Now we atomically allocate the my_regex struct within function
regex_comp() and compile the regex or free both in case of failure. The
pointer to the allocated my_regex struct is returned directly. The
my_regex* argument to regex_comp() is removed.
Function regex_free() was modified so that it systematically frees the
my_regex entry. The function does nothing when called with a NULL as
argument (like free()). It will avoid existing risk of not properly
freeing the initialized area.
Other structures are also updated in order to be compatible (the ones
related to Lua and action rules).
This patch adds the support for the "table" line parsing in "peers" sections
to declare stick-table in such sections. This also prevents the user from having
to declare dummy backends sections with a unique stick-table inside.
Even if still supported, this usage will become deprecated.
To do so, the ->table member of proxy struct which is a stktable struct is replaced
by a pointer to a stktable struct allocated at parsing time in src/cfgparse-listen.c
for the dummy stick-table backends and in src/cfgparse.c for "peers" sections.
This has an impact on the code for stick-table sample converters and on the stickiness
rules parsers which first store the name of the dummy before resolving the rules.
This patch replaces proxy_tbl_by_name() calls by stktable_find_by_name() calls
to lookup for stick-tables stored in "stktable_by_name" ebtree at parsing time.
There is only one remaining place where proxy_tbl_by_name() is used: src/hlua.c.
At several places in the code we relied on the fact that ->size member of stick-table
was equal to zero to consider the stick-table was present by not configured,
this do not make sense anymore as ->table member of struct proxyis fow now on a pointer.
These tests are replaced by a test on ->table value itself.
In "peers" section we do not have to temporary store the name of the section the
stick-table are attached to because this name is obviously already known just after
having entered this "peers" section.
About the CLI stick-table I/O handler, the pointer to proxy struct is replaced by
a pointer to a stktable struct.
This ads support for accessing stick tables from Lua. The supported
operations are reading general table info, lookup by string/IP key, and
dumping the table.
Similar to "show table", a data filter is available during dump, and as
an improvement over "show table" it's possible to use up to 4 filter
expressions instead of just one (with implicit AND clause binding the
expressions). Dumping with/without filters can take a long time for
large tables, and should be used sparingly.
It's a bit painful to have to deal with HTTP semantics for each protocol
version (H1 and H2), and working on the version-agnostic code further
emphasizes the problem.
This patch creates http.h and http.c which are agnostic to the version
in use, and which borrow a few parts from proto_http and from h1. For
example the once thought h1-specific h1_char_classes array is in fact
dictated by RFC7231 and is used to parse HTTP headers. A few changes
were made to a few files which were including proto_http.h while they
only needed http.h.
Certain string definitions pre-dated the introduction of indirect
strings (ist) so some were used to simplify the definition of the known
HTTP methods. The current lookup code saves 2 kB of a heavily used table
and is faster than the previous table based lookup (typ. 14 ns vs 16
before).
The function hlua_ctx_resume return less text message and more error
code. These error code allow the caller to return appropriate
message to the user.
We have two y for nsuring that the data is not concurently manipulated:
- locks
- running task on the same thread.
locks are expensives, it is better to avoid it.
This patch cecks that the Lua task run on the same thread that
the stream associated to the coprocess.
TODO: in a next version, the error should be replaced by a yield
and thread migration request.
This patch simply brings HAProxy internal regex system to the Lua API.
Lua doesn't embed regexes, now it inherits from the regexes compiled
with haproxy.
Certain types and enums are very specific to the HTTP/1 parser, and we'll
need to share them with the HTTP/2 to HTTP/1 translation code. Let's move
them to h1.c/h1.h. Those with very few occurrences or only used locally
were renamed to explicitly mention the relevant HTTP version :
enum ht_state -> h1_state.
http_msg_state_str -> h1_msg_state_str
HTTP_FLG_* -> H1_FLG_*
http_char_classes -> h1_char_classes
Others like HTTP_IS_*, HTTP_MSG_* are left to be done later.
These notification management function and structs are generic and
it will be better to move in common parts.
The notification management functions and structs have names
containing some "lua" references because it was written for
the Lua. This patch removes also these references.
This problem is already detected here:
8dc7316a6f
Another case raises. Now HAProxy sends a final message (typically
with "http-request deny"). Once the the message is sent, the response
channel flags are not modified.
