blob: c238bc880f5f19dfe11815ae29f186f02c97709a [file] [log] [blame]
/*
* File descriptors management functions.
*
* Copyright 2000-2014 Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
* 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This code implements an events cache for file descriptors. It remembers the
* readiness of a file descriptor after a return from poll() and the fact that
* an I/O attempt failed on EAGAIN. Events in the cache which are still marked
* ready and active are processed just as if they were reported by poll().
*
* This serves multiple purposes. First, it significantly improves performance
* by avoiding to subscribe to polling unless absolutely necessary, so most
* events are processed without polling at all, especially send() which
* benefits from the socket buffers. Second, it is the only way to support
* edge-triggered pollers (eg: EPOLL_ET). And third, it enables I/O operations
* that are backed by invisible buffers. For example, SSL is able to read a
* whole socket buffer and not deliver it to the application buffer because
* it's full. Unfortunately, it won't be reported by a poller anymore until
* some new activity happens. The only way to call it again thus is to keep
* this readiness information in the cache and to access it without polling
* once the FD is enabled again.
*
* One interesting feature of the cache is that it maintains the principle
* of speculative I/O introduced in haproxy 1.3 : the first time an event is
* enabled, the FD is considered as ready so that the I/O attempt is performed
* via the cache without polling. And the polling happens only when EAGAIN is
* first met. This avoids polling for HTTP requests, especially when the
* defer-accept mode is used. It also avoids polling for sending short data
* such as requests to servers or short responses to clients.
*
* The cache consists in a list of active events and a list of updates.
* Active events are events that are expected to come and that we must report
* to the application until it asks to stop or asks to poll. Updates are new
* requests for changing an FD state. Updates are the only way to create new
* events. This is important because it means that the number of cached events
* cannot increase between updates and will only grow one at a time while
* processing updates. All updates must always be processed, though events
* might be processed by small batches if required.
*
* There is no direct link between the FD and the updates list. There is only a
* bit in the fdtab[] to indicate than a file descriptor is already present in
* the updates list. Once an fd is present in the updates list, it will have to
* be considered even if its changes are reverted in the middle or if the fd is
* replaced.
*
* It is important to understand that as long as all expected events are
* processed, they might starve the polled events, especially because polled
* I/O starvation quickly induces more cached I/O. One solution to this
* consists in only processing a part of the events at once, but one drawback
* is that unhandled events will still wake the poller up. Using an edge-
* triggered poller such as EPOLL_ET will solve this issue though.
*
* Since we do not want to scan all the FD list to find cached I/O events,
* we store them in a list consisting in a linear array holding only the FD
* indexes right now. Note that a closed FD cannot exist in the cache, because
* it is closed by fd_delete() which in turn calls fd_release_cache_entry()
* which always removes it from the list.
*
* The FD array has to hold a back reference to the cache. This reference is
* always valid unless the FD is not in the cache and is not updated, in which
* case the reference points to index 0.
*
* The event state for an FD, as found in fdtab[].state, is maintained for each
* direction. The state field is built this way, with R bits in the low nibble
* and W bits in the high nibble for ease of access and debugging :
*
* 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
* [ 0 | PW | RW | AW | 0 | PR | RR | AR ]
*
* A* = active *R = read
* P* = polled *W = write
* R* = ready
*
* An FD is marked "active" when there is a desire to use it.
* An FD is marked "polled" when it is registered in the polling.
* An FD is marked "ready" when it has not faced a new EAGAIN since last wake-up
* (it is a cache of the last EAGAIN regardless of polling changes).
*
* We have 8 possible states for each direction based on these 3 flags :
*
* +---+---+---+----------+---------------------------------------------+
* | P | R | A | State | Description |
* +---+---+---+----------+---------------------------------------------+
* | 0 | 0 | 0 | DISABLED | No activity desired, not ready. |
* | 0 | 0 | 1 | MUSTPOLL | Activity desired via polling. |
* | 0 | 1 | 0 | STOPPED | End of activity without polling. |
* | 0 | 1 | 1 | ACTIVE | Activity desired without polling. |
* | 1 | 0 | 0 | ABORT | Aborted poll(). Not frequently seen. |
* | 1 | 0 | 1 | POLLED | FD is being polled. |
* | 1 | 1 | 0 | PAUSED | FD was paused while ready (eg: buffer full) |
* | 1 | 1 | 1 | READY | FD was marked ready by poll() |
* +---+---+---+----------+---------------------------------------------+
*
* The transitions are pretty simple :
* - fd_want_*() : set flag A
* - fd_stop_*() : clear flag A
* - fd_cant_*() : clear flag R (when facing EAGAIN)
* - fd_may_*() : set flag R (upon return from poll())
* - sync() : if (A) { if (!R) P := 1 } else { P := 0 }
*
* The PAUSED, ABORT and MUSTPOLL states are transient for level-trigerred
* pollers and are fixed by the sync() which happens at the beginning of the
* poller. For event-triggered pollers, only the MUSTPOLL state will be
* transient and ABORT will lead to PAUSED. The ACTIVE state is the only stable
* one which has P != A.
