Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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LF, and trim trailing whitespaces as needed
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The crash can appear on some non-windows platforms (any LP64 model platforms).
Depending on alignment this can overwrite one word of the pointer `op` declared
above. Subsequently it will crash when later writing to memory through that
pointer
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The new helper functions check_curl_easy_setopt() and
check_curl_multi_setopt() encapsulate the pervasive idiom:
code = curl_{easy,multi}_setopt(handle, option, arg);
check_curl_{easy,multi}_code(code, option);
But since each of these helper functions contains its own local CURL{,M}code
variable 'code', having a caller-scope variable reused for every such call is
no longer necessary -- in fact is no longer used at all. That produces a fatal
warning with MSVC. Get rid of those now-unused variables.
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with corrections for timed out connections in pipelining. Minor fix for safer op retrieval.
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try and eliminate a crash in the wild.
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shared pointers. Removed direct cast and dereference of handles.
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intrusive_ptr<> for refrence counting.
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of used handles and a fast handle factory that's thread-
correct.
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as transfers can appear delayed with deep pipelining and more
requests in the pool. Added bad HTTP status error (typically
getting a 0 back as HTTP status from libcurl) to the list of
retryable errors. There's a response stream problem with libcurl
and pipelining that induces this problem. Retrying helps but
may not be entirely safe. Watch bug 1420 on the libcurl sourceforge
bug tracker. Extend options of test/example program to include
un-ranged requests. Document the excessive data transfer induced
when ranged requests are disabled. This is an abnormal mode for
very rare users so we'll just eat that for now.
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some problems disabling pipelining on a multi handle with outstanding
requests so build a more conservative system that allows requests
to drain before setting curl multi options. Would rather not have
this but it is significantly safer. "HttpPipelining" debug setting
is now fully dynamic. Connection limits can also be made dynamic
in the near future. Upped the default connection count back to 8 for
now but will revisit this in the tuning phase. It might be time to
combine mesh and textures into a single asset class. For normal
server operations that would be a clear path, but for server under
load, the current scheme may be better. Minor cleanup in logging
to elminate some redundant strings. Might add some more tracing to the
stall logic 'just in case'.
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GetTexture and GetMesh2 at a pipeline depth of 5. Create
global debug option, HttpPipelining, to enable and disable
HTTP pipelining (defaults to true). Tweak texture and
mesh low- and high-water request levels based on pipelining
status and depth. Fixup texture console which was damaged
in a recent release. Split logging of the no-request
HTTP error case into two cases: one for missing URL in
HTTP request, one for HTTP request not created. A refactor
in llcorehttp is coming: I will be moving all libcurl-
using code into libcurl-specific modules.
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Added toTerseString() conversion on HttpStatus to generate a string
that's more descriptive than the hex value of the HttpStatus value
but still forms a short, searchable token (e.g. "Http_503" or
"Core_7"). Using this throughout the viewer now, no live cases
of toHex(), I believe.
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Do some runtime code avoidance and skip unnecessary libcurl and
syscall invocations.
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Simple change dropped this value by 7-10mS or so. Any time we
complete an operation on a transport pass, arrange to skip the
run-loop sleep so that we fill a possible empty slot as quickly
as possible. With pipelining, this kind of thing should become
unnecessary but for now, we'll do this to increase throughput.
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Header container moves from a vector of raw lines to a vector
of string pairs representing name/value pairs in headers. For
incoming headers, we normalize the name to lowercase and trim
it. Values are only left-trimmed. Outgoing headers are left
as-is. Simple find() method for the common case, forward and
reverse iterators for those few who need to do it themselves.
The HTTP status line (e.g. 'HTTP/1.1 200 Ok') is no longer treated
as a header to be returned to caller. Unit tests, as usual,
were a bear but they absolutely ensured outgoing HTTP header
conformance after the change. Grunt work paid off.
LLTextureFetch was also given a second options structure
for texture fetches. Same as the original but with header return
to caller requested. Baked textures should use this, the other
20,000 texture fetch requests should continue to use the original.
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Header container moves from a vector of raw lines to a vector
of string pairs representing name/value pairs in headers. For
incoming headers, we normalize the name to lowercase and trim
it. Values are only left-trimmed. Outgoing headers are left
as-is. Simple find() method for the common case, forward and
reverse iterators for those few who need to do it themselves.