HAProxy executes a Lua sample-fecthes for building logs, and the
result is ignored because the response flag remains set to the value
HTTP_MSG_RPBEFORE. So the Lua function hlua_check_proto() want to
guarantee the valid state of the buffer and ask for aborting the
request.
The function check_proto() is not the good way to ensure request
consistency. The real question is not "Are the message valid ?", but
"Are the validity of message unchanged ?"
This patch memorize the parser state before entering int the Lua
code, and perform a check when it go out of the Lua code. If the parser
state change for down, the request is aborted because the HTTP message
is degraded.
This patch should be backported in version 1.6 and 1.7
(http|tcp)-(request|response) action cannot take arguments from the
configuration file. Arguments are useful for executing the action with
a special context.
This patch adds the possibility of passing arguments to an action. It
runs exactly like sample fetches and other Lua wrappers.
Note that this patch implements a 'TODO'.
If an action wrapper stops the processing of the transaction
with a txn_done() function, the return code of the action is
"continue". So the continue can implies the processing of other
like adding headers. However, the HTTP content is flushed and
a segfault occurs.
This patchs add a flag indicating that the Lua code want to
stop the processing, ths flags is forwarded to the haproxy core,
and other actions are ignored.
Must be backported in 1.6
The function txn_done() ends a transaction. It does not make
sense to call this function from a lua sample-fetch wrapper,
because the role of a sample-fetch is not to terminate a
transaction.
This patch modify the role of the fucntion txn_done() if it
is called from a sample-fetch wrapper, now it just ends the
execution of the Lua code like the done() function.
Must be backported in 1.6
Concat object is based on "luaL_Buffer". The luaL_Buffer documentation says:
During its normal operation, a string buffer uses a variable number of stack
slots. So, while using a buffer, you cannot assume that you know where the
top of the stack is. You can use the stack between successive calls to buffer
operations as long as that use is balanced; that is, when you call a buffer
operation, the stack is at the same level it was immediately after the
previous buffer operation. (The only exception to this rule is
luaL_addvalue.) After calling luaL_pushresult the stack is back to its level
when the buffer was initialized, plus the final string on its top.
So, the stack cannot be manipulated between the first call at the function
"luaL_buffinit()" and the last call to the function "luaL_pushresult()" because
we cannot known the stack status.
In other way, the memory used by these functions seems to be collected by GC, so
if the GC is triggered during the usage of the Concat object, it can be used
some released memory.
This patch rewrite the Concat class without the "luaL_Buffer" system. It uses
"userdata()" forr the memory allocation of the buffer strings.
If a sample fetch needing http_txn is called from an HTTP Lua applet,
the result will be invalid and may even cause a crash because some HTTP
data can be forwarded and the HTTP txn is no longer valid.
Here the solution is to ensure that a fetch called from Lua never
needs http_txn. This is done thanks to a new flag HLUA_F_MAY_USE_HTTP
which indicates whether or not it is safe to call a fetch which needs
HTTP.
This fix needs to be backported to 1.6.
This patch converts a boolean "int" to a bitfiled. The main
reason is to save space in the struct if another flag may will
be require.
Note that this patch is required for next fix and will need to be
backported to 1.6.
The direction (request or response) is not propagated in the
sample fecthes called throught Lua. This patch adds the direction
status in some structs (hlua_txn and hlua_smp) to make sure that
the sample fetches will be called with all the information.
The converters can not access to a TXN object, so there are not
impacted the direction. However, the samples used as input of the
Lua converter wrapper are initiliazed with the direction. Thereby,
the struct smp stay consistent.
[wt: needs to be backported to 1.6]
The garbage collector is a little bit heavy to run, and it was added
only for cosockets. This patch prevent useless executions when no
cosockets are used.
The (http|tcp)-(request|response) action rules use common
opaque type. For the HAProxy embbedded feature, types are know,
it better to add this types in the action union and use it.
This patch cretes a new Map class that permits to do some lookup in
HAProxy maps. This Map class is integration in the HAProxy update
system, so we can modify the map throught the socket.
With HTTP/2, we'll have to support multiplexed streams. A stream is in
fact the largest part of what we currently call a session, it has buffers,
logs, etc.
In order to catch any error, this commit removes any reference to the
struct session and tries to rename most "session" occurrences in function
names to "stream" and "sess" to "strm" when that's related to a session.
