blob: b74cea0cc9534da98d57760b81289af662647895 [file] [log] [blame]
2010/01/16 - Connection header adjustments depending on the transaction mode.
HTTP transactions supports 5 possible modes :
WANT_TUN : default, nothing changed
WANT_TUN + httpclose : headers set for close in both dirs
WANT_KAL : keep-alive desired in both dirs
WANT_SCL : want close with the server and KA with the client
WANT_CLO : want close on both sides.
When only WANT_TUN is set, nothing is changed nor analysed, so for commodity
below, we'll refer to WANT_TUN+httpclose as WANT_TUN.
The mode is adjusted in 3 steps :
- configuration sets initial mode
- request headers set required request mode
- response headers set the final mode
1) Adjusting the initial mode via the configuration
option httpclose => TUN
option http-keep-alive => KAL
option http-server-close => SCL
option forceclose => CLO
Note that option httpclose combined with any other option is equivalent to
forceclose.
2) Adjusting the request mode once the request is parsed
If we cannot determine the body length from the headers, we set the mode to CLO
but later we'll switch to tunnel mode once forwarding the body. That way, all
parties are informed of the correct mode.
Depending on the request version and request Connection header, we may have to
adjust the current transaction mode and to update the connection header.
mode req_ver req_hdr new_mode hdr_change
TUN 1.0 - TUN -
TUN 1.0 ka TUN del_ka
TUN 1.0 close TUN del_close
TUN 1.0 both TUN del_ka, del_close
TUN 1.1 - TUN add_close
TUN 1.1 ka TUN del_ka, add_close
TUN 1.1 close TUN -
TUN 1.1 both TUN del_ka
KAL 1.0 - CLO -
KAL 1.0 ka KAL -
KAL 1.0 close CLO del_close
KAL 1.0 both CLO del_ka, del_close
KAL 1.1 - KAL -
KAL 1.1 ka KAL del_ka
KAL 1.1 close CLO -
KAL 1.1 both CLO del_ka
SCL 1.0 - CLO -
SCL 1.0 ka SCL del_ka
SCL 1.0 close CLO del_close
SCL 1.0 both CLO del_ka, del_close
SCL 1.1 - SCL add_close
SCL 1.1 ka SCL del_ka, add_close
SCL 1.1 close CLO -
SCL 1.1 both CLO del_ka
CLO 1.0 - CLO -
CLO 1.0 ka CLO del_ka
CLO 1.0 close CLO del_close
CLO 1.0 both CLO del_ka, del_close
CLO 1.1 - CLO add_close
CLO 1.1 ka CLO del_ka, add_close
CLO 1.1 close CLO -
CLO 1.1 both CLO del_ka
=> Summary:
- KAL and SCL are only possible with the same requests :
- 1.0 + ka
- 1.1 + ka or nothing
- CLO is assumed for any non-TUN request which contains at least a close
header, as well as for any 1.0 request without a keep-alive header.
- del_ka is set whenever we want a CLO or SCL or TUN and req contains a KA,
or when the req is 1.1 and contains a KA.
- del_close is set whenever a 1.0 request contains a close.
- add_close is set whenever a 1.1 request must be switched to TUN, SCL, CLO
and did not have a close hdr.
Note that the request processing is performed in two passes, one with the
frontend's config and a second one with the backend's config. It is only
possible to "raise" the mode between them, so during the second pass, we have
no reason to re-add a header that we previously removed. As an exception, the
TUN mode is converted to CLO once combined because in fact it's an httpclose
option set on a TUN mode connection :
BE (2)
| TUN KAL SCL CLO
----+----+----+----+----
TUN | TUN CLO CLO CLO
+
KAL | CLO KAL SCL CLO
FE +
(1) SCL | CLO SCL SCL CLO
+
CLO | CLO CLO CLO CLO
3) Adjusting the final mode once the response is parsed
This part becomes trickier. It is possible that the server responds with a
version that the client does not necessarily understand. Obviously, 1.1 clients
are asusmed to understand 1.0 responses. The problematic case is a 1.0 client
receiving a 1.1 response without any Connection header. Some 1.0 clients might
know that in 1.1 this means "keep-alive" while others might ignore the version
and assume a "close". Since we know the version on both sides, we may have to
adjust some responses to remove any ambiguous case. That's the reason why the
following table considers both the request and the response version. If the
response length cannot be determined, we switch to CLO mode.
mode res_ver res_hdr req_ver new_mode hdr_change
TUN 1.0 - any TUN -
TUN 1.0 ka any TUN del_ka
TUN 1.0 close any TUN del_close
TUN 1.0 both any TUN del_ka, del_close
TUN 1.1 - any TUN add_close
TUN 1.1 ka any TUN del_ka, add_close
TUN 1.1 close any TUN -
TUN 1.1 both any TUN del_ka
KAL 1.0 - any SCL add_ka
KAL 1.0 ka any KAL -
KAL 1.0 close any SCL del_close, add_ka
KAL 1.0 both any SCL del_close
KAL 1.1 - 1.0 KAL add_ka
KAL 1.1 - 1.1 KAL -
KAL 1.1 ka 1.0 KAL -
KAL 1.1 ka 1.1 KAL del_ka
KAL 1.1 close 1.0 SCL del_close, add_ka
KAL 1.1 close 1.1 SCL del_close
KAL 1.1 both 1.0 SCL del_close
KAL 1.1 both 1.1 SCL del_ka, del_close
SCL 1.0 - any SCL add_ka
SCL 1.0 ka any SCL -
SCL 1.0 close any SCL del_close, add_ka
SCL 1.0 both any SCL del_close
SCL 1.1 - 1.0 SCL add_ka
SCL 1.1 - 1.1 SCL -
SCL 1.1 ka 1.0 SCL -
SCL 1.1 ka 1.1 SCL del_ka
SCL 1.1 close 1.0 SCL del_close, add_ka
SCL 1.1 close 1.1 SCL del_close
SCL 1.1 both 1.0 SCL del_close
SCL 1.1 both 1.1 SCL del_ka, del_close
CLO 1.0 - any CLO -
CLO 1.0 ka any CLO del_ka
CLO 1.0 close any CLO del_close
CLO 1.0 both any CLO del_ka, del_close
CLO 1.1 - any CLO add_close
CLO 1.1 ka any CLO del_ka, add_close
CLO 1.1 close any CLO -
CLO 1.1 both any CLO del_ka
=> in summary :
- the header operations do not depend on the initial mode, they only depend
on versions and current connection header(s).
- both CLO and TUN modes work similarly, they need to set a close mode on the
response. A 1.1 response will exclusively need the close header, while a 1.0
response will have it removed. Any keep-alive header is always removed when
found.
- a KAL request where the server wants to close turns into an SCL response so
that we release the server but still maintain the connection to the client.
- the KAL and SCL modes work the same way as we need to set keep-alive on the
response. So a 1.0 response will only have the keep-alive header with any
close header removed. A 1.1 response will have the keep-alive header added
for 1.0 requests and the close header removed for all requests.
Note that the SCL and CLO modes will automatically cause the server connection
to be closed at the end of the data transfer.