This reverts commit 9e46496d45. It was
wrong and is not reliable, depending on the compiler's version and
optimization, as the struct is assigned inside a statement, thus on
its own stack. It's not needed anymore now so let's remove this.
We previously relied on chunk_cat(dst, b_fromist(src)) for this but it
is not reliable as the allocated buffer is inside the expression and
may be on a temporary stack. While it's possible to allocate stack space
for a struct and return a pointer to it, it's not possible to initialize
it form a temporary variable to prevent arguments from being evaluated
multiple times. Since this is only used to append an ist after a chunk,
let's instead have a chunk_istcat() function to perform exactly this
from a native ist.
The only call place (URI computation in the cache) was updated.
Debug commands will usually mark the fate of the process. We'd rather
have them counted and visible in a core or in stats output than trying
to guess how a flag combination could happen. The counter is only
incremented when the command is about to be issued however, so that
failed attempts are ignored.
8c1cddef ("MINOR: ssl: new functions duplicate and free a ckch_store")
use some OpenSSL refcount functions that were introduced in OpenSSL
1.0.2 and OpenSSL 1.1.0.
Fix the problem by introducing them in openssl-compat.h.
Fix#336.
As reported in issue #335, a lot of contention happens on the PATLRU lock
when performing expensive regex lookups. This is absurd since the purpose
of the LRU cache was to have a fast cache for expressions, thus the cache
must not be shared between threads and must remain lockless.
This commit makes the LRU cache thread-local and gets rid of the PATLRU
lock. A test with 7 threads on 4 cores climbed from 67kH/s to 369kH/s,
or a scalability factor of 5.5.
Given the huge performance difference and the regression caused to
users migrating from processes to threads, this should be backported at
least to 2.0.
Thanks to Brian Diekelman for his detailed report about this regression.
In MT_LIST_BEHEAD(), explicitely set the next element of the prev to NULL,
instead of setting it to the prev of the next. If we only had one element,
then we'd set the next and the prev to the element itself, and thus it would
make the element appear to be outside any list.
A lot of our chunk-based functions are able to work on a buffer pointer
but not on an ist. Instead of duplicating all of them to also take an
ist as a source, let's have a macro to make a temporary dummy buffer
from an ist. This will only result in structure field manipulations
that the compiler will quickly figure to eliminate them with inline
functions, and in other cases it will just use 4 words in the stack
before calling a function, instead of performing intermediary
conversions.
The flag HTX_FL_PROXY_RESP is now set on responses generated by HAProxy,
excluding responses returned by applets and services. It is an informative flag
set by the applicative layer.
It currently is not possible to figure the exact haproxy version from a
core file for the sole reason that the version is stored into a const
string and as such ends up in the .text section that is not part of a
core file. By turning them into variables we move them to the data
section and they appear in core files. In order to help finding them,
we just prepend an extra variable in front of them and we're able to
immediately spot the version strings from a core file:
$ strings core | fgrep -A2 'HAProxy version'
HAProxy version follows
2.1-dev2-e0f48a-88
2019/10/15
(These are haproxy_version and haproxy_date respectively). This may be
backported to 2.0 since this part is not support to impact anything but
the developer's time spent debugging.
When raw data are copied or appended in a chunk, the result must not exceed the
chunk size but it can reach it. Unlike functions to copy or append a string,
there is no terminating null byte.
This patch must be backported as far as 1.8. Note in 1.8, the functions
chunk_cpy() and chunk_cat() don't exist.
$ echo -e "set ssl cert certificate.pem <<\n$(cat certificate2.pem)\n" | \
socat stdio /var/run/haproxy.stat
Certificate updated!
The operation is locked at the ckch level with a HA_SPINLOCK_T which
prevents the ckch architecture (ckch_store, ckch_inst..) to be modified
at the same time. So you can't do a certificate update at the same time
from multiple CLI connections.
SNI trees are also locked with a HA_RWLOCK_T so reading operations are
locked only during a certificate update.
Bundles are supported but you need to update each file (.rsa|ecdsa|.dsa)
independently. If a file is used in the configuration as a bundle AND
as a unique certificate, both will be updated.
Bundles, directories and crt-list are supported, however filters in
crt-list are currently unsupported.
The code tries to allocate every SNIs and certificate instances first,
so it can rollback the operation if that was unsuccessful.
