If the data to write is bigger than what the socket can send, and the
reminder is smaller than NGX_SSL_BUFSIZE, then SSL_write() fails with
SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE. The reminder of payload however is successfully
copied to the low-level buffer and all the output chain buffers are
flushed. This means that retry logic doesn't work because
ngx_http_upstream_process_non_buffered_request() checks only if there's
anything in the output chain buffers and ignores the fact that something
may be buffered in low-level parts of the stack.
Signed-off-by: Patryk Lesiewicz <patryk@google.com>
If a connection with the read delayed flag set was stored in the keepalive
cache, and after picking it from the cache a read timer was set on that
connection, this timer was considered a delay timer rather than a socket read
event timer as expected. The latter timeout is usually much longer than the
former, which caused a significant delay in request processing.
The issue manifested itself with proxy_limit_rate and upstream keepalive
enabled and exists since 973ee2276300 (1.7.7) when proxy_limit_rate was
introduced.
On some systems, it's possible that reaper of orphaned processes is
set to something other than "init" process. On such systems, the
changing binary procedure did not work.
The fix is to check if PPID has changed, instead of assuming it's
always 1 for orphaned processes.
As per POSIX, basic regular expressions have no alternations, and the
interpretation of the "\|" construct is undefined. At least on MINIX
and Solaris grep interprets "\|" as literal "|", and not as an alternation
as GNU grep does. Removed such constructs introduced in f1daa0356a1d.
This fixes clang detection on MINIX.
The ngx_http_upstream_process_upgraded() did not handle c->close request,
and upgraded connections do not use the write filter. As a result,
worker_shutdown_timeout did not affect upgraded connections (ticket #1419).
Fix is to handle c->close in the ngx_http_request_handler() function, thus
covering most of the possible cases in http handling.
Additionally, mail proxying did not handle neither c->close nor c->error,
and thus worker_shutdown_timeout did not work for mail connections. Fix is
to add c->close handling to ngx_mail_proxy_handler().
Also, added explicit handling of c->close to stream proxy,
ngx_stream_proxy_process_connection(). This improves worker_shutdown_timeout
handling in stream, it will no longer wait for some data being transferred
in a connection before closing it, and will also provide appropriate
logging at the "info" level.
A zlib variant from Intel as available from https://github.com/jtkukunas/zlib
uses 64K hash instead of scaling it from the specified memory level, and
also uses 16-byte padding in one of the window-sized memory buffers, and can
force window bits to 13 if compression level is set to 1 and appropriate
compile options are used. As a result, nginx complained with "gzip filter
failed to use preallocated memory" alerts.
This change improves deflate_state allocation detection by testing that
items is 1 (deflate_state is the only allocation where items is 1).
Additionally, on first failure to use preallocated memory we now assume
that we are working with the Intel's modified zlib, and switch to using
appropriate preallocations. If this does not help, we complain with the
usual alerts.
Previous version of this patch was published at
http://mailman.nginx.org/pipermail/nginx/2014-July/044568.html.
The zlib variant in question is used by default in ClearLinux from Intel,
see http://mailman.nginx.org/pipermail/nginx-ru/2017-October/060421.html,
http://mailman.nginx.org/pipermail/nginx-ru/2017-November/060544.html.
Previously, nginx failed to move buffer position when parsing an incomplete
record header, and due to this wasn't be able to continue parsing once
remaining bytes of the record header were received.
This can affect response header parsing, potentially generating spurious errors
like "upstream sent unexpected FastCGI request id high byte: 1 while reading
response header from upstream". While this is very unlikely, since usually
record headers are written in a single buffer, this still can happen in real
life, for example, if a record header will be split across two TCP packets
and the second packet will be delayed.
This does not affect non-buffered response body proxying, due to "buf->pos =
buf->last;" at the start of the ngx_http_fastcgi_non_buffered_filter()
function. Also this does not affect buffered response body proxying, as
each input buffer is only passed to the filter once.
This is what usually happens for zones no longer used in the new
configuration, but zones where size or tag were changed were freed
when creating new memory zones. If reconfiguration failed (for
example, due to a conflicting listening socket), this resulted in a
segmentation fault in the master process.
Reported by Zhihua Cao,
http://mailman.nginx.org/pipermail/nginx-devel/2017-October/010536.html.
In particular, if ngx_http_postpone_filter_add() fails in ngx_chain_add_copy(),
the output chain of the postponed request was left in an invalid state.
This header carries the definition of HMAC_Init_ex(). In OpenSSL this
header is included by <openssl/ssl.h>, but it's not so in BoringSSL.
It's probably a good idea to explicitly include this header anyway,
regardless of whether it's included by other headers or not.
Upgrading an upstream connection is usually followed by reading from the client
which a subrequest is not allowed to do. Moreover, accessing the header_in
request field while processing upgraded connection ends up with a null pointer
dereference since the header_in buffer is only created for the the main request.
If proxy_next_upstream includes http_503/http_504, and upstream
returns 503/504, $upstream_status converted this to 502 for any
values except the last one.
The NGX_DONE value returned from ngx_http_upstream_cache_send() indicates
that upstream was already finalized in ngx_http_upstream_process_headers().
It was treated as a generic error which resulted in duplicate finalization.
Handled NGX_HTTP_UPSTREAM_INVALID_HEADER from ngx_http_upstream_cache_send().
Previously, it could return within ngx_http_upstream_finalize_request(), and
since it's below NGX_HTTP_SPECIAL_RESPONSE, a client connection could stuck.
