Historically we used to require that the connections held the desired
polling states for the data layer and the socket layer. Then with muxes
these were more or less merged into the transport layer, and now it
happens that with all transport layers having their own state, the
"transport layer state" as we have it in the connection (XPRT_RD_ENA,
XPRT_WR_ENA) is only an exact copy of the undelying file descriptor
state, but with a delay. All of this is causing some difficulties at
many places in the code because there are still some locations which
use the conn_want_* API to remain clean and only rely on connection,
and count on a later collection call to conn_cond_update_polling(),
while others need an immediate action and directly use the FD updates.
Since our updates are now much cheaper, most of them being only an
atomic test-and-set operation, and since our I/O callbacks are deferred,
there's no benefit anymore in trying to "cache" the transient state
change in the connection flags hoping to cancel them before they
become an FD event. Better make such calls transparent indirections
to the FD layer instead and get rid of the deferred operations which
needlessly complicate the logic inside.
This removes flags CO_FL_XPRT_{RD,WR}_ENA and CO_FL_WILL_UPDATE.
A number of functions related to polling updates were either greatly
simplified or removed.
Two places were using CO_FL_XPRT_WR_ENA as a hint to know if more data
were expected to be sent after a PROXY protocol or SOCKSv4 header. These
ones were simply replaced with a check on the subscription which is
where we ought to get the autoritative information from.
Now the __conn_xprt_want_* and their conn_xprt_want_* counterparts
are the same. conn_stop_polling() and conn_xprt_stop_both() are the
same as well. conn_cond_update_polling() only causes errors to stop
polling. It also becomes way more obvious that muxes should not at
all employ conn_xprt_{want|stop}_{recv,send}(), and that the call
to __conn_xprt_stop_recv() in case a mux failed to allocate a buffer
is inappropriate, it ought to unsubscribe from reads instead. All of
this definitely requires a serious cleanup.
This is convenient when processing large dumps, it allows to copy-paste
values to inspect from one window to another, or to directly transfer
a "show fd"/"show stream" output through sed. In order to do this, simply
pass "-" alone instead of the value and they will all be read one line at
a time from stdin. For example, in order to quickly print the different
set of connection flags from "show fd", this is sufficient:
sed -ne 's/^.* cflg=\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p' | contrib/debug/flags conn -
It's often convenient, for example to dump two channels or two stream-int
at once. Now all input values are decoded and the value is recalled before
the dump when there is more than one to display.
It's often confusing to have a whole dump on the screen while only
checking for a set of task or stream flags, and appending "|grep ^chn"
isn't very convenient to repeat the opeation. Instead let's add the
ability to filter the output as certain types only by prepending their
name(s) before the value.
Commit 477902bd2e ("MEDIUM: connections: Get ride of the xprt_done
callback.") broke the master CLI for a very obscure reason. It happens
that short requests immediately terminated by a shutdown are properly
received, CS_FL_EOS is correctly set, but in si_cs_recv(), we refrain
from setting CF_SHUTR on the channel because CO_FL_CONNECTED was not
yet set on the connection since we've not passed again through
conn_fd_handler() and it was not done in conn_complete_session(). While
commit a8a415d31a ("BUG/MEDIUM: connections: Set CO_FL_CONNECTED in
conn_complete_session()") fixed the issue, such accident may happen
again as the root cause is deeper and actually comes down to the fact
that CO_FL_CONNECTED is lazily set at various check points in the code
but not every time we drop one wait bit. It is not the first time we
face this situation.
Originally this flag was used to detect the transition between WAIT_*
and CONNECTED in order to call ->wake() from the FD handler. But since
at least 1.8-dev1 with commit 7bf3fa3c23 ("BUG/MAJOR: connection: update
CO_FL_CONNECTED before calling the data layer"), CO_FL_CONNECTED is
always synchronized against the two others before being checked. Moreover,
with the I/Os moved to tasklets, the decision to call the ->wake() function
is performed after the I/Os in si_cs_process() and equivalent, which don't
care about this transition either.
So in essence, checking for CO_FL_CONNECTED has become a lazy wait to
check for (CO_FL_WAIT_L4_CONN | CO_FL_WAIT_L6_CONN), but that always
relies on someone else having synchronized it.
