| Initialization stages aka how to get your code initialized at the right moment |
| |
| |
| 1. Background |
| |
| Originally all subsystems were initialized via a dedicated function call |
| from the huge main() function. Then some code started to become conditional |
| or a bit more modular and the #ifdef placed there became a mess, resulting |
| in init code being moved to function constructors in each subsystem's own |
| file. Then pools of various things were introduced, starting to make the |
| whole init sequence more complicated due to some forms of internal |
| dependencies. Later epoll was introduced, requiring a post-fork callback, |
| and finally threads arrived also requiring some post-thread init/deinit |
| and allocation, marking the old architecture's last breath. Finally the |
| whole thing resulted in lots of init code duplication and was simplified |
| in 1.9 with the introduction of initcalls and initialization stages. |
| |
| |
| 2. New architecture |
| |
| The new architecture relies on two layers : |
| - the registration functions |
| - the INITCALL macros and initialization stages |
| |
| The first ones are mostly used to add a callback to a list. The second ones |
| are used to specify when to call a function. Both are totally independent, |
| however they are generally combined via another set consisting in the REGISTER |
| macros which make some registration functions be called at some specific points |
| during the init sequence. |
| |
| |
| 3. Registration functions |
| |
| Registration functions never fail. Or more precisely, if they fail it will only |
| be on out-of-memory condition, and they will cause the process to immediately |
| exit. As such they do not return any status and the caller doesn't have to care |
| about their success. |
| |
| All available functions are described below in alphanumeric ordering. Please |
| make sure to respect this ordering when adding new ones. |
| |
| - void hap_register_build_opts(const char *str, int must_free) |
| |
| This appends the zero-terminated constant string <str> to the list of known |
| build options that will be reported on the output of "haproxy -vv". A line |
| feed character ('\n') will automatically be appended after the string when it |
| is displayed. The <must_free> argument must be zero, unless the string was |
| allocated by any malloc-compatible function such as malloc()/calloc()/ |
| realloc()/strdup() or memprintf(), in which case it's better to pass a |
| non-null value so that the string is freed upon exit. Note that despite the |
| function's prototype taking a "const char *", the pointer will actually be |
| cast and freed. The const char* is here to leave more freedom to use consts |
| when making such options lists. |
| |
| - void hap_register_per_thread_alloc(int (*fct)()) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| threads are started, at the beginning of the polling loop. This is also valid |
| for the main thread and will be called even if threads are disabled, so that |
| it is guaranteed that this function will be called in any circumstance. Each |
| thread will first call all these functions exactly once when it starts. Calls |
| are serialized by the init_mutex, so that locking is not necessary in these |
| functions. There is no relation between the thread numbers and the callback |
| ordering. The function is expected to return non-zero on success, or zero on |
| failure. A failure will make the process emit a succinct error message and |
| immediately exit. See also hap_register_per_thread_free() for functions |
| called after these ones. |
| |
| - void hap_register_per_thread_deinit(void (*fct)()); |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| threads are gracefully stopped, at the end of the polling loop. This is also |
| valid for the main thread and will be called even if threads are disabled, so |
| that it is guaranteed that this function will be called in any circumstance |
| if the process experiences a soft stop. Each thread will call this function |
| exactly once when it stops. However contrary to _alloc() and _init(), the |
| calls are made without any protection, thus if any shared resource if touched |
| by the function, the function is responsible for protecting it. The reason |
| behind this is that such resources are very likely to be still in use in one |
| other thread and that most of the time the functions will in fact only touch |
| a refcount or deinitialize their private resources. See also |
| hap_register_per_thread_free() for functions called after these ones. |
| |
| - void hap_register_per_thread_free(void (*fct)()); |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| threads are gracefully stopped, at the end of the polling loop, after all calls |
| to _deinit() callbacks are done for this thread. This is also valid for the |
| main thread and will be called even if threads are disabled, so that it is |
| guaranteed that this function will be called in any circumstance if the |
