GCC4 is stupid (unbelievable news!).
When some code uses __builtin_expect(x != 0, 1), it really performs
the check of x != 0 then tests that the result is not zero! This is
a double check when only one was expected. Some performance drops
of 10% in the HTTP parser code have been observed due to this bug.
GCC 3.4 is fine though.
A solution consists in expecting that the tested value is 1. In
this case, it emits the correct code, but it's still not optimal
it seems. Finally the best solution is to ignore likely() and to
pray for the compiler to emit correct code. However, we still have
to fix unlikely() to remove the test there too, and to fix all
code which passed pointers overthere to pass integers instead.
State and offsets within http_msg were incorrectly set to signed int.
Turning them into unsigned slightly improved performance while reducing
code size.
Now when a server has "redir <prefix>" on its config line, any HEAD or GET
request addressing it will lead to a 302 with Location set to "<prefix>"
immediately followed by the relative URI of the incoming request. This makes
it very easy to send redirect to browsers to check remote static servers, as
well as to provide redirection for remote sites when the local one is down.
The servers now support the "redir" keyword, making it possible to
return a 302 with the specified prefix in front of the request instead
of connecting to them. This is generally useful for multi-site load
balancing but may also serve in order to achieve very high traffic
rate.
The keyword has only been added to the config parser and to structures,
it's not used yet.
This patch adds two new variables: fastinter and downinter.
When server state is:
- non-transitionally UP -> inter (no change)
- transitionally UP (going down), unchecked or transitionally DOWN (going up) -> fastinter
- down -> downinter
It allows to set something like:
server sr6 127.0.51.61:80 cookie s6 check inter 10000 downinter 20000 fastinter 500 fall 3 weight 40
In the above example haproxy uses 10000ms between checks but as soon as
one check fails fastinter (500ms) is used. If server is down
downinter (20000) is used or fastinter (500ms) if one check pass.
Fastinter is also used when haproxy starts.
New "timeout.check" variable was added, if set haproxy uses it as an additional
read timeout, but only after a connection has been already established. I was
thinking about using "timeout.server" here but most people set this
with an addition reserve but still want checks to kick out laggy servers.
Please also note that in most cases check request is much simpler
and faster to handle than normal requests so this timeout should be smaller.
I also changed the timeout used for check connections establishing.
Changes from the previous version:
- use tv_isset() to check if the timeout is set,
- use min("timeout connect", "inter") but only if "timeout check" is set
as this min alone may be to short for full (connect + read) check,
- debug code (fprintf) commented/removed
- documentation
Compile tested only (sorry!) as I'm currently traveling but changes
are rather small and trivial.
Commit 8b3977ffe3 removed "t->logs.bytes_in = 0;"
but instead it should change it into "t->logs.bytes_out = 0;" as since
583bc96606 counters are incremented not set.
It should be incremented in session_process_counters while sending data to a
client:
bytes = s->rep->total - s->logs.bytes_out;
s->logs.bytes_out = s->rep->total;
However, if we increment (set) s->logs.bytes_out while processing
"logasap", statistics get wrong values added for headers: 0 or even
negative if haproxy adds some headers itself.
To test it, please enable logasap and download one empty file and look at
stats. Without my fix information available on that page are invalid, for
example:
# pxname,svname,qcur,qmax,scur,smax,slim,stot,bin,bout,dreq,dresp,ereq,econ,eresp,wretr,wredis,status,weight,act,bck,chkfail,chkdown,lastchg,downtime,qlimit,pid,iid,sid,throttle,lbtot,
www,b,0,0,0,1,,1,24,-92,,0,,0,0,0,,UP,1,1,0,0,0,3121,0,,1,2,1,,1,
www,BACKEND,0,0,0,1,0,1,24,-92,0,0,,0,0,0,0,UP,1,1,0,,0,3121,0,,1,2,0,,1,
There's no point trying to check original dest addr with only one
method when doing transparent proxy as in full transparent mode,
the real destination address is required. Let's copy the one from
the frontend.
Due to the way Linux delivers EPOLLIN and EPOLLHUP, a closed connection
received after some server data sometimes results in truncated responses
if the client disconnects before server starts to respond. The reason
is that the EPOLLHUP flag is processed as an indication of end of
transfer while some data may remain in the system's socket buffers.
This problem could only be triggered with sepoll, although nothing should
prevent it from happening with normal epoll. In fact, the work factoring
performed by sepoll increases the risk that this bug appears.
The fix consists in making FD_POLL_HUP and FD_POLL_ERR sticky and that
they are only checked if FD_POLL_IN is not set, meaning that we have
read all pending data.
That way, the problem is definitely fixed and sepoll still remains about
17% faster than epoll since it can take into account all information
returned by the kernel.
The documentation now lists all keywords except the req* and rsp*. The
"server" keyword has been documented for mandatory parameters. Specific
settings are still waiting to be written in a dedicated section.
The source address selection for health checks did not consider
the new transparent proxy method. Rely on the same unified function
as the other connect() calls.
This patch also fixes a bug by which the proxy's source address was
ignored if cttproxy was used.
