A special last buffer with cl->buf->pos set to NULL can be present in
a chain when writing request body if chunked encoding was used. This
resulted in a NULL pointer dereference if it happened to be the only
buffer left after a do...while loop iteration in ngx_write_chain_to_file().
The problem originally appeared in nginx 1.3.9 with chunked encoding
support. Additionally, rev. 3832b608dc8d (nginx 1.9.13) changed the
minimum number of buffers to trigger this from IOV_MAX (typically 1024)
to NGX_IOVS_PREALLOCATE (typically 64).
Fix is to skip such buffers in ngx_chain_to_iovec(), much like it is
done in other places.
When it's known that the kernel supports EPOLLRDHUP, there is no need in
additional recv() call to get EOF or error when the flag is absent in the
event generated by the kernel. A special runtime test is done at startup
to detect if EPOLLRDHUP is actually supported by the kernel because
epoll_ctl() silently ignores unknown flags.
With this knowledge it's now possible to drop the "ready" flag for partial
read. Previously, the "ready" flag was kept until the recv() returned EOF
or error. In particular, this change allows the lingering close heuristics
(which relies on the "ready" flag state) to actually work on Linux, and not
wait for more data in most cases.
The "available" flag is now used in the read event with the semantics similar
to the corresponding counter in kqueue.
Correct error code for NGX_EXDEV on Windows is ERROR_NOT_SAME_DEVICE,
"The system cannot move the file to a different disk drive".
Previously used ERROR_WRONG_DISK is about wrong diskette in the drive and
is not appropriate.
There is no real difference though, as MoveFile() is able to copy files
between disk drives, and will fail with ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED when asked
to copy directories. The ERROR_NOT_SAME_DEVICE error is only used
by MoveFileEx() when called without the MOVEFILE_COPY_ALLOWED flag.
On Windows there are two possible error codes which correspond to
the EEXIST error code: ERROR_FILE_EXISTS used by CreateFile(CREATE_NEW),
and ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS used by CreateDirectory().
MoveFile() seems to use both: ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS when moving within
one filesystem, and ERROR_FILE_EXISTS when copying a file to a different
drive.
Fixes various aspects of --test-build-devpoll, --test-build-eventport, and
--test-build-epoll.
In particular, if --test-build-devpoll was used on Linux, then "devpoll"
event method would be preferred over "epoll". Also, wrong definitions of
event macros were chosen.
The ngx_thread_write_chain_to_file() function introduced, which
uses ngx_file_t thread_handler, thread_ctx and thread_task fields.
The task context structure (ngx_thread_file_ctx_t) is the same for
both reading and writing, and can be safely shared as long as
operations are serialized.
The task->handler field is now always set (and not only when task is
allocated), as the same task can be used with different handlers.
The thread_write flag is introduced in the ngx_temp_file_t structure
to explicitly enable use of ngx_thread_write_chain_to_file() in
ngx_write_chain_to_temp_file() when supported by caller.
In collaboration with Valentin Bartenev.
This simplifies the interface of the ngx_thread_read() function.
Additionally, most of the thread operations now explicitly set
file->thread_task, file->thread_handler and file->thread_ctx,
to facilitate use of thread operations in other places.
(Potential problems remain with sendfile in threads though - it uses
file->thread_handler as set in ngx_output_chain(), and it should not
be overwritten to an incompatible one.)
In collaboration with Valentin Bartenev.
If a write event happens after sendfile() but before we've got the
sendfile results in the main thread, this write event will be ignored.
And if no more events will happen, the connection will hang.
Removing the events works in the simple cases, but not always, as
in some cases events are added back by an unrelated code. E.g.,
the upstream module adds write event in the ngx_http_upstream_init()
to track client aborts.
Fix is to use wev->complete instead. It is now set to 0 before
a sendfile() task is posted, and it is set to 1 once a write event
happens. If on completion of the sendfile() task wev->complete is 1,
we know that an event happened while we were executing sendfile(), and
the socket is still ready for writing even if sendfile() did not sent
all the data or returned EAGAIN.
While sendfilev() is documented to return -1 with EINVAL set
if the file was truncated, at least Solaris 11 silently returns 0,
and this results in CPU hog. Added a test to complain appropriately
if 0 is returned.
If sendfile in threads is used, it is possible that multiple
subrequests will trigger multiple ngx_linux_sendfile_thread() calls,
as operations are only serialized in output chain based on r->aio,
that is, on subrequest level.
This resulted in "task #N already active" alerts, in particular, when
running proxy_store.t with "aio threads; sendfile on;".
Fix is to tolerate duplicate calls, with an additional safety check
that the file is the same as previously used.
The same problem also affects "aio on; sendfile on;" on FreeBSD
(previously known as "aio sendfile;"), where aio->preload_handler()
could be called multiple times due to similar reasons, resulting in
"second aio post" alerts. Fix is the same as well.
It is also believed that similar problems can arise if a filter
calls the next body filter multiple times for some reason. These are
mostly theoretical though.
This fixes suboptimal behavior caused by surplus lseek() for sequential writes
on systems without pwrite(). A consecutive read after write might result in an
error on systems without pread() and pwrite().
Fortunately, at the moment there are no widely used systems without these
syscalls.
Resolved warnings about declarations that hide previous local declarations.
Warnings about WSASocketA() being deprecated resolved by explicit use of
WSASocketW() instead of WSASocket(). When compiling without IPv6 support,
WinSock deprecated warnings are disabled to allow use of gethostbyname().
Iterating through all connections takes a lot of CPU time, especially
with large number of worker connections configured. As a result
nginx processes used to consume CPU time during graceful shutdown.
To mitigate this we now only do a full scan for idle connections when
shutdown signal is received.
Transitions of connections to idle ones are now expected to be
avoided if the ngx_exiting flag is set. The upstream keepalive module
was modified to follow this.
With this change it's no longer needed to pass -D_GNU_SOURCE manually,
and -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 is set to use 64-bit off_t.
Note that nginx currently fails to work properly with master process
enabled on GNU Hurd, as fcntl(F_SETOWN) returns EOPNOTSUPP for sockets
as of GNU Hurd 0.6. Additionally, our strerror() preloading doesn't
work well with GNU Hurd, as it uses large numbers for most errors.
Two mechanisms are implemented to make it possible to store pointers
in shared memory on Windows, in particular on Windows Vista and later
versions with ASLR:
- The ngx_shm_remap() function added to allow remapping of a shared memory
zone to the address originally used for it in the master process. While
important, it doesn't solve the problem by itself as in many cases it's
not possible to use the address because of conflicts with other
allocations.
- We now create mappings at the same address in all processes by starting
mappings at predefined addresses normally unused by newborn processes.
These two mechanisms combined allow to use shared memory on Windows
almost without problems, including reloads.
Based on the patch by Sergey Brester:
http://mailman.nginx.org/pipermail/nginx-devel/2015-April/006836.html