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authorMonty Brandenberg <monty@lindenlab.com>2013-09-17 21:55:44 +0000
committerMonty Brandenberg <monty@lindenlab.com>2013-09-17 21:55:44 +0000
commitdab920c26b36e032876592ca827a3a31f067a9ba (patch)
treec9ac4bd267144c0fdb609f9f0837a71999c92749 /indra/llcorehttp/README.Linden
parent99c60b83f15a3c40ecf0e5f144cfc060b37c4cf8 (diff)
SH-4492 Create a useful README for llcorehttp.
First edit complete. Use the library in 15 minutes. Describe the code. Refinements to the initial try. Describe that code. Still to do: more refinements, how to choose a policy class, FAQ.
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+
+
+
+1. HTTP fetching in 15 Minutes
+
+ Let's start with a trivial working example. You'll need a throwaway
+ build of the viewer. And we'll use indra/newview/llappviewer.cpp as
+ our host.
+
+ Add some needed headers:
+
+
+ #include "httpcommon.h"
+ #include "httprequest.h"
+ #include "httphandler.h"
+
+
+ You'll need to derive a class from HttpHandler (not HttpHandle).
+ This is used to deliver notifications of HTTP completion to your
+ code. Place it near the top, before LLDeferredTaskList, say:
+
+
+ class MyHandler : public LLCore::HttpHandler
+ {
+ public:
+ MyHandler()
+ : LLCore::HttpHandler()
+ {}
+
+ virtual void onCompleted(LLCore::HttpHandle /* handle */,
+ LLCore::HttpResponse * /* response */)
+ {
+ LL_INFOS("Hack") << "It is happening again." << LL_ENDL;
+
+ delete this; // Last statement
+ }
+ };
+
+
+ Add some statics up there as well:
+
+
+ // Our request object. Allocate during initialiation.
+ static LLCore::HttpRequest * my_request(NULL);
+
+ // The policy class for HTTP traffic.
+ // Use HttpRequest::DEFAULT_POLICY_ID, but DO NOT SHIP WITH THIS VALUE!!
+ static LLCore::HttpRequest::policy_t my_policy(LLCore::HttpRequest::DEFAULT_POLICY_ID);
+
+ // Priority for HTTP requests. Use 0U.
+ static LLCore::HttpRequest::priority_t my_priority(0U);
+
+
+ In LLAppViewer::init() after mAppCoreHttp.init(), create a request object:
+
+
+ my_request = new LLCore::HttpRequest();
+
+
+ In LLAppViewer::mainLoop(), just before entering the while loop,
+ we'll kick off one HTTP request:
+
+
+ // Construct a handler object (we'll use the heap this time):
+ MyHandler * my_handler = new MyHandler;
+
+ // Issue a GET request to 'http://www.example.com/' kicking off
+ // all the I/O, retry logic, etc.
+ LLCore::HttpHandle handle;
+ handle = my_request->requestGet(my_policy,
+ my_priority,
+ "http://www.example.com/",
+ NULL,
+ NULL,
+ my_handler);
+ if (LLCORE_HTTP_HANDLE_INVALID == handle)
+ {
+ LL_WARNS("Hack") << "Failed to launch HTTP request. Try again."
+ << LL_ENDL;
+ }
+
+
+ Finally, arrange to periodically call update() on the request object
+ to find out when the request completes. This will be done by
+ calling the onCompleted() method with status information and
+ response data from the HTTP operation. Add this to the
+ LLAppViewer::idle() method after the ping:
+
+
+ my_request->update(0);
+
+
+ That's it. Build it, run it and watch the log file. You should get
+ the "It is happening again." message indicating that the HTTP
+ operation completed in some manner.
+
+
+2. What Does All That Mean
+
+ MyHandler/HttpHandler. This class replaces the Responder-style in
+ legacy code. One method is currently defined. It is used for all
+ request completions, successful or failed:
+
+
+ void onCompleted(LLCore::HttpHandle /* handle */,
+ LLCore::HttpResponse * /* response */);
+
+
+ The onCompleted() method is invoked as a callback during calls to
+ HttpRequest::update(). All I/O is completed asynchronously in
+ another thread. But notifications are polled by calling update()
+ and invoking a handler for completed requests.
