Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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CRYPTO_set_id_callback and CRYPTO_set_locking_callback are no-op in ssl 1.1.x
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LLThread::currentID() used to return a U32, a distinct unsigned value
incremented by explicitly constructing LLThread or by calling LLThread::
registerThreadID() early in a thread launched by other means. The latter
imposed an unobvious requirement on new code based on std::thread. Using
std::thread::id instead delegates to the compiler/library the problem of
distinguishing threads launched by any means.
Change lots of explicit U32 declarations. Introduce LLThread::id_t typedef to
avoid having to run around fixing uses again if we later revisit this decision.
LLMutex, which stores an LLThread::id_t, wants a distinguished value meaning
NO_THREAD, and had an enum with that name. But as std::thread::id promises
that the default-constructed value is distinct from every valid value,
NO_THREAD becomes unnecessary and goes away.
Because LLMutex now stores LLThread::id_t instead of U32, make llmutex.h
#include "llthread.h" instead of the other way around. This makes LLMutex an
incomplete type within llthread.h, so move LLThread::lockData() and
unlockData() to the .cpp file. Similarly, remove llrefcount.h's #include
"llmutex.h" to break circularity; instead forward-declare LLMutex.
It turns out that a number of source files assumed that #include "llthread.h"
would get the definition for LLMutex. Sprinkle #include "llmutex.h" as needed.
In the SAFE_SSL code in llcorehttp/httpcommon.cpp, there's an ssl_thread_id()
callback that returns an unsigned long to the SSL library. When LLThread::
currentID() was U32, we could simply return that. But std::thread::id is very
deliberately opaque, and can't be reinterpret_cast to unsigned long.
Fortunately it can be hashed because std::hash is specialized with that type.
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Turns out that Monty didn't intend for the int-flavored representation of
HttpStatus to expand to 64 bits even when unsigned long is that wide. So
change the implicit conversion operator, and its uses, to U32 instead. That
produces a consistent toHex() result for both 32-bit and 64-bit builds.
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Prep for some slight cleanup of the code.
Add AP_AVATAR Policy
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Incorporate the new libcurl 7.38.0 build with curl bug 1420
workaround. Add developer-centric testing code to evaluate
the workaround or a future fix for 1420.
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reproduce data corruption via timeouts.
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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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Start using DNS cache in legacy LLCurl code. Go to 15 seconds
particularly as we're using threaded resolver at this point.
Documentation cleanup. Add libcurl status checking and logging
for curl_easy_setopt() operations that fail. Shouldn't happen
and we'll just continue anyway but there's info in the logs to
track these down now. Cleaned up logic around FASTTIMER enable
defines used to evaluate pipeline stalls in main thread.
Removed long-standing thread race around caps strings and
URL construction. Not a significant risk but refactoring the
code to get rid of them removed one huge eyesore. It can be
made even slicker if desired (see notes).
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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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Not certain what the source of the short data is with one resident but I'm
going to make these problems retryable as they are transport-related. Lift
the retry detection into a method that should be reusable by others interested
in determining what is retryable. Trace output handling on the libcurl debug
callback was attrocious. Some unsafe length handling on my part was protected
by a second layer of defense. Made that correct and more useful by logging
actual data sizes during trace.
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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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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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