Miroslav Zagorac [Tue, 30 Jan 2024 02:14:09 +0000 (03:14 +0100)]
CLEANUP: log: deinitialization of the log buffer in one function
In several places in the source, there was the same block of code that was
used to deinitialize the log buffer. There were even two functions that
did this, but they were called only from the code that is in the same
source file (free_tcpcheck_fmt() in src/tcpcheck.c and free_logformat_list()
in src/proxy.c - they were both static functions).
The function free_logformat_list() was moved from the file src/proxy.c to
src/log.c, and a check of the list before freeing the memory was added to
that function.
Amaury Denoyelle [Mon, 29 Jan 2024 08:18:08 +0000 (09:18 +0100)]
BUG/MEDIUM: quic: fix crash on invalid qc_stream_buf_free() BUG_ON
A recent fix was introduced to ensure unsent data are deleted when a
QUIC MUX stream releases its qc_stream_desc instance. This is necessary
to ensure all used buffers will be liberated once all ACKs are received.
This is implemented by the following patch :
Before this patch, buffer removal was done only on ACK reception. ACK
handling is only done in order from the oldest one. A BUG_ON() statement
is present to ensure this assertion remains valid.
This is however not true anymore since the above patch. Indeed, after
unsent data removal, the current buffer may be empty if it did not
contain yet any sent data. In this case, it is not the oldest buffer,
thus the BUG_ON() statement will be triggered.
To fix this, simply remove this BUG_ON() statement. It should not have
any impact as it is safe to remove buffers in any order.
Note that several conditions must be met to trigger this BUG_ON crash :
* a QUIC MUX stream is destroyed before transmitting all of its data
* several buffers must have been previously allocated for this stream so
it happens only for transfers bigger than bufsize
* latency should be high enough to delay ACK reception
This must be backported wherever the above patch is (currently targetted
to 2.6).
Amaury Denoyelle [Mon, 29 Jan 2024 12:45:48 +0000 (13:45 +0100)]
BUG/MEDIUM: qpack: allow 6xx..9xx status codes
HTTP status codes outside of 100..599 are considered invalid in HTTP
RFC9110. However, it is explicitely stated that range 600..999 is often
used for internal communication so in practice haproxy must be lenient
with it.
Before this patch, QPACK encoder rejected these values. This resulted in
a connection error. Fix this by extending the range of allowed values
from 100 to 999.
This is linked to github issue #2422. Once again, thanks to @yokim-git
for his help here.
Amaury Denoyelle [Mon, 29 Jan 2024 12:47:44 +0000 (13:47 +0100)]
BUG/MEDIUM: h3: do not crash on invalid response status code
A crash occurs in h3_resp_headers_send() if an invalid response code is
received from the backend side. Fix this by properly flagging the
connection on error. This will cause a CONNECTION_CLOSE.
This should fix github issue #2422.
Big thanks to ygkim (@yokim-git) for his help and reactivity. Initially,
GDB reported an invalid code source location due to heavy functions
inlining inside h3_snd_buf(). The issue was found after using -Og flag.
Amaury Denoyelle [Mon, 29 Jan 2024 14:15:27 +0000 (15:15 +0100)]
MINOR: h3: add traces for stream sending function
Replace h3_debug_printf() by real trace for functions used by stream
layer snd_buf callback. A new event type H3_EV_STRM_SEND is created for
the occasion.
This should be backported up to 2.6 to help investigate H3 issues on
stable releases. Note that h3_nego_ff/h3_done_ff definition are not
available from 2.8.
Olivier Houchard [Sat, 27 Jan 2024 21:58:29 +0000 (22:58 +0100)]
BUG/MAJOR: ssl_sock: Always clear retry flags in read/write functions
It has been found that under some rare error circumstances,
SSL_do_handshake() could return with SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ without
even trying to call the read function, causing permanent wakeups
that prevent the process from sleeping.
It was established that this only happens if the retry flags are
not systematically cleared in both directions upon any I/O attempt,
but, given the lack of documentation on this topic, it is hard to
say if this rather strange behavior is expected or not, otherwise
why wouldn't the library always clear the flags by itself before
proceeding?
In addition, this only seems to affect OpenSSL 1.1.0 and above,
and does not affect wolfSSL nor aws-lc.
A bisection on haproxy showed that this issue was first triggered by
commit a8955d57ed ("MEDIUM: ssl: provide our own BIO."), which means
that OpenSSL's socket BIO does not have this problem. And this one
does always clear the flags before proceeding. So let's just proceed
the same way. It was verified that it properly fixes the problem,
does not affect other implementations, and doesn't cause any freeze
nor spurious wakeups either.
Many thanks to Valentín Gutiérrez for providing a network capture
showing the incident as well as a reproducer. This is GH issue #2403.
This patch needs to be backported to all versions that include the
commit above, i.e. as far as 2.0.
Willy Tarreau [Fri, 26 Jan 2024 19:11:39 +0000 (20:11 +0100)]
[RELEASE] Released version 3.0-dev2
Released version 3.0-dev2 with the following main changes :
- MINOR: ot: logsrv struct becomes logger
- MINOR: ssl: Update ssl_fc_curve/ssl_bc_curve to use SSL_get0_group_name
- CLEANUP: ssl: fix indentation in smp_fetch_ssl_fc_ec()
- DEV: patchbot: produce a verdict for too long commit messages
- CLEANUP: ssl: fix indentation in smp_fetch_ssl_fc_ec() (part 2)
- CLEANUP: quic: Double quic_dgram_parse() prototype declaration.
- BUG/MINOR: map: list-based matching potential ordering regression
- REGTESTS: add a test to ensure map-ordering is preserved
- DOC: config: fix typo about map_*_key converters
- DOC: configuration: corrected description of keyword tune.ssl.ocsp-update.mindelay
- MINOR: map: mapfile ordering also matters for tree-based match types
- DEV: phash: add a trivial perfect hash generator for integers
- OPTIM: http: simplify http_get_status_idx() using a hash
- CLEANUP: http: avoid duplicating literals in find_http_meth()
- MINOR: http: add infrastructure to choose status codes for err / fail
- MEDIUM: http_act: check status codes against the bit fields for err/fail
- MEDIUM: http: add the ability to redefine http-err-codes and http-fail-codes
- CI: codespell: ignore some words in URLs
- CI: codespell: add more words to whitelist
- CLEANUP: fix spelling of "occured" in src/h3.c
- BUILD: quic: missing include for quic_tp
- BUG/MINOR: mux-quic: do not prevent non-STREAM sending on flow control
- MEDIUM: ssl: allow multiple fallback certificate to allow ECDSA/RSA selection
- MEDIUM: ssl: generate '*' SNI filters for default certificates
- MEDIUM: ssl: does not use default_ctx for 'generate-certificate' option
- REORG: ssl: move 'generate-certificates' code to ssl_gencert.c
- DOC: configuration: update configuration on how to have multiple default certs
- MEDIUM: ssl: implements 'default-crt' keyword for bind Lines
- CI: github: update wolfSSL to 5.6.6
- DOC: INSTALL: require at least WolfSSL 5.6.6
- DEV: h2: add support for multiple flags in mkhdr
- DEV: h2: support hex-encoded data sequences in mkhdr
- BUG/MINOR: mux-h2: also count streams for refused ones
- BUG/MEDIUM: quic: keylog callback not called (USE_OPENSSL_COMPAT)
- MINOR: vars: fix indentation in var_clear_buffer()
- DOC: configuration: fix set-dst in actions keywords matrix
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: refine connection vs stream error on headers
- MINOR: mux-h2/traces: add a missing trace on connection WU with negative inc
- MINOR: mux-h2: add a counter of "glitches" on a connection
- MINOR: connection: add a new mux_ctl to report number of connection glitches
- MINOR: mux-h2: implement MUX_CTL_GET_GLITCHES
- MINOR: connection: add sample fetches to report per-connection glitches
- BUILD: stick-table: fix build error on 32-bit platforms
- MINOR: quic: Transport parameters encoding without version_information
- MINOR: quic: Enable early data at SSL session level (aws-lc)
- MINOR: ssl_sock: Early data disabled during SSL_CTX switching (aws-lc)
- MINOR: quic: Correctly wait for the completion of handshakes with early data (aws-lc)
- BUG/MEDIUM: cli: some err/warn msg dumps add LR into CSV output on stat's CLI
- BUG/MINOR: jwt: fix jwt_verify crash on 32-bit archs
- BUILD: quic: fix build error when using the compatibility layer
- BUILD: quic: Fix build error when building QUIC against wolfssl.