+
+ In this example, the invocation also deletes the handler (which is
+ never referenced by the llcorehttp code again). But other
+ allocation models are possible including handlers shared by many
+ requests, stack-based handlers and handlers mixed in with other,
+ unrelated classes.
+
+ LLCore::HttpRequest(). Instances of this class are used to request
+ all major functions of the library. Initialization, starting
+ requests, delivering final notification of completion and various
+ utility operations are all done via instances. There is one very
+ important rule for instances:
+
+ Request objects may NOT be shared between threads.
+
+ my_priority. The APIs support the idea of priority ordering of
+ requests but it hasn't been implemented and the hope is that this
+ will become useless and removed from the interface. Use 0U except
+ as noted.
+
+ my_policy. This is an important one. This library attempts to
+ manage TCP connection usage more rigorously than in the past. This
+ is done by issuing requests to a queue that has various settable
+ properties. These establish connection usage for the queue as well
+ as how queues compete with one another. (This is patterned after
+ class-based queueing used in various networking stacks.) Several
+ classes are pre-defined. Deciding when to use an existing class and
+ when to create a new one will determine what kind of experience
+ users have. We'll pick up this question in detail below.
+
+ requestGet(). Issues an ordinary HTTP GET request to a given URL
+ and associating the request with a policy class, a priority and an
+ response handler. Two additional arguments, not used here, allow
+ for additional headers on the request and for per-request options.
+ If successful, the call returns a handle whose value is other than
+ LLCORE_HTTP_HANDLE_INVALID. The HTTP operation is then performed
+ asynchronously by another thread without any additional work by the
+ caller. If the handle returned is invalid, you can get the status
+ code by calling my_request->getStatus().
+
+ update(). To get notification that the request has completed, a
+ call to update() will invoke onCompleted() methods.
+
+
+3. Refinements, Necessary and Otherwise
+
+ MyHandler::onCompleted(). You'll want to do something useful with
+ your response. Distinguish errors from successes and getting the
+ response body back in some form.
+
+ Add a new header:
+
+
+ #include "bufferarray.h"
+
+
+ Replace the existing MyHandler::onCompleted() definition with:
+
+
+ virtual void onCompleted(LLCore::HttpHandle /* handle */,
+ LLCore::HttpResponse * response)
+ {
+ LLCore::HttpStatus status = response->getStatus();
+ if (status)
+ {
+ // Successful request. Try to fetch the data
+ LLCore::BufferArray * data = response->getBody();
+
+ if (data && data->size())
+ {
+ // There's some data. A BufferArray is a linked list
+ // of buckets. We'll create a linear buffer and copy
+ // it into it.
+ size_t data_len = data->size();
+ char * data_blob = new char [data_len + 1];
+ data->read(0, data_blob, data_len);
+ data_blob[data_len] = '\0';
+
+ // Process the data now in NUL-terminated string.
+ // Needs more scrubbing but this will do.
+ LL_INFOS("Hack") << "Received: " << data_blob << LL_ENDL;
+
+ // Free the temporary data
+ delete [] data_blob;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ // Something went wrong. Translate the status to
+ // a meaningful message.
+ LL_WARNS("Hack") << "HTTP GET failed. Status: "
+ << status.toTerseString()
+ << ", Reason: " << status.toString()
+ << LL_ENDL;
+ }
+
+ delete this; // Last statement
+ }
+
+
+ HttpHeaders. The header file "httprequest.h" documents the expected
+ important headers that will go out with the request. You can add to
+ these by including an HttpHeaders object with the requestGet() call.
+ These are typically setup once as part of init rather than
+ dynamically created.
+
+ Add another header:
+
+
+ #include "httpheaders.h"
+
+
+ In LLAppViewer::mainLoop(), add this alongside the allocation of
+ my_handler:
+
+
+ // Additional headers for all requests
+ LLCore::HttpHeaders * my_headers = new LLCore::HttpHeaders();
+ my_headers->append("Accept", "text/html, application/llsd+xml");
+
+
+ HttpOptions. Options are similar and include a mix of value types.
