Now that warnings were almost all removed, let's enable zero-warning
via -dW. All tests were adjusted, but two:
- mcli/mcli_start_progs.vtc:
the programs section currently cannot be silenced
- stats/stats-file.vtc:
the warning comes from the stats file itself on comment lines.
All other ones are now OK.
Support for headers and body hidden in the version for the "option httpchk"
directive was removed. However a Host header is mandatory for HTTP/1.1
requests and some servers may return an error if it is not set. For now, to
add it, an "http-check send" rule must be added. But it is not really handy
to use an extra config line for this purpose.
So now, it is possible to set the host header value, a log-format string, as
extra argument to "option httpchk" directive. It must be the fourth argument:
option httpchk GET / HTTP/1.1 www.srv.com
While this patch is not a bug fix, it is simple enough to be backported if
necessary. On 2.9 and older, lf_init_expr() does not exist and LIST_INIT() must
be used instead.
With the CI occasionally slowing down, we're starting to see again some
spurious failures despite the long 1-second timeouts. This reports false
positives that are disturbing and doesn't provide as much value as this
could. However at this delay it already becomes a pain for developers
to wait for the tests to complete.
This commit adds support for the new environment variable
HAPROXY_TEST_TIMEOUT that will allow anyone to modify the connect,
client and server timeouts. It was set to 5 seconds by default, which
should be plenty for quite some time in the CI. All relevant values
that were 200ms or above were replaced by this one. A few larger
values were left as they are special. One test for the set-timeout
action that used to rely on a fixed 1-sec value was extended to a
fixed 5-sec, as the timeout is normally not reached, but it needs
to be known to compare the old and new values.
Historically, the input and output buffers of a check are allocated by hand
during the startup, with a specific size (not necessarily the same than
other buffers). But since the recent refactoring of the checks to rely
exclusively on the tcp-checks and to use the underlying mux layer, this part
is totally buggy. Indeed, because these buffers are now passed to a mux,
they maybe be swapped if a zero-copy is possible. In fact, for now it is
only possible in h2_rcv_buf(). Thus the bug concretely only exists if a h2
health-check is performed. But, it is a latent bug for other muxes.
Another problem is the size of these buffers. because it may differ for the
other buffer size, it might be source of bugs.
Finally, for configurations with hundreds of thousands of servers, having 2
buffers per check always allocated may be an issue.
To fix the bug, we now allocate these buffers when required using the buffer
pool. Thus not-running checks don't waste memory and muxes may swap them if
possible. The only drawback is the check buffers have now always the same
size than buffers used by the streams. This deprecates indirectly the
"tune.chksize" global option.
In addition, the http-check regtest have been update to perform some h2
health-checks.
Many thanks to @VigneshSP94 for its help on this bug.
This patch should solve the issue #936. It relies on the commit "MINOR:
tcpcheck: Don't handle anymore in-progress send rules in tcpcheck_main".
Both must be backport as far as 2.2.
bla
Its sole remaining purpose was to display "proxy foo started", which
has little benefit and pollutes output for those with plenty of proxies.
Let's remove it now.
The VTCs were updated to reflect this, because many of them had explicit
counts of dropped lines to match this message.
This is tagged as MEDIUM because some users may be surprized by the
loss of this quite old message.
For http-check send rules, it is now possible to use a log-format string to set
the request's body. the keyword "body-lf" should be used instead of "body". If the
string eval fails, no body is added.
For http-check send rules, it is now possible to use a log-format string to set
the request URI. the keyword "uri-lf" should be used instead of "uri". If the
string eval fails, we fall back on the default uri "/".