- BUILD: quic: Fix build error when building QUIC against libressl.
- BUG/MINOR: hlua: fix uninitialized var in hlua_core_get_var()
- CLEANUP: hlua: fix indent, remove extra return in hlua_core_get_var()
- BUG/MEDIUM: cache: Fix crash when deleting secondary entry
- BUG/MINOR: quic: newreno QUIC congestion control algorithm no more available
- CLEANUP: quic: Remove unused CUBIC_BETA_SCALE_FACTOR_SHIFT macro.
- MINOR: quic: Stop hardcoding a scale shifting value (CUBIC_BETA_SCALE_FACTOR_SHIFT)
- MINOR: quic: extract qc_stream_buf free in a dedicated function
- BUG/MEDIUM: quic: remove unsent data from qc_stream_desc buf
- CLEANUP: fix spelling of "elemt"
- CI: extend spell check white list
- CI: enable spell check on git push
- BUILD: makefile: also define cmd_CXX to pretty-print C++ build commands
- BUILD/MEDIUM: deviceatlas: addon build rework.
- DOC: deviceatlas: update to be in line with the v3 api.
- BUILD/MEDIUM: deviceatlas: updating the addon part.
- BUILD: deviceatlas: remove unneeded depenency on libcurl / libzip
- BUILD: deviceatlas: fix empty "-I" left on CFLAGS
- Revert "CI: enable spell check on git push"
It reports failures that neither the patch's author nor the committer
are able to check for before pushing, causing an excess of failure
reports that can hardly be acted upon. We need to find a better
solution, let's revert it for now.
Willy Tarreau [Fri, 26 Jan 2024 18:36:11 +0000 (19:36 +0100)]
BUILD: deviceatlas: remove unneeded depenency on libcurl / libzip
These were previously used for the "dadwsch" utility that's no longer
part of the addon, so we should not move the CFLAGS/LDFLAGS to the
global ones as this adds an undesired dependency on the libcurl and
libzip libs.
David Carlier [Thu, 25 Jan 2024 09:11:18 +0000 (09:11 +0000)]
BUILD/MEDIUM: deviceatlas: updating the addon part.
- Reflecing the changes done in addons/deviceatlas/Makefile.inc.
Enabling the cache feature and its disabling option as well.
- Now the `dadwsch` application is part of the API's package for more
general purposes, we remove it.
- Minor and transparent to user changes into da.c's workflow, also
making more noticeable some notices with appropriate logging levels.
- Adding support for the new `deviceatlas-cache-size` config keyword,
a no-op when the cache support is disabled.
- Adding missing compilation units and relevant api updates to
the dummy library version.
David Carlier [Thu, 25 Jan 2024 09:00:14 +0000 (09:00 +0000)]
BUILD/MEDIUM: deviceatlas: addon build rework.
- Removing the legacy v2 support, which in turn suppress the need to set
a regex engine.
- Moving the options and addon into its distrinct build unit, cleaning up
the main one in the process.
- Adding a new option to disable the cache if desired or if
having a C++ toolchain is not a possibility.
Willy Tarreau [Fri, 26 Jan 2024 17:48:45 +0000 (18:48 +0100)]
BUILD: makefile: also define cmd_CXX to pretty-print C++ build commands
Device Atlas' dummy lib will use a C++ file when built with cache
support, so for completeness we'll have to pretty-print it as well.
Let's define cmd_CXX.
Amaury Denoyelle [Fri, 26 Jan 2024 13:41:04 +0000 (14:41 +0100)]
BUG/MEDIUM: quic: remove unsent data from qc_stream_desc buf
QCS instances use qc_stream_desc for data buffering on emission. On
stream reset, its Tx channel is closed earlier than expected. This may
leave unsent data into qc_stream_desc.
Before this patch, these unsent data would remain after QCS freeing.
This prevents the buffer to be released as no ACK reception will remove
them. The buffer is only freed when the whole connection is closed. As
qc_stream_desc buffer is limited per connection, this reduces the buffer
pool for other streams of the same connection. In the worst case if
several streams are resetted, this may completely freeze the transfer of
the remaining connection streams.
This bug was reproduced by reducing the connection buffer pool to a
single buffer instance by using the following global statement :
tune.quic.frontend.conn-tx-buffers.limit 1.
Then a QUIC client is used which opens a stream for a large enough
object to ensure data are buffered. The client them emits a STOP_SENDING
before reading all data, which forces the corresponding QCS instance to
be resetted. The client then opens a new request but the transfer is
freezed due to this bug.
To fix this, adjust qc_stream_desc API. Add a new argument <final_size>
on qc_stream_desc_release() function. Its value is compared to the
currently buffered offset in latest qc_stream_desc buffer. If
<final_size> is inferior, it means unsent data are present in the
buffer. As such, qc_stream_desc_release() removes them to ensure the
buffer will finally be freed when all ACKs are received. It is also
possible that no data remains immediately, indicating that ACK were
already received. As such, buffer instance is immediately removed by
qc_stream_buf_free().
This must be backported up to 2.6. As this code section is known to
regression, a period of observation could be reserved before
distributing it on LTS releases.
Amaury Denoyelle [Fri, 26 Jan 2024 13:30:16 +0000 (14:30 +0100)]
MINOR: quic: extract qc_stream_buf free in a dedicated function
On ACK reception, data are removed from buffer via qc_stream_desc_ack().
The buffer can be freed if no more data are left. A new slot is also
accounted in buffer connection pool. Extract this operation in a
dedicated private function qc_stream_buf_free().
This change should have no functional change. However it will be useful
for the next patch which needs to remove a buffer from another function.
This patch is necessary for the following bugfix. As such, it must be
backported with it up to 2.6.
BUG/MINOR: quic: newreno QUIC congestion control algorithm no more available
There is a typo in the statement to initialize this variable when selecting
newreno as cc algo:
const char *newreno = "newrno";
This would have happened if #defines had be used in place of several const char *
variables harcoded values.
Take the opportunity of this patch to use #defines for all the available cc algorithms.
BUG/MEDIUM: cache: Fix crash when deleting secondary entry
When a cache is "cold" and multiple clients simultaneously try to access
the same resource we must forward all the requests to the server. Next,
every "duplicated" response will be processed in http_action_store_cache
and we will try to cache every one of them regardless of whether this
response was already cached. In order to avoid having multiple entries
for a same primary key, the logic is then to first delete any
preexisting entry from the cache tree before storing the current one.
The actual previous response content will not be deleted yet though
because if the corresponding row is detached from the "avail" list it
might still be used by a cache applet if it actually performed a lookup
in the cache tree before the new response could be received.
This all means that we can end up using a valid row that references a
cache_entry that was already removed from the cache tree. This does not
pose any problem in regular caches (no 'vary' mechanism enabled) because
the applet only works on the data and not the 'cache_entry' information,
but in the "vary" context, when calling 'http_cache_applet_release' we
might call 'delete_entry' on the given entry which in turn tries to
iterate over all the secondary entries to find the right one in which
the secondary entry counter can be updated. We would then call
eb32_next_dup on an entry that was not in the tree anymore which ended
up crashing.
This crash was introduced by "48f81ec09 : MAJOR: cache: Delay cache
entry delete in reserve_hot function" which added the call to
"release_entry" in "http_cache_applet_release" that ended up crashing.
This issue was raised in GitHub #2417.
This patch must be backported to branch 2.9.
BUG/MINOR: hlua: fix uninitialized var in hlua_core_get_var()
As raised by Coverity in GH #2223, f034139bc0 ("MINOR: lua: Allow reading
"proc." scoped vars from LUA core.") causes uninitialized reads due to
smp being passed to vars_get_by_name() without being initialized first.
