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2023-01-27PHP: Make use of zend_stream_init_filename().Andrew Clayton1-6/+6
Where possible make use of the zend_stream_init_filename() function introduced in PHP 7.4. This is essentially a preparatory patch for switching to using an already opened file-pointer in nxt_php_execute(). While wrapping this new code in a PHP version check with a fallback to our own function is perhaps slightly overkill, it does reduce the diff of the commit that switches to a FILE *. Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Cc: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-27PHP: Factored out code into a helper function.Alejandro Colomar1-10/+19
We're going to use zend_stream_init_filename in a following commit. To reduce the diff of that change, move the current code that will be replaced, to a function that has the same interface. We use strlen(3) here to be able to use an interface without passing the length, but we will remove that call in a following code, so it has no performance issues. Co-developed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com> Cc: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-24Tests: added NJS iteration tests.Andrei Zeliankou1-0/+6
2023-01-24Tests: NJS tests reworked.Andrei Zeliankou1-35/+31
2023-01-18Removed repetitive phrasing from README.Artem Konev1-10/+9
2023-01-18Liam.Artem Konev1-2/+2
2023-01-17NJS: added the keys API for the request objects.Zhidao HONG2-33/+106
This commit is to loop through the request objects headers, arguments, and cookies.
2023-01-12PHP: Fix a potential problem parsing the path.Andrew Clayton2-1/+3
@dward on GitHub reported an issue with a URL like http://foo.bar/test.php?blah=test.php/foo where we would end up trying to run the script test.php?blah=test.php In the PHP module the format 'file.php/' is treated as a special case in nxt_php_dynamic_request() where we check the _path_ part of the url for the string '.php/'. The problem is that the path actually also contains the query string, thus we were finding 'test.php/' in the above URL and treating that whole path as the script to run. The fix is simple, replace the strstr(3) with a memmem(3), where we can limit the amount of path we use for the check. The trick here and what is not obvious from the code is that while path.start points to the whole path including the query string, path.length only contains the length of the _path_ part. NOTE: memmem(3) is a GNU extension and is neither specified by POSIX or ISO C, however it is available on a number of other systems, including: FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, illumos, and macOS. If it comes to it we can implement a simple alternative for systems which lack memmem(3). This also adds a test case (provided by @dward) to cover this. Closes: <https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/781> Cc: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com> Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Reviewed-by: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com> [test] Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-12Fix endianness detection in nxt_websocket_header_t.Andrew Clayton1-2/+2
The nxt_websocket_header_t structure defines the layout of a websocket frame header. As the websocket frame is mapped directly onto this structure its layout needs to match how it's coming off the network. The network being big endian means on big endian systems the structure layout can simply match that of the websocket frame header. On little endian systems we need to reverse the two bytes. This was done via the BYTE_ORDER, BIG_ENDIAN and LITTLE_ENDIAN macros, however these are not universal, e.g they are _not_ defined on illumos (OpenSolaris / OpenIndiana) and so we get the following compiler errors In file included from src/nxt_h1proto.c:12:0: src/nxt_websocket_header.h:25:13: error: duplicate member 'opcode' uint8_t opcode:4; ^~~~~~ src/nxt_websocket_header.h:26:13: error: duplicate member 'rsv3' uint8_t rsv3:1; ^~~~ src/nxt_websocket_header.h:27:13: error: duplicate member 'rsv2' uint8_t rsv2:1; ^~~~ src/nxt_websocket_header.h:28:13: error: duplicate member 'rsv1' uint8_t rsv1:1; ^~~~ src/nxt_websocket_header.h:29:13: error: duplicate member 'fin' uint8_t fin:1; ^~~ src/nxt_websocket_header.h:31:13: error: duplicate member 'payload_len' uint8_t payload_len:7; ^~~~~~~~~~~ src/nxt_websocket_header.h:32:13: error: duplicate member 'mask' uint8_t mask:1; ^~~~ This commit fixes that by using the new NXT_HAVE_{BIG,LITTLE}_ENDIAN macros introduced in the previous commit. Closes: <https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/297> Fixes: e501c74 ("Introducing websocket support in router and libunit.") Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-12Autodetect endianness.Andrew Clayton2-1/+32
