Including but not limited to:
- Correctly use PQerrorMessage() in case we cleanup with PQfinish
- If we get a network error, cleanup the connection
- No longer call the page handler from inside kore_pgsql_handle()
but instead just put it to sleep in case we don't need it.
This does grow the http_requests list quite a bit with sleeping
connections and can perhaps be improved later on.
- Allow us to on error return OK from a page handler from inside
the completetion block for KORE_PGSQL().
- Count the cummulative time for a request to finish instead
of the latest run time for the handler.
Has support for full async pgsql queries. Most of the logic
is hidden behind a KORE_PGSQL() macro allowing you to insert
these pgsql calls in your page handlers without blocking the
kore worker while the query is going off.
There is place for improvement here, and perhaps KORE_PGSQL won't
stay as I feel this might overcomplicate things instead of making
them simpler as I thought it would.
Using authentication blocks one can define "authentication" mechanisms
in Kore for page handlers.
This can be used to require a session cookie (validated by your own validator)
for certain page handlers, and hopefully in the future provide a framework
for adding more authentication things (like HTTP Auth).
Right now only cookie checking is available.
- Parameter validation is now done only when http_process_*()
is called and upon http_argument_add().
- You MUST have defined your params in a param block or they will
be filtered out.
- http_argument_lookup() is dead, welcome http_argument_get() and
its brothers and sisters:
http_argument_get_string()
http_argument_get_uint16()
http_argument_get_int16()
http_argument_get_uint32()
http_argument_get_int32()
They will automatically do bounds checking on integers for you
and return proper integers or a NUL-terminated string.
- The http_argument_get* functions no longer create an additional
copy of the string which you need to free. Easier going.
- http_multiple_args() is dead, byebye
- Make some stuff we don't want to share with the modules static.
Allows you to configure maximum amount of seconds an HTTP connection
can stay open (does not affect SPDY connections). If set to 0 it will
disable keep-alive all together.
Add some inttypes fluff.
If enabled Kore adds the HSTS header to every response.
- Additionally, fix some typos in the example configuration.
- Change default SSL cipher list again, no more RC4 and almost PFS for all browsers.
- http_header_max:
Maximum size of HTTP headers (in non SPDY connections).
- http_postbody_max:
Maximum size of an HTTP POST body (both in SPDY and HTTP mode).
Right now Kore will simply DC the client, ideally we want to send
a 413 (entity too large) to the client however.
See modules/examples/module.conf for more.
New API functions (docs need to be updated):
- http_file_lookup()
- http_file_add()
- http_argument_add()
- kore_strip_chars()
- kore_mem_find()
- Add an example under the example module on how files can be read.
- Keep HTTP requests in connection, so we can delete them if the connection
ends before the requests do (this way we don't leak them).
- When spdy_stream_close() is called, delete the attached http request.
(This shouldn't hurt to do, so hopefully won't cause major fallout).
- When parsing HTTP, find the first occurence of end-of-headers so uploads
with multipart/form-data can succeed properly.
- Add a test upload page to the example module.
Prototypes:
int http_argument_multiple_lookup(struct http_req *req,
struct http_arg *args);
void http_argument_multiple_free(struct http_arg *args);
These functions can be used to lookup arguments in a single call.
args points to an array of struct http_arg elements. Each of them
have the argument name set and its value set to NULL.
The array must have its last element name field set to NULL.
Upon return http_argument_multiple_lookup() gives the caller the
number of arguments that were successfully found. It makes their values
available under the value field in the struct http_arg array passed.
Example:
int v;
struct http_args args[4];
memset(args, 0, sizeof(args));
args[0].name = "email";
args[1].name = "password1";
args[2].name = "password2";
args[3].name = NULL;
v = http_argument_multiple_lookup(req, args);
if (v != 3) {
kore_debug("argument %s was not present", args[v].name);
} else {
for (v = 0; args[v].name != NULL; v++)
kore_debug("%s -> %s", args[v].name, args[v].value);
}
http_argument_multiple_free(args);
- Introduce own memory management system on top of malloc to keep track
of all our allocations and free's. Later we should introduce a pooling
mechanism for fixed size allocations (http_request comes to mind).
- Introduce ssl_cipher in configuration.
Memory usage is kind of high right now, but it seems its OpenSSL
doing it rather then Kore.
http_populate_arguments() before using http_argument_lookup() to lookup a given argument.
population uses the appropriate query string (from GET or POST) automatically.
by calling http_response_header_add().
fix wrong overflow check in spdy_stream_get_header().
html_inject now exports last modified timestamp for the files that are
compiled into the module in the format static_mtime_<type>_<name>.
modules can now look into the request headers using http_request_header_get().