Indeed, vars_get_by_name() tries to read smp->sess and smp->strm pointers.
As we're only interested in the PROC var scope, it is safe to call
vars_get_by_name() with sess and strm pointers set to NULL, thus we
simply memset smp prior to calling vars_get_by_name() to fix the issue.
BUILD: quic: Fix build error when building QUIC against libressl.
This previous commit was not sufficient to completely fix the building issue
in relation with the TLS stack 0-RTT support. LibreSSL was the last TLS
stack to refuse to compile because of undefined a QUIC specific function
for 0-RTT: SSL_set_quic_early_data_enabled().
To get rid of such compilation issues, define HA_OPENSSL_HAVE_0RTT_SUPPORT
only when building against TLS stack with 0-RTT support.
BUILD: quic: Fix build error when building QUIC against wolfssl.
This commit:
"MINOR: quic: Enable early data at SSL session level (aws-lc)
introduced a build error when using wolfssl as TLS stack
because it references unknown function wolfSSL_set_quic_early_data_enabled()
which is not defined in qc_set_quic_early_data_context() that must not be used
in this case. The compilation of this fonction was enabled for wolfssl when
it should not have by the mentionned commit.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 24 Jan 2024 09:46:11 +0000 (10:46 +0100)]
BUILD: quic: fix build error when using the compatibility layer
Commit f783dd959b ("MINOR: quic: Enable early data at SSL session level
(aws-lc)") introduced a build error when using the openssl compat layer
because it references unknown function SSL_set_quic_early_data_context()
in qc_set_quic_early_data_context() that is not used in this case.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 24 Jan 2024 09:31:05 +0000 (10:31 +0100)]
BUG/MINOR: jwt: fix jwt_verify crash on 32-bit archs
The jwt_verify converter was added in 2.5 with commit 130e142ee2
("MEDIUM: jwt: Add jwt_verify converter to verify JWT integrity"). It
takes a string on input and returns an integer. It turns out that by
presetting the return value to zero before processing contents, while
the sample data is a union, it overwrites the beginning of the buffer
struct passed on input. On a 64-bit arch it's not an issue because it's
where the allocated size is stored and it's not used in the operation,
which explains why the regtest works. But on 32-bit, both the size and
the pointer are overwritten, causing a NULL pointer to be passed to
jwt_tokenize() which is not designed to support this, hence crashes.
Let's just use a temporary variable to hold the result and move the
output sample initialization to the end of the function.
Emeric Brun [Tue, 23 Jan 2024 14:44:32 +0000 (15:44 +0100)]
BUG/MEDIUM: cli: some err/warn msg dumps add LR into CSV output on stat's CLI
The initial purpose of CSV stats through CLI was to make it easely
parsable by scripts. But in some specific cases some error or warning
messages strings containing LF were dumped into cells of this CSV.
This made some parsing failure on several tools. In addition, if a
warning or message contains to successive LF, they will be dumped
directly but double LFs tag the end of the response on CLI and the
client may consider a truncated response.
This patch extends the 'csv_enc_append' and 'csv_enc' functions used
to format quoted string content according to RFC with an additionnal
parameter to convert multi-lines strings to one line: CRs are skipped,
and LFs are replaced with spaces. In addition and optionally, it is
also possible to remove resulting trailing spaces.
The call of this function to fill strings into stat's CSV output is
updated to force this conversion.
This patch should be backported on all supported branches (issue was
already present in v2.0)
MINOR: quic: Correctly wait for the completion of handshakes with early data (aws-lc)
This patch impacts only the haproxy builds against aws-lc TLS stack (USE_OPENSSL_AWSLC).
As mentionned by the boringssl documentation, SSL_do_handshake() completes as soon
as ClientHello is processed and server flight sent (from the TLS stack to the
server endpoint I guess). Into QUIC, the completion has as side effect to discard
the Handshake packet number space. If this handshake completion is not deffered,
the Handshake level CRYPTO data will not be sent to the peer (because of the
assotiated packet number space discarding). According to the documentation,
SSL_in_early_data() may be used to do that. If it returns 1, this means that
the handshake is still in progress but has enough progressed to send half-RTT
data.
This patch is required to make the haproxy builds against aws-lc TLS stack support 0-RTT.
MINOR: ssl_sock: Early data disabled during SSL_CTX switching (aws-lc)
This patch impacts only haproxy when built against aws-lc TLS stack (OPENSSL_IS_AWSLC).
During the SSL_CTX switching from ssl_sock_switchctx_cbk() callback,
ssl_sock_switchctx_set() is called. This latter calls SSL_set_SSL_CTX()
whose aims is to change the SSL_CTX attached o an SSL object (TLS session).
But the aws-lc (or boringssl) implementation of this function copy
the "early data enabled" setting value (boolean) coming with the SSL_CTX object
into the SSL object. So, if not set in the SSL_CTX object this setting disabled
the one which has been set by configuration into the SSL object
(see qc_set_quic_early_data_enabled(), it calls SSL_set_early_data_enabled()
with an SSL object as parameter).
Fix this enabling the "early data enabled" setting into the SSL_CTX before
setting this latter into the SSL object.
This patch is required to make QUIC 0-RTT work with haproxy built against
aws-lc.
Note that, this patch should also help in early data support for TCP connections.
MINOR: quic: Enable early data at SSL session level (aws-lc)
This patch impacts only the haproxy build against aws-lc TLS stack (USE_OPENSSL_AWSLC).
Implement qc_set_quic_early_data_enabled() new function to enable
early data at session level. To make QUIC O-RTT work, a context string
must be set calling SSL_set_quic_early_data_context(). This is a
subset of the encoded transport parameters which is used for this.
Note that some application level settings should be also added (TODO).
This patch is required to make 0-RTT work for haproxy builds against aws-lc.
MINOR: quic: Transport parameters encoding without version_information
Encode the version_information parameter only if the chosen version is provided
to quic_transport_params_encode() whose aim is to encode into a buffer all the
transport parameters passed as parameter (struct quic_params *p) in addition
to the version_information parameter.
This enables the support of transport parameters encoding without
the version_information transport parameter. This is useful for build against TLS stacks
as boringssl, aws-lc where a subset of the listener transport parameters
without version_information must be set as context string for acception
early data (see https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-boringssl-docs/ssl.h.html#SSL_set_quic_early_data_context).
This patch is required to make haproxy builds against aws-lc TLS stack
(USE_OPENSSL_AWSLC) support 0-RTT. Does not impact the others builds.
Willy Tarreau [Sun, 21 Jan 2024 07:21:35 +0000 (08:21 +0100)]
BUILD: stick-table: fix build error on 32-bit platforms
Commit 9b2717e7b ("MINOR: stktable: use {show,set,clear} table with ptr")
stores a pointer in a long long (64bit), which fails the cas to void* on
32-bit platforms:
src/stick_table.c: In function 'table_process_entry_per_ptr':
src/stick_table.c:5136:37: error: cast to pointer from integer of different size [-Werror=int-to-pointer-cast]
5136 | ts = stktable_lookup_ptr(t, (void *)ptr);
On all our supported platforms, longs and pointers are of the same size,
so let's just turn this to a ulong instead.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 17 Jan 2024 17:00:21 +0000 (18:00 +0100)]
MINOR: connection: add sample fetches to report per-connection glitches
Now with fc_glitches and bc_glitches we can retrieve the number of
detected glitches on a front or back connection. On the backend it
can indicate a bug in a server that may induce frequent reconnections
hence CPU usage in TLS reconnections, and on the frontend it may
indicate an abusive client that may be trying to attack the stack
or to fingerprint it. Small non-zero values are definitely expected
and can be caused by network glitches for example, as well as rare
bugs in the other component (or maybe even in haproxy). These should
never be considered as alarming as long as they remain low (i.e.
much less than one per request). A reg-test is provided.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 17 Jan 2024 15:57:23 +0000 (16:57 +0100)]
MINOR: mux-h2: add a counter of "glitches" on a connection
There are a lot of H2 events which are not invalid from a protocol
perspective but which are yet anomalies, especially when repeated. They
can come from bogus or really poorly implemlented clients, as well as
purposely built attacks, as we've seen in the past with various waves
of attempts at abusing H2 stacks.