The HTTP status line (e.g. 'HTTP/1.1 200 Ok') is no longer treated
as a header to be returned to caller. Unit tests, as usual,
were a bear but they absolutely ensured outgoing HTTP header
conformance after the change. Grunt work paid off.
LLTextureFetch was also given a second options structure
for texture fetches. Same as the original but with header return
to caller requested. Baked textures should use this, the other
20,000 texture fetch requests should continue to use the original.
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changes to common libraries from the server codebase:
* Additional error checking in http handlers.
* Uniform log spam for http errors.
* Switch to using constants for http heads and status codes.
* Fixed bugs in incorrectly checking if parsing LLSD xml resulted in an error.
* Reduced spam regarding LLSD parsing errors in the default completedRaw http handler. It should not longer be necessary to short-circuit completedRaw to avoid spam.
* Ported over a few bug fixes from the server code.
* Switch mode http status codes to use S32 instead of U32.
* Ported LLSD::asStringRef from server code; avoids copying strings all over the place.
* Ported server change to LLSD::asBinary; this always returns a reference now instead of copying the entire binary blob.
* Ported server pretty notation format (and pretty binary format) to llsd serialization.
* The new LLCurl::Responder API no longer has two error handlers to choose from. Overriding the following methods have been deprecated:
** error - use httpFailure
** errorWithContent - use httpFailure
** result - use httpSuccess
** completed - use httpCompleted
** completedHeader - no longer necessary; call getResponseHeaders() from a completion method to obtain these headers.
* In order to 'catch' a completed http request, override one of these methods:
** httpSuccess - Called for any 2xx status code.
** httpFailure - Called for any non-2xx status code.
** httpComplete - Called for all status codes. Default implementation is to call either httpSuccess or httpFailure.
* It is recommended to keep these methods protected/private in order to avoid triggering of these methods without using a 'push' method (see below).
* Uniform error handling should followed whenever possible by calling a variant of this during httpFailure:
** llwarns << dumpResponse() << llendl;
* Be sure to include LOG_CLASS(your_class_name) in your class in order for the log entry to give more context.
* In order to 'push' a result into the responder, you should no longer call error, errorWithContent, result, or completed.
* Nor should you directly call httpSuccess/Failure/Completed (unless passing a message up to a parent class).
* Instead, you can set the internal content of a responder and trigger a corresponding method using the following methods:
** successResult - Sets results and calls httpSuccess
** failureResult - Sets results and calls httpFailure
** completedResult - Sets results and calls httpCompleted
* To obtain information about a the response from a reponder method, use the following getters:
** getStatus - HTTP status code
** getReason - Reason string
** getContent - Content (Parsed body LLSD)
** getResponseHeaders - Response Headers (LLSD map)
** getHTTPMethod - HTTP method of the request
** getURL - URL of the request
* It is still possible to override completeRaw if you want to manipulate data directly out of LLPumpIO.
* See indra/llmessage/llcurl.h for more information.
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Reformatted messages around request retry. Successfully retried requests
also message so you can see the cycle closed. Added additional retryable
error codes (timeout, other libcurl failures). Commenting and removed some
unnecessary std::min logic.
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Add to-do list to _httpinternal.h to guide anyone who
wants to pitch in and help.
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When releasing HTTP waiters, avoid unnecessary sort activity.
For Content-Type in responses, let libcurl do the work and removed
my parsing of headers. Drop Content-Encoding as libcurl will deal
with that. If anyone is interested, they can parse.
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The fetch state machine received a new timeout during the WAIT_HTTP_REQ
state. For the integration, rather than jump the state to done, we issue
a request cancel and let the notification plumbing do the rest without
any race conditions or special-case logic.
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aggressive shutdown of a thread.
Some additional work let me enable a memory check for the clean shutdown case and
generally do a better job on other interfaces. Request queue waiters now awake
on shutdown and don't sleep once the queue is turned off. Much better semantically
for how this will be used.
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in library.
With this commit, the cleanup paths should be production quality. Unit tests have been
expanded to include cases requiring thread termination and cleanup by the worker thread.
Special operation/request added to support the unit tests. Thread interface expanded
to include a very aggressive cancel() method that does not do cleanup but prevents the
thread from accessing objects that will be destroyed.
