avoids separate memory allocation for list of pointers
adds ability to check if con is already in joblist,
so do not re-add con if already in joblist
since con is checked if in joblist before being added to joblist,
there is no longer need for two lists and jobs can be processed
before poll() for to process new events
Most OS platforms have already provided solutions to
Y2038 32-bit signed time_t 5 - 10 years ago (or more!)
Notable exceptions are Linux i686 and FreeBSD i386.
Since 32-bit systems tend to be embedded systems,
and since many distros take years to pick up new software,
this commit aims to provide Y2038 mitigations for lighttpd
running on 32-bit systems with Y2038-unsafe 32-bit signed time_t
* Y2038: lighttpd 1.4.60 and later report Y2038 safety
$ lighttpd -V
+ Y2038 support # Y2038-SAFE
$ lighttpd -V
- Y2038 support (unsafe 32-bit signed time_t) # Y2038-UNSAFE
* Y2038: general platform info
* Y2038-SAFE: lighttpd 64-bit builds on platforms using 64-bit time_t
- all major 64-bit platforms (known to this author) use 64-bit time_t
* Y2038-SAFE: lighttpd 32-bit builds on platforms using 64-bit time_t
- Linux x32 ABI (different from i686)
- FreeBSD all 32-bit and 64-bit architectures *except* 32-bit i386
- NetBSD 6.0 (released Oct 2012) all 32-bit and 64-bit architectures
- OpenBSD 5.5 (released May 2014) all 32-bit and 64-bit architectures
- Microsoft Windows XP and Visual Studio 2005 (? unsure ?)
Another reference suggests Visual Studio 2015 defaults to 64-bit time_t
- MacOS 10.15 Catalina (released 2019) drops support for 32-bit apps
* Y2038-SAFE: lighttpd 32-bit builds on platforms using 32-bit unsigned time_t
- e.g. OpenVMS (unknown if lighttpd builds on this platform)
* Y2038-UNSAFE: lighttpd 32-bit builds on platforms using 32-bit signed time_t
- Linux 32-bit (including i686)
- glibc 32-bit library support not yet available for 64-bit time_t
- https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/Y2038ProofnessDesign
- Linux kernel 5.6 on 32-bit platforms does support 64-bit time_t
https://itsubuntu.com/linux-kernel-5-6-to-fix-the-year-2038-issue-unix-y2k/
- https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/64_002dbit-time-symbol-handling.html
"Note: at this point, 64-bit time support in dual-time
configurations is work-in-progress, so for these
configurations, the public API only makes the 32-bit time
support available. In a later change, the public API will
allow user code to choose the time size for a given
compilation unit."
- compiling with -D_TIME_BITS=64 currently has no effect
- glibc recent (Jul 2021) mailing list discussion
- https://public-inbox.org/bug-gnulib/878s2ozq70.fsf@oldenburg.str.redhat.com/T/
- FreeBSD i386
- DragonFlyBSD 32-bit
* Y2038 mitigations attempted on Y2038-UNSAFE platforms (32-bit signed time_t)
* lighttpd prefers system monotonic clock instead of realtime clock
in places where realtime clock is not required
* lighttpd treats negative time_t values as after 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT
* (lighttpd presumes that lighttpd will not encounter dates before 1970
during normal operation.)
* lighttpd casts struct stat st.st_mtime (and st.st_*time) through uint64_t
to convert negative timestamps for comparisions with 64-bit timestamps
(treating negative timestamp values as after 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT)
* lighttpd provides unix_time64_t (int64_t) and
* lighttpd provides struct unix_timespec64 (unix_timespec64_t)
(struct timespec equivalent using unix_time64_t tv_sec member)
* lighttpd provides gmtime64_r() and localtime64_r() wrappers
for platforms 32-bit platforms using 32-bit time_t and
lighttpd temporarily shifts the year in order to use
gmtime_r() and localtime_r() (or gmtime() and localtime())
from standard libraries, before readjusting year and passing
struct tm to formatting functions such as strftime()
* lighttpd provides TIME64_CAST() macro to cast signed 32-bit time_t to
unsigned 32-bit and then to unix_time64_t
* Note: while lighttpd tries handle times past 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT
on 32-bit platforms using 32-bit signed time_t, underlying libraries and
underlying filesystems might not behave properly after 32-bit signed time_t
overflows (19 Jan 2038 03:14:08 GMT). If a given 32-bit OS does not work
properly using negative time_t values, then lighttpd likely will not work
properly on that system.
* Other references and blogs
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_formatting_and_storage_bugs
- http://www.lieberbiber.de/2017/03/14/a-look-at-the-year-20362038-problems-and-time-proofness-in-various-systems/
This commit is a large set of code changes and results in removal of
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of CPU instructions, a portion of which
are on hot code paths.
Most (buffer *) used by lighttpd are not NULL, especially since buffers
were inlined into numerous larger structs such as request_st and chunk.
In the small number of instances where that is not the case, a NULL
check is often performed earlier in a function where that buffer is
later used with a buffer_* func. In the handful of cases that remained,
a NULL check was added, e.g. with r->http_host and r->conf.server_tag.
- check for empty strings at config time and set value to NULL if blank
string will be ignored at runtime; at runtime, simple pointer check
for NULL can be used to check for a value that has been set and is not
blank ("")
- use buffer_is_blank() instead of buffer_string_is_empty(),
and use buffer_is_unset() instead of buffer_is_empty(),
where buffer is known not to be NULL so that NULL check can be skipped
- use buffer_clen() instead of buffer_string_length() when buffer is
known not to be NULL (to avoid NULL check at runtime)
- use buffer_truncate() instead of buffer_string_set_length() to
truncate string, and use buffer_extend() to extend
Examples where buffer known not to be NULL:
- cpv->v.b from config_plugin_values_init is not NULL if T_CONFIG_BOOL
(though we might set it to NULL if buffer_is_blank(cpv->v.b))
- address of buffer is arg (&foo)
(compiler optimizer detects this in most, but not all, cases)
- buffer is checked for NULL earlier in func
- buffer is accessed in same scope without a NULL check (e.g. b->ptr)
internal behavior change:
callers must not pass a NULL buffer to some funcs.