In order to better deal with such situations, it would be nice to be
able to sort out what is correct and what is not. There's already the
HTTP error counter that may even be updated on a tracked connection,
but HTTP errors are something clearly defined while there's an entire
scope of gray area around it that should not fall into it.
This patch introduces the notion of "glitches", which normally correspond
to unexpected and temporary malfunction. And this is exactly what we'd
like to monitor. For example a peer is not misbehaving if a request it
sends fails to decode because due to HPACK compression it's larger than
a buffer, and for this reason such an event is reported as a stream error
and not a connection error. But this causes trouble nonetheless and should
be accounted for, especially to detect if it's repeated. Similarly, a
truncated preamble or settings frame may very well be caused by a network
hiccup but how do we know that in the logs? For such events, a glitch
counter is incremented on the connection.
For now a total of 41 locations were instrumented with this and the
counter is reported in the traces when not null, as well as in
"show sess" and "show fd". This was done using a new function,
"h2c_report_glitch()" so that it becomes easier to extend to more
advanced processing (applying thresholds, producing logs, escalating
to connection error, tracking etc).
A test with h2spec shows it reported in 8545 trace lines for 147 tests,
with some reaching value 3 in a same test (e.g. HPACK errors).
Some places were not instrumented, typically anything that can be
triggered on perfectly valid activity (received data after RST being
emitted, timeouts, etc). Some types of events were thought about,
such as INITIAL_WINDOW_SIZE after the first SETTINGS frame, too small
window update increments, etc. It just sounds too early to know if
those are currently being triggered by perfectly legit clients. Also
it's currently not incremented on timeouts so that we don't do that
repeatedly on short keep-alive timeouts, though it could make sense.
This may change in the future depending on how it's used. For now
this is not exposed outside of traces and debugging.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 17 Jan 2024 15:56:18 +0000 (16:56 +0100)]
MINOR: mux-h2/traces: add a missing trace on connection WU with negative inc
The test was performed but no trace emitted, which can complicate certain
diagnostics, so let's just add the trace for this rare case. It may safely
be backported though this is really not important.
Willy Tarreau [Thu, 18 Jan 2024 16:01:45 +0000 (17:01 +0100)]
BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: refine connection vs stream error on headers
Commit 7021a8c4d8 ("BUG/MINOR: mux-h2: also count streams for refused
ones") addressed stream counting issues on some error cases but not
completely correctly regarding the conn_err vs stream_err case. Indeed,
contrary to the initial analysis, h2c_dec_hdrs() can set H2_CS_ERROR
when facing some unrecoverable protocol errors, and it's not correct
to send it to strm_err which will only send the RST_STREAM frame and
the subsequent GOAWAY frame is in fact the result of the read timeout.
The difficulty behind this lies on the sequence of output validations
because h2c_dec_hdrs() returns two results at once:
- frame processing status (done/incomplete/failed)
- connection error status
The original ordering requires to write 2 exemplaries of the exact
same error handling code disposed differently, which the patch above
tried to factor to one. After careful inspection of h2c_dec_hdrs()
and its comments, it's clear that it always returns -1 on failure,
*including* connection errors. This means we can rearrange the test
to get rid of the missing data first, and immediately enter the
no-return zone where both the stream and connection errors can be
checked at the same place, making sure to consistently maintain
error counters. This is way better because we don't have to update
stream counters on the error path anymore. h2spec now passes the
test much faster.
This will need to be backported to the same branches as the commit
above, which was already backported to 2.9.
DOC: configuration: fix set-dst in actions keywords matrix
Since d54e8f8107 ("DOC: config: reorganize actions into their own section")
dconv-generated shortlink for "set-dst" in actions keywords matrix is
broken.
This is due to trailing "<expr>" which should not be specified in the
matrix, but only in the actual keyword prototype and description.
BUG/MEDIUM: quic: keylog callback not called (USE_OPENSSL_COMPAT)
This bug impacts only the QUIC OpenSSL compatibility module (USE_QUIC_OPENSSL_COMPAT)
and it was introduced by this commit:
BUG/MINOR: quic: Wrong keylog callback setting.
quic_tls_compat_keylog_callback() callback was no more set when the SSL keylog was
enabled by tune.ssl.keylog setting. This is the callback which sets the TLS secrets
into haproxy.
Set it again when the SSL keylog is not enabled by configuration.
Thank you to @Greg57070 for having reported this issue in GH #2412.
Willy Tarreau [Fri, 12 Jan 2024 17:36:57 +0000 (18:36 +0100)]
BUG/MINOR: mux-h2: also count streams for refused ones
There are a few places where we can reject an incoming stream based on
technical errors such as decoded headers that are too large for the
internal buffers, or memory allocation errors. In this case we send
an RST_STREAM to abort the request, but the total stream counter was
not incremented. That's not really a problem, until one starts to try
to enforce a total stream limit using tune.h2.fe.max-total-streams,
and which will not count such faulty streams. Typically a client that
learns too large cookies and tries to replay them in a way that
overflows the maximum buffer size would be rejected and depending on
how they're implemented, they might retry forever.
This patch removes the stream count increment from h2s_new() and moves
it instead to the calling functions, so that it translates the decision
to process a new stream instead of a successfully decoded stream. The
result is that such a bogus client will now be blocked after reaching
the total stream limit.
This can be validated this way:
global
tune.h2.fe.max-total-streams 128
expose-experimental-directives
trace h2 sink stdout
trace h2 level developer
trace h2 verbosity complete
trace h2 start now
frontend h
bind :8080
mode http
redirect location /
Sending this will fill frames with 15972 bytes of cookie headers that
expand to 16500 for storage+index once decoded, causing "message too large"
events:
(dev/h2/mkhdr.sh -t p;dev/h2/mkhdr.sh -t s;
for sid in {0..1000}; do
dev/h2/mkhdr.sh -t h -i $((sid*2+1)) -f es,eh \
-R "828684410f7777772e6578616d706c652e636f6d \
$(for i in {1..66}; do
echo -n 60 7F 73 433d $(for j in {1..24}; do
echo -n 2e313233343536373839; done);
done) ";
done) | nc 0 8080
Now it properly stops after sending 128 streams.
This may be backported wherever commit 983ac4397 ("MINOR: mux-h2:
support limiting the total number of H2 streams per connection") is
present, since without it, that commit is less effective.
Willy Tarreau [Fri, 12 Jan 2024 16:53:50 +0000 (17:53 +0100)]
DEV: h2: support hex-encoded data sequences in mkhdr
For HPACK-encoded headers (particularly with huffman encoding), it's
really necessary to support hex sequences as they appear in RFC7541
examples, so let's support hex digit pairs with -R.
Now it's possible to do this to send GET https://www.example.com/ :
MEDIUM: ssl: generate '*' SNI filters for default certificates
This patch follows the previous one about default certificate selection
("MEDIUM: ssl: allow multiple fallback certificate to allow ECDSA/RSA
selection").
This patch generates '*" SNI filters for the first certificate of a
bind line, it will be used to match default certificates. Instead of
setting the default_ctx pointer in the bind line.
Since the filters are in the SNI tree, it allows to have multiple
default certificate and restore the ecdsa/rsa selection with a
multi-cert bundle.
This configuration:
# foobar.pem.ecdsa and foobar.pem.rsa
bind *:8443 ssl crt foobar.pem crt next.pem
will use "foobar.pem.ecdsa" and "foobar.pem.rsa" as default
certificates.
Note: there is still cleanup needed around default_ctx.
MEDIUM: ssl: allow multiple fallback certificate to allow ECDSA/RSA selection
This patch changes the default certificate mechanism.
Since the beginning of SSL in HAProxy, the default certificate was the first
certificate of a bind line. This allowed to fallback on this certificate
when no servername extension was sent by the server, or when no SAN nor
CN was available in the certificate.
When using a multi-certificate bundle (ecdsa+rsa), it was possible to
have both certificates as the fallback one, leting openssl chose the
right one. This was possible because a multi-certificate bundle
was generating a unique SSL_CTX for both certificates.
