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Reproduces issue https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/1169.
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Acked-by: Timo Stark <t.stark@nginx.com>
[ Remove trailing '.' from subject line - Andrew ]
Signed-off-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
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Python applications are used only to generate responses here and can be
replaced by applications written in any other language. While the
"_python" prefix is used to indicate that the file contains tests
specific to the Python module.
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These tests cause router crash when run with AddressSanitizer:
=================================================================
==77196==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x60c000079340 at pc 0x55d56b132d4b bp 0x7f8cc7f346b0 sp 0x7f8cc7f346a0
READ of size 1 at 0x60c000079340 thread T1
#0 0x55d56b132d4a in nxt_openssl_conn_io_shutdown src/nxt_openssl.c:1466
#1 0x55d56b0f6a25 in nxt_h1p_closing src/nxt_h1proto.c:2069
#2 0x55d56b1009a6 in nxt_h1p_shutdown src/nxt_h1proto.c:2038
#3 0x55d56b1014c3 in nxt_h1p_request_close src/nxt_h1proto.c:1718
#4 0x55d56b1045c0 in nxt_http_request_close_handler src/nxt_http_request.c:864
#5 0x55d56b104988 in nxt_http_request_done src/nxt_http_request.c:795
#6 0x55d56b0ba0c3 in nxt_event_engine_start src/nxt_event_engine.c:542
#7 0x55d56b0dcac2 in nxt_router_thread_start src/nxt_router.c:3645
#8 0x55d56b0b421b in nxt_thread_trampoline src/nxt_thread.c:126
#9 0x7f8ccab95ac2 (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x94ac2)
#10 0x7f8ccac2784f (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x12684f)
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This flag is necessary to either run or skip certain tests that have
specific behavior depending on whether AddressSanitizer is enabled.
For instance, some tests may fail only when the binary is compiled
with AddressSanitizer.
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It can fail with reporting following alert:
[alert] 137462#137462 mount("none", "/tmp/unit-test-636e0uh8/proc", "proc", 2097162, "") (16: Device or resource busy)
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@filiphanes requested support for bytearray
and memoryview in the request body here:
<https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/648>
This patch implements bytearray body support only.
Memoryview body still need to be implemented.
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* Take options as well as requestListener
Unit-http have not kept up with the signature of nodejs's http package
development. Nodejs allows an optional `options` object to be passed to
the `createServer` function, we didn't. This resulted in function
signature errors when user code that did make use of the options arg
tried to call unit's replaced function.
This change changes the signature to be more in line with how nodejs
does it discarding it and printing a message to stdout.
* Add test file to start node application with options
* Add changes to docs/changes.xml
Closes: https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/1043
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Conditional access logging was introduced here:
https://github.com/nginx/unit/commit/4c91bebb50d06b28e369d68b23022caa072cf62d
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According to the Node.js documenation this variable
should only include numbering scheme.
Thanks to @dbit-xia.
Closes: https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/1085
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Also fixed various pylint errors and style issues.
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For more information see:
https://github.com/rack/rack/commit/42aff22f708123839ba706cbe659d108b47c40c7
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This closes #1006 issue on GitHub.
Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
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After the launch of the project, the testing infrastructure was shared with
nginx project in some cases. To avoid port overlap, a decision was made
to shift the port range for Unit tests. This problem was resolved a long time
ago and is no longer relevant, so it is now safe to use port 8XXX range as the
default, as it is more appropriate for testing purposes.
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This variable contains a string that is formed using random data and
can be used as a unique request identifier.
This closes #714 issue on GitHub.
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This test reproduces https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/964.
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This test reproduce https://github.com/nginx/unit/issues/923.
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Starting from Node.js 15.0.0 the chunk parameter of the response.write()
can be a Uint8Array.
This closes #870 issue on GitHub.
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Class usage came from the unittest framework and it was always redundant
after migration to the pytest. This commit removes classes from files
containing tests to make them more readable and understandable.
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Prerequisites check moved to the module level to simplify class structure.
Discovery and prerequisites checks functions moved to the separate files.
Introduced "require" fixture to provide per-test requirements check.
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Common methods from applications/proto.py converted to the fixtures.
sysctl check moved to the specific file where it is using.
Some options moved to the constructor to have early access.
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All log-related code moved to the log.py.
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To make fixtures accessible inside of setup methods in tests all these methods
are renamed to the "setup_method_fixture" and decorated by autouse flag.
Also all setup methods moved to the top of the files.
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Don't reconstruct a new string for the $request_line from the parsed
method, target, and HTTP version, but rather keep a pointer to the
original memory where the request line was received.
This will be necessary for implementing URI rewrites, since we want to
log the original request line, and not one constructed from the
rewritten target.
This implementation changes behavior (only for invalid requests) in the
following way:
Previous behavior was to log as many tokens from the request line as
were parsed validly, thus:
Request -> access log ; error log
"GET / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / HTTP/1.1" OK ; =
"GET / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / HTTP/1.1" [1] ; =
"GET / HTTP/2.1" -> "GET / HTTP/2.1" OK ; =
"GET / HTTP/1." -> "GET / HTTP/1." [2] ; "GET / HTTP/1. [null]"
"GET / food" -> "GET / food" [2] ; "GET / food [null]"
"GET / / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / / HTTP/1.1" [2] ; =
"GET / / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / / HTTP/1.1" [2] ; =
"GET food HTTP/1.1" -> "GET" ; "GET [null] [null]"
"OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1" -> "OPTIONS" [3] ; "OPTIONS [null] [null]"
"FOOBAR baz HTTP/1.1"-> "FOOBAR" ; "FOOBAR [null] [null]"
"FOOBAR / HTTP/1.1" -> "FOOBAR / HTTP/1.1" ; =
"get / HTTP/1.1" -> "-" ; " [null] [null]"
"" -> "-" ; " [null] [null]"
This behavior was rather inconsistent. We have several options to go
forward with this patch:
- NGINX behavior.