If you have too much instances of the certificate (at least 20000 in my
tests on my laptop), the function can take too much time and be killed
by the watchdog. This will be fixed later. Also with too much
certificates it's possible that socat exits before the end of the
generation without displaying a message, consider changing the socat
timeout in this case (-t2 for example).
The size of the certificate is currently limited by the maximum size of
a payload, that must fit in a buffer.
This macro atomically cuts the head of a list and returns the list
of elements as a detached list, meaning that they're all linked
together without any head. If the list was empty, NULL is returned.
We used to rely on some config flags defined in uri_auth.h set during
parsing, and another set of STAT_* flags defined in stats.h set at run
time, with a somewhat gray area between the two sets. This is confusing
in the stats code as both are called "flags" in various functions and
it's quite hard to know which one describes what.
This patch cleans this up by replacing all ST_* by a newly assigned
value from the STAT_* set so that we can now use unified flags to
describe both the configuration and the current state. There is no
functional change at all.
This flag was added in 1.4-rc1 by commit 329f74d463 ("[BUG] uri_auth: do
not attemp to convert uri_auth -> http-request more than once") to
address the case where two proxies inherit the stats settings from
the defaults instance, and the first one compiles the expression while
the second one uses it. In this case since they use the exact same
uri_auth pointer, only the first one should compile and the second one
must not fail the check. This was addressed by adding an ST_CONVDONE
flag indicating that the expression conversion was completed and didn't
need to be done again. But this is a hack and it becomes cumbersome in
the middle of the other flags which are all relevant to the stats
applet. Let's instead fix it by checking if we're dealing with an
alias of the defaults instance and refrain from compiling this twice.
This allows us to remove the ST_CONVDONE flag.
A typical config requiring this check is :
defaults
mode http
stats auth foo:bar
listen l1
bind :8080
listen l2
bind :8181
Without this (or previous) check it would cmoplain when checking l2's
validity since the rule was already built.
The function http_get_authority() may be used to parse a URI and looks for the
authority, between the scheme and the path. An option may be used to skip the
user info (part before the '@'). Most of time, the user info will be ignored.
The first flag, HTX_SL_F_HAS_AUTHORITY, is set when the uri contains an
authority. For the H1, it happens when a CONNECT request is received or when an
absolute uri is used. For the H2, it happens when the pseudo header ":authority"
is provided.
The second one, HTX_SL_F_NORMALIZED_URI, is set when the received uri is
represented as an absolute uri because of the protocol requirements. For now, it
is only used for h2 requests, when the pseudo headers :authority and :scheme are
found. Internally, the uri is represented as an absolute uri. This flag allows
us to make the difference between an absolute uri in h1 and h2.
This function now dumps info about the HTX message into a buffer, passed as
argument. In addition, it is possible to only dump meta information, without the
message content.
We often need ISO time + microseconds in traces and ring buffers, thus
function does this by calling gettimeofday() and keeping a cached value
of the part representing the tv_sec value, and only rewrites the microsecond
part. The cache is per-thread so it's lockless and safe to use as-is.
Some tests already show that it's easy to see 3-4 events in a single
microsecond, thus it's likely that the nanosecond version will have to
be implemented as well. But certain comments on the net suggest that
some parsers are having trouble beyond microsecond, thus for now let's
stick to the microsecond only.
Make it so MT_LIST_ADD and MT_LIST_ADDQ return 1 if it managed to add the
item, 0 (because it was already in a list) otherwise.
Make it so MT_LIST_DEL returns 1 if it managed to remove the item from a
list, or 0 otherwise (because it was in no list).
Add a few new macroes to the mt_lists.
MT_LIST_LOCK_ELT()/MT_LIST_UNLOCK_ELT() helps locking/unlocking an element.
This should only be used if you know for sure nobody else will remove the
element from the list in the meanwhile.
mt_list_for_each_entry_safe() is an iterator, similar to
list_for_each_entry_safe().
It takes 5 arguments, item, list_head, member are similar to those of
the non-mt variant, tmpelt is a temporary pointer to a struct mt_list, while
tmpelt2 is a struct mt_list itself.
MT_LIST_DEL_SELF() can be used to delete an item while parsing the list with
mt_list_for_each_entry_safe(). It shouldn't be used outside, and you
shouldn't use MT_LIST_DEL() while using mt_list_for_each_entry_safe().
Instead of using the same type for regular linked lists and "autolocked"
linked lists, use a separate type, "struct mt_list", for the autolocked one,
and introduce a set of macros, similar to the LIST_* macros, with the
MT_ prefix.