When the haproxy and openssl architecture evolved, we decided to
use multiple SSL_CTX for a multi-cert bundle, in order to simplify the
code and allow updates over the CLI.
However only one default_ctx was allowed, so we lost the ability to
chose between ECDSA and RSA for the default certificate.
This patch allows to use a '*' filter for a certificate, which allow to
lookup between multiple '*' filter, and have one in RSA and another one
in ECDSA. It replaces the default_ctx mechanism in the ClientHello
callback and use the standard algorithm to look for a default cert and
chose between ECDSA and RSA.
/!\ This patch breaks the automatic setting of the default certificate, which
will be introduce in the next patch. So the first certificate of a bind
line won't be used as a defaullt anymore.
To use this feature, one could use crt-list with '*' filters:
BUG/MINOR: mux-quic: do not prevent non-STREAM sending on flow control
Data emitted by QUIC MUX is restrained by the peer flow control. This is
checked on stream and connection level inside qcc_io_send().
The connection level check was placed early in qcc_io_send() preambule.
However, this also prevents emission of other frames STOP_SENDING and
RESET_STREAM, until flow control limitation is increased by a received
MAX_DATA. Note that local flow control frame emission is done prior in
qcc_io_send() and so are not impacted.
In the worst case, if no MAX_DATA is received for some time, this could
delay significantly streams closure and resource free. However, this
should be rare as other peers should anticipate emission of MAX_DATA
before reaching flow control limit. In the end, this is also covered by
the MUX timeout so the impact should be minimal
To fix this, move the connection level check directly inside QCS sending
loop. Note that this could cause unnecessary looping when connection
flow control level is reached and no STOP_SENDING/RESET_STREAM are
needed.
Ilya Shipitsin [Thu, 11 Jan 2024 19:49:09 +0000 (20:49 +0100)]
CI: codespell: ignore some words in URLs
"trafic,ressources" are found in URIs, due to
https://github.com/codespell-project/actions-codespell/issues/55 we cannot use
wildcard for exclusion, let start with fixed list
Willy Tarreau [Thu, 11 Jan 2024 11:06:49 +0000 (12:06 +0100)]
MEDIUM: http: add the ability to redefine http-err-codes and http-fail-codes
The new global keywords "http-err-codes" and "http-fail-codes" allow to
redefine which HTTP status codes indicate a client-induced error or a
server error, as tracked by stick-table counters. This is only done
globally, though everything was done so that it could easily be extended
to a per-proxy mechanism if there was a real need for this (but it would
eat quite more RAM then).
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 10 Jan 2024 17:44:30 +0000 (18:44 +0100)]
MEDIUM: http_act: check status codes against the bit fields for err/fail
This drops the hard-coded 4xx and 5xx status codes for err_cnt and
fail_cnt, in favor of the new bit fields that will soon be configurable.
There should be no difference at all since the bit fields are initialized
to the exact same sets (400-499 for err, 500-599 minus 501 and 505 for
fail).
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 10 Jan 2024 17:36:12 +0000 (18:36 +0100)]
MINOR: http: add infrastructure to choose status codes for err / fail
At the moment, http_err_cnt and http_fail_cnt are incremented on a
well-defined set of status codes, which are checked at various places.
Over time, there have been some complains about 404, 401 or 407
triggering errors, or 500 triggering failures in SOAP environments
for example. With a small bit field that fits in a cache line we
can match the presence of a status code from 100 to 599, so that
remains cheap.
This patch adds two such bit fields, one per code class, and the
accompanying functions to set/clear/test the codes. The arrays are
preset at boot time. For now they are not used and it's not possible
to adjust them.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 10 Jan 2024 10:28:28 +0000 (11:28 +0100)]
CLEANUP: http: avoid duplicating literals in find_http_meth()
The function does the inverse of http_known_methods[], better rely on
that array with its indices, that makes the code clearer. Note that
we purposely don't use a loop because the compiler is able to build
an evaluation tree of the size checks and content checks that's very
efficient for the most common methods. Moving a few unimportant
entries even simplified the output code a little bit (they're now
groupped by size without changing anything for the first ones).
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 10 Jan 2024 15:34:48 +0000 (16:34 +0100)]
OPTIM: http: simplify http_get_status_idx() using a hash
This function uses a large switch/case, but the problem is that due to the
numerous holes in the range, the compiler implemented a large jump table.
With a bit of experimentations, some trivial perfect-hash code works, and
since the number of entries is 19, it was enlarged to match the nearest
next power of two to avoid a large modulo operation, and fills the holes
with the default return value (HTTP_ERR_500). Jumping to 32 also results
in a lot of valid keys and allows us to pick small values, resulting in
very fast and compact code. The new function, despite keeping a 32-bytes
table, saves slightly more than 800 bytes of code+data compared to the
previous code, and avoids table jumps that affect the CPU's branch history.
Note that another simple hash worked fine and produced exactly 19 codes
(hence no need to pad holes): ((status * 8675725) >> 13) % 19
But it's still about 24 bytes larger in code to save 13 bytes of data
that are aligned anyway, and it was a bit more expensive so that was
definitely not worth it.
The validity of the table was verified with this test code added just after
it:
__attribute__((constructor)) void http_hash_test(void)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i <= 600; i++)
printf("code %d => %d\n", i, http_get_status_idx(i));
exit(0);
}
And starting haproxy |grep -vw 14 correctly shows all ordered values
(except 500 of course which is 14).
In case new codes would be added, just play again with dev/phash to
updated the table. As long as there are less than 32 effective entries
it will remain easy to update without having to modify phash.
Willy Tarreau [Wed, 10 Jan 2024 15:25:58 +0000 (16:25 +0100)]
DEV: phash: add a trivial perfect hash generator for integers
We have a few places where we're checking many status codes. The sets
are so small that just a multiply, a shift and an optional xor are
sufficient to turn that into a smaller set. The program used to produce
them is hackish as it allows to easily fiddle with various operations
manually and experiment by brute-forcing a pair of integers for the
mul and the xor. It also supports producing an incomplete table that
gives an easier modulo operation. Let's commit it as-is so that it can
be reused later (e.g. if new status codes are introduced for example).
MINOR: map: mapfile ordering also matters for tree-based match types
Willy made me realize that tree-based matching may also suffer from
out-of-order mapfile loading, as opposed to what's being said in b546bb6d ("BUG/MINOR: map: list-based matching potential ordering
regression") and the associated REGTEST.
Indeed, in case of duplicated keys, we want to be sure that only the key
that was first seen in the file will be returned (as long as it is not
removed). The above fix is still valid, and the list-based match regtest
will also prevent regressions for tree-based match since mapfile loading
logic is currently match-type agnostic.
But let's clarify that by making both the code comment and the regtest
more precise.
DOC: configuration: corrected description of keyword tune.ssl.ocsp-update.mindelay
Deleted the text paragraph in the description of keyword
tune.ssl.ocsp-update.mindelay, which was added in the commit 5843237
"MINOR: ssl: Add global options to modify ocsp update min/max delay",
because it was a copy of the description of tune.ssl.ssl-ctx-cache-size.
REGTESTS: add a test to ensure map-ordering is preserved
As shown in "BUG/MINOR: map: list-based matching potential ordering
regression", list-based matching types such as dom are affected by the
order in which elements are loaded from the map.
Since this is historical behavior and existing usages depend on it, we
add a test to prevent future regressions.
An unexpected side-effect was introduced by 5fea597 ("MEDIUM: map/acl:
Accelerate several functions using pat_ref_elt struct ->head list")
The above commit tried to use eb tree API to manipulate elements as much
as possible in the hope to accelerate some functions.
Prior to 5fea597, pattern_read_from_file() used to iterate over all
elements from the map file in the same order they were seen in the file
(using list_for_each_entry) to push them in the pattern expression.
Now, since eb api is used to iterate over elements, the ordering is lost
very early.
This is known to cause behavior changes with existing setups (same conf
and map file) when compared with previous versions for some list-based
matching methods as described in GH #2400. For instance, the map_dom()
converter may return a different matching key from the one that was
returned by older haproxy versions.