- buffer_init_buffer() requires non-null args
- buffer_copy_buffer() requires non-null args
- buffer_append_string_buffer() requires non-null args
- buffer_string_space() requires non-null arg
optimize buffer_* primitives
Other than buffer_string_set_length(), reallocate with one power-2 step
in size (or use the requested size, if larger). This replaces the fixed
BUFFER_PIECE_SIZE round-up of only 64 bytes extension each reallocation,
which could lead to excessive reallocations in some scenarios.
buffer_extend() convenience routine to prep for batch append
(combines buffer_string_prepare_append() and buffer_commit())
mod_fastcgi, mod_scgi, mod_proxy and others now leverage buffer_extend()
mod_scgi directly performs little-endian encoding of short ints
http_response_write_header() optimizes writing response header,
leveraging buffer_extend()
modify mod_proxy to append line ends
similar to how it is done in http_response_write_header()
(removes one call to buffer_append_string_len())
Note: monotonic time does not change while VM is suspended
Continue to use real time where required by HTTP protocol, for logging
and for other user-visible instances, such as mod_status, as well as for
external databases and caches.
convert all log_error_write() to log_error() and pass (log_error_st *)
use con->errh in preference to srv->errh (even though currently same)
avoid passing (server *) when previously used only for logging (errh)
quickly clear buffer instead of buffer_string_set_length(b, 0) or
buffer_reset(b). Avoids free() of large buffers about to be reused,
or buffers that are module-scoped, persistent, and reused.
(buffer_reset() should still be used with buffers in connection *con
when the data in the buffers is supplied by external, untrusted source)
skip redundant calls to buffer_string_prepare_copy() when simply
clearing buffer is sufficient, e.g. when a blanked buffer is desired
before calling buffer_append_strftime(), which internally prepares
buffer for the resultant formatted string
fix potential NULL pointer dereference in mod_deflate.c
remove logically dead code in connection-glue.c
add coverity annotations to see if some issues will be reclassified
* takes uintmax_t now
* use in http_chunk_append_len
From: Stefan Bühler <stbuehler@web.de>
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lighttpd.net/lighttpd/branches/lighttpd-1.4.x@2980 152afb58-edef-0310-8abb-c4023f1b3aa9
- a lot of code tried to handle manually adding terminating zeroes and
keeping track of the correct "used" count.
Replaced all "external" usages with simple wrapper functions:
* buffer_string_is_empty (used <= 1), buffer_is_empty (used == 0);
prefer buffer_string_is_empty
* buffer_string_set_length
* buffer_string_length
* CONST_BUF_LEN() macro
- removed "static" buffer hacks (buffers pointing to constant/stack
memory instead of malloc()ed data)
- buffer_append_strftime(): refactor buffer+strftime uses
- li_tohex(): no need for a buffer for binary-to-hex conversion:
the output data length is easy to predict
- remove "-Winline" from extra warnings: the "inline" keyword just
supresses the warning about unused but defined (static) functions;
don't care whether it actually gets inlined or not.
From: Stefan Bühler <stbuehler@web.de>
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lighttpd.net/lighttpd/branches/lighttpd-1.4.x@2979 152afb58-edef-0310-8abb-c4023f1b3aa9
* removed almost all usages of buffer as "memory" (without terminating
zero)
* refactored cgi variable name encoding
From: Stefan Bühler <stbuehler@web.de>
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lighttpd.net/lighttpd/branches/lighttpd-1.4.x@2977 152afb58-edef-0310-8abb-c4023f1b3aa9
* remove unused structs and functions
(buffer_array, read_buffer)
* change return type from int to void for many functions,
as the return value (indicating error/success) was never checked,
and the function would only fail on programming errors and not on
invalid input; changed functions to use force_assert instead of
returning an error.
* all "len" parameters now are the real size of the memory to be read.
the length of strings is given always without the terminating 0.
* the "buffer" struct still counts the terminating 0 in ->used,
provide buffer_string_length() to get the length of a string in a
buffer.
unset config "strings" have used == 0, which is used in some places
to distinguish unset values from "" (empty string) values.
* most buffer usages should now use it as string container.
* optimise some buffer copying by "moving" data to other buffers
* use (u)intmax_t for generic int-to-string functions
* remove unused enum values: UNUSED_CHUNK, ENCODING_UNSET
* converted BUFFER_APPEND_SLASH to inline function (no macro feature
needed)
* refactor: create chunkqueue_steal: moving (partial) chunks into another
queue
* http_chunk: added separate function to terminate chunked body instead of
magic handling in http_chunk_append_mem().
http_chunk_append_* now handle empty chunks, and never terminate the
chunked body.
From: Stefan Bühler <stbuehler@web.de>
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lighttpd.net/lighttpd/branches/lighttpd-1.4.x@2975 152afb58-edef-0310-8abb-c4023f1b3aa9
* The breakage-log simply replaces stderr (the old stderr is moved away if needed for errorlog),
and stderr isn't closed after forking.
It defaults to stderr if started with -n (no daemonize), otherwise it defaults to /dev/null.
It is _not_ reopened in log_error_cycle, as there may be many long running childs which have it
still open anyway. Use a pipe-logger with cycle-support if you need it.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lighttpd.net/lighttpd/branches/lighttpd-1.4.x@2550 152afb58-edef-0310-8abb-c4023f1b3aa9