This patch addresses it once for all by killing this flag and only checking
the two others (for which a composite mask CO_FL_WAIT_L4L6 was added). This
revealed a number of inconsistencies that were purposely not addressed here
for the sake of bisectability:
- while most places do check both L4+L6 and HANDSHAKE at the same time,
some places like assign_server() or back_handle_st_con() and a few
sample fetches looking for proxy protocol do check for L4+L6 but
don't care about HANDSHAKE ; these ones will probably fail on TCP
request session rules if the handshake is not complete.
- some handshake handlers do validate that a connection is established
at L4 but didn't clear CO_FL_WAIT_L4_CONN
- the ->ctl method of mux_fcgi, mux_pt and mux_h1 only checks for L4+L6
before declaring the mux ready while the snd_buf function also checks
for the handshake's completion. Likely the former should validate the
handshake as well and we should get rid of these extra tests in snd_buf.
- raw_sock_from_buf() would directly set CO_FL_CONNECTED and would only
later clear CO_FL_WAIT_L4_CONN.
- xprt_handshake would set CO_FL_CONNECTED itself without actually
clearing CO_FL_WAIT_L4_CONN, which could apparently happen only if
waiting for a pure Rx handshake.
- most places in ssl_sock that were checking CO_FL_CONNECTED don't need
to include the L4 check as an L6 check is enough to decide whether to
wait for more info or not.
It also becomes obvious when reading the test in si_cs_recv() that caused
the failure mentioned above that once converted it doesn't make any sense
anymore: having CS_FL_EOS set while still waiting for L4 and L6 to complete
cannot happen since for CS_FL_EOS to be set, the other ones must have been
validated.
Some of these parts will still deserve further cleanup, and some of the
observations above may induce some backports of potential bug fixes once
totally analyzed in their context. The risk of breaking existing stuff
is too high to blindly backport everything.
These ones used to serve as a set of switches between CO_FL_SOCK_* and
CO_FL_XPRT_*, and now that the SOCK layer is gone, they're always a
copy of the last know CO_FL_XPRT_* ones that is resynchronized before
I/O events by calling conn_refresh_polling_flags(), and that are pushed
back to FDs when detecting changes with conn_xprt_polling_changes().
While these functions are not particularly heavy, what they do is
totally redundant by now because the fd_want_*/fd_stop_*() actions
already perform test-and-set operations to decide to create an entry
or not, so they do the exact same thing that is done by
conn_xprt_polling_changes(). As such it is pointless to call that
one, and given that the only reason to keep CO_FL_CURR_* is to detect
changes there, we can now remove them.
Even if this does only save very few cycles, this removes a significant
complexity that has been responsible for many bugs in the past, including
the last one affecting FreeBSD.
All tests look good, and no performance regressions were observed.
This simple program prepares a TCP connection between two ends and
allows to perform various operations on them such as send, recv, poll,
shutdown, close, reset, etc. It takes care of remaining particularly
silent to help inspection via strace, though it can also be verbose
and report status, errno, and poll events. It delays acceptation of
the incoming server-side connection so that it's even possible to
test the poll status on a listener with a pending connection, or
to close the connection without accepting it and inspect the effect
on the client.
Actions are executed in the command line order as they are parsed,
they may be grouped using commas when they are performed on the same
socket.
