Previously, the NGX_LOG_INFO level was used unconditionally. This is
correct for client SSL connections, but too low for connections to
upstream servers. To resolve this, ngx_connection_error() now used
to log this error, it will select logging level appropriately.
With this change, if an upstream connection is closed during SSL
handshake, it is now properly logged at "error" level.
Previously, nginx closed client connection in cases when a response body
from upstream was needed to be cached or stored but shouldn't be sent to
the client. While this is normal for HTTP, it is unacceptable for SPDY.
Fix is to use instead the p->downstream_error flag to prevent nginx from
sending anything downstream. To make this work, the event pipe code was
modified to properly cache empty responses with the flag set.
The ngx_http_upstream_dummy_handler() must be set regardless of
the read event state. This prevents possible additional call of
ngx_http_upstream_send_request_handler().
The check became meaningless after refactoring in 2a92804f4109.
With the loop currently in place, "current" can't be NULL, hence
the check can be dropped.
Additionally, the local variable "current" was removed to
simplify code, and pool->current now used directly instead.
Found by Coverity (CID 714236).
This isn't really important as configuration testing shortly ends with
a process termination which will free all sockets, though Coverity
complains.
Prodded by Coverity (CID 400872).
Previously, last_modified_time was tested against -1 to check if the
not modified filter should be skipped. Notably, this prevented nginx
from additional If-Modified-Since (et al.) checks on proxied responses.
Such behaviour is suboptimal in some cases though, as checks are always
skipped on responses from a cache with ETag only (without Last-Modified),
resulting in If-None-Match being ignored in such cases. Additionally,
it was not possible to return 412 from the If-Unmodified-Since if last
modification time was not known for some reason.
This change introduces explicit r->disable_not_modified flag instead,
which is set by ngx_http_upstream_process_headers().
Previous code in ngx_http_upstream_send_response() used last modified time
from r->headers_out.last_modified_time after the header filter chain was
already called. At this point, last_modified_time may be already cleared,
e.g., with SSI, resulting in incorrect last modified time stored in a
cache file. Fix is to introduce u->headers_in.last_modified_time instead.
Clearing of the r->headers_out.last_modified_time field if a response
isn't cacheable in ngx_http_upstream_send_response() was introduced
in 3b6afa999c2f, the commit to enable not modified filter for cacheable
responses. It doesn't make sense though, as at this point header was
already sent, and not modified filter was already executed. Therefore,
the line was removed to simplify code.
log->filter ("if" parameter) was uninitialized when the default value
was being used, which would lead to a crash (SIGSEGV) when access_log
directive wasn't specified in the configuration.
Zero-fill the whole structure instead of zeroing fields one-by-one
in order to prevent similar issues in the future.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Sikora <piotr@cloudflare.com>
Large allocations from a slab pool result in free page blocks being fragmented,
eventually leading to a situation when no further allocation larger than a page
size are possible from the pool. While this isn't a problem for nginx itself,
it is known to be bad for various 3rd party modules. Fix is to merge adjacent
blocks of free pages in the ngx_slab_free_pages() function.
Prodded by Wandenberg Peixoto and Yichun Zhang.
Since the type cast has precedence higher than the bit shift operator,
all values were truncated to 8 bits.
These macros are used to construct header block for SYN_REPLY frame on
platforms with strict alignment requirements. As a result, any response
that contains a header with name or value longer than 255 bytes was
corrupted on such platforms.
Do not taste the last parameter against directory, as otherwise it would
result in the trailing slash being cut from the parameter value.
Notably, this prevents an internal redirect to an empty URI
if the parameter is set to the literal slash:
location / { try_files $uri /; }
Previous workaround to avoid warnings on OS X due to deprecated system
OpenSSL library (introduced in a3870ea96ccd) no longer works, as
the MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED macro is ignored on OS X 10.9
if a compiler used supports __attribute__(availability).
In particular, properly output partial match at the end of a subrequest
response (much like we do at the end of a response), and reset/set the
last_in_chain flag as appropriate.
Reported by KAWAHARA Masashi.
This fixes --with-file-aio support on systems that lack eventfd()
syscall, notably aarch64 Linux.
The syscall(SYS_eventfd) may still be necessary on systems that
have eventfd() syscall in the kernel but lack it in glibc, e.g.
as seen in the current CentOS 5 release.
Missed during introduction of the SMTP pipelining support (04e43d03e153,
1.5.6). Previously, the check wasn't needed as s->buffer was used directly
and the number of arguments didn't matter.
Reported by Svyatoslav Nikolsky.