The files stream.{c,h} were added and session.{c,h} removed.
The session will be reintroduced later and a few parts of the stream
will progressively be moved overthere. It will more or less contain
only what we need in an embryonic session.
Sample fetch functions and converters will have to change a bit so
that they'll use an L5 (session) instead of what's currently called
"L4" which is in fact L6 for now.
Once all changes are completed, we should see approximately this :
L7 - http_txn
L6 - stream
L5 - session
L4 - connection | applet
There will be at most one http_txn per stream, and a same session will
possibly be referenced by multiple streams. A connection will point to
a session and to a stream. The session will hold all the information
we need to keep even when we don't yet have a stream.
Some more cleanup is needed because some code was already far from
being clean. The server queue management still refers to sessions at
many places while comments talk about connections. This will have to
be cleaned up once we have a server-side connection pool manager.
Stream flags "SN_*" still need to be renamed, it doesn't seem like
any of them will need to move to the session.
This class is accessible via the TXN object. It is created only if
the attached proxy have HTTP mode. It contain all the HTTP
manipulation functions:
- req_get_headers
- req_del_header
- req_rep_header
- req_rep_value
- req_add_header
- req_set_header
- req_set_method
- req_set_path
- req_set_query
- req_set_uri
- res_get_headers
- res_del_header
- res_rep_header
- res_rep_value
- res_add_header
- res_set_header
This struct used to carry only a sample fetch function. Thanks to
lua_pushuserdata(), we don't need to have the Lua engine allocate
that struct for us and we can simply push our pointer onto the stack.
This makes the code more readable by removing several occurrences of
"f->f->". Just like the previous patch, it comes with the nice effect
of saving about 1.3% of performance when fetching samples from Lua.
Since last cleanups, this one was only used to carry a struct channel.
Removing it makes the code a bit cleaner (no more chn->chn) and easier
to follow (no more abstraction for a common type). Interestingly it
happens to also make the Lua code slightly faster (about 1.5%) when
using channels, probably thanks to less pointer dereferences and maybe
the use of lua_pushlightuserdata().
In some cases we don't want to known if a fetch or converter
fails. We just want a valid string. After this patch, we
have two sets of fetches and two sets of converters. There are:
txn.f, txn.sf, txn.c, txn.sc. The version prefixed by 's' always
returns strings for any type, and returns an empty string in the
error case or when the data are not available. This is particularly
useful when manipulating headers or cookies.
This patch implements a wrapper to give access to the converters
in the Lua code. The converters are used with the transaction.
The automatically created function are prefixed by "conv_".
HAProxy proposes many sample fetches. It is possible that the
automatic registration of the sample fetches causes a collision
with an existing Lua function. This patch sets a namespace for
the sample fetches.
If we are writing in the request buffer, we are not waked up
when the data are forwarded because it is useles. The request
analyzers are waked up only when data is incoming. So, if the
request buffer is full, we set the WAKE_ON_WRITE flag.
Before this patch, each yield in a Lua action set a flags to be
waked up when some activity were detected on the response channel.
This behavior causes loop in the analyzer process.
This patch set the wake up on response buffer activity only if we
really want to be waked up on this activity.
This flag indicate that the current yield is returned by the Lua
execution task control. If this flag is set, the current task may
quit but will be set in the run queue to be re-executed immediatly.
This patch modify the "hlua_yieldk()" function, it adds an argument
that contain a field containing yield options.
This is used to ensure that the task doesn't become a zombie
when the Lua returns a yield. The yield wrapper ensure that an
timer used for waking up the task will be set.
The timer is reseted to TICK_ETERNITY if the Lua execution is
done.
This first patch permits to cofigure the Lua execution exipiration.
This expiration is configured but it is not yet avalaible, it will
be add in a future patch.
In the future, the lua execution must return scheduling informations.
We want more than one flag, so I convert an integer used with an
enum into an interer used as bitfield.
The channel class permits manipulation of channels. A channel is
an FIFO buffer between the client and the server. This class provides
function to read, write, forward, destroy and alter data between
the input and the ouput of the buffer.
This patch adds the TCP I/O functionnality. The class implemented
provides the same functions than the "lua socket" project. This
make network compatibility with another LUA project. The documentation
is located here:
http://w3.impa.br/~diego/software/luasocket/tcp.html