The timeout functions were difficult to manipulate because they were
rounding results to the millisecond. Thus, it was difficult to compare
and to check what expired and what did not. Also, the comparison
functions were heavy with multiplies and divides by 1000. Now, all
timeouts are stored in timevals, reducing the number of operations
for updates and leading to cleaner and more efficient code.
Peter van Dijk contributed this patch which implements the "smtpchk"
option, which is to SMTP what "httpchk" is to HTTP. By default, it sends
"HELO localhost" to the servers, and waits for the 250 message, but it
can also send a specific request.
The new 'block' keyword makes it possible to block a request based on
ACL test results. Block accepts two optional arguments : 'if' <cond>
and 'unless' <cond>.
The request will be blocked with a 403 response if the condition is validated
(if) or if it is not (unless). Do not rely on this one too much, as it's more
of a proof of concept helping in developing other matches.
This framework offers all other subsystems the ability to register
ACL matching criteria. Some generic matching functions are already
provided. Others will come soon and the framework shall evolve.
There are multiple places where the client's destination address is
required. Let's store it in the session when needed, and add a flag
to inform that it has been retrieved.
The rbtree-based wait queue consumes a lot of CPU. Use the ul2tree
instead. Lots of cleanups and code reorganizations made it possible
to reduce the task struct and simplify the code a bit.
The principle behind speculative I/O is to speculatively try to
perform I/O before registering the events in the system. This
considerably reduces the number of calls to epoll_ctl() and
sometimes even epoll_wait(), and manages to increase overall
performance by about 10%.
The new poller has been called "sepoll". It is used by default
on Linux when it works. A corresponding option "nosepoll" and
the command line argument "-ds" allow to disable it.
Now fdtab can contain the FD_POLL_* events so that the pollers
which can fill them can give userful information to readers and
writers about the precise condition of wakeup.
Some pollers such as kqueue lose their FD across fork(), meaning that
the registered file descriptors are lost too. Now when the proxies are
started by start_proxies(), the file descriptors are not registered yet,
leaving enough time for the fork() to take place and to get a new pollfd.
It will be the first call to maintain_proxies that will register them.
select, poll and epoll now have their dedicated functions and have
been split into distinct files. Several FD manipulation primitives
have been provided with each poller.
The rest of the code needs to be cleaned to remove traces of
StaticReadEvent/StaticWriteEvent. A trick involving a macro has
temporarily been used right now. Some work needs to be done to
factorize tests and sets everywhere.
The fiprm and beprm were added to ease the transition between
a single listener mode to frontends+backends. They are no longer
needed and make the code a bit more complicated. Remove them.
Struct server has gathered lots of informations over the time, but
it's better for clarity and performance to group those information
by usage, the most common ones at the top and the least ones at the
bottom.
Patch from Fabrice Dulaunoy. Explanation below, and script
merged in examples/.
This patch allow to put a different address in the check part for each
server (and not only a specific port)
I need this feature because I've a complex settings where, when a specific
farm goes down, I need to switch a set of other farm either if these other
farm behave perfectly well.
For that purpose, I've made a small PERL daemon with some REGEX or PORT
test which allow me to test a bunch of thing.
Patch from Bryan Germann for 1.2.17.
In some circumstances, it is useful not to add the X-Forwarded-For
header, for instance when the client is another reverse-proxy or
stunnel running on the same machine and which already adds it. This
patch adds the "except" keyword to the "forwardfor" option, allowing
to specify an address or network which will not be added to this
header.
Some session flags were clearly related to HTTP transactions.
A new 'flags' field has been added to http_txn, and the
associated flags moved to proto_http.h.
Some parts of HTTP processing were incorrectly called "request" while
they are messages or transactions. The following structure members
have changed :
http_msg.hdr_state => msg_state
http_msg.sor => som
http_req.req_state => removed
http_req => http_txn
The HTTP parser has been rewritten for better compliance to RFC2616.
The same parser is now usable for both requests and responses, and
it now supports HTTP/0.9 as well as multi-line headers. It has also
been improved for speed ; a typicial HTTP request is parsed in about
2 microseconds on a 1 GHz processor.
The monitor-uri check has been moved so that the requests are not
logged. The httpclose option now tries to change as little as
possible in the request, and does not affect the first header if
it is already set to 'close'. HTTP/0.9 requests are converted to
HTTP/1.0 before being forwarded.
Headers and request transformations are now distinct. The headers
list is updated after each insertion/removal/transformation. The
request is re-parsed and checked after each transformation. It is
not possible anymore to remove a request, and requests which lead
to invalid request lines are now rejected.
A struct http_req has been created to collect every information
related to an HTTP request being processed. Right now, it is
still in the struct session but the frontier is clear now.
This patch from Sin Yu makes use of an rbtree for the wait queue,
which will solve the slowdown problem encountered when timeouts
are heterogenous in the configuration. The next step will be to
turn maintain_proxies() into a per-proxy task so that we won't
have to scan them all after each poll() loop.
The stats page could not tell the difference between a FE and a BE.
It has been revamped to indicate all relevant information. The font
is also slightly smaller in order for all the info to fit into small
screens. The data output path has been greatly simplified to use
string chunks.
The notion of capabilities has been added to the proxy so that we
know whether a proxy supports frontend, backend, or rulesets. Given
this, some parameters are optionnal, some are ignored with a warning
and others are forbidden. It is now possible to write valid two level
configs without binding to dummy address/ports.
The maxconn argument is used only for the listeners, and the
fullconn is used only for the backends. If unset, it inherits
maxconn's value which itself can inherit the default or the
global value (we might need to change this).
HTTP error messages were all specific cases handled by an IF.
Now they are all in an array so that it will be easier to add
new ones. Also, the return functions now use chunks as inputs
so that it should be easier to provide alternative return
messages if needed.
The nbconn attribute in the proxies was not relevant anymore because
a frontend A may use backend B and both of them must account for their
respective connections. For this reason, there now are two separate
counters for frontend and backend connections.
The stats page has been updated to reflect the backend, but a separate
line entry for the frontend with error counts would be good.
Note that as of now, beconn may be higher than maxconn, because maxconn
applies to the frontend, while beconn may be increased due to sessions
passed from another frontend.