+ One interesting per-request option is the trace setting. This
+ enables various debug-type messages in the log file that show the
+ progress of the request through the library. It takes values from
+ zero to three with higher values giving more verbose logging. We'll
+ use '2' and this will also give us a chance to verify that
+ HttpHeaders works as expected.
+
+ Same as above, a new header:
+
+
+ #include "httpoptions.h"
+
+
+ And in LLAppView::mainLoop():
+
+
+ // Special options for requests
+ LLCore::HttpOptions * my_options = new LLCore::HttpOptions();
+ my_options->setTrace(2);
+
+
+ Now let's put that all together into a more complete requesting
+ sequence. Replace the existing invocation of requestGet() with this
+ slightly more elaborate block:
+
+
+ LLCore::HttpHandle handle;
+ handle = my_request->requestGet(my_policy,
+ my_priority,
+ "http://www.example.com/",
+ my_options,
+ my_headers,
+ my_handler);
+ if (LLCORE_HTTP_HANDLE_INVALID == handle)
+ {
+ LLCore::HttpStatus status = my_request->getStatus();
+
+ LL_WARNS("Hack") << "Failed to request HTTP GET. Status: "
+ << status.toTerseString()
+ << ", Reason: " << status.toString()
+ << LL_ENDL;
+
+ delete my_handler; // No longer needed.
+ my_handler = NULL;
+ }
+
+
+ Build, run and examine the log file. You'll get some new data with
+ this run. First, you should get the www.example.com home page
+ content:
+
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2013-09-17T20:26:51Z INFO: MyHandler::onCompleted: Received: <!doctype html>
+<html>
+<head>
+ <title>Example Domain</title>
+
+ <meta charset="utf-8" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
+ <style type="text/css">
+ body {
+ background-color: #f0f0f2;
+ margin: 0;
+ padding: 0;
+ font-family: "Open Sans", "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
+
+ }
+ div {
+ width: 600px;
+ margin: 5em auto;
+ padding: 50px;
+ background-color: #fff;
+ border-radius: 1em;
+ }
+ a:link, a:visited {
+ color: #38488f;
+ text-decoration: none;
+ }
+ @media (max-width: 700px) {
+ body {
+ background-color: #fff;
+ }
+ div {
+ width: auto;
+ margin: 0 auto;
+ border-radius: 0;
+ padding: 1em;
+ }
+ }
+ </style>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+<div>
+ <h1>Example Domain</h1>
+ <p>This domain is established to be used for illustrative examples in documents. You may use this
+ domain in examples without prior coordination or asking for permission.</p>
+ <p><a href="http://www.iana.org/domains/example">More information...</a></p>
+</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+ You'll also get a detailed trace of the HTTP operation itself. Note
+ the HEADEROUT line which shows the additional header added to the
+ request.
+
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+HttpService::processRequestQueue: TRACE, FromRequestQueue, Handle: 086D3148
+HttpLibcurl::addOp: TRACE, ToActiveQueue, Handle: 086D3148, Actives: 0, Readies: 0
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: TEXT, Data: About to connect() to www.example.com port 80 (#0)
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: TEXT, Data: Trying 93.184.216.119...