For IP or STR matching, matching is based on tree lookups for better
efficiency, so in this case the ordering is lost at the name of
performance. The order in which they are loaded doesn't matter because
tree ordering is based on the content, it is not positional.
But with some other types, matching is based on list lookups (e.g.: dom),
and the order in which elements are pushed into the list can affect the
matching element that will be returned (in case of multiple matches, since
only the first matching element in the list will be returned).
Despite the documentation not officially stating that the file ordering
should be preserved for list-based matching methods, it's probably best
to be conservative here and stick to historical behavior. Moreover, there
was no performance benefit from using the eb tree api to iterate over
elements in pattern_read_from_file() since all elements are visited
anyway.
Willy Tarreau [Tue, 9 Jan 2024 13:44:08 +0000 (14:44 +0100)]
DEV: patchbot: produce a verdict for too long commit messages
Some rare commit messages area really too large because they contain
code excerpts in the message body or are release commits with their
changelog. In this case, instead of leaving an empty file that will
be silently ignored, let's produce an output message indicating that
the verdict is uncertain, with an explanation stating that there was
an error.
Mariam John [Fri, 29 Dec 2023 17:14:41 +0000 (11:14 -0600)]
MINOR: ssl: Update ssl_fc_curve/ssl_bc_curve to use SSL_get0_group_name
The function `smp_fetch_ssl_fc_ec` gets the curve name used during key
exchange. It currently uses the `SSL_get_negotiated_group`, available
since OpenSSLv3.0 to get the nid and derive the short name of the curve
from the nid. In OpenSSLv3.2, a new function, `SSL_get0_group_name` was
added that directly gives the curve name.
The function `smp_fetch_ssl_fc_ec` has been updated to use
`SSL_get0_group_name` if using OpenSSL>=3.2 and for versions >=3.0 and <
3.2 use the old SSL_get_negotiated_group to get the curve name. Another
change made is to normalize the return value, so that
`smp_fetch_ssl_fc_ec` returns curve name in uppercase.
(`SSL_get0_group_name` returns the curve name in lowercase and
`SSL_get_negotiated_group` + `OBJ_nid2sn` returns curve name in
uppercase).
Addition to commit 18da35c "MEDIUM: tree-wide: logsrv struct becomes logger",
when the OpenTracing filter is compiled in debug mode (using OT_DEBUG=1)
then logsrv should be changed to logger here as well.
Willy Tarreau [Sat, 6 Jan 2024 13:09:35 +0000 (14:09 +0100)]
[RELEASE] Released version 3.0-dev1
Released version 3.0-dev1 with the following main changes :
- MINOR: channel: Use dedicated functions to deal with STREAMER flags
- MEDIUM: applet: Handle channel's STREAMER flags on applets size
- MINOR: applets: Use channel's field to compute amount of data received
- MEDIUM: cache: Save body size of cached objects and track it on delivery
- MEDIUM: cache: Add support for endp-to-endp fast-forwarding
- MINOR: cache: Add global option to enable/disable zero-copy forwarding
- MINOR: pattern: Use reference name as filename to read patterns from a file
- MEDIUM: pattern: Add support for virtual and optional files for patterns
- DOC: config: Add section about name format for maps and ACLs
- DOC: management/lua: Update commands about map and acl
- MINOR: promex: Add support for specialized front/back/li/srv metric names
- MINOR: promex: Export active/backup metrics per-server
- BUG/MINOR: ssl: Double free of OCSP Certificate ID
- MINOR: ssl/cli: Add ha_(warning|alert) msgs to CLI ckch callback
- BUG/MINOR: ssl: Wrong OCSP CID after modifying an SSL certficate
- BUG/MINOR: lua: Wrong OCSP CID after modifying an SSL certficate (LUA)
- DOC: configuration: typo req.ssl_hello_type
- MINOR: hq-interop: add fastfwd support
- CLEANUP: mux_quic: rename ffwd function with prefix qmux_strm_
- MINOR: mux-quic: add traces for 0-copy/fast-forward
- BUG/MINOR: mworker/cli: fix set severity-output support
- CLEANUP: mworker/cli: add comments about pcli_find_and_exec_kw()
- BUG/MEDIUM: quic: Possible buffer overflow when building TLS records
- BUILD: ssl: update types in wolfssl cert selection callback
- MINOR: ssl: activate the certificate selection callback for WolfSSL
- CI: github: switch to wolfssl git-c4b77ad for new PR
- BUG/MEDIUM: map/acl: pat_ref_{set,delete}_by_id regressions
- BUG/MINOR: ext-check: cannot use without preserve-env
- CLEANUP: mux-quic: remove unused prototype
- MINOR: mux-quic: clean up qcs Rx buffer allocation API
- MINOR: mux-quic: clean up qcs Tx buffer allocation API
- CLEANUP: mux-quic: clean up app ops callback definitions
- MINOR: mux-quic: factorize QC_SF_UNKNOWN_PL_LENGTH set
- MINOR: h3: complete traces for sending
- MINOR: h3: adjust zero-copy sending related code
- MINOR: hq-interop: use zero-copy to transfer single HTX data block
- BUG/MEDIUM: quic: QUIC CID removed from tree without locking
- BUG/MEDIUM: stconn: Block zero-copy forwarding if EOS/ERROR on consumer side
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h1: Cound data from input buf during zero-copy forwarding
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h1: Explicitly skip request's C-L header if not set originally
- CLEANUP: mux-h1: Fix a trace message about C-L header addition
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: Report too large HEADERS frame only when rxbuf is empty
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-quic: report early error on stream
- DOC: config: add arguments to sample fetch methods in the table
- DOC: config: also add arguments to the converters in the table
- BUG/MINOR: resolvers: default resolvers fails when network not configured
- SCRIPTS: mk-patch-list: produce a list of patches
- DEV: patchbot: add the AI-based bot to pre-select candidate patches to backport
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: Switch pending error to error if demux buffer is empty
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: Only Report H2C error on read error if demux buffer is empty
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: Don't report error on SE if error is only pending on H2C
- BUG/MEDIUM: mux-h2: Don't report error on SE for closed H2 streams
- DOC: config: Update documentation about local haproxy response
- DEV: patchbot: use checked buttons as reference instead of internal table
- DEV: patchbot: allow to show/hide backported patches
- MINOR: h3: remove quic_conn only reference
- BUG/MINOR: server: Use the configured address family for the initial resolution
- MINOR: mux-quic: remove qcc_shutdown() from qcc_release()
- MINOR: mux-quic: use qcc_release in case of init failure
- MINOR: mux-quic: adjust error code in init failure
- MINOR: h3: add traces for connection init stage
- BUG/MINOR: h3: properly handle alloc failure on finalize
- MINOR: h3: use INTERNAL_ERROR code for init failure
- BUG/MAJOR: stconn: Disable zero-copy forwarding if consumer is shut or in error
- MINOR: stats: store the parent proxy in stats ctx (http)
- BUG/MEDIUM: stats: unhandled switching rules with TCP frontend
- MEDIUM: proxy: set PR_O_HTTP_UPG on implicit upgrades
- MINOR: proxy: monitor-uri works with tcp->http upgrades
- OPTIM: server: eb lookup for server_find_by_name()
- OPTIM: server: ebtree lookups for findserver_unique_* functions
- MINOR: server/event_hdl: add server_inetaddr struct to facilitate event data usage
- MINOR: server/event_hdl: update _srv_event_hdl_prepare_inetaddr prototype
- BUG/MINOR: server/event_hdl: propagate map port info through inetaddr event
- MINOR: server: ensure connection cleanup on server addr changes
- CLEANUP: server/event_hdl: remove purge_conn hint in INETADDR event
- MEDIUM: server: merge srv_update_addr() and srv_update_addr_port() logic
- CLEANUP: server: remove unused server_parse_addr_change_request() function
- CLEANUP: resolvers: remove duplicate func prototype
- MINOR: resolvers: add unique numeric id to nameservers
- MEDIUM: server: make server_set_inetaddr() updater serializable
- MINOR: server/event_hdl: expose updater info through INETADDR event
- MINOR: server: add dns hint in server_inetaddr_updater struct
- MEDIUM: server/dns: clear RMAINT when addr resolves again
- BUG/MINOR: server/dns: use server_set_inetaddr() to unset srv addr from DNS
- BUG/MEDIUM: server/dns: perform svc_port updates atomically from SRV records
- MEDIUM: peers: use server as stream target
- CLEANUP: peers: remove unused sock_init_arg struct member
- CLEANUP: peers: remove unused "proto" and "xprt" struct members
- MINOR: peers: rely on srv->addr and remove peer->addr
- DOC: config: add context hint for server keywords
- MINOR: stktable: add table_process_entry helper function
- MINOR: stktable: use {show,set,clear} table with ptr
- MINOR: map: add map_*_key converters to provide the matching key
- DOC: fix typo for fastfwd QUIC option
- BUG/MINOR: mux-quic: always report error to SC on RESET_STREAM emission
- MEDIUM: mux-quic: add BUG_ON if sending on locally closed QCS
- BUG/MINOR: mux-quic: disable fast-fwd if connection on error
- BUG/MINOR: quic: Wrong keylog callback setting.
