Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Previously, after seeing upgrade to HTTP/2, we feed data followed by
upgrade response headers directly to nghttp2_session_mem_recv() in
Curl_http2_switched(). But it turns out that passed buffer, mem, is
part of stream->mem, and callbacks called by
nghttp2_session_mem_recv() will write stream specific data into
stream->mem, overwriting input data. This will corrupt input, and
most likely frame length error is detected by nghttp2 library. The
fix is first copy the passed data to HTTP/2 connection buffer,
httpc->inbuf, and call nghttp2_session_mem_recv().
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Coverity CID 1299426 warned about possible NULL dereference otherwise,
but that would only ever happen if we get invalid HTTP/2 data with
frames for stream 0. Avoid this risk by returning early when stream 0 is
used.
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This commit just add implicitly opened stream 1 to streams hash.
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It makes them easier to match output from the nghttpd test server.
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Previously, when we send all given buffer in data_source_callback, we
return NGHTTP2_ERR_DEFERRED, and nghttp2 library removes this stream
temporarily for writing. This itself is good. If this is the sole
stream in the session, nghttp2_session_want_write() returns zero,
which means that libcurl does not check writeability of the underlying
socket. This leads to very slow upload, because it seems curl only
upload 16k something per 1 second. To fix this, if we still have data
to send, call nghttp2_session_resume_data after nghttp2_session_send.
This makes nghttp2_session_want_write() returns nonzero (if connection
window still opens), and as a result, socket writeability is checked,
and upload speed becomes normal.
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Use a curl_off_t for upload left
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as after 4883f7019d3, the *_clean() function only flushes the hash.
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We could get stream ID not in the hash in on_stream_close. For
example, if we decided to reject stream (e.g., PUSH_PROMISE), then we
don't create stream and store it in hash with its stream ID.
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This commit requires nghttp2 v1.0.0 to compile, and migrate to v1.0.0,
and utilize recent version of nghttp2 to simplify the code,
First we use nghttp2_option_set_no_recv_client_magic function to
detect nghttp2 v1.0.0. That function only exists since v1.0.0.
Since nghttp2 v0.7.5, nghttp2 ensures header field ordering, and
validates received header field. If it found error, RST_STREAM with
PROTOCOL_ERROR is issued. Since we require v1.0.0, we can utilize
this feature to simplify libcurl code. This commit does this.
Migration from 0.7 series are done based on nghttp2 migration
document. For libcurl, we removed the code sending first 24 bytes
client magic. It is now done by nghttp2 library.
on_invalid_frame_recv callback signature changed, and is updated
accordingly.
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... and suddenly things work much better!
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... so that they'll get handled next in the multi loop.
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to allow code to act differently on the situation.
Also added some more info message for the connection re-use function to
make it clearer when connections are not re-used.
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It makes us use less memory when not doing HTTP/2 and subsequently also
makes us not have to cleanup HTTP/2 related data when not using HTTP/2!
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Previously when we do pause because of out of buffer, we just throw
away unread data in connection buffer. This just broke protocol
framing, and I saw occasional FRAME_SIZE_ERROR. This commit fix this
issue by remembering how much data read, and in the next iteration, we
process remaining data.
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This commit fixes the bug that streams get stuck if stream gets some
DATA, and stream->closed becomes true at the same time. Previously,
in this condition, after we processed DATA, we are going to try to
read data from underlying transport, but there is no data, and gets
EAGAIN. There was no code path to evaludate stream->closed.
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With the "drained" functionality we can get here slightly asynchronously
so the stream have have been closed but there is pending data left to
read.
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No need to wait for our "spot" like for pipelining
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... which is necessary since the socket won't be readable but there is
data waiting in the buffer.
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... from the connection struct. The stream one being the 'struct HTTP'
which is kept in the SessionHandle struct (easy handle).
lookup streams for incoming frames in the stream hash, hashing is based
on the stream id and we get the SessionHandle for the incoming stream
that way.
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Once we know we are HTTP/2 enabled we know the server can multiplex.
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Previously in Curl_http2_switched, we called nghttp2_session_mem_recv to
parse incoming data which were already received while curl was handling
upgrade. But we didn't call nghttp2_session_send, and it led to make
curl not send any response to the received frames. Most likely, we
received SETTINGS from server at this point, so we missed opportunity to
send SETTINGS + ACK. This commit adds missing nghttp2_session_send call
in Curl_http2_switched to fix this issue.
Bug: https://github.com/bagder/curl/issues/192
Reported-by: Stefan Eissing
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This header file must be included after all header files except
memdebug.h, as it does similar memory function redefinitions and can be
similarly affected by conflicting definitions in system or dependent
library headers.
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... it would otherwise lead to memory leakage if we never actually do
the switch.
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We prematurely changed protocol handler to HTTP/2 which made things very
slow (and wrong).
Reported-by: Stefan Eissing
Bug: https://github.com/bagder/curl/issues/169
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Since we just started make use of free(NULL) in order to simplify code,
this change takes it a step further and:
- converts lots of Curl_safefree() calls to good old free()
- makes Curl_safefree() not check the pointer before free()
The (new) rule of thumb is: if you really want a function call that
frees a pointer and then assigns it to NULL, then use Curl_safefree().
But we will prefer just using free() from now on.
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