Log the entire request line, up to '\r' | '\n', even if it was
invalid.
This is the most informative alternative. However, RFC-complying
requests will probably not send invalid requests.
This information would be interesting to users where debugging
requests constructed manually via netcat(1) or a similar tool, or
maybe for debugging a client, are important. It might be interesting
to support this in the future if our users are interested; for now,
since this approach requires looping over invalid requests twice,
that's an overhead that we better avoid.
- Previous Unit behavior
This is relatively fast (almost as fast as the next alternative, the
one we chose), but the implementation is ugly, in that we need to
perform the same operation in many places around the code.
If we want performance, probably the next alternative is better; if
we want to be informative, then the first one is better (maybe in
combination with the third one too).
- Chosen behavior
Only logging request lines when the request is valid. For any
invalid request, or even unsupported ones, the request line will be
logged as "-". Thus:
Request -> access log [4]
"GET / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / HTTP/1.1" OK
"GET / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / HTTP/1.1" [1]
"GET / HTTP/2.1" -> "-" [3]
"GET / HTTP/1." -> "-"
"GET / food" -> "-"
"GET / / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / / HTTP/1.1" [2]
"GET / / HTTP/1.1" -> "GET / / HTTP/1.1" [2]
"GET food HTTP/1.1" -> "-"
"OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1" -> "-"
"FOOBAR baz HTTP/1.1"-> "-"
"FOOBAR / HTTP/1.1" -> "FOOBAR / HTTP/1.1"
"get / HTTP/1.1" -> "-"
"" -> "-"
This is less informative than previous behavior, but considering how
inconsistent it was, and that RFC-complying agents will probably not
send us such requests, we're ready to lose that information in the
log. This is of course the fastest and simplest implementation we
can get.
We've chosen to implement this alternative in this patch. Since we
modified the behavior, this patch also changes the affected tests.
[1]: Multiple successive spaces as a token delimiter is allowed by the
RFC, but it is discouraged, and considered a security risk. It is
currently supported by Unit, but we will probably drop support for
it in the future.
[2]: Unit currently supports spaces in the request-target. This is
a violation of the relevant RFC (linked below), and will be fixed
in the future, and consider those targets as invalid, returning
a 400 (Bad Request), and thus the log lines with the previous
inconsistent behavior would be changed.
[3]: Not yet supported.
[4]: In the error log, regarding the "log_routes" conditional logging
of the request line, we only need to log the request line if it
was valid. It doesn't make sense to log "" or "-" in case that
the request was invalid, since this is only useful for
understanding decisions of the router. In this case, the access
log is more appropriate, which shows that the request was invalid,
and a 400 was returned. When the request line is valid, it is
printed in the error log exactly as in the access log.
Link: <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc9112#section-3>
Suggested-by: Liam Crilly <liam@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Zhidao Hong <z.hong@f5.com>
Cc: Timo Stark <t.stark@nginx.com>
Cc: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com>
Cc: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Cc: Artem Konev <a.konev@f5.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
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This makes the build tree more organized, which is good for adding new
stuff. Now, it's useful for example for adding manual pages in man3/,
but it may be useful in the future for example for extending the build
system to run linters (e.g., clang-tidy(1), Clang analyzer, ...) on the
C source code.
Previously, the build tree was quite flat, and looked like this (after
`./configure && make`):
$ tree -I src build
build
├── Makefile
├── autoconf.data
├── autoconf.err
├── echo
├── libnxt.a
├── nxt_auto_config.h
├── nxt_version.h
├── unitd
└── unitd.8
1 directory, 9 files
And after this patch, it looks like this:
$ tree -I src build
build
├── Makefile
├── autoconf.data
├── autoconf.err
├── bin
│ └── echo
├── include
│ ├── nxt_auto_config.h
│ └── nxt_version.h
├── lib
│ ├── libnxt.a
│ └── unit
│ └── modules
├── sbin
│ └── unitd
├── share
│ └── man
│ └── man8
│ └── unitd.8
└── var
├── lib
│ └── unit
├── log
│ └── unit
└── run
└── unit
17 directories, 9 files
It also solves one issue introduced in
5a37171f733f ("Added default values for pathnames."). Before that
commit, it was possible to run unitd from the build system
(`./build/unitd`). Now, since it expects files in a very specific
location, that has been broken. By having a directory structure that
mirrors the installation, it's possible to trick it to believe it's
installed, and run it from there:
$ ./configure --prefix=./build
$ make
$ ./build/sbin/unitd
Fixes: 5a37171f733f ("Added default values for pathnames.")
Reported-by: Liam Crilly <liam@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Pavlov <thresh@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Cc: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com>
Cc: Zhidao Hong <z.hong@f5.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
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In BSD systems, it's usually </var/db> or some other dir under </var>
that is not </var/lib>, so $statedir is a more generic name. See
hier(7).
Reported-by: Andrei Zeliankou <zelenkov@nginx.com>
Reported-by: Zhidao Hong <z.hong@f5.com>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Pavlov <thresh@nginx.com>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Clayton <a.clayton@nginx.com>
Cc: Liam Crilly <liam@nginx.com>
Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@nginx.com>
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We install jars with names like websocket-api-${NXT_JAVA_MODULE}-$NXT_VERSION.jar,
which translates to versioned NXT_JAVA_MODULE in the packaging system, e.g.
websocket-api-java11-1.30.0.jar.
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