- BUG/MINOR: quic: Missing call to TLS message callbacks
- MINOR: h3: check connection error during sending
- BUG/MINOR: h3: close connection on header list too big
- BUG/MINOR: h3: close connection on sending alloc errors
- BUG/MINOR: h3: disable fast-forward on buffer alloc failure
- Revert "MINOR: mux-quic: Disable zero-copy forwarding for send by default"
- MINOR: stktable: stktable_data_ptr() cannot fail in table_process_entry()
- CLEANUP: assorted typo fixes in the code and comments
- CI: use semantic version compare for determing "latest" OpenSSL
- CLEANUP: server: remove ambiguous check in srv_update_addr_port()
- CLEANUP: resolvers: remove unused RSLV_UPD_OBSOLETE_IP flag
- CLEANUP: resolvers: remove some more unused RSLV_UDP flags
- MEDIUM: server: simplify snr_set_srv_down() to prevent confusions
- MINOR: backend: export get_server_*() functions
- MINOR: tcpcheck: export proxy_parse_tcpcheck()
- MEDIUM: udp: allow to retrieve the frontend destination address
- MINOR: global: export a way to list build options
- MINOR: debug: add features and build options to "show dev"
- BUG/MINOR: server: fix server_find_by_name() usage during parsing
- REGTESTS: check attach-srv out of order declaration
- CLEANUP: quic: Remaining useless code into server part
- BUILD: quic: Missing quic_ssl.h header protection
- BUG/MEDIUM: h3: fix incorrect snd_buf return value
- MINOR: h3: do not consider missing buf room as error on trailers
- BUG/MEDIUM: stconn: Forward shutdown on write timeout only if it is forwardable
- BUG/MEDIUM: stconn: Set fsb date if zero-copy forwarding is blocked during nego
- BUG/MEDIUM: spoe: Never create new spoe applet if there is no server up
- MINOR: mux-h2: support limiting the total number of H2 streams per connection
- CLEANUP: mux-h2: remove the printfs from previous commit on h2 streams limit.
- DEV: h2: add the ability to emit literals in mkhdr
- DEV: h2: add the preface as well in supported output types
- DEV: h2: support passing raw data for a frame
- IMPORT: ebtree: implement and use flsnz_long() to count bits
- IMPORT: ebtree: switch the sizes and offsets to size_t and ssize_t
- IMPORT: ebtree: rework the fls macros to better deal with arch-specific ones
- IMPORT: ebtree: make string_equal_bits turn back to unsigned char
- IMPORT: ebtree: use unsigned ints for flznz()
- IMPORT: ebtree: make string_equal_bits() return an unsigned
Willy Tarreau [Sat, 30 Dec 2023 16:24:06 +0000 (17:24 +0100)]
IMPORT: ebtree: make string_equal_bits() return an unsigned
It used to return ssize_t for -1 but in fact we're using this -1 as
the largest possible value and the result is generally cast to signed
to check if the end was reached, so better make it clearly return an
unsigned value here.
Willy Tarreau [Sat, 30 Dec 2023 15:28:05 +0000 (16:28 +0100)]
IMPORT: ebtree: make string_equal_bits turn back to unsigned char
With flsnz() instead of flsnz_long() we're now getting a better
performance on both x86 and ARM. The difference is that previously
we were relying on a function that was forcing the use of register
%eax for the 8-bit version and that was preventing the compiler
from keeping the code optimized. The gain is roughly 5% on ARM and
1% on x86.
Willy Tarreau [Sat, 30 Dec 2023 14:37:17 +0000 (15:37 +0100)]
IMPORT: ebtree: rework the fls macros to better deal with arch-specific ones
The definitions were a bit of a mess and there wasn't even a fall back to
__builtin_clz() on compilers supporting it. Now we instead define a macro
for each implementation that is set on an arch-dependent case by case,
and add the fall back ones only when not defined. This also allows the
flsnz8() to automatically fall back to the 32-bit arch-specific version
if available. This shows a consistent 33% speedup on arm for strings.
Willy Tarreau [Sun, 17 Dec 2023 15:43:25 +0000 (16:43 +0100)]
IMPORT: ebtree: implement and use flsnz_long() to count bits
The asm code shows multiple conversions. Gcc has always been terribly
bad at dealing with chars, which are constantly converted to ints for
every operation and zero-extended after each operation. But here in
addition there are conversions before and after the flsnz(). Let's
just mark the variables as long and use flsnz_long() to process them
without any conversion. This shortens the code and makes it slightly
faster.
Note that the fls operations could make use of __builtin_clz() on
gcc 4.6 and above, and it would be useful to implement native support
for ARM as well.
Willy Tarreau [Tue, 10 Oct 2023 15:09:38 +0000 (17:09 +0200)]
DEV: h2: support passing raw data for a frame
With -r it's possible to pass raw data that will be interpreted by
printf so it even supports \x sequences. E.g. for a RST_STREAM, let's
just use \x00\x00\x00\x00.
Willy Tarreau [Fri, 13 Oct 2023 16:11:59 +0000 (18:11 +0200)]
MINOR: mux-h2: support limiting the total number of H2 streams per connection
This patch introduces a new setting: tune.h2.fe.max-total-streams. It
sets the HTTP/2 maximum number of total streams processed per incoming
connection. Once this limit is reached, HAProxy will send a graceful GOAWAY
frame informing the client that it will close the connection after all
pending streams have been closed. In practice, clients tend to close as fast
as possible when receiving this, and to establish a new connection for next
requests. Doing this is sometimes useful and desired in situations where
clients stay connected for a very long time and cause some imbalance inside a
farm. For example, in some highly dynamic environments, it is possible that
new load balancers are instantiated on the fly to adapt to a load increase,
and that once the load goes down they should be stopped without breaking
established connections. By setting a limit here, the connections will have
a limited lifetime and will be frequently renewed, with some possibly being
established to other nodes, so that existing resources are quickly released.
The default value is zero, which enforces no limit beyond those implied by
the protocol (2^30 ~= 1.07 billion). Values around 1000 were found to
already cause frequent enough connection renewal without causing any
perceptible latency to most clients. One notable exception here is h2load
which reports errors for all requests that were expected to be sent over
a given connection after it receives a GOAWAY. This is an already known
limitation: https://github.com/nghttp2/nghttp2/issues/981
The patch was made in two parts inside h2_frt_handle_headers():
- the first one, at the end of the function, which verifies if the
configured limit was reached and if it's needed to emit a GOAWAY ;
- the second, just before decoding the stream frame, which verifies if
a previously configured limit was ignored by the client, and closes
the connection if this happens. Indeed, one reason for a connection
to stay alive for too long definitely comes from a stupid bot that
periodically fetches the same resource, scans lots of URLs or tries
to brute-force something. These ones are more likely to just ignore
the last stream ID advertised in GOAWAY than a regular browser, or
a well-behaving client such as curl which respects it. So in order
to make sure we can close the connection we need to enforce the
advertised limit.