| process experiences a soft stop. Each thread will call this function exactly |
| once when it stops. However contrary to _alloc() and _init(), the calls are |
| made without any protection, thus if any shared resource if touched by the |
| function, the function is responsible for protecting it. The reason behind |
| this is that such resources are very likely to be still in use in one other |
| thread and that most of the time the functions will in fact only touch a |
| refcount or deinitialize their private resources. See also |
| hap_register_per_thread_deinit() for functions called before these ones. |
| |
| - void hap_register_per_thread_init(int (*fct)()) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| threads are started, at the beginning of the polling loop, right after the |
| list of _alloc() functions. This is also valid for the main thread and will |
| be called even if threads are disabled, so that it is guaranteed that this |
| function will be called in any circumstance. Each thread will call this |
| function exactly once when it starts, and calls are serialized by the |
| init_mutex which is held over all _alloc() and _init() calls, so that locking |
| is not necessary in these functions. In other words for all threads but the |
| current one, the sequence of _alloc() and _init() calls will be atomic. There |
| is no relation between the thread numbers and the callback ordering. The |
| function is expected to return non-zero on success, or zero on failure. A |
| failure will make the process emit a succinct error message and immediately |
| exit. See also hap_register_per_thread_alloc() for functions called before |
| these ones. |
| |
| - void hap_register_post_check(int (*fct)()) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called at |
| the end of the configuration validity checks, just at the point where the |
| program either forks or exits depending whether it's called with "-c" or not. |
| Such calls are suited for memory allocation or internal table pre-computation |
| that would preferably not be done on the fly to avoid inducing extra time to |
| a pure configuration check. Threads are not yet started so no protection is |
| required. The function is expected to return non-zero on success, or zero on |
| failure. A failure will make the process emit a succinct error message and |
| immediately exit. |
| |
| - void hap_register_post_deinit(void (*fct)()) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| freeing the global sections at the end of deinit(), after everything is |
| stopped. The process is single-threaded at this point, thus these functions |
| are suitable for releasing configuration elements provided that no other |
| _deinit() function uses them, i.e. only close/release what is strictly |
| private to the subsystem. Since such functions are mostly only called during |
| soft stops (reloads) or failed startups, they tend to experience much less |
| test coverage than others despite being more exposed, and as such a lot of |
| care must be taken to test them especially when facing partial subsystem |
| initializations followed by errors. |
| |
| - void hap_register_post_proxy_check(int (*fct)(struct proxy *)) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called for |
| each proxy, after the calls to _post_server_check(). This can allow, for |
| example, to pre-configure default values for an option in a frontend based on |
| the "bind" lines or something in a backend based on the "server" lines. It's |
| worth being aware that such a function must be careful not to waste too much |
| time in order not to significantly slow down configurations with tens of |
| thousands of backends. The function is expected to return non-zero on |
| success, or zero on failure. A failure will make the process emit a succinct |
| error message and immediately exit. |
| |
| - void hap_register_post_server_check(int (*fct)(struct server *)) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called for |
| each server, after the call to check_config_validity(). This can allow, for |
| example, to preset a health state on a server or to allocate a protocol- |
| specific memory area. It's worth being aware that such a function must be |
| careful not to waste too much time in order not to significantly slow down |
| configurations with tens of thousands of servers. The function is expected |
| to return non-zero on success, or zero on failure. A failure will make the |
| process emit a succinct error message and immediately exit. |
| |
| - void hap_register_proxy_deinit(void (*fct)(struct proxy *)) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| freeing the resources during deinit(). These functions will be called as part |
| of the proxy's resource cleanup. Note that some of the proxy's fields will |
| already have been freed and others not, so such a function must not use any |
| information from the proxy that is subject to being released. In particular, |