In configure we set NXT_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN for i386, amd64 and x86_64. However that misses at least AArch64 (arm64) where it's usually run in little endian mode. However none of that really matters as NXT_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN isn't used anywhere. So why this patch? The only place we need to explicitly know about endianness is the nxt_websocket_header_t structure where we lay it out differently depending on endianness. This is currently done using BYTE_ORDER, LITTLE_ENDIAN and BIG_ENDIAN macros. However on at least illumos (OpenSolaris / OpenIndiana) those macros are not defined and we get compiler errors due to duplicate structure members. So let's use our own NXT_HAVE_{BIG,LITTLE}_ENDIAN macros. However it would be better to detect endianness programmatically as some architectures can run in either mode, e.g Linux used to run in big endian on PowerPC but has since switched to little endian (to match x86). This commit adds an auto/endian script (using a slightly modified version of the test program from nginx's auto script), that checks for the endianness of the platform being built on. E.g checking for endianness ... little endian The next commit will switch the nxt_websocket_header_t structure over to these new macros. Link: <https://github.com/nginx/unit/pull/298> Link: <https://developer.ibm.com/articles/l-power-little-endian-faq-trs/> Tested-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-12Python: Fix enabling of UTF-8 in some situations.Andrew Clayton1-0/+14
There was a couple of reports of Python applications failing due to the following type of error File "/opt/netbox/netbox/netbox/configuration.py", line 25, in _import print(f"\U0001f9ec loaded config '{path}'") UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character '\U0001f9ec' in position 0: ordinal not in range(128) due to the use of Unicode text in the print() statement. This only happened for python 3.8+ when using the "home" configuration option as this meant we were going through the new PyConfig configuration. When using this new configuration method with the 'isolated' specific API (for embedded Python) UTF-8 is disabled by default, PyPreConfig->utf8_mode = 0. To fix this we need to setup the Python pre config and enable utf-8 mode. However rather than enable utf-8 unconditionally we can set to it to -1 so that it will use the LC_CTYPE environment variable to determine whether to enable utf-8 mode or not. utf-8 mode will be enabled if LC_CTYPE is either: C, POSIX or some specific UTF-8 locale. This is the default utf8_mode setting when using the non-isolated PyPreConfig API. Reported-by: Tobias Genannt <tobias.genannt@kappa-velorum.net> Tested-by: Tobias Genannt <tobias.genannt@kappa-velorum.net> Link: <https://peps.python.org/pep-0587/> Link: <https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/init_config.html#c.PyPreConfig.utf8_mode> Fixes: 491d0f70 ("Python: Added support for Python 3.11.") Closes: <https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/817> Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-12Python: Do some cleanup in nxt_python3_init_config().Andrew Clayton1-10/+12
This is a preparatory patch for future work and cleans up the code a little in the Python 3.8+ variant of nxt_python3_init_config(). The main advantage being we no longer have calls to PyConfig_Clear() in two different paths. The variables have a little extra space in their declarations to allow for the next patch which introduces a variable with a longer type name, which will help reduce the size of the diff. Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2023-01-12Fixed the Slack workspace link.Artem Konev1-1/+1
2023-01-02Tools: setup-unit: disabled buggy behavior of zsh(1).Alejandro Colomar1-0/+3
Reported-by: Liam Crilly <liam@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2023-01-02Tools: setup-unit: workarounded macOS tmp file permissions.Alejandro Colomar1-1/+4
mktemp(1) in macOS uses a weird directory where only the running user has permissions. If we use that for the welcome website, unitd(8) won't be able to read the page. Use a directory at $HOME before trying a tmpdir. Reported-by: Liam Crilly <lcrilly@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2023-01-02Tools: setup-unit: removed root checks.Alejandro Colomar1-8/+0
Reported-by: Liam Crilly <lcrilly@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2022-12-28Packages: do not clean up rpm build root.Konstantin Pavlov1-2/+2
These directories are used in the Makefile to determine status of a target.
2022-12-15Docs: added changelog for Python 3.11.Konstantin Pavlov2-2/+16
While at it, fixed changelogs generation for Python 3.10 as well.
