stream.c and mux_fcgi.c may cause a warning for a possible NULL deref
at -Os, while that is not possible thanks to the previous test. Let's
just switch to __htx_get_head_blk() instead.
In muxes, the stream-endoint descriptor of a stream is always defined. Thus,
in .show_fd callback functions, there is no reason to test it.
This patch should address the issue #1727.
.
The stream endpoint descriptor that was named "endp" is now called "sd"
both in the fcgi_strm struct and in the few functions using this. The
name was also updated in the "show fd" output.
Function arguments and local variables called "cs" were renamed to
"sc" to avoid future confusion. There were also 3 places in debugging
traces where "cs" used to display the stconn, which were turned to "sc"
for similar reasons. The number of streams "nb_cs" was turned to "nb_sc".
There's no more reason for keepin the code and definitions in conn_stream,
let's move all that to stconn. The alphabetical ordering of include files
was adjusted.
This file contains all the stream-connector functions that are specific
to application layers of type stream. So let's name it accordingly so
that it's easier to figure what's located there.
The alphabetical ordering of include files was preserved.
First it applies to the stream endpoint and not the conn_stream, and
second it only tests and touches the flags so it makes sense to call
it se_fl_ like other functions which only manipulate the flags, as
it's just a special case of flags.
The function doesn't return a pointer to the mux but to the mux stream
(h1s, h2s etc). Let's adjust its name to reflect this. It's rarely used,
the name can be enlarged a bit. And of course s/cs/sc to accommodate for
the updated name.
These functions return the app-layer associated with an stconn, which
is a check, a stream or a stream's task. They're used a lot to access
channels, flags and for waking up tasks. Let's just name them
appropriately for the stream connector.
For historical reasons (stream-interface and connections), we used to
require two independent fields for the application level callbacks and
the transport-level functions. Over time the distinction faded away so
much that the low-level functions became specific to the application
and conversely. For example, applets may only work with streams on top
since they rely on the channels, and the stream-level functions differ
between applets and connections. Right now the application level only
contains a wake() callback and the low-level ones contain the functions
that act at the lower level to perform the shutr/shutw and at the upper
level to notify about readability and writability. Let's just merge them
together into a single set and get rid of this confusing distinction.
Note that the check ops do not define any app-level function since these
are only called by streams.
This renames the "struct conn_stream" to "struct stconn" and updates
the descriptions in all comments (and the rare help descriptions) to
"stream connector" or "connector". This touches a lot of files but
the change is minimal. The local variables were not even renamed, so
there's still a lot of "cs" everywhere.
Just like for the appctx, this is a pointer to a stream endpoint descriptor,
so let's make this explicit and not confuse it with the full endpoint. There
are very few changes thanks to the preliminary refactoring of the flags
manipulation.
After some discussion we found that the cs_endpoint was precisely the
descriptor for a stream endpoint, hence the naturally coming name,
stream endpoint constructor.
This patch renames only the type everywhere and the new/init/free functions
to remain consistent with it. Future patches will address field names and
argument names in various code areas.
That's the "stream endpoint" pointer. Let's change it now while it's
not much spread. The function __cs_endp_target() wasn't yet renamed
because that will change more globally soon.
This changes all main uses of endp->flags to the se_fl_*() equivalent
by applying coccinelle script endp_flags.cocci. The se_fl_*() functions
themselves were manually excluded from the change, of course.
Note: 144 locations were touched, manually reviewed and found to be OK.
The script was applied with all includes:
spatch --in-place --recursive-includes -I include --sp-file $script $files
The mux ->detach() function currently takes a conn_stream. This causes
an awkward situation where the caller cs_detach_endp() has to partially
mark it as released but not completely so that ->detach() finds its
endpoint and context, and it cannot be done later since it's possible
that ->detach() deletes the endpoint. As such the endpoint link between
the conn_stream and the mux's stream is in a transient situation while
we'd like it to be clean so that the mux's ->detach() code can call any
regular function it wants that knows the regular semantics of the
relation between the CS and the endpoint.
A better approach consists in slightly modifying the detach() API to
better match the reality, which is that the endpoint is detached but
still alive and that it's the only part the function is interested in.
As such, this patch modifies the function to take an endpoint there,
and by analogy (or simplicity) does the same for ->attach(), even
though it looks less important there since we're always attaching an
endpoint to a conn_stream anyway. It is possible that in the future
the API could evolve to use more endpoints that provide a bit more
flexibility in the API, but at this point we don't need to go further.
The principle that each mux stream should have an endpoint is not
guaranteed for closed streams that map to the dummy static streams.
Let's have a dummy endpoint for use with such streams. It only has
the DETACHED flag and a NULL conn_stream, and is referenced by all
the closed streams so that we can afford not to test strm->endp when
trying to access the flags or the CS.
At a few places the endpoint pointer was retrieved from the conn_stream
while it's safer and more long-term proof to take it from the fstrm.
Let's just do that.
Wherever we need to report an error, we have an even easier access to
the endpoint than the conn_stream. Let's first adjust the API to use
the endpoint and rename the function accordingly to cs_ep_set_error().
This bug was already fixed at many places (stats, promex, lua) but the FCGI
multiplexer is also affected. When there is no content-length specified in
the response and when the END_REQUEST record is delayed, the response may be
truncated because an abort is erroneously detected. If the connection is not
closed because "keep-conn" option is set, the response is aborted at the end
of the server timeout.
This bug is a design issue with the HTX. It should be addressed. But it will
probably not be possible to backport them as far as 2.4. So, for now, the
only solution is to explicitly add an EOT block with the EOM flag in this
case.
This patch should fix the issue #1682. It must be backported as far as 2.4.
For all muxes, the function responsible to release a mux is always called
with a defined mux. Thus there is no reason to test if it is defined or not.