| all servers have already been deleted. Since such functions are mostly only |
| called during soft stops (reloads) or failed startups, they tend to |
| experience much less test coverage than others despite being more exposed, |
| and as such a lot of care must be taken to test them especially when facing |
| partial subsystem initializations followed by errors. It's worth mentioning |
| that too slow functions could have a significant impact on the configuration |
| check or exit time especially on large configurations. |
| |
| - void hap_register_server_deinit(void (*fct)(struct server *)) |
| |
| This adds a call to function <fct> to the list of functions to be called when |
| freeing the resources during deinit(). These functions will be called as part |
| of the server's resource cleanup. Note that some of the server's fields will |
| already have been freed and others not, so such a function must not use any |
| information from the server that is subject to being released. Since such |
| functions are mostly only called during soft stops (reloads) or failed |
| startups, they tend to experience much less test coverage than others despite |
| being more exposed, and as such a lot of care must be taken to test them |
| especially when facing partial subsystem initializations followed by errors. |
| It's worth mentioning that too slow functions could have a significant impact |
| on the configuration check or exit time especially on large configurations. |
| |
| |
| 4. Initialization stages |
| |
| In order to offer some guarantees, the startup of the program is split into |
| several stages. Some callbacks can be placed into each of these stages using |
| an INITCALL macro, with 0 to 3 arguments, respectively called INITCALL0 to |
| INITCALL3. These macros must be placed anywhere at the top level of a C file, |
| preferably at the end so that the referenced symbols have already been met, |
| but it may also be fine to place them right after the callbacks themselves. |
| |
| Such callbacks are referenced into small structures containing a pointer to the |
| function and 3 arguments. NULL replaces unused arguments. The callbacks are |
| cast to (void (*)(void *, void *, void *)) and the arguments to (void *). |
| |
| The first argument to the INITCALL macro is the initialization stage. The |
| second one is the callback function, and others if any are the arguments. |
| The init stage must be among the values of the "init_stage" enum, currently, |
| and in this execution order: |
| |
| - STG_PREPARE : used to preset variables, pre-initialize lookup tables and |
| pre-initialize list heads |
| - STG_LOCK : used to pre-initialize locks |
| - STG_ALLOC : used to allocate the required structures |
| - STG_POOL : used to create pools |
| - STG_REGISTER : used to register static lists such as keywords |
| - STG_INIT : used to initialize subsystems |
| |
| Each stage is guaranteed that previous stages have successfully completed. This |
| means that an INITCALL placed at stage STG_REGISTER is guaranteed that all |
| pools were already created and will be usable. Conversely, an INITCALL placed |
| at stage STG_PREPARE must not rely on any field that requires preliminary |
| allocation nor initialization. A callback cannot rely on other callbacks of the |
| same stage, as the execution order within a stage is undefined and essentially |
| depends on the linking order. |
| |
| Example: register a very early call to init_log() with no argument, and another |
| call to cli_register_kw(&cli_kws) much later: |
| |
| INITCALL0(STG_PREPARE, init_log); |
| INITCALL1(STG_REGISTER, cli_register_kw, &cli_kws); |
| |
| Technically speaking, each call to such a macro adds a distinct local symbol |
| whose dynamic name involves the line number. These symbols are placed into a |
| separate section and the beginning and end section pointers are provided by the |
| linker. When too old a linker is used, a fallback is applied consisting in |
| placing them into a linked list which is built by a constructor function for |
| each initcall (this takes more room). |
| |
| Due to the symbols internally using the line number, it is very important not |
| to place more than one INITCALL per line in the source file. |
| |
| It is also strongly recommended that functions and referenced arguments are |
| static symbols local to the source file, unless they are global registration |
| functions like in the example above with cli_register_kw(), where only the |
| argument is a local keywords table. |
| |
| INITCALLs do not expect the callback function to return anything and as such |
| do not perform any error check. As such, they are very similar to constructors |
| offered by the compiler except that they are segmented in stages. It is thus |
| the responsibility of the called functions to perform their own error checking |
| and to exit in case of error. This may change in the future. |
| |
| |
| 5. REGISTER family of macros |