Example showing a successful recv() of pending data before a pending error:
$ ./poll -v -l pol,acc,pol -c snd,shw -s pol,rcv,pol,rcv,pol,snd,lin,clo -c pol,rcv,pol,rcv,pol
#### BEGIN ####
cmd #1 stp #1: do_pol(3): ret=1 ev=0x1 (IN)
cmd #1 stp #2: do_acc(3): ret=5
cmd #1 stp #3: do_pol(3): ret=0 ev=0
cmd #2 stp #1: do_snd(4): ret=3
cmd #2 stp #2: do_shw(4): ret=0
cmd #3 stp #1: do_pol(5): ret=1 ev=0x2005 (IN OUT RDHUP)
cmd #3 stp #2: do_rcv(5): ret=3
cmd #3 stp #3: do_pol(5): ret=1 ev=0x2005 (IN OUT RDHUP)
cmd #3 stp #4: do_rcv(5): ret=0
cmd #3 stp #5: do_pol(5): ret=1 ev=0x2005 (IN OUT RDHUP)
cmd #3 stp #6: do_snd(5): ret=3
cmd #3 stp #7: do_lin(5): ret=0
cmd #3 stp #8: do_clo(5): ret=0
cmd #4 stp #1: do_pol(4): ret=1 ev=0x201d (IN OUT ERR HUP RDHUP)
cmd #4 stp #2: do_rcv(4): ret=3
cmd #4 stp #3: do_pol(4): ret=1 ev=0x201d (IN OUT ERR HUP RDHUP)
cmd #4 stp #4: do_rcv(4): ret=-1 (Connection reset by peer)
cmd #4 stp #5: do_pol(4): ret=1 ev=0x2015 (IN OUT HUP RDHUP)
#### END ####
The old module proto_http does not exist anymore. All code dedicated to the HTTP
analysis is now grouped in the file proto_htx.c. So, to finish the polishing
after removing the legacy HTTP code, proto_htx.{c,h} files have been moved in
http_ana.{c,h} files.
In addition, all HTX analyzers and related functions prefixed with "htx_" have
been renamed to start with "http_" instead.
Many flags of the HTTP transction (TX_*) are now unused and useless. So the
flags TX_WAIT_CLEANUP, TX_HDR_CONN_*, TX_CON_CLO_SET and TX_CON_KAL_SET were
removed. Most of TX_CON_WANT_* were also removed. Only TX_CON_WANT_TUN has been
kept.
Add session flags, and add a new flag, SESS_FL_PREFER_LAST, to be set when
we use NTLM authentication, and we should reuse the last connection. This
should fix using NTLM with HTX. This totally replaces TX_PREFER_LAST.
This should be backported to 1.9.
These flags haven't been used for a while. SF_TUNNEL was reintroduced
by commit d62b98c6e ("MINOR: stream: don't set backend's nor response
analysers on SF_TUNNEL") to handle the two-level streams needed to
deal with the first model for H2, and was not removed after this model
was abandonned. SF_INITIALIZED was only set. SF_CONN_TAR was never
referenced at all.
The SI_FL_WANT_PUT flag is used in an awkward way, sometimes it's
set by the stream-interface to mean "I have something to deliver",
sometimes it's cleared by the channel to say "I don't want you to
send what you have", and it has to be set back once CF_DONT_READ
is cleared. This will have to be split between SI_FL_RX_WAIT_EP
and SI_FL_RXBLK_CHAN. This patch only replaces all uses of the
flag with its natural (but negated) replacement SI_FL_RX_WAIT_EP.
The code is expected to be strictly equivalent. The now unused flag
was completely removed.
The plan is to have the following flags to describe why a stream interface
doesn't produce data :
- SI_FL_RXBLK_CHAN : the channel doesn't want it to receive
- SI_FL_RXBLK_BUFF : waiting for a buffer allocation to complete
- SI_FL_RXBLK_ROOM : more room is required in the channel to receive
- SI_FL_RXBLK_SHUT : input now closed, nothing new will come
- SI_FL_RX_WAIT_EP : waiting for the endpoint to produce more data
Applets like the CLI which consume complete commands at once and produce
large chunks of responses will for example be able to stop being woken up
by clearing SI_FL_WANT_GET and setting SI_FL_RXBLK_ROOM when the rx buffer
is full. Once called they will unblock WANT_GET. The flags were moved
together in readable form with the Rx bits using 2 hex digits and still
have some room to do a similar operation on the Tx path later, with the
WAIT_EP flag being represented alone on a digit.
This flag is not enough to describe all blocking situations, as can be
seen in each case we remove it. The muxes has taught us that using multiple
blocking flags in parallel will be much easier, so let's start to do this
now. This patch only renames this flags in order to make next changes more
readable.
Commit 53216e7db ("MEDIUM: connections: Don't directly mess with the
polling from the upper layers.") removed the CS_FL_DATA_RD_ENA and
CS_FL_DATA_WR_ENA flags without updating flags.c, thus breaking the
build. This patch also adds flag CL_FL_NOT_FIRST which was brought
by commit 08088e77c.
