has
changed in the 2.2, so it may be a bit tricky. Note it does not fix any known
bug on previous versions because the CO_SFL_MSG_MORE flag is ignored by the h1
mux.
When HAProxy generates a 500 response, if the formatting failed, for instance
because the message is larger than a buffer, it retries to format it in loop. To
fix the bug, we must stop trying to send a response if it is a non-rewritable
response (TX_CONST_REPLY flag is set on the HTTP transaction).
Because this part is not trivial, some comments have been added.
No backport is needed.
Coverity reports a possible null deref in issue #703. It seems this
cannot happen as in order to have a CF_READ_ERROR we'd need to have
attempted a recv() which implies a conn_stream, thus conn cannot be
NULL anymore. But at least one line tests for conn and the other one
not, which is confusing. So let's add a check for conn before
dereferencing it.
This needs to be backported to 2.1 and 2.0. Note that in 2.0 it's
in proto_htx.c.
This patch fixes all the leftovers from the include cleanup campaign. There
were not that many (~400 entries in ~150 files) but it was definitely worth
doing it as it revealed a few duplicates.
Most of the files dealing with error reports have to include log.h in order
to access ha_alert(), ha_warning() etc. But while these functions don't
depend on anything, log.h depends on a lot of stuff because it deals with
log-formats and samples. As a result it's impossible not to embark long
dependencies when using ha_warning() or qfprintf().
This patch moves these low-level functions to errors.h, which already
defines the error codes used at the same places. About half of the users
of log.h could be adjusted, sometimes revealing other issues such as
missing tools.h. Interestingly the total preprocessed size shrunk by
4%.
This one was not easy because it was embarking many includes with it,
which other files would automatically find. At least global.h, arg.h
and tools.h were identified. 93 total locations were identified, 8
additional includes had to be added.
In the rare files where it was possible to finalize the sorting of
includes by adjusting only one or two extra lines, it was done. But
all files would need to be rechecked and cleaned up now.
It was the last set of files in types/ and proto/ and these directories
must not be reused anymore.
extern struct dict server_name_dict was moved from the type file to the
main file. A handful of inlined functions were moved at the bottom of
the file. Call places were updated to use server-t.h when relevant, or
to simply drop the entry when not needed.
The files remained mostly unchanged since they were OK. However, half of
the users didn't need to include them, and about as many actually needed
to have it and used to find functions like srv_currently_usable() through
a long chain that broke when moving the file.
This one is particularly difficult to split because it provides all the
functions used to manipulate a proxy state and to retrieve names or IDs
for error reporting, and as such, it was included in 73 files (down to
68 after cleanup). It would deserve a small cleanup though the cut points
are not obvious at the moment given the number of structs involved in
the struct proxy itself.
The current state of the logging is a real mess. The main problem is
that almost all files include log.h just in order to have access to
the alert/warning functions like ha_alert() etc, and don't care about
logs. But log.h also deals with real logging as well as log-format and
depends on stream.h and various other things. As such it forces a few
heavy files like stream.h to be loaded early and to hide missing
dependencies depending where it's loaded. Among the missing ones is
syslog.h which was often automatically included resulting in no less
than 3 users missing it.
Among 76 users, only 5 could be removed, and probably 70 don't need the
full set of dependencies.
A good approach would consist in splitting that file in 3 parts:
- one for error output ("errors" ?).
- one for log_format processing
- and one for actual logging.
It was moved without any change, however many callers didn't need it at
all. This was a consequence of the split of proto_http.c into several
parts that resulted in many locations to still reference it.
Just some minor reordering, and the usual cleanup of call places for
those which didn't need it. We don't include the whole tools.h into
stats-t anymore but just tools-t.h.
Initially it looked like this could have been placed into auth.h or
stats.h but it's not the case as it's what makes the link between them
and the HTTP layer. However the file needed to be split in two. Quite
a number of call places were dropped because these were mostly leftovers
from the early days where the stats and cli were packed together.
The files were moved almost as-is, just dropping arg-t and auth-t from
acl-t but keeping arg-t in acl.h. It was useful to revisit the call places
since a handful of files used to continue to include acl.h while they did
not need it at all. Struct stream was only made a forward declaration
since not otherwise needed.
All includes that were not absolutely necessary were removed because
checks.h happens to very often be part of dependency loops. A warning
was added about this in check-t.h. The fields, enums and structs were
a bit tidied because it's particularly tedious to find anything there.
It would make sense to split this in two or more files (at least
extract tcp-checks).
The file was renamed to the singular because it was one of the rare
exceptions to have an "s" appended to its name compared to the struct
name.
The type file is becoming a mess, half of it is for the proxy protocol,
another good part describes conn_streams and mux ops, it would deserve
being split again. At least it was reordered so that elements are easier
to find, with the PP-stuff left at the end. The MAX_SEND_FD macro was moved
to compat.h as it's said to be the value for Linux.
List.h was missing for LIST_ADDQ(). A few unneeded includes of action.h
were removed from certain files.
This one still relies on applet.h and stick-table.h.
A few includes had to be added, namely list-t.h in the type file and
types/proxy.h in the proto file. actions.h was including http-htx.h
but didn't need it so it was dropped.