| |
| The association of INITCALLs and registration functions allows to perform some |
| early dynamic registration of functions to be used anywhere, as well as values |
| to be added to existing lists without having to manipulate list elements. For |
| the sake of simplification, these combinations are available as a set of |
| REGISTER macros which register calls to certain functions at the appropriate |
| init stage. Such macros must be used at the top level in a file, just like |
| INITCALL macros. The following macros are currently supported. Please keep them |
| alphanumerically ordered: |
| |
| - REGISTER_BUILD_OPTS(str) |
| |
| Adds the constant string <str> to the list of build options. This is done by |
| registering a call to hap_register_build_opts(str, 0) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| The string will not be freed. |
| |
| - REGISTER_CONFIG_POSTPARSER(name, parser) |
| |
| Adds a call to function <parser> at the end of the config parsing. The |
| function is called at the very end of check_config_validity() and may be used |
| to initialize a subsystem based on global settings for example. This is done |
| by registering a call to cfg_register_postparser(name, parser) at stage |
| STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_CONFIG_SECTION(name, parse, post) |
| |
| Registers a new config section name <name> which will be parsed by function |
| <parse> (if not null), and with an optional call to function <post> at the |
| end of the section. Function <parse> must be of type (int (*parse)(const char |
| *file, int linenum, char **args, int inv)), and returns 0 on success or an |
| error code among the ERR_* set on failure. The <post> callback takes no |
| argument and returns a similar error code. This is achieved by registering a |
| call to cfg_register_section() with the three arguments at stage |
| STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_PER_THREAD_ALLOC(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_per_thread_alloc(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_PER_THREAD_DEINIT(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_per_thread_deinit(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_PER_THREAD_FREE(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_per_thread_free(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_PER_THREAD_INIT(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_per_thread_init(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_POOL(ptr, name, size) |
| |
| Used internally to declare a new pool. This is made by calling function |
| create_pool_callback() with these arguments at stage STG_POOL. Do not use it |
| directly, use either DECLARE_POOL() or DECLARE_STATIC_POOL() instead (see |
| below). |
| |
| - REGISTER_POST_CHECK(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_post_check(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_POST_DEINIT(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_post_deinit(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_POST_PROXY_CHECK(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_post_proxy_check(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_POST_SERVER_CHECK(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_post_server_check(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_PROXY_DEINIT(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_proxy_deinit(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| - REGISTER_SERVER_DEINIT(fct) |
| |
| Registers a call to register_server_deinit(fct) at stage STG_REGISTER. |
| |
| |
| 6. Other initialization macros |
| |
| On top of the INITCALL family of macros, a few other convenient macros were |
| created in order to simplify declarations or allocations: |
| |
| - DECLARE_POOL(ptr, name, size) |
| |
| Placed at the top level of a file, this declares a global memory pool as |
| variable <ptr>, name <name> and size <size> bytes per element. This is made |
| via a call to REGISTER_POOL() and by assigning the resulting pointer to |
| variable <ptr>. <ptr> will be created of type "struct pool_head *". If the |
| pool needs to be visible outside of the function (which is likely), it will |
| also need to be declared somewhere as "extern struct pool_head *<ptr>;". It |
| is recommended to place such declarations very early in the source file so |
| that the variable is already known to all subsequent functions which may use |
| it. |
| |
| - DECLARE_STATIC_POOL(ptr, name, size) |
| |
| Placed at the top level of a file, this declares a static memory pool as |
| variable <ptr>, name <name> and size <size> bytes per element. This is made |
| via a call to REGISTER_POOL() and by assigning the resulting pointer to local |
| variable <ptr>. <ptr> will be created of type "static struct pool_head *". It |
| is recommended to place such declarations very early in the source file so |
| that the variable is already known to all subsequent functions which may use |
| it. |