The behaviour of the flag CF_WRITE_PARTIAL was modified by commit
95fad5ba4 ("BUG/MAJOR: stream-int: don't re-arm recv if send fails") due
to a situation where it could trigger an immediate wake up of the other
side, both acting in loops via the FD cache. This loss has caused the
need to introduce CF_WRITE_EVENT as commit c5a9d5bf, to replace it, but
both flags express more or less the same thing and this distinction
creates a lot of confusion and complexity in the code.
Since the FD cache now acts via tasklets, the issue worked around in the
first patch no longer exists, so it's more than time to kill this hack
and to restore CF_WRITE_PARTIAL's semantics (i.e.: there has been some
write activity since we last left process_stream).
This patch mostly reverts the two commits above. Only the part making
use of CF_WROTE_DATA instead of CF_WRITE_PARTIAL to detect the loss of
data upon connection setup was kept because it's more accurate and
better suited.
Commit f4cfcf9 ("MINOR: debug/flags: Add missing flags") added a number
of missing flags but a few of them were incorrect, hiding real values.
This can be backported to 1.8.
These flags are not exactly for the data layer, they instead indicate
what is expected from the transport layer. Since we're going to split
the connection between the transport and the data layers to insert a
mux layer, it's important to have a clear idea of what each layer does.
All function conn_data_* used to manipulate these flags were renamed to
conn_xprt_*.
After careful inspection, this flag is set at exactly two places :
- once in the health-check receive callback after receipt of a
response
- once in the stream interface's shutw() code where CF_SHUTW is
always set on chn->flags
The flag was checked in the checks before deciding to send data, but
when it is set, the wake() callback immediately closes the connection
so the CO_FL_SOCK_WR_SH flag is also set.
The flag was also checked in si_conn_send(), but checking the channel's
flag instead is enough and even reveals that one check involving it
could never match.
So it's time to remove this flag and replace its check with a check of
CF_SHUTW in the stream interface. This way each layer is responsible
for its shutdown, this will ease insertion of the mux layer.
This flag is both confusing and wrong. It is supposed to report the
fact that the data layer has received a shutdown, but in fact this is
reported by CO_FL_SOCK_RD_SH which is set by the transport layer after
this condition is detected. The only case where the flag above is set
is in the stream interface where CF_SHUTR is also set on the receiving
channel.
In addition, it was checked in the health checks code (while never set)
and was always test jointly with CO_FL_SOCK_RD_SH everywhere, except in
conn_data_read0_pending() which incorrectly doesn't match the second
time it's called and is fortunately protected by an extra check on
(ic->flags & CF_SHUTR).
This patch gets rid of the flag completely. Now conn_data_read0_pending()
accurately reports the fact that the transport layer has detected the end
of the stream, regardless of the fact that this state was already consumed,
and the stream interface watches ic->flags&CF_SHUTR to know if the channel
was already closed by the upper layer (which it already used to do).
The now unused conn_data_read0() function was removed.
The ->init() callback of the connection's data layer was only used to
complete the session's initialisation since sessions and streams were
split apart in 1.6. The problem is that it creates a big confusion in
the layers' roles as the session has to register a dummy data layer
when waiting for a handshake to complete, then hand it off to the
stream which will replace it.
The real need is to notify that the transport has finished initializing.
This should enable a better splitting between these layers.
This patch thus introduces a connection-specific callback called
xprt_done_cb() which informs about handshake successes or failures. With
this, data->init() can disappear, CO_FL_INIT_DATA as well, and we don't
need to register a dummy data->wake() callback to be notified of errors.
Very early in the connection rework process leading to v1.5-dev12, commit
56a77e5 ("MEDIUM: connection: complete the polling cleanups") marked the
end of use for this flag which since was never set anymore, but it continues
to be tested. Let's kill it now.
The goal is to have a collection of quick-n-dirty utilities that make
debugging easier and that can easily be modified when needed. The first
utility in this series is called "flags". For a given numeric argument,
it reports the various known combinations of flags for channels, streams
and so on. This way it's easy to copy-paste values from the CLI or from
gdb and immediately know what state a stream-interface or connection is
in.