Most of the file was a large set of HTX elements manipulation functions
and few types, so splitting them allowed to further reduce dependencies
and shrink the build time. Doing so revealed that a few files (h2.c,
mux_pt.c) needed haproxy/buf.h and were previously getting it through
htx.h. They were fixed.
So the enums and structs were placed into http-t.h and the functions
into http.h. This revealed that several files were dependeng on http.h
but not including it, as it was silently inherited via other files.
Regex are essentially included for myregex_t but it turns out that
several of the C files didn't include it directly, relying on the
one included by their own .h. This has been cleanly addressed so
that only the type is included by H files which need it, and adding
the missing includes for the other ones.
This one used to be stored into debug.h but the debug tools got larger
and require a lot of other includes, which can't use BUG_ON() anymore
because of this. It does not make sense and instead this macro should
be placed into the lower includes and given its omnipresence, the best
solution is to create a new bug.h with the few surrounding macros needed
to trigger bugs and place assertions anywhere.
Another benefit is that it won't be required to add include <debug.h>
anymore to use BUG_ON, it will automatically be covered by api.h. No
less than 32 occurrences were dropped.
The FSM_PRINTF macro was dropped since not used at all anymore (probably
since 1.6 or so).
All files that were including one of the following include files have
been updated to only include haproxy/api.h or haproxy/api-t.h once instead:
- common/config.h
- common/compat.h
- common/compiler.h
- common/defaults.h
- common/initcall.h
- common/tools.h
The choice is simple: if the file only requires type definitions, it includes
api-t.h, otherwise it includes the full api.h.
In addition, in these files, explicit includes for inttypes.h and limits.h
were dropped since these are now covered by api.h and api-t.h.
No other change was performed, given that this patch is large and
affects 201 files. At least one (tools.h) was already freestanding and
didn't get the new one added.
Now http-request auth rules are evaluated in a dedicated function and no longer
handled "in place" during the HTTP rules evaluation. Thus the action name
ACT_HTTP_REQ_AUTH is removed. In additionn, http_reply_40x_unauthorized() is
also removed. This part is now handled in the new action_ptr callback function.
There is no reason to not use proxy's error replies to emit 401/407
responses. The function http_reply_40x_unauthorized(), responsible to emit those
responses, is not really complex. It only adds a
WWW-Authenticate/Proxy-Authenticate header to a generic message.
So now, error replies can be defined for 401 and 407 status codes, using
errorfile or http-error directives. When an http-request auth rule is evaluated,
the corresponding error reply is used. For 401 responses, all occurrences of the
WWW-Authenticate header are removed and replaced by a new one with a basic
authentication challenge for the configured realm. For 407 responses, the same
is done on the Proxy-Authenticate header. If the error reply must not be
altered, "http-request return" rule must be used instead.
When an error response is sent to a client, the write of the http reply in the
channel buffer and its sending are performed in different functions. The
http_reply_to_htx() function is used to write an http reply in HTX message. This
way, it could be possible to use the http replies in a different context.
The htx_copy_msg() function can now be used to copy the HTX message stored in a
buffer in an existing HTX message. It takes care to not overwrite existing
data. If the destination message is empty, a raw copy is performed. All the
message is copied or nothing.
This function is used instead of channel_htx_copy_msg().
When HAProxy returns an http error message, the corresponding http reply is now
used instead of the buffer containing the corresponding HTX message. So,
http_error_message() function now returns the http reply to use for a given
stream. And the http_reply_and_close() function now relies on
http_reply_message() to send the response to the client.
The txn flag TX_CONST_REPLY may now be used to prevent after-response ruleset
evaluation. It is used if this ruleset evaluation failed on an internal error
response. Before, it was done incrementing the parameter <final>. But it is not
really convenient if an intermediary function is used to produce the
response. Using a txn flag could also be a good way to prevent after-response
ruleset evaluation in a different context.
When an http reply is configured to use an error message from an http-errors
section, instead of referencing the error message, the http reply is used. To do
so the new http reply type HTTP_REPLY_INDIRECT has been added.
"http-request deny", "http-request tarpit" and "http-response deny" rules now
use the same syntax than http return rules and internally rely on the http
replies. The behaviour is not the same when no argument is specified (or only
the status code). For http replies, a dummy response is produced, with no
payload. For old deny/tarpit rules, the proxy's error messages are used. Thus,
to be compatible with existing configuration, the "default-errorfiles" parameter
is implied. For instance :
http-request deny deny_status 404
is now an alias of
http-request deny status 404 default-errorfiles
The http_reply_message() function may be used to send an http reply to a
client. This function is responsile to convert the reply in HTX, to push it in
the response buffer and to forward it to the client. It is also responsible to
terminate the transaction.
This function is used during evaluation of http return rules.
TX_CLDENY, TX_CLALLOW, TX_SVDENY and TX_SVALLOW flags are unused. Only
TX_CLTARPIT is used to make the difference between an http deny rule and an http
tarpit rule. So these unused flags are removed.
Expose native cum_req metric for a server: so far it was calculated as a
sum or all responses. Rename it from Cum. HTTP Responses to Cum. HTTP
Requests to be consistent with Frontend and Backend.