It does not make sense anymore to wait for a session creation to process
a TCP monitor check which only closes the connection and returns. Better
to process this immediately after the accept() return. It also saves us
from counting a connection for monitor checks, which is much more logical.
The previous sockstream_accept() function uses nothing from sockstream, and
is totally irrelevant to stream interfaces. Move this to the protocols.c
file which handles listeners and protocols, and call it listener_accept().
It now makes much more sense that the code dealing with listen() also handles
accept() and passes it to upper layers.
Patterns were using a bitmask to indicate if request or response was desired
in fetch functions and keywords. ACLs were using a bitmask in fetch keywords
and a single bit in fetch functions. ACLs were also using an ACL_PARTIAL bit
in fetch functions indicating that a non-final fetch was performed, which was
an abuse of the existing direction flag.
The change now consists in using :
- a capabilities field for fetch keywords => SMP_CAP_REQ/RES to indicate
if a keyword supports requests, responses, both, etc...
- an option field for fetch functions to indicate what the caller expects
(request/response, final/non-final)
The ACL_PARTIAL bit was reversed to get SMP_OPT_FINAL as it's more explicit
to know we're working on a final buffer than on a non-final one.
ACL_DIR_* were removed, as well as PATTERN_FETCH_*. L4 fetches were improved
to support being called on responses too since they're still available.
The <dir> field of all fetch functions was changed to <opt> which is now
unsigned.
The patch is large but mostly made of cosmetic changes to accomodate this, as
almost no logic change happened.
Having the args everywhere will make it easier to share fetch functions
between patterns and ACLs. The only place where we could have needed
the expr was in the http_prefetch function which can do well without.
These ones were either unused or improperly used. Some integers were marked
read-only, which does not make much sense. Buffers are not read-only, they're
"constant" in that they must be kept intact after any possible change.
This one is not needed anymore as we can return the data and its type in the
sample provided by the caller. ACLs now always return the proper type. BOOL
is already returned when the result is expected to be processed as a boolean.
temp_pattern has been unexported now.
The new sample types are necessary for the acl-pattern convergence.
These types are boolean and signed int. Some types were renamed for
less ambiguity (ip->ipv4, integer->uint).
The types and minimal number of ACL keyword arguments are now stored in
their declaration. This will allow many more fantasies if some ACL use
several arguments or types.
Doing so required to rework all ACL keyword declarations to add two
parameters. So this was a good opportunity for a general cleanup and
to sort all entries in alphabetical order.
We still have two pending issues :
- parse_acl_expr() checks for errors but has no way to report them to
the user ;
- the types of some arguments are still not resolved and kept as strings
(eg: ARGT_FE/BE/TAB) for compatibility reasons, which must be resolved
in acl_find_targets()
All ACL fetches which return integer value now store the result into
the temporary pattern struct. All ACL matches which rely on integer
also get their value there.
Note: the pattern data types are not set right now.
When a listeners encounters a resource shortage, it currently stops until
one re-enables it. This is far from being perfect as it does not yet handle
the case where the single connection from the listener is rejected (eg: the
stats page).
Now we'll have a special status for resource limited listeners and we'll
queue them into one or multiple lists. That way, each time we have to stop
a listener because of a resource shortage, we can enqueue it and change its
state, so that it is dequeued once more resources are available.
This patch currently does not change any existing behaviour, it only adds
the basic building blocks for doing that.
Managing listeners state is difficult because they have their own state
and can at the same time have theirs dictated by their proxy. The pause
is not done properly, as the proxy code is fiddling with sockets. By
introducing new functions such as pause_listener()/resume_listener(), we
make it a bit more obvious how/when they're supposed to be used. The
listen_proxies() function was also renamed to resume_proxies() since
it's only used for pause/resume.
This patch is the first in a series aiming at getting rid of the maintain_proxies
mess. In the end, proxies should not call enable_listener()/disable_listener()
anymore.
Some ACLs in the client ought to belong to proto_tcp, or protocols.
This file should only contain frontend-specific information and will
be renamed that way in next commit.
It should be stated as a rule that a C file should never
include types/xxx.h when proto/xxx.h exists, as it gives
less exposure to declaration conflicts (one of which was
caught and fixed here) and it complicates the file headers
for nothing.
Only types/global.h, types/capture.h and types/polling.h
have been found to be valid includes from C files.
There was a missing state for listeners, when they are not listening
but still attached to the protocol. The LI_ASSIGNED state was added
for this purpose. This permitted to clean up the assignment/release
workflow quite a bit. Generic enable/enable_all/disable/disable_all
primitives were added, and a disable_all entry was added to the
struct protocol.
A new generic protocol mechanism has been added. It provides
an easy method to implement new protocols with different
listeners (eg: unix sockets).
The listeners are automatically started at the right moment
and enabled after the possible fork().