Balabit's TPROXY version 4 which replaces CTTPROXY provides a similar
API to the previous proxy, but relies on IP_FREEBIND instead of
IP_TRANSPARENT. Let's add it.
Using some Linux kernel patches which add the IP_TRANSPARENT
SOL_IP option , it is possible to bind to a non-local address
on without having resort to any sort of NAT, thus causing no
performance degradation.
This is by far faster and cleaner than the previous CTTPROXY
method. The code has been slightly changed in order to remain
compatible with CTTPROXY as a fallback for the new method when
it does not work.
It is not needed anymore to specify the outgoing source address
for connect, it can remain 0.0.0.0.
Using some Linux kernel patches, it is possible to redirect non-local
traffic to local sockets when IP forwarding is enabled. In order to
enable this option, we introduce the "transparent" option keyword on
the "bind" command line. It will make the socket reachable by remote
sources even if the destination address does not belong to the machine.
- options tcplog, tcpsplice and transparent have been documented.
- keywords "srvtimeout", "timeout queue", "timeout server" and
"timeout tarpit" have been documented
- keywords "transparent" and "use_backend" have been documented
Only "server", "source" and "stats *" remain undocumented
Options nolinger, persist, smtpchk and ssl-hello-chk have been
documented. All keywords and options up to and including option
tcpka are now documented.
a copy-paste typo was present in the reconnection code responsible
for respatching. The client's FSM would not be re-evaluated if an
error occurred. It looks harmless but better fix it.
Several users have complained that when haproxy gets a connection
failure due to an active reject from a server, it immediately
retries, often leading to the same situation being repeated until
the retry counter reaches zero.
Now if a connection error shows up, a turn-around state of 1 second
is applied before retrying. This is performed by faking a connection
timeout in order not to touch much code. However, a cleaner method
would involve an extra state.
This patch extends a little previously added functionality to also
count retries and redispatches for servers. Now it is possible to know
which server causes redispatches as it is not always the same that takes
most retries.
While working with the code I found that redistribute_pending() does not increment
srv->redispatches && be->redispatches. I don't know how to test it but
I think the fix is correct. If not I can withdraw it.
I also extended logs to show how many retries were done and if redispatching
was necessary ('+'). I'm using an additional session flag SN_REDISP to match
redispatched connections. I had to rearrange all defines in session.h to make
more room for it.
The documentation about logs was also fixed a little (sorry, english only),
as current version uses totally different format. BTW: examples are still
outdated, maybe next time...
Finally, I changed %d -> %u for retries/redispatches as those variables
are declared as unsigned.
It was abnormal to see more connect errors than connect attempts.
This was caused by the fact that the server's connection count was
not incremented for failed connect() attempts.
Now the per-server connections are correctly incremented for each
connect() attempt. This includes the retries too. The number of
connections effectively served by a server will then be :
srv->cum_sess - srv->errors - srv->warnings
In order to offer DoS protection, it may be required to lower the maximum
accepted time to receive a complete HTTP request without affecting the client
timeout. This helps protecting against established connections on which
nothing is sent. The client timeout cannot offer a good protection against
this abuse because it is an inactivity timeout, which means that if the
attacker sends one character every now and then, the timeout will not
trigger. With the HTTP request timeout, no matter what speed the client
types, the request will be aborted if it does not complete in time.
This new parameter makes it possible to override the default
number of consecutive incoming connections which can be
accepted on a socket. By default it is not limited on single
process mode, and limited to 8 in multi-process mode.
Add the "backlog" parameter to frontends, to give hints to
the system about the approximate listen backlog desired size.
In order to protect against SYN flood attacks, one solution is
to increase the system's SYN backlog size. Depending on the
system, sometimes it is just tunable via a system parameter,
sometimes it is not adjustable at all, and sometimes the system
relies on hints given by the application at the time of the
listen() syscall. By default, HAProxy passes the frontend's
maxconn value to the listen() syscall. On systems which can
make use of this value, it can sometimes be useful to be able
to specify a different value, hence this backlog parameter.
It is sometimes required to know some informations such as the
process uptime when consulting statistics. This patch adds the
"show info" command to query those informations on the UNIX
socket.
The build process was getting annoying under some conditions,
especially on platforms which are used to set CFLAGS, as well
as those which set a lot of complex defines. The new Makefile
takes care of this situation by not mixing TARGET, CPU and user
values, and by making privileging the pre-setting of common
variables with the ability to override them.
Now CFLAGS and LDFLAGS are set by default and may be overridden
without the risk of breaking useful defines. Options are better
dealt with, and as a bonus, it was possible to merge the FreeBSD
and OpenBSD targets into the common GNU Makefile.
The report of build options by "haproxy -vv" has been slightly
adapted to the new mode. Options implied by architecture are not
reported, only user-specified options are. It is also possible to
add options which will not be reported in order not to mangle the
output when specifying dirty informations such as URLs...
The Makefile was copiously documented and it should be easier to
build for any target now. Backwards compatibility with older
build processes was kept, and warnings are emitted for deprecated
build options.