blob: 0fa6fe720b1efedff86a19b7d27ff927e72fbc7b [file] [log] [blame]
2018-02-21 - Layering in haproxy 1.9
------------------------------------
2 main zones :
- application : reads from conn_streams, writes to conn_streams, often uses
streams
- connection : receives data from the network, presented into buffers
available via conn_streams, sends data to the network
The connection zone contains multiple layers which behave independantly in each
direction. The Rx direction is activated upon callbacks from the lower layers.
The Tx direction is activated recursively from the upper layers. Between every
two layers there may be a buffer, in each direction. When a buffer is full
either in Tx or Rx direction, this direction is paused from the network layer
and the location where the congestion is encountered. Upon end of congestion
(cs_recv() from the upper layer, of sendto() at the lower layers), a
tasklet_wakeup() is performed on the blocked layer so that suspended operations
can be resumed. In this case, the Rx side restarts propagating data upwards
from the lowest blocked level, while the Tx side restarts propagating data
downwards from the highest blocked level. Proceeding like this ensures that
information known to the producer may always be used to tailor the buffer sizes
or decide of a strategy to best aggregate data. Additionally, each time a layer
is crossed without transformation, it becomes possible to send without copying.
The Rx side notifies the application of data readiness using a wakeup or a
callback. The Tx side notifies the application of room availability once data
have been moved resulting in the uppermost buffer having some free space.
When crossing a mux downwards, it is possible that the sender is not allowed to
access the buffer because it is not yet its turn. It is not a problem, the data
remains in the conn_stream's buffer (or the stream one) and will be restarted
once the mux is ready to consume these data.
cs_recv() -------. cs_send()
^ +--------> |||||| -------------+ ^
| | -------' | | stream
--|----------|-------------------------------|-------|-------------------
| | V | connection
data .---. | | room
ready! |---| |---| available!
|---| |---|
|---| |---|
| | '---'
^ +------------+-------+ |
| | ^ | /
/ V | V /
/ recvfrom() | sendto() |
-------------|----------------|--------------|---------------------------
| | poll! V kernel
The cs_recv() function should act on pointers to buffer pointers, so that the
callee may decide to pass its own buffer directly by simply swapping pointers.
Similarly for cs_send() it is desirable to let the callee steal the buffer by
swapping the pointers. This way it remains possible to implement zero-copy
forwarding.
Some operation flags will be needed on cs_recv() :
- RECV_ZERO_COPY : refuse to merge new data into the current buffer if it
will result in a data copy (ie the buffer is not empty), unless no more
than XXX bytes have to be copied (eg: copying 2 cache lines may be cheaper
than waiting and playing with pointers)
- RECV_AT_ONCE : only perform the operation if it will result in the source
buffer to become empty at the end of the operation so that no two buffers
remain allocated at the end. It will most of the time result in either a
small read or a zero-copy operation.
- RECV_PEEK : retrieve a copy of pending data without removing these data
from the source buffer. Maybe an alternate solution could consist in
finding the pointer to the source buffer and accessing these data directly,
except that it might be less interesting for the long term, thread-wise.
- RECV_MIN : receive minimum X bytes (or less with a shutdown), or fail.
This should help various protocol parsers which need to receive a complete
frame before proceeding.
- RECV_ENOUGH : no more data expected after this read if it's of the
requested size, thus no need to re-enable receiving on the lower layers.
- RECV_ONE_SHOT : perform a single read without re-enabling reading on the
lower layers, like we currently do when receving an HTTP/1 request. Like
RECV_ENOUGH where any size is enough. Probably that the two could be merged
(eg: by having a MIN argument like RECV_MIN).
Some operation flags will be needed on cs_send() :
- SEND_ZERO_COPY : refuse to merge the presented data with existing data and
prefer to wait for current data to leave and try again, unless the consumer
considers the amount of data acceptable for a copy.
- SEND_AT_ONCE : only perform the operation if it will result in the source
buffer to become empty at the end of the operation so that no two buffers
remain allocated at the end. It will most of the time result in either a
small write or a zero-copy operation.
Both operations should return a composite status :
- number of bytes transfered
- status flags (shutr, shutw, reset, empty, full, ...)