2022-12-19Tools: unitc avoid interactive rm(1) invocations.Liam Crilly1-3/+3
2022-12-16Tools: Fixed bug in help message.Alejandro Colomar1-1/+1
'sudo' was misplaced. Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2022-12-16Tools: Using HereDoc instead of echo(1).Alejandro Colomar1-5/+7
This prevents accidents, which are likely to happen especially with quotes. Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2022-12-16Version bump.Andrei Zeliankou2-2/+31
2022-12-16Tools: fixed quoting for apostrophe in setup-unit.Liam Crilly1-1/+1
2022-12-15Unit 1.29.0 release.Andrei Zeliankou1-0/+1
2022-12-15Generated Dockerfiles for Unit 1.29.0.1.29.0Andrei Zeliankou8-8/+8
2022-12-15Added version 1.29.0 CHANGES.Andrei Zeliankou2-2/+42
2022-12-15Reordered changes for 1.29.0 by significance (subjective).Andrei Zeliankou1-17/+23
2022-12-14Tools: Updated built-in 'setup-unit' help, README.md command lines.Artem Konev2-70/+69
2022-12-14Packages: Used a more common name for pkg-config.Konstantin Pavlov1-1/+1
pkg-config package is named differently on supported rpm-based systems: - Amazon Linux 2 has pkgconfig - Fedora has pkgconf-pkg-config - RHEL 7 has pkgconfig - RHEL 8 and 9 have pkgconfig-pkg-config What they share in common is they all provide 'pkgconfig', which we can use in the spec file so we don't have to specify it per-OS.
2022-12-14Tests: added tests for "path" option in isolation/cgroup.Andrei Zeliankou1-0/+123
2022-12-07Packages: added njs support.Konstantin Pavlov5-8/+30
2022-11-29Added contribs and njs.Konstantin Pavlov6-0/+168
2022-12-14Tools: Added subcommands to setup-unit.Alejandro Colomar1-211/+1400
This script combines the old setup-unit (as the repo-config command), with new functionality, to provide an easy welcome website for first-time users, and also some more commands that are useful for administrating a running unitd(8) instance. Suggested-by: Liam Crilly <liam@nginx.com> Cc: Konstantin Pavlov <thresh@nginx.com> Cc: Artem Konev <a.konev@f5.com> Cc: Timo Start <t.stark@nginx.com> Cc: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2022-12-14Tools: Added unitc.Liam Crilly2-0/+310
2022-12-14Python: Added "prefix" to configuration.OutOfFocus417-23/+472
This patch gives users the option to set a `"prefix"` attribute for Python applications, either at the top level or for specific `"target"`s. If the attribute is present, the value of `"prefix"` must be a string beginning with `"/"`. If the value of the `"prefix"` attribute is longer than 1 character and ends in `"/"`, the trailing `"/"` is stripped. The purpose of the `"prefix"` attribute is to set the `SCRIPT_NAME` context value for WSGI applications and the `root_path` context value for ASGI applications, allowing applications to properly route requests regardless of the path that the server uses to expose the application. The context value is only set if the request's URL path begins with the value of the `"prefix"` attribute. In all other cases, the `SCRIPT_NAME` or `root_path` values are not set. In addition, for WSGI applications, the value of `"prefix"` will be stripped from the beginning of the request's URL path before it is sent to the application. Reviewed-by: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com> Reviewed-by: Artem Konev <artem.konev@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2022-12-14Removed dead code.OutOfFocus41-1/+0
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
2022-12-14Java: upgrading third-party components.Sergey A. Osokin4-24/+27
2022-12-13Docker: limited the waiting time for control socket removal.Konstantin Pavlov1-1/+15
Fixes https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/728 Refs https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/718
2022-12-13Regenerated Dockerfiles.Konstantin Pavlov2-4/+4
2022-12-07Docker: bumped language versions.Konstantin Pavlov1-2/+2
2022-12-13Tests: added tests for the large header buffer settings.Andrei Zeliankou1-0/+60
Added tests for the "large_header_buffer_size" and "large_header_buffers" configuration options.