Note that a regular client will not face a problem with that because in
the worst case it will have max_concurrent_streams in flight and this
limit is taken into account when calculating the advertised last
acceptable stream ID.
Just a note: it may also be possible to move the first part above to
h2s_frt_stream_new() instead so that it's not processed for trailers,
though it doesn't seem to be more interesting, first because it has
two return points.
This is something that may be backported to 2.9 and 2.8 to offer more
control to those dealing with dynamic infrastructures, especially since
for now we cannot force a connection to be cleanly closed using rules
(e.g. github issues #946, #2146).
BUG/MEDIUM: spoe: Never create new spoe applet if there is no server up
This test was already performed when a new message is queued into the
sending queue. However not when the last applet is released, in
spoe_release_appctx(). It is a quite old bug. It was introduced by commit 6f1296b5c7 ("BUG/MEDIUM: spoe: Create a SPOE applet if necessary when the
last one is released").
Because of this bug, new SPOE applets may be created and quickly released
because there is no server up, in loop and while there is at least one
message in the sending queue, consuming all the CPU. It is pretty visible if
the processing timeout is high.
To fix the bug, conditions to create or not a SPOE applet are now
centralized in spoe_create_appctx(). The test about the max connections per
second and about number of active servers are moved in this function.
This patch must be backported to all stable versions.
BUG/MEDIUM: stconn: Set fsb date if zero-copy forwarding is blocked during nego
During the zero-copy forwarding, if the consumer side reports it is blocked,
it means it is blocked on send. At the stream-connector level, the event
must be reported to be sure to set/update the fsb date. Otherwise, write
timeouts cannot be properly reported. If this happens when no other timeout
is armed, this freezes the stream.
BUG/MEDIUM: stconn: Forward shutdown on write timeout only if it is forwardable
The commit b9c87f8082 ("BUG/MEDIUM: stconn/stream: Forward shutdown on write
timeout") introduced a regression. In sc_cond_forward_shut(), the write
timeout is considered too early to forward the shutdown. In fact, it is
always considered, even if the shutdown is not forwardable yet. It is of
course unexpected. It is especially an issue when a write timeout is
encountered on server side during the connection establishment. In this
case, if shutdown is forwarded too early on the client side, the connection
is closed before the 503 error sending.
So the write timeout must indeed be considered to forward the shutdown to
the underlying layer, but only if the shutdown is forwardable. Otherwise, we
should do nothing.
This patch should fix the issue #2404. It must be backported as far as 2.2.
MINOR: h3: do not consider missing buf room as error on trailers
Improve h3_resp_trailers_send() return value to be similar with
h3_resp_data_send(). In particular, if QCS Tx buffer has not enough
space for trailer encoding, 0 is returned instead of an error value,
with QC_SF_BLK_MROOM set.
This unify HTTP/3 headers/data/trailers encoding functions. Negative
error codes are limited to fatal error which should cause a connection
closure. Not enough output buffer space is only a transient condition
which is reflect by the QC_SF_BLK_MROOM flag.
BUG/MEDIUM: h3: fix incorrect snd_buf return value
h3_resp_data_send() is used to transcode HTX data into H3 data frames.
If QCS Tx buffer is not aligned when first invoked, two separate frames
may be built, first until buffer end, then with remaining space in
front.
If buffer space is not enough for at least the H3 frame header, -1 is
returned with the flag QC_SF_BLK_MROOM set to await for more room. An
issue arises if this occurs for the second frame : -1 is returned even
though HTX data were properly transcoded and removed on the first step.
This causes snd_buf callback to return an incorrect value to the stream
layer, which in the end will corrupt the channel output buffer.
To fix this, stop considering that not enough remaining space is an
error case. Instead, return 0 if this is encountered for the first frame
or the HTX removed block size for the second one. As QC_SF_BLK_MROOM is
set, this will correctly interrupt H3 encoding. Label err is thus only
properly limited to fatal error which should cause a connection closure.
A new BUG_ON() has been added which should prevent similar issues in the
future.
This issue was detected using the following client :
$ ngtcp2-client --no-quic-dump --no-http-dump --exit-on-all-streams-close \
127.0.0.1 20443 -n2 "http://127.0.0.1:20443/?s=50k"
This triggers the following CHECK_IF statement. Note that it may be
necessary to disable fast forwarding to enforce snd_buf usage.
Thread 1 "haproxy" received signal SIGILL, Illegal instruction.
0x00005555558bc48a in co_data (c=0x5555561ed428) at include/haproxy/channel.h:130
130 CHECK_IF_HOT(c->output > c_data(c));
[ ## gdb ## ] bt
#0 0x00005555558bc48a in co_data (c=0x5555561ed428) at include/haproxy/channel.h:130
#1 0x00005555558c1d69 in sc_conn_send (sc=0x5555561f92d0) at src/stconn.c:1637
#2 0x00005555558c2683 in sc_conn_io_cb (t=0x5555561f7f10, ctx=0x5555561f92d0, state=32832) at src/stconn.c:1824
#3 0x000055555590c48f in run_tasks_from_lists (budgets=0x7fffffffdaa0) at src/task.c:596
#4 0x000055555590cf88 in process_runnable_tasks () at src/task.c:876
#5 0x00005555558aae3b in run_poll_loop () at src/haproxy.c:3049
#6 0x00005555558ab57e in run_thread_poll_loop (data=0x555555d9fa00 <ha_thread_info>) at src/haproxy.c:3251
#7 0x00005555558ad053 in main (argc=6, argv=0x7fffffffddd8) at src/haproxy.c:3948
In case CHECK_IF are not activated, it may cause crash or incorrect
transfers.
Such "#ifdef USE_QUIC" prepocessor statements are used by QUIC C header
to avoid inclusion of QUIC headers when the QUIC support is not enabled
(by USE_QUIC make variable). Furthermore, this allows inclusions of QUIC
header from C file without having to protect them with others "#ifdef USE_QUIC"
statements as follows:
So, here if this quic_ssl.h header was included by a C file, and compiled without
QUIC support, this will lead to build errrors as follows:
In file included from <a C file...>:
include/haproxy/quic_ssl.h:35:35: warning: ‘enum ssl_encryption_level_t’
declared inside parameter list will not be visible outside of this
definition or declaration
Should be backported to 2.9 to avoid such building issues to come.
CLEANUP: quic: Remaining useless code into server part
Remove some QUIC definitions of members from server structure as the haproxy QUIC
stack does not support at all the server part (QUIC client) as this time.
Remove the statements in relation with their initializations.
This patch should be backported as far as 2.6 to save memory.
REGTESTS: check attach-srv out of order declaration
Previous patch fixed a regression which caused some config with
attach-srv to be rejected if the rule was declared before the target
server itself. To better detect this kind of error, mix the declaration
order in the corresponding regtest.
BUG/MINOR: server: fix server_find_by_name() usage during parsing
Since below commit, server_find_by_name() now search using
'used_server_id' proxy backend tree : 4bcfe30414005323a8d4ab986bce92bb736b59df
OPTIM: server: eb lookup for server_find_by_name()
This introduces a regression if server_find_by_name() is used via
check_config_validity() during post-parsing. Indeed, used_server_id tree
is populated at the same stage so it's possible to not found an existing
server. This can cause incorrect rejection of previously valid
configuration file.
To fix this, servers are now inserted in used_server_id tree during
parsing via parse_server(). This guarantees that server instances can be
retrieved during post parsing.
A known feature which uses server_find_by_name() during post parsing is
attach-srv tcp-rule used for reverse HTTP. Prior to the current fix, a
config was wrongly rejected if the rule was declared before the server
line.
This should not be backported unless the mentionned commit is.
Willy Tarreau [Tue, 2 Jan 2024 10:08:04 +0000 (11:08 +0100)]
MINOR: debug: add features and build options to "show dev"
The "show dev" CLI command is still missing useful elements such as the
build options, SSL version etc. Let's just add the build features and
the build options there so that it's possible to collect all of this
from a running process without having to start the executable with -vv.
This is still dumped all at once from the parsing function since the
output is small. If it were to grow, this would possibly require to be
reworked to support a context.
It might be helpful to backport this to 2.9 since it can help narrow
down certain issues.