| How it works ? (unfinished and inexact) |
| |
| For TCP and HTTP : |
| |
| - listeners create listening sockets with a READ callback pointing to the |
| protocol-specific accept() function. |
| |
| - the protocol-specific accept() function then accept()'s the connection and |
| instantiates a "server TCP socket" (which is dedicated to the client side), |
| and configures it (non_block, get_original_dst, ...). |
| |
| For TCP : |
| - in case of pure TCP, a request buffer is created, as well as a "client TCP |
| socket", which tries to connect to the server. |
| |
| - once the connection is established, the response buffer is allocated and |
| connected to both ends. |
| |
| - both sockets are set to "autonomous mode" so that they only wake up their |
| supervising session when they encounter a special condition (error or close). |
| |
| |
| For HTTP : |
| - in case of HTTP, a request buffer is created with the "HOLD" flag set and |
| a read limit to support header rewriting (may be this one will be removed |
| eventually because it's better to limit only to the buffer size and report |
| an error when rewritten data overflows) |
| |
| - a "flow analyzer" is attached to the buffer (or possibly multiple flow |
| analyzers). For the request, the flow analyzer is "http_lb_req". The flow |
| analyzer is a function which gets called when new data is present and |
| blocked. It has a timeout (request timeout). It can also be bypassed on |
| demand. |
| |
| - when the "http_lb_req" has received the whole request, it creates a client |
| socket with all the parameters needed to try to connect to the server. When |
| the connection establishes, the response buffer is allocated on the fly, |
| put to HOLD mode, and a an "http_lb_resp" flow analyzer is attached to the |
| buffer. |
| |
| |
| For client-side HTTPS : |
| |
| - the accept() function must completely instantiate a TCP socket + an SSL |
| reader. It is when the SSL session is complete that we call the |
| protocol-specific accept(), and create its buffer. |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Conclusions |
| ----------- |
| |
| - we need a generic TCP accept() function with a lot of flags set by the |
| listener, to tell it what info we need to get at the accept() time, and |
| what flags will have to be set on the socket. |
| |
| - once the TCP accept() function ends, it wakes up the protocol supervisor |
| which is in charge of creating the buffers, etc, switch states, etc... |
| |