The quic kernel bpf helper inspects packet payload for DCID, extracts key
and routes the packet into socket matching the key.
Due to reuseport feature, each worker owns a personal socket, which is
identified by the same key, used to create DCID.
BPF objects are locked in RAM and are subject to RLIMIT_MEMLOCK.
The "ulimit -l" command may be used to setup proper limits, if maps
cannot be created with EPERM or updated with ETOOLONG.
With introduction of open_file_cache in 1454:f497ed7682a7, opening a file
with ngx_open_cached_file() automatically adds a cleanup handler to close
the file. As such, calling ngx_close_file() directly for non-regular files
is no longer needed and will result in duplicate close() call.
In 1454:f497ed7682a7 ngx_close_file() call for non-regular files was removed
in the static module, but wasn't in the flv module. And the resulting
incorrect code was later copied to the mp4 module. Fix is to remove the
ngx_close_file() call from both modules.
Reported by Chris Newton.
The ngx_http_parse_complex_uri() function cannot make URI longer and does
not null-terminate URI, so there is no need to allocate an extra byte. This
allocation appears to be a leftover from changes in 461:a88a3e4e158f (0.1.5),
where null-termination of r->uri and many other strings was removed.
When the request line contains request-target in the absolute-URI form,
it can contain path-empty instead of a single slash (see RFC 7230, RFC 3986).
Previously, the ngx_http_parse_request_line() function only accepted empty
path when there was no query string.
With this change, non-empty query is also correctly handled. That is,
request line "GET http://example.com?foo HTTP/1.1" is accepted and results
in $uri "/" and $args "foo".
Note that $request_uri remains "?foo", similarly to how spaces in URIs
are handled. Providing "/?foo", similarly to how "/" is provided for
"GET http://example.com HTTP/1.1", requires allocation.
Previously, when processing client ACK, rtt could be calculated for a packet
different than the largest if it was missing in the sent chain. Even though
this is an unlikely situation, rtt based on a different packet could be larger
than needed leading to bigger pto timeout and performance degradation.
Previously, this only worked for Application level because before
quic-transport-30, there were the following constraints:
Because the receiver doesn't use the ACK Delay for Initial and Handshake
packets, a sender SHOULD send a value of 0.
When adjusting an RTT sample using peer-reported acknowledgement delays, an
endpoint ... MUST ignore the ACK Delay field of the ACK frame for packets
sent in the Initial and Handshake packet number space.
Now initial output packet is not padded anymore if followed by a handshake
packet. If the datagram is still not big enough to satisfy minimum size
requirements, handshake packet is padded.
The patch replaces c->send() occurences with c->send_chain(), because the
latter accounts for the local address, which may be different if the wildcard
listener is used.
Previously, server sent response to client using address different from
one client connected to.
Notably, this fixes an issue with Chrome that can emit a "certificate_unknown"
alert during the SSL handshake where c->ssl->no_wait_shutdown is not yet set.
The filter is responsible for creating HTTP/3 response header and body.
The change removes differences to the default branch for
ngx_http_chunked_filter_module and ngx_http_header_filter_module.
Instead, appropriate format specifier for hexadecimal is used
in ngx_log_debug().
The STREAM frame "data" debug is moved into ngx_quic_log_frame(), similar
to all other frame fields debug.
Previously, the number of next_upstream tries included servers marked
as "down", resulting in "no live upstreams" with the code 502 instead
of the code derived from an attempt to connect to the last tried "up"
server (ticket #2096).
Similarly to the problem fixed in 2096b21fcd10 (ticket #1792),
when a "trailer only" gRPC response (that is, a response with the
END_STREAM flag in the HEADERS frame) was immediately followed by
RST_STREAM(NO_ERROR) in the data preread along with the response
header, RST_STREAM wasn't properly skipped and caused "upstream
rejected request with error 0" errors.
Observed with "unknown service" gRPC errors returned by grpc-go.
Fix is to set ctx->done if we are going to parse additional data,
so the RST_STREAM(NO_ERROR) is properly skipped. Additionally, now
ngx_http_grpc_filter() will complain about frames sent for closed
stream if there are any.
When installing or running from a non-root user it is sometimes required to
override default, compiled in error log path. There was no way to do this
without rebuilding the binary (ticket #147).
This patch introduced "-e" command line option which allows one to override
compiled in error log path.
Header value returned from the HTTP parser is expected to be null-terminated or
have a spare byte after the value bytes. When an empty header value was passed
by client in a literal header representation, neither was true. This could
result in segfault. The fix is to assign a literal empty null-terminated
string in this case.
Thanks to Andrey Kolyshkin.