*
* The READY state is a bit special as activity on the FD might be notified
* both by the poller or by the cache. But it is needed for some multi-layer
* protocols (eg: SSL) where connection activity is not 100% linked to FD
* activity. Also some pollers might prefer to implement it as ACTIVE if
* enabling/disabling the FD is cheap. The READY and ACTIVE states are the
* two states for which a cache entry is allocated.
*
* The state transitions look like the diagram below. Only the 4 right states
* have polling enabled :
*
* (POLLED=0) (POLLED=1)
*
* +----------+ sync +-------+
* | DISABLED | <----- | ABORT | (READY=0, ACTIVE=0)
* +----------+ +-------+
* clr | ^ set | ^
* | | | |
* v | set v | clr
* +----------+ sync +--------+
* | MUSTPOLL | -----> | POLLED | (READY=0, ACTIVE=1)
* +----------+ +--------+
* ^ poll | ^
* | | |
* | EAGAIN v | EAGAIN
* +--------+ +-------+
* | ACTIVE | | READY | (READY=1, ACTIVE=1)
* +--------+ +-------+
* clr | ^ set | ^
* | | | |
* v | set v | clr
* +---------+ sync +--------+
* | STOPPED | <------ | PAUSED | (READY=1, ACTIVE=0)
* +---------+ +--------+
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <common/compat.h>
#include <common/config.h>
#include <types/global.h>
#include <proto/fd.h>
#include <proto/port_range.h>
struct fdtab *fdtab = NULL; /* array of all the file descriptors */
struct fdinfo *fdinfo = NULL; /* less-often used infos for file descriptors */
int maxfd; /* # of the highest fd + 1 */
int totalconn; /* total # of terminated sessions */
int actconn; /* # of active sessions */
struct poller pollers[MAX_POLLERS];
struct poller cur_poller;
int nbpollers = 0;
unsigned int *fd_cache = NULL; // FD events cache
unsigned int *fd_updt = NULL; // FD updates list
int fd_cache_num = 0; // number of events in the cache
int fd_nbupdt = 0; // number of updates in the list
/* Deletes an FD from the fdsets, and recomputes the maxfd limit.
* The file descriptor is also closed.
*/
void fd_delete(int fd)
{
if (fdtab[fd].linger_risk) {
/* this is generally set when connecting to servers */
setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_LINGER,
(struct linger *) &nolinger, sizeof(struct linger));
}
if (cur_poller.clo)
cur_poller.clo(fd);
fd_release_cache_entry(fd);
fdtab[fd].state = 0;
port_range_release_port(fdinfo[fd].port_range, fdinfo[fd].local_port);
fdinfo[fd].port_range = NULL;
close(fd);
fdtab[fd].owner = NULL;
fdtab[fd].new = 0;
while ((maxfd-1 >= 0) && !fdtab[maxfd-1].owner)
maxfd--;
}
/* Scan and process the cached events. This should be called right after
* the poller.
*/
void fd_process_cached_events()
{
int fd, entry, e;
for (entry = 0; entry < fd_cache_num; ) {
fd = fd_cache[entry];
e = fdtab[fd].state;
/* Principle: events which are marked FD_EV_ACTIVE are processed
* with their usual I/O callback. The callback may remove the
* events from the cache or tag them for polling. Changes will be
* applied on next round. Cache entries with no more activity are
* automatically scheduled for removal.
*/
fdtab[fd].ev &= FD_POLL_STICKY;
if ((e & (FD_EV_READY_R | FD_EV_ACTIVE_R)) == (FD_EV_READY_R | FD_EV_ACTIVE_R))
fdtab[fd].ev |= FD_POLL_IN;
if ((e & (FD_EV_READY_W | FD_EV_ACTIVE_W)) == (FD_EV_READY_W | FD_EV_ACTIVE_W))
fdtab[fd].ev |= FD_POLL_OUT;
if (fdtab[fd].iocb && fdtab[fd].owner && fdtab[fd].ev)
fdtab[fd].iocb(fd);
else
updt_fd(fd);
/* If the fd was removed from the cache, it has been
* replaced by the next one that we don't want to skip !
*/
if (entry < fd_cache_num && fd_cache[entry] != fd)
continue;
entry++;
}
}
/* Check the events attached to a file descriptor, update its cache
* accordingly, and call the associated I/O callback. If new updates are
* detected, the function tries to process them as well in order to save
* wakeups after accept().
*/
void fd_process_polled_events(int fd)
{
int new_updt, old_updt;
/* First thing to do is to mark the reported events as ready, in order
* for them to later be continued from the cache without polling if
* they have to be interrupted (eg: recv fills a buffer).
*/
if (fdtab[fd].ev & (FD_POLL_IN | FD_POLL_HUP | FD_POLL_ERR))
fd_may_recv(fd);
if (fdtab[fd].ev & (FD_POLL_OUT | FD_POLL_ERR))
fd_may_send(fd);
if (fdtab[fd].cache) {
/* This fd is already cached, no need to process it now. */
return;
}
if (unlikely(!fdtab[fd].iocb || !fdtab[fd].ev)) {
/* nothing to do */
return;
}
/* Save number of updates to detect creation of new FDs. */
old_updt = fd_nbupdt;
fdtab[fd].iocb(fd);
/* One or more fd might have been created during the iocb().
