Additionally, make sure to check for errors from ngx_http_parse_header_line()
call after joining saved parts. There shouldn't be any errors, though
check may help to catch bugs like missing f->split_parts reset.
Reported by Lucas Molas.
Previously r->header_size was used to store length for a part of
value that represents an individual already parsed HTTP header,
while r->header_end pointed to the end of the whole value.
Instead of storing length of a following name or value as pointer
to a potential end address (r->header_name_end and r->header_end)
that might be overflowed, now r->lowercase_index counter is used
to store remaining length of a following unparsed field.
It also fixes incorrect $body_bytes_sent value if a request is
closed while parsing of the request header. Since r->header_size
is intended for counting header size, thus abusing it for header
parsing purpose was certainly a bad idea.
If something like "error_page 400 @name" is used in a configuration,
a request could be passed to a named location without URI set, and this
in turn might result in segmentation faults or other bad effects
as most of the code assumes URI is set.
With this change nginx will catch such configuration problems in
ngx_http_named_location() and will stop request processing if URI
is not set, returning 500.
If a request is finalized in the first call to the
ngx_http_upstream_process_upgraded() function, e.g., because upstream
server closed the connection for some reason, in the second call
the u->peer.connection pointer will be null, resulting in segmentation
fault.
Fix is to avoid second direct call, and post event instead. This ensures
that ngx_http_upstream_process_upgraded() won't be called again if
a request is finalized.
The fix removes useless stsc entry in result mp4.
If start_sample == n then current stsc entry should be skipped
and the result stsc should start with the next entry.
The reason for that is start_sample starts from 0, not 1.
Previously, upstream's status code was overwritten with
cached response's status code when STALE or REVALIDATED
response was sent to the client.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Sikora <piotr@cloudflare.com>
The size of the priority field is increased by one bit in spdy/3,
and now it's a 3-bit field followed by 5 bits of unused space.
But a shift of these bits hasn't been adjusted in 39d7eef2e332
accordingly.
Linux returns EOPNOTSUPP for non-TCP sockets and ENOPROTOOPT for TCP
sockets, because getsockopt(TCP_FASTOPEN) is not implemented so far.
While there, lower the log level from ALERT to NOTICE to match other
getsockopt() failures.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Sikora <piotr@cloudflare.com>
If "proxy_pass" is specified with variables, the resulting
hostname is looked up in the list of upstreams defined in
configuration. The search was case-sensitive, as opposed
to the case of "proxy_pass" specified without variables.
If seek position is within the last track chunk
and that chunk is standalone (stsc entry describes only
this chunk) such seek generates stsc seek error. The
problem is that chunk numbers start with 1, not with 0.
Mp4 module does not check movie and track durations when reading
file. Instead it generates errors when track metadata is shorter
than seek position. Now such tracks are skipped and movie duration
check is performed at file read stage.
Mp4 module does not allow seeks after the last key frame. Since
stss atom only contains key frames it's usually shorter than
other track atoms. That leads to stss seek error when seek
position is close to the end of file. The fix outputs empty
stss frame instead of generating error.
Backed out 05a56ebb084a, as it turns out that kernel can return connections
without any delay if syncookies are used. This basically means we can't
assume anything about connections returned with deferred accept set.
To solve original problem the 05a56ebb084a tried to solve, i.e. to don't
wait longer than needed if a connection was accepted after deferred accept
timeout, this patch changes a timeout set with setsockopt(TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT)
to 1 second, unconditionally. This is believed to be enough for speed
improvements, and doesn't imply major changes to timeouts used.
Note that before 2.6.32 connections were dropped after a timeout. Though
it is believed that 1s is still appropriate for kernels before 2.6.32,
as previously tcp_synack_retries controlled the actual timeout and 1s results
in more than 1 minute actual timeout by default.
If there is no SSI context in a given request at a given time,
the $date_local and $date_gmt variables used "%s" format, instead
of "%A, %d-%b-%Y %H:%M:%S %Z" documented as the default and used
if there is SSI module context and timefmt wasn't modified using
the "config" SSI command.
While use of these variables outside of the SSI evaluation isn't strictly
valid, previous behaviour is certainly inconsistent, hence the fix.
Modern clang versions seem to no longer produce warnings for
system headers on Linux (at least clang 3.3 works), hence the
change. For older versions --with-cc-opt="-Wno-error" can be
used as a workaround.
Even during execution of a request it is possible that there will be
no session available, notably in case of renegotiation. As a result
logging of $ssl_session_id in some cases caused NULL pointer dereference
after revision 97e3769637a7 (1.5.9). The check added returns an empty
string if there is no session available.