The buffer flags became a big bazaar. Re-arrange them
so that their names are more explicit and so that they
are more easily readable in hex form. Some aggregates
have also been adjusted.
srv_state has been removed from HTTP state machines, and states
have been split in either TCP states or analyzers. For instance,
the TARPIT state has just become a simple analyzer.
New flags have been added to the struct buffer to compensate this.
The high-level stream processors sometimes need to force a disconnection
without touching a file-descriptor (eg: report an error). But if
they touched BF_SHUTW or BF_SHUTR, the file descriptor would not
be closed. Thus, the two SHUT?_NOW flags have been added so that
an application can request a forced close which the stream interface
will be forced to obey.
During this change, a new BF_HIJACK flag was added. It will
be used for data generation, eg during a stats dump. It
prevents the producer on a buffer from sending data into it.
BF_SHUTR_NOW /* the producer must shut down for reads ASAP */
BF_SHUTW_NOW /* the consumer must shut down for writes ASAP */
BF_HIJACK /* the producer is temporarily replaced */
BF_SHUTW_NOW has precedence over BF_HIJACK. BF_HIJACK has
precedence over BF_MAY_FORWARD (so that it does not need it).
New functions buffer_shutr_now(), buffer_shutw_now(), buffer_abort()
are provided to manipulate BF_SHUT* flags.
A new type "stream_interface" has been added to describe both
sides of a buffer. A stream interface has states and error
reporting. The session now has two stream interfaces (one per
side). Each buffer has stream_interface pointers to both
consumer and producer sides.
The server-side file descriptor has moved to its stream interface,
so that even the buffer has access to it.
process_srv() has been split into three parts :
- tcp_get_connection() obtains a connection to the server
- tcp_connection_failed() tests if a previously attempted
connection has succeeded or not.
- process_srv_data() only manages the data phase, and in
this sense should be roughly equivalent to process_cli.
Little code has been removed, and a lot of old code has been
left in comments for now.
It is not always convenient to run checks on req->l in functions to
check if a buffer is empty or full. Now the stream_sock functions
set flags BF_EMPTY and BF_FULL according to the buffer contents. Of
course, functions which touch the buffer contents adjust the flags
too.
BF_SHUTR_PENDING and BF_SHUTW_PENDING were poor ideas because
BF_SHUTR is the pending of BF_SHUTW_DONE and BF_SHUTW is the
pending of BF_SHUTR_DONE. Remove those two useless and confusing
"pending" versions and rename buffer_shut{r,w}_* functions.
This is the first attempt at moving all internal parts from
using struct timeval to integer ticks. Those provides simpler
and faster code due to simplified operations, and this change
also saved about 64 bytes per session.
A new header file has been added : include/common/ticks.h.
It is possible that some functions should finally not be inlined
because they're used quite a lot (eg: tick_first, tick_add_ifset
and tick_is_expired). More measurements are required in order to
decide whether this is interesting or not.
Some function and variable names are still subject to change for
a better overall logics.
A second occurrence of read-timeout rearming was present in stream_sock.c.
To fix the problem, it was necessary to put the shutdown information in
the buffer (already planned).
Two new functions http_header_add_tail() and http_header_add_tail2()
make it easier to append headers, and also reduce the number of
sprintf() calls and perform stricter checks.
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.
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.
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.
As suggested by Markus Elfring, a few "const char *" have replaced
some "char *" declarations where a function is not expected to
modify a value. It does not change the code but it helps detecting
coding errors.
The files are now stored under :
- include/haproxy for the generic includes
- include/types.h for the structures needed within prototypes
- include/proto.h for function prototypes and inline functions
- src/*.c for the C files
Most include files are now covered by LGPL. A last move still needs
to be done to put inline functions under GPL and not LGPL.
Version has been set to 1.3.0 in the code but some control still
needs to be done before releasing.