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Groundwork is used for the default class which currently represents
texture fetching. Class options implemented from API user into
HttpLibcurl. Policy layer is going to start doing some traffic
shaping like work to solve problems with consumer-grade gear.
Need to have dynamic aspects to policies and that starts now...
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LLProxy support, HttpOptions starting to work, HTTP resource waiting fixed.
Non-LLThread-based threads need to do some registration or LLMutex locks taken out in these
threads will not work as expected (SH-3154). We'll get a better solution later, this fixes
some things for now. Tracing of operations now supported. Global and per-request (via
HttpOptions) tracing levels of [0..3]. The 2 and 3 levels use libcurl's VERBOSE mode
combined with CURLOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION to stream high levels of detail into the log. *Very*
laggy but useful. Simple GET request supported (no Range: header). Really just a
degenrate case of a ranged get but supplied an API anyway. Global option to use the
LLProxy interface to setup CURL handles for either socks5 or http proxy usage. This
isn't really the most encapsulated way to do this but a better solution will have to
come later. The wantHeaders and tracing options are now supported in HttpOptions giving
per-request controls. Big refactoring of the HTTP resource waiter in lltexturefetch.
What I was doing before wasn't correct. Instead, I'm implementing the resource wait
after the Semaphore model (though not using system semaphores). So instead of having
a sequence like: SEND_HTTP_REQ -> WAIT_HTTP_RESOURCE -> SEND_HTTP_REQ, we now
do WAIT_HTTP_RESOURCE -> WAIT_HTTP_RESOURCE2 (actual wait) -> SEND_HTTP_REQ. Works
well but the prioritized filling of the corehttp library needs some performance
work later.
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206/content-range hack in xport.
Retry/response handling is decided in policy so moved that there. Removed special case
206-without-content-range response in transport. Have this sitation recognizable in the
API and let callers deal with it as needed.
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cleanup.
Our logging holds on to a changing bit of memory between operations and the memory
leak detection I'm using senses this and complains. So, for now, disable the
final memory check on Mac & Linux, leave it active on Windows. Solve this for
real some other day. Add try/catch blocks to do cleanup in unit tests that go
wrong so that we don't get a cascade of assertion failures when subsequent tests
find singletons still alive.
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surprised me. Added a retry queue similar to ready queue to the
policy object which is sorted by retry time. Currently do five
retries (after the initial try) delayed by .25, .5, 1, 2 and 5
seconds. Removed the retry logic from the lltexturefetch module.
Upped the waiting time in the unit test for the retries. People
won't like this but tough, need tests.
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Implemented first global policy definitions to support SSL CA certificate configuration
to support https: operations. Fixed HTTP 206 status handling to match what is currently
being done by grid services and to lay a foundation for fixes that will be a response
to ER-1824. More libcurl CURLOPT options set on easy handles to do peer verification
in the traditional way. HTTP POST working and now reporting asset metrics back to
grid for the viewer's asset system. This uses LLSD so that is also showing as compatible
with the new library.
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Identified and reacted to the priority inversion problem we
have in texturefetch. Includes the introduction of a priority_queue
for the requests that are ready. Start some parameterization in
anticipation of having policy_class everywhere. Removed _assert.h
which isn't really needed in indra codebase. Implemented async
setPriority request (which I hope I can get rid of eventually along
with all priorities in this library). Converted to using unsigned
int for priority rather than float. Implemented POST and did
groundwork for PUT.
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This is the first functional viewer pass with the HTTP work of the texture fetch
code performed by the llcorehttp library. Not exactly a 'drop-in' replacement
but a work-alike with some changes (e.g. handler notification in consumer
thread versus responder notification in worker thread).
This also includes some temporary changes in the priority scheme to prevent
the kind of priority inversion found in VWR-28996. Scheme used here does
provide liveness if not optimal responsiveness or order-of-operation.
The llcorehttp library at this point is far from optimally performing.
Its worker thread is making relatively poor use of cycles it gets and
it doesn't idle or sleep intelligently yet. This early integration step
helps shake out the interfaces, implementation niceties will be covered
soon.
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The unit/integration tests don't work yet as I'm still battling cmake/autobuild
as usual but first milestone passed.
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