13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joris Vink
4e2ca90095 Move Kore hook functions to kore/hooks.h. 2021-01-11 23:58:26 +01:00
Joris Vink
ce360e15d6 Update examples with latest single binary changes.
- Use kore_default_getopt() to let Kore do all argument parsing
  for the examples. They don't do any option parsing themselves.
2020-10-08 20:26:11 +02:00
Joris Vink
7350131232 Allow listening of tls/notls ports at the same time.
Before kore needed to be built with NOTLS=1 to be able to do non TLS
connections. This has been like this for years.

It is time to allow non TLS listeners without having to rebuild Kore.

This commit changes your configuration format and will break existing
applications their config.

Configurations now get listener {} contexts:

listen default {
	bind 127.0.0.1 8888
}

The above will create a listener on 127.0.0.1, port 8888 that will serve
TLS (still the default).

If you want to turn off TLS on that listener, specify "tls no" in that
context.

Domains now need to be attached to a listener:

Eg:
	domain * {
		attach	default
	}

For the Python API this kills kore.bind(), and kore.bind_unix(). They are
replaced with:

	kore.listen("name", ip=None, port=None, path=None, tls=True).
2019-09-27 12:27:04 +02:00
Joris Vink
dd2dff2318 Rework HTTP and worker processes.
The HTTP layer used to make a copy of each incoming header and its
value for a request. Stop doing that and make HTTP headers zero-copy
all across the board.

This change comes with some api function changes, notably the
http_request_header() function which now takes a const char ** rather
than a char ** out pointer.

This commit also constifies several members of http_request, beware.

Additional rework how the worker processes deal with the accept lock.

Before:
	if a worker held the accept lock and it accepted a new connection
	it would release the lock for others and back off for 500ms before
	attempting to grab the lock again.

	This approach worked but under high load this starts becoming obvious.

Now:
	- workers not holding the accept lock and not having any connections
	  will wait less long before returning from kore_platform_event_wait().

	- workers not holding the accept lock will no longer blindly wait
	  an arbitrary amount in kore_platform_event_wait() but will look
	  at how long until the next lock grab is and base their timeout
	  on that.

	- if a worker its next_lock timeout is up and failed to grab the
	  lock it will try again in half the time again.

	- the worker process holding the lock will when releasing the lock
	  double check if it still has space for newer connections, if it does
	  it will keep the lock until it is full. This prevents the lock from
	  bouncing between several non busy worker processes all the time.

Additional fixes:

- Reduce the number of times we check the timeout list, only do it twice
  per second rather then every event tick.
- Fix solo worker count for TLS (we actually hold two processes, not one).
- Make sure we don't accidentally miscalculate the idle time causing new
  connections under heavy load to instantly drop.
- Swap from gettimeofday() to clock_gettime() now that MacOS caught up.
2018-02-14 13:48:49 +01:00
john721
f15558ed98 Fix no response in case kore was built with NOTLS=1. (#142) 2016-08-16 10:19:07 +02:00
Joris Vink
43fec8678e kore_buf_create -> kore_buf_alloc. 2016-07-14 12:34:29 +02:00
Joris Vink
4ad50caa29 Large changes to the memory subsystem in kore.
- Change pools to use mmap() for allocating regions.
- Change kore_malloc() to use pools for commonly sized objects.
  (split into multiple of 2 buckets, starting at 8 bytes up to 8192).
- Rename kore_mem_free() to kore_free().

The preallocated pools will hold up to 128K of elements per block size.

In case a larger object is to be allocated kore_malloc() will use
malloc() instead.
2016-07-12 13:54:14 +02:00
Joris Vink
fcb86ddb8b Massive rework of HTTP layer.
This commit is a flag day, your old modules will almost certainly
need to be updated in order to build properly with these changes.

Summary of changes:

- Offload HTTP bodies to disk if they are large (inspired by #100).
  (disabled by default)
- The http_argument_get* macros now takes an explicit http_request parameter.
- Kore will now throw 404 errors almost immediately after an HTTP request
  has come in instead of waiting until all data has arrived.

API changes:

- http_argument_get* macros now require an explicit http_request parameter.
  (no more magic invokations).
- http_generic_404() is gone
- http_populate_arguments() is gone
- http_body_bytes() is gone
- http_body_text() is gone
- http_body_read() has been added
- http_populate_post() has been added
- http_populate_get() has been added
- http_file_read() has been added
- http_file_rewind() has been added
- http_file_lookup() no longer takes name, fname, data and len parameters.
- http_file_lookup() now returns a struct http_file pointer.
- http_populate_multipart_form() no longer takes an secondary parameter.

New configuration options:

- http_body_disk_offload:
	Number of bytes after which Kore will offload the HTTP body to
	disk instead of retaining it in memory. If 0 this feature is
	disabled. (Default: 0)

- http_body_disk_path:
	The path where Kore will store temporary HTTP body files.
	(this directory does not get created if http_body_disk_offload is 0).

New example:

The upload example has been added, demonstrating how to deal with file
uploads from a multipart form.
2016-01-18 11:30:22 +01:00
Pascal Borreli
4e9d9968ac Fixed typos 2015-05-17 02:51:46 +01:00
Joris Vink
8565b47800 Attach tasks/pgsqls to http_requests once more.
This way if an http request is removed while tasks or
pgsqls are still active they are free'd out and cancelled
properly.
2014-08-14 22:05:34 +02:00
Joris Vink
7349fab13f Sprinkle kore_snprintf() where appropriate. 2014-08-11 11:02:30 +02:00
Joris Vink
d35bb9837d update comment in example tasks.c 2014-08-03 21:47:19 +02:00
Joris Vink
55b344f1c3 Redo last move, but properly this time 2014-08-03 17:47:29 +02:00