Note the patch may seem huge but it is just because of indentation changes.
Several muxes (h2, fcgi, quic) don't support the protocol upgrade. For these
muxes, there is no reason to have code to support it. Thus in the destroy
callback, there is now a BUG_ON() and the release function is simplified
because the connection is always owned by the mux..
Once a mux initialized, the underlying connection alwaus exists from its
point of view and it is never removed until the mux is released. It may be
owned by another mux during an upgrade. But the pointer remains set. Thus
there is no reason to test it in the destroy callback function.
This patch should fix the issue #1652.
To be able to move wait_event from the stream-interface to the conn-stream,
we must be prepare to handle errors when a mux is attached to a conn-stream.
Indeed, the wait_event's tasklet will be allocated when both a mux and a
stream will be both attached to a stream. So, we must be prepared to handle
allocation errors.
These flags only concerns the connection part. In addition, it is required
for a next commit, to avoid circular deps. Thus CS_SHR_* and CS_SHW_* were
renamed with the "CO_" prefix.
The source and destination addresses at the applicative layer are moved from
the stream-interface to the conn-stream. This simplifies a bit the code and
it is a logicial step to remove the stream-interface.
At many places, we now use the new CS functions to get a stream or a channel
from a conn-stream instead of using the stream-interface API. It is the
first step to reduce the scope of the stream-interfaces. The main change
here is about the applet I/O callback functions. Before the refactoring, the
stream-interface was the appctx owner. Thus, it was heavily used. Now, as
far as possible,the conn-stream is used. Of course, it remains many calls to
the stream-interface API.
All old flags CS_FL_* are now moved in the endpoint scope and renamed
CS_EP_* accordingly. It is a systematic replacement. There is no true change
except for the health-check and the endpoint reset. Here it is a bit special
because the same conn-stream is reused. Thus, we must handle endpoint
allocation errors. To do so, cs_reset_endp() has been adapted.
Thanks to this last change, it will now be possible to simplify the
multiplexer and probably the applets too. A review must also be performed to
remove some flags in the channel or the stream-interface. The HTX will
probably be simplified too. Finally, there is now some place in the
conn-stream to move info from the stream-interface.
The conn-stream endpoint is now shared between the conn-stream and the
applet or the multiplexer. If the mux or the applet is created first, it is
responsible to also create the endpoint and share it with the conn-stream.
If the conn-stream is created first, it is the opposite.
When the endpoint is only owned by an applet or a mux, it is called an
orphan endpoint (there is no conn-stream). When it is only owned by a
conn-stream, it is called a detached endpoint (there is no mux/applet).
The last entity that owns an endpoint is responsible to release it. When a
mux or an applet is detached from a conn-stream, the conn-stream
relinquishes the endpoint to recreate a new one. This way, the endpoint
state is never lost for the mux or the applet.
It is a transient commit to prepare next changes. Now, when a conn-stream is
created from an applet or a multiplexer, an endpoint is always provided. In
addition, the API to create a conn-stream was specialized to have one
function per type.
The next step will be to share the endpoint structure.
Some CS flags, only related to the endpoint, are moved into the endpoint
struct. More will probably moved later. Those ones are not critical. So it
is pretty safe to move them now and this will ease next changes.
Group the endpoint target of a conn-stream, its context and the associated
flags in a dedicated structure in the conn-stream. It is not inlined in the
conn-stream structure. There is a dedicated pool.
For now, there is no complexity. It is just an indirection to get the
endpoint or its context. But the purpose of this structure is to be able to
share a refcounted context between the mux and the conn-stream. This way, it
will be possible to preserve it when the mux is detached from the
conn-stream.
This change is only significant for the multiplexer part. For the applets,
the context and the endpoint are the same. Thus, there is no much change. For
the multiplexer part, the connection was used to set the conn-stream
endpoint and the mux's stream was the context. But it is a bit strange
because once a mux is installed, it takes over the connection. In a
wonderful world, the connection should be totally hidden behind the mux. The
stream-interface and, in a lesser extent, the stream, still access the
connection because that was inherited from the pre-multiplexer era.
Now, the conn-stream endpoint is the mux's stream (an opaque entity for the
conn-stream) and the connection is the context. Dedicated functions have
been added to attached an applet or a mux to a conn-stream.
h1_parse_msg_hdrs() and h1_parse_msg_tlrs() may return negative values if
the parsing fails or if more space is needed in the destination buffer. When
h1-htx was changed, The H1 mux was updated accordingly but not the FCGI
mux. Thus if a negative value is returned, it is ignored and it is casted to
a size_t, leading to an integer overflow on the <ofs> value, used to know
the position in the RX buffer.
This patch must be backported as far as 2.2.
Previous uses of `ist.cocci` did not add `--include-headers-for-types` and
`--recursive-includes` preventing Coccinelle seeing `struct ist` members of
other structs.
Reapply the patch with proper flags to further clean up the use of the ist API.
The command used was:
spatch -sp_file dev/coccinelle/ist.cocci -in_place --include-headers --include-headers-for-types --recursive-includes --dir src/
Found manually, while creating the previous commits to turn `struct proxy`
members into ists.
There is an existing Coccinelle rule to replace this pattern by `istadv()` in
`ist.cocci`:
@@
struct ist i;
expression e;
@@
- i.ptr += e;
- i.len -= e;
+ i = istadv(i, e);
But apparently it is not smart enough to match ists that are stored in another
struct. It would be useful to make the existing rule more generic, so that it
might catch similar cases in the future.
The server_id_hdr_name is already processed as an ist in various locations lets
also just store it as such.
see 0643b0e7e ("MINOR: proxy: Make `header_unique_id` a `struct ist`") for a
very similar past commit.