When we use the same entry for both regular list and autolocked list, as
is done for the "list" field in struct connection, we know have to explicitely
cast it to struct mt_list when using MT_ macros.
To avoid code duplication in the futur mux FCGI, functions parsing H1 messages
and converting them into HTX have been moved in the file h1_htx.c. Some
specific parts remain in the mux H1. But most of the parsing is now generic.
This new flag may be used to report unexpected error because of not well
formatted HTX messages (not related to a parsing error) or our incapactity to
handle the processing because we reach a limit (ressource exhaustion, too big
headers...). It should result to an error 500 returned to the client when
applicable.
In prompts on the CLI we now commonly need to propose a keyword name
and a description and it doesn't make sense to define a new struct for
each such pairs. Let's simply have a generic "name_desc" for this.
The new functions are :
__b_put_varint() : inserts a varint when it's known that it fits
b_put_varint() : tries to insert a varint at the tail
b_get_varint() : tries to get a varint from the head
b_peek_varint() : tries to peek a varint at a specific offset
Wrapping is supported so that they are expected to be safe to use to
manipulate varints with buffers anywhere.
It will sometimes be useful to encode varints to know the output size in
advance. Two versions are provided, one inline using a switch/case construct
which will be trivial for use with constants (and will be very fast albeit
huge) and one function iterating on the number which is 5 times smaller,
for use with variables.
The function call tracing code is a quite old and was never ported to
support threads. It's not even sure whether it still works well, but
at least its presence creates confusion for future work so let's rename
it to calltrace.c and add a comment about its lack of thread-safety.
It's sometimes convenient for debugging macros not to be forced to
explicitly pass NULL in an unused argument. This macro does this, it
replaces a missing arg with NULL.
This is somewhat related to indent_msg() except that this one places a
known prefix at the beginning of each line, allows to replace the EOL
character, and not to insert a prefix on the first line if not desired.
It works with a normal output buffer/chunk so it doesn't need to allocate
anything nor to modify the input string. It is suitable for use in multi-
line backtraces.
Since last commit there's no point anymore in having two variants of the
same function, let's switch to b_free() only. __b_drop() was renamed to
__b_free() for obvious consistency reasons.
A small race exists in buffers with "show sess all". This one wants to show
some information grabbed from the buffer (especially in HTX mode). But the
thread owning this buffer might just be releasing its area, right after a
free() or munmap() call, resulting in a head that is not seen as empty yet
though the area was released. It may then be dereferenced by "show sess all"
causing a crash. Note that in practice it only happens in debug mode with
UAF enabled, but it's tricky enough to fix it right now.
This should be backported to stable versions which support threads and a
store barrier. It's worth noting that by performing the clearing first,
b_free() and b_drop() now become two exact equivalent.
Commit 85b2cae63 ("MINOR: pools: make the thread harmless during the
mmap/munmap syscalls") was used to relax the pressure experienced by
other threads when running in debug mode with UAF enabled. It places
a pair of thread_harmless_now()/thread_harmless_end() around the call
to mmap(), assuming callers are not sensitive to parallel activity.
But there are a few cases like "show sess all" where this happens in
isolated threads, and marking the thread as harmless there is a very
bad idea, even worse when arriving to thread_harmless_end() which loops
forever.
Let's only do that when the thread is not isolated. No backport is
needed as the patch above was only in 2.1-dev.
It happens that upon looping threads the watchdog fires, starts a dump,
and other threads expire their budget while waiting for the other threads
to get dumped and trigger a watchdog event again, adding some confusion
to the traces. With this patch the situation becomes clearer as we export
the list of threads being dumped so that the watchdog can check it before
deciding to trigger. This way such threads in queue for being dumped are
not attempted to be reported in turn.
This should be backported to 2.0 as it helps understand stack traces.
This one was added by commit daacf3664 ("BUG/MEDIUM: protocols: add a
global lock for the init/deinit stuff") but I forgot to add it to the
include file, breaking DEBUG_THREAD.
Default HTTP error messages are stored in an array of chunks. And since the HTX
was added, these messages are also converted in HTX and stored in another
array. But now, the first array is not used anymore because the legacy HTTP mode
was removed.
So now, only the array with the HTX messages are kept. The other one was
removed.
Because the h2 multiplexer only uses the HTX mode, following H2 functions were
removed :
* h2_prepare_h1_reqline
* h2_make_h1_request()
* h2_make_h1_trailers()