* This mainly happens with new incoming connections that have
* just been accepted, so we'd like to process them immediately
* for better efficiency, as it saves one useless task wakeup.
* Second benefit, if at the end the fds are disabled again, we can
* safely destroy their update entry to reduce the scope of later
* scans. This is the reason we scan the new entries backwards.
*/
for (new_updt = fd_nbupdt; new_updt > old_updt; new_updt--) {
fd = fd_updt[new_updt - 1];
if (!fdtab[fd].new)
continue;
fdtab[fd].new = 0;
fdtab[fd].ev &= FD_POLL_STICKY;
if ((fdtab[fd].state & FD_EV_STATUS_R) == (FD_EV_READY_R | FD_EV_ACTIVE_R))
fdtab[fd].ev |= FD_POLL_IN;
if ((fdtab[fd].state & FD_EV_STATUS_W) == (FD_EV_READY_W | FD_EV_ACTIVE_W))
fdtab[fd].ev |= FD_POLL_OUT;
if (fdtab[fd].ev && fdtab[fd].iocb && fdtab[fd].owner)
fdtab[fd].iocb(fd);
/* we can remove this update entry if it's the last one and is
* unused, otherwise we don't touch anything, especially given
* that the FD might have been closed already.
*/
if (new_updt == fd_nbupdt && !fd_recv_active(fd) && !fd_send_active(fd)) {
fdtab[fd].updated = 0;
fd_nbupdt--;
}
}
}
/* disable the specified poller */
void disable_poller(const char *poller_name)
{
int p;
for (p = 0; p < nbpollers; p++)
if (strcmp(pollers[p].name, poller_name) == 0)
pollers[p].pref = 0;
}
/*
* Initialize the pollers till the best one is found.
* If none works, returns 0, otherwise 1.
*/
int init_pollers()
{
int p;
struct poller *bp;
if ((fd_cache = (uint32_t *)calloc(1, sizeof(uint32_t) * global.maxsock)) == NULL)
goto fail_cache;
if ((fd_updt = (uint32_t *)calloc(1, sizeof(uint32_t) * global.maxsock)) == NULL)
goto fail_updt;
do {
bp = NULL;
for (p = 0; p < nbpollers; p++)
if (!bp || (pollers[p].pref > bp->pref))
bp = &pollers[p];
if (!bp || bp->pref == 0)
break;
if (bp->init(bp)) {
memcpy(&cur_poller, bp, sizeof(*bp));
return 1;
}
} while (!bp || bp->pref == 0);
return 0;
fail_updt:
free(fd_cache);
fail_cache:
return 0;
}
/*
* Deinitialize the pollers.
*/
void deinit_pollers() {
struct poller *bp;
int p;
for (p = 0; p < nbpollers; p++) {
bp = &pollers[p];
if (bp && bp->pref)
bp->term(bp);
}
free(fd_updt);
free(fd_cache);
fd_updt = NULL;
fd_cache = NULL;
}
/*
* Lists the known pollers on <out>.
* Should be performed only before initialization.
*/
int list_pollers(FILE *out)
{
int p;
int last, next;
int usable;
struct poller *bp;
fprintf(out, "Available polling systems :\n");
usable = 0;
bp = NULL;
last = next = -1;
while (1) {
for (p = 0; p < nbpollers; p++) {
if ((next < 0 || pollers[p].pref > next)
&& (last < 0 || pollers[p].pref < last)) {
next = pollers[p].pref;
if (!bp || (pollers[p].pref > bp->pref))
bp = &pollers[p];
}
}
if (next == -1)
break;
for (p = 0; p < nbpollers; p++) {
if (pollers[p].pref == next) {
fprintf(out, " %10s : ", pollers[p].name);
if (pollers[p].pref == 0)
fprintf(out, "disabled, ");
else
fprintf(out, "pref=%3d, ", pollers[p].pref);
if (pollers[p].test(&pollers[p])) {
fprintf(out, " test result OK");
if (next > 0)
usable++;
} else {
fprintf(out, " test result FAILED");
if (bp == &pollers[p])
bp = NULL;
}
fprintf(out, "\n");
}
}
last = next;
next = -1;
};
fprintf(out, "Total: %d (%d usable), will use %s.\n", nbpollers, usable, bp ? bp->name : "none");
return 0;
}
/*
* Some pollers may lose their connection after a fork(). It may be necessary
* to create initialize part of them again. Returns 0 in case of failure,
* otherwise 1. The fork() function may be NULL if unused. In case of error,
* the the current poller is destroyed and the caller is responsible for trying
* another one by calling init_pollers() again.
*/
int fork_poller()
{
int fd;
for (fd = 0; fd <= maxfd; fd++) {
if (fdtab[fd].owner) {
fdtab[fd].cloned = 1;
}
}
if (cur_poller.fork) {
if (cur_poller.fork(&cur_poller))
return 1;
cur_poller.term(&cur_poller);
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
/*
* Local variables:
* c-indent-level: 8
* c-basic-offset: 8
* End:
*/