When parsing of headers in a cache file fails, already parsed headers
need to be cleared, and protocol state needs to be reinitialized. To do
so, u->request_sent is now set to ensure ngx_http_upstream_reinit() will
be called.
This change complements improvements in 46ddff109e72.
This slightly reduces cost of selecting a peer if all or almost all peers
failed, see ticket #1030. There should be no measureable difference with
other workloads.
While this may result in non-ideal distribution of requests if nginx
won't be able to select a server in a reasonable number of attempts,
this still looks better than severe performance degradation observed
if there is no limit and there are many points configured (ticket #1030).
This is also in line with what we do for other hash balancing methods.
Previously, unix sockets were treated as AF_INET ones, and this may
result in buffer overread on Linux, where unbound unix sockets have
2-byte addresses.
Note that it is not correct to use just sun_path as a binary representation
for unix sockets. This will result in an empty string for unbound unix
sockets, and thus behaviour of limit_req and limit_conn will change when
switching from $remote_addr to $binary_remote_addr. As such, normal text
representation is used.
Reported by Stephan Dollberg.
At least FreeBSD, macOS, NetBSD, and OpenBSD can return unix sockets
with non-null-terminated sun_path. Additionally, the address may become
non-null-terminated if it does not fit into the buffer provided and was
truncated (may happen on macOS, NetBSD, and Solaris, which allow unix socket
addresess larger than struct sockaddr_un). As such, ngx_sock_ntop() might
overread the sockaddr provided, as it used "%s" format and thus assumed
null-terminated string.
To fix this, the ngx_strnlen() function was introduced, and it is now used
to calculate correct length of sun_path.
Some OSes (notably macOS, NetBSD, and Solaris) allow unix socket addresses
larger than struct sockaddr_un. Moreover, some of them (macOS, Solaris)
return socklen of the socket address before it was truncated to fit the
buffer provided. As such, on these systems socklen must not be used without
additional check that it is within the buffer provided.
Appropriate checks added to ngx_event_accept() (after accept()),
ngx_event_recvmsg() (after recvmsg()), and ngx_set_inherited_sockets()
(after getsockname()).
We also obtain socket addresses via getsockname() in
ngx_connection_local_sockaddr(), but it does not need any checks as
it is only used for INET and INET6 sockets (as there can be no
wildcard unix sockets).
The sync flag of HTTP/2 request body buffer is used when the size of request
body is unknown or bigger than configured "client_body_buffer_size". In this
case the buffer points to body data inside the global receive buffer that is
used for reading all HTTP/2 connections in the worker process. Thus, when the
sync flag is set, the buffer must be flushed to a temporary file, otherwise
the request body data can be overwritten.
Previously, the sync buffer wasn't flushed to a temporary file if the whole
body was received in one DATA frame with the END_STREAM flag and wasn't
copied into the HTTP/2 body preread buffer. As a result, the request body
might be corrupted (ticket #1384).
Now, setting r->request_body_in_file_only enforces writing the sync buffer
to a temporary file in all cases.
When caching intercepted errors, previous behaviour was to use
proxy_cache_valid times specified, regardless of various cache control
headers present in the response. Fix is to check u->cacheable and
use u->cache->valid_sec as set by various cache control response headers,
similar to how we do this in the normal caching code path.
If cache file is truncated, it is possible that u->process_header()
will return NGX_AGAIN. Added appropriate handling of this case by
changing the error to NGX_HTTP_UPSTREAM_INVALID_HEADER.
Also, added appropriate logging of this and NGX_HTTP_UPSTREAM_INVALID_HEADER
cases at the "crit" level. Note that this will result in duplicate logging
in case of NGX_HTTP_UPSTREAM_INVALID_HEADER. While this is something better
to avoid, it is considered to be an overkill to implement cache-specific
error logging in u->process_header().
Additionally, u->buffer.start is now reset to be able to receive a new
response, and u->cache_status set to MISS to provide the value in the
$upstream_cache_status variable, much like it happens on other cache file
errors detected by ngx_http_file_cache_read(), instead of HIT, which is
believed to be misleading.
It is to be used as a bitmask with various bits set/reset when appropriate.
63b8b157b776 made a similar change to ngx_http_upstream_rr_peer_t.down and
ngx_stream_upstream_rr_peer_t.down.
Previously, "get indexed header" message was logged when in fact only
header name was obtained using an index, and "get indexed header name"
was logged when full header representation (name and value) was obtained
using an index. Fixed version logs "get indexed name" and "get indexed
header" respectively.
Previously, when the first UDP response packet was not received from the
proxied server within proxy_timeout, no error message was logged before
switching to the next upstream. Additionally, when one of succeeding response
packets was not received within the timeout, the timeout error had low severity
because it was logged as a client connection error as opposed to upstream
connection error.
Various buffers are allocated in an assumption that there would be
no more than 4 year digits. This might not be true on platforms
with 64-bit time_t, as 64-bit time_t is able to represent more than that.
Such dates with more than 4 year digits hardly make sense though, as
various date formats in use do not allow them anyway.
As such, all dates are now truncated by ngx_gmtime() to December 31, 9999.
This should have no effect on valid dates, though will prevent potential
buffer overflows on invalid ones.
In ngx_gmtime(), instead of casting to ngx_uint_t we now work with
time_t directly. This allows using dates after 2038 on 32-bit platforms
which use 64-bit time_t, notably NetBSD and OpenBSD.
As the code is not able to work with negative time_t values, argument
is now set to 0 for negative values. As a positive side effect, this
results in Epoch being used for such values instead of a date in distant
future.