2022-12-13Configuration: made large_header_buffers a valid setting.Andrew Clayton1-0/+3
This is an extension to the previous commit, which made large_header_buffer_size a valid configuration setting. This commit makes a related value, large_header_buffers, a valid configuration setting. While large_header_buffer_size effectively limits the maximum size of any single header (although unit will try to pack multiple headers into a buffer if they wholly fit). large_header_buffers limits how many of these 'large' buffers are available. It makes sense to also allow this to be user set. large_header_buffers is already set by the configuration system in nxt_router.c it just isn't set as a valid config option in nxt_conf_validation.c With this change users can set this option in their config if required by the following "settings": { "http": { "large_header_buffers": 8 } }, It retains its default value of 4 if this is not set. NOTE: This is being released as undocumented and subject to change as it exposes internal workings of unit. Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-12-13Configuration: made large_header_buffer_size a valid setting.Andrew Clayton1-0/+3
@JanMikes and @tagur87 on GitHub both reported issues with long URLs that were exceeding the 8192 byte large_header_buffer_size setting, which resulted in a HTTP 431 error (Request Header Fields Too Large). This can be resolved in the code by updating the following line in src/nxt_router.c::nxt_router_conf_create() skcf->large_header_buffer_size = 8192; However, requiring users to modify unit and install custom versions is less than ideal. We could increase the value, but to what? This commit takes the option of allowing the user to set this option in their config by making large_header_buffer_size a valid configuration setting. large_header_buffer_size is already set by the configuration system in nxt_router.c it just isn't set as a valid config option in nxt_conf_validation.c With this change users can set this option in their config if required by the following "settings": { "http": { "large_header_buffer_size": 16384 } }, It retains its default value of 8192 bytes if this is not set. With this commit, without the above setting or too low a value, with a long URL you get a 431 error. With the above setting set to a large enough value, the request is successful. NOTE: This setting really determines the maximum size of any single header _value_. Also, unit will try and place multiple values into a buffer _if_ they fully fit. NOTE: This is being released as undocumented and subject to change as it exposes internal workings of unit. Closes: <https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/521> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-12-12Tests: stop execution if can't unmount any filesystem.Andrei Zeliankou2-2/+15
2022-12-12Tests: pretty output.Andrei Zeliankou3-9/+10
Hide expected alerts by default. Silence succesfull "go build" information.
2022-12-10Isolation: wired up cgroup support to the config system.Andrew Clayton2-0/+68
This hooks the cgroup support up to the config system so it can actually be used. To make use of this in unit a new "cgroup" section has been added to the isolation configuration. e.g "applications": { "python": { "type": "python", "processes": 5, "path": "/opt/unit/unit-cgroup-test/", "module": "app", "isolation": { "cgroup": { "path": "app/python" } } } } Now there are two ways to specify the path, relative, like the above (without a leading '/') and absolute (with a leading '/'). In the above case the "python" application is placed into its own cgroup under CGROUP_ROOT/<main unit process cgroup>/app/python. Whereas if you specified say "path": "/unit/app/python" Then the python application would be placed under CGROUP_ROOT/unit/app/python The first option allows you to easily take advantage of any resource limits that have already been configured for unit. With the second method (absolute pathname) if you know of an already existing cgroup where you'd like to place it, you can, e.g "path": "/system.slice/unit/python" Where system.slice has already been created by systemd and may already have some overall system limits applied which would also apply to unit. Limits apply down the hierarchy and lower groups can't exceed the previous group limits. So what does this actually look like? Lets take the unit-calculator application[0] and have each of its applications placed into their own cgroup. If we give each application a new section like "isolation": { "cgroup": { "path": "/unit/unit-calculator/add" } } changing the path for each one, we can visualise the result with the systemd-cgls command, e.g │ └─session-5.scope (#4561) │ ├─ 6667 sshd: andrew [priv] │ ├─ 6684 sshd: andrew@pts/0 │ ├─ 6685 -bash │ ├─ 12632 unit: main v1.28.0 [/opt/unit/sbin/unitd --control 127.0.0.1:808> │ ├─ 12634 unit: controller │ ├─ 12635 unit: router │ ├─ 13550 systemd-cgls │ └─ 13551 less ├─unit (#4759) │ └─unit-calculator (#5037) │ ├─subtract (#5069) │ │ ├─ 12650 unit: "subtract" prototype │ │ └─ 12651 unit: "subtract" application │ ├─multiply (#5085) │ │ ├─ 12653 unit: "multiply" prototype │ │ └─ 12654 unit: "multiply" application │ ├─divide (#5101) │ │ ├─ 12671 unit: "divide" prototype │ │ └─ 12672 node divide.js │ ├─sqroot (#5117) │ │ ├─ 12679 unit: "sqroot" prototype │ │ └─ 12680 /home/andrew/src/unit-calculator/sqroot/sqroot │ └─add (#5053) │ ├─ 12648 unit: "add" prototype │ └─ 12649 unit: "add" application We used an absolute path so the cgroups will be created relative to the main cgroupfs mount, e.g /sys/fs/cgroup We can see that the main unit processes are in the same cgroup as the shell from where they were started, by default child process are placed into the same cgroup as the parent. Then we can see that each application has been placed into its own cgroup under /sys/fs/cgroup Taking another example of a simple 5 process python application, with "isolation": { "cgroup": { "path": "app/python" } } Here we have specified a relative path and thus the python application will be placed below the existing cgroup that contains the main unit process. E.g │ │ │ ├─app-glib-cinnamon\x2dcustom\x2dlauncher\x2d3-43951.scope (#90951) │ │ │ │ ├─ 988 unit: main v1.28.0 [/opt/unit/sbin/unitd --no-daemon] │ │ │ │ ├─ 990 unit: controller │ │ │ │ ├─ 991 unit: router │ │ │ │ ├─ 43951 xterm -bg rgb:20/20/20 -fg white -fa DejaVu Sans Mono │ │ │ │ ├─ 43956 bash │ │ │ │ ├─ 58828 sudo -i │ │ │ │ ├─ 58831 -bash │ │ │ │ └─app (#107351) │ │ │ │ └─python (#107367) │ │ │ │ ├─ 992 unit: "python" prototype │ │ │ │ ├─ 993 unit: "python" application │ │ │ │ ├─ 994 unit: "python" application │ │ │ │ ├─ 995 unit: "python" application │ │ │ │ ├─ 996 unit: "python" application │ │ │ │ └─ 997 unit: "python" application [0]: <https://github.com/lcrilly/unit-calculator> Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-12-10Isolation: wired up cgroup to build system.Andrew Clayton4-0/+29
This commit enables the building of the cgroup code. This is only built when the cgroupv2 filesystem is found. If cgroupv2 support is found then cgroupv2: .................. YES will be printed by ./configure Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-12-10Isolation: wired up per-application cgroup support internally.Andrew Clayton4-0/+79
This commit hooks into the cgroup infrastructure added in the previous commit to create per-application cgroups. It does this by adding each "prototype process" into its own cgroup, then each child process inherits its parents cgroup. If we fail to create a cgroup we simply fail the process. This behaviour may get enhanced in the future. This won't actually do anything yet. Subsequent commits will hook this up to the build and config systems. Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-12-10Isolation: added core cgroup infrastructure.Andrew Clayton2-0/+188
Firstly, this is not to be confused with CLONE_NEWCGROUP which unit already supports and is related to namespaces. To re-cap, namespaces allow processes to have different views of various parts of the system such as filesystem mounts, networking, hostname etc. Whereas cgroup[0] is a Linux kernel facility for collecting a bunch of processes together to perform some task on the group as a whole, for example to implement resource limits. There are two parts to cgroup, the core part of organising processes into a hierarchy and the controllers which are responsible for enforcing resource limits etc. There are currently two versions of the cgroup sub-system, the original cgroup and a version 2[1] introduced in 3.16 (August 2014) and marked stable in 4.5 (March 2016). This commit supports the cgroup V2 API and implements the ability to place applications into their own cgroup on a per-application basis. You can put them each into their own cgroup or you can group some together. The ability to set resource limits can easily be added in future. The initial use case of this would be to aid in observability of unit applications which becomes much easier if you can just monitor them on a per cgroup basis. One thing to note about cgroup, is that unlike namespaces which are controlled via system calls such as clone(2) and unshare(2), cgroups are setup and controlled through the cgroupfs pseudo-filesystem. cgroup is Linux only and this support will only be enabled if configure finds the cgroup2 filesystem mount, e.g cgroup2 on /sys/fs/cgroup type cgroup2 (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,seclabel,nsdelegate,memory_recursiveprot) The cgroups are removed on shutdown or as required on reconfiguration. This commit just adds the basic infrastructure for using cgroups within unit. Subsequent commits will wire up this support. It supports creating cgroups relative to the main cgroup root and also below the cgroup of the main unit process. [0]: <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/cgroups.7.html> [1]: <https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/admin-guide/cgroup-v2.html> Cc: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
2022-12-10Added simple wrappers for fopen(3) and fclose(3).Andrew Clayton2-0/+41
Add simple wrapper functions for fopen(3) and fclose(3) that are somewhat akin to the nxt_file_open() and nxt_file_close() wrappers that log errors. Suggested-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Reviewed-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>