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: TEXT, Data: Connected to www.example.com (93.184.216.119) port 80 (#0)
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: TEXT, Data: Connected to www.example.com (93.184.216.119) port 80 (#0)
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADEROUT, Data: GET / HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com Accept-Encoding: deflate, gzip Connection: keep-alive Keep-alive: 300 Accept: text/html, application/llsd+xml
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: HTTP/1.1 200 OK
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Accept-Ranges: bytes
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Cache-Control: max-age=604800
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Content-Type: text/html
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Date: Tue, 17 Sep 2013 20:26:56 GMT
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Etag: "3012602696"
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Expires: Tue, 24 Sep 2013 20:26:56 GMT
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Last-Modified: Fri, 09 Aug 2013 23:54:35 GMT
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Server: ECS (ewr/1590)
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: X-Cache: HIT
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: x-ec-custom-error: 1
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data: Content-Length: 1270
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: HEADERIN, Data:
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: DATAIN, Data: 256 Bytes
+HttpOpRequest::debugCallback: TRACE, LibcurlDebug, Handle: 086D3148, Type: TEXT, Data: Connection #0 to host www.example.com left intact
+HttpLibcurl::completeRequest: TRACE, RequestComplete, Handle: 086D3148, Status: Http_200
+HttpOperation::addAsReply: TRACE, ToReplyQueue, Handle: 086D3148
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+4. What Does All That Mean, Part 2
+
+ HttpStatus. The HttpStatus object encodes errors from libcurl, the
+ library itself and HTTP status values. It does this to avoid
+ collapsing all non-HTTP error into a single '499' HTTP status and to
+ make errors distinct.
+
+ To aid programming, the usual bool conversions are available so that
+ you can write 'if (status)' and the expected thing will happen
+ whether it's an HTTP, libcurl or library error. There's also
+ provision to override the treatment of HTTP errors (making 404 a
+ success, say).
+
+ Share data, don't copy it. The library was started with the goal of
+ avoiding data copies as much as possible. Instead, read-only data
+ sharing across threads with atomic reference counts is used for a
+ number of data types. These currently are:
+
+ * BufferArray. Linked list of data blocks/HTTP bodies.
+ * HttpHeaders. Shared headers for both requests and responses.
+ * HttpOptions. Request-only data modifying HTTP behavior.
+ * HttpResponse. HTTP response description given to onCompleted.
+
+ Using objects of these types requires a few rules:
+
+ * Constructor always gives a reference to caller.
+ * References are dropped with release() not delete.
+ * Additional references may be taken out with addRef().
+ * Unless otherwise stated, once an object is shared with another
+ thread it should be treated as read-only. There's no
+ synchronization on the objects themselves.
+
+ HttpResponse. You'll encounter this mainly in onCompleted() methods.
+ Commonly-used interfaces on this object:
+
+ * getStatus() to return the final status of the request.
+ * getBody() to retrieve the response body which may be NULL or
+ zero-length.
+ * getContentType() to return the value of the 'Content-Type'
+ header or an empty string if none was sent.
+
+ This is a reference-counted object so you can call addRef() on it
+ and hold onto the response for an arbitrary time. But you'll
+ usually just call a few methods and return from onCompleted() whose
+ caller will release the object.
+
+ BufferArray. The core data representation for request and response
+ bodies. In HTTP responses, it's fetched with the getBody() method
+ and may be NULL or non-NULL but zero length. All successful data
+ handling should check both conditions before attempting to fetch
+ data from the object. Data access model uses simple read/write
+ semantics:
+
+ * append()
+ * size()
+ * read()
+ * write()
+
+ There is a more sophisticated stream adapter that extends these
+ methods and will be covered below. So, one way to retrieve data
+ from a request is as follows:
+
+
+ LLCore::BufferArray * data = response->getBody();
+ if (data && data->size())
+ {
+ size_t data_len = data->size();
+ char * data_blob = new char [data_len + 1];
+ data->read(0, data_blob, data_len);
+
+
+ HttpOptions and HttpResponse. Really just simple containers of POD
+ and std::string pairs. But reference counted and the rule about not
+ modifying after sharing must be followed. You'll have the urge to
+ change options dynamically at some point. And you'll try to do that
+ by just writing new values to the shared object. And in tests
+ everything will appear to work. Then you ship and people in the
+ real world start hitting read/write races in strings and then crash.
+
+ HttpHandle. Uniquely identifies a request and can be used to
+ identify it in an onCompleted() method or cancel it if it's still
+ queued. But as soon as a request's onCompleted() invocation
+ returns, the handle becomes invalid and may be reused immediately
+ for new requests. Don't hold on to handles after notification.
+
+
+5. And Still More Refinements
+
+
+6. Choosing a Policy Class
+
+
+7. FAQ
+