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Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Holt
a5ebec0041
http: Change routes to sequential matcher evaluation (#2967)
Previously, all matchers in a route would be evaluated before any
handlers were executed, and a composite route of the matching routes
would be created. This made rewrites especially tricky, since the only
way to defer later matchers' evaluation was to wrap them in a subroute,
or to invoke a "rehandle" which often caused bugs.

Instead, this new sequential design evaluates each route's matchers then
its handlers in lock-step; matcher-handlers-matcher-handlers...

If the first matching route consists of a rewrite, then the second route
will be evaluated against the rewritten request, rather than the original
one, and so on.

This should do away with any need for rehandling.

I've also taken this opportunity to avoid adding new values to the
request context in the handler chain, as this creates a copy of the
Request struct, which may possibly lead to bugs like it has in the past
(see PR #1542, PR #1481, and maybe issue #2463). We now add all the
expected context values in the top-level handler at the server, then
any new values can be added to the variable table via the VarsCtxKey
context key, or just the GetVar/SetVar functions. In particular, we are
using this facility to convey dial information in the reverse proxy.

Had to be careful in one place as the middleware compilation logic has
changed, and moved a bit. We no longer compile a middleware chain per-
request; instead, we can compile it at provision-time, and defer only the
evaluation of matchers to request-time, which should slightly improve
performance. Doing this, however, we take advantage of multiple function
closures, and we also changed the use of HandlerFunc (function pointer)
to Handler (interface)... this led to a situation where, if we aren't
careful, allows one request routed a certain way to permanently change
the "next" handler for all/most other requests! We avoid this by making
a copy of the interface value (which is a lightweight pointer copy) and
using exclusively that within our wrapped handlers. This way, the
original stack frame is preserved in a "read-only" fashion. The comments
in the code describe this phenomenon.

This may very well be a breaking change for some configurations, however
I do not expect it to impact many people. I will make it clear in the
release notes that this change has occurred.
2020-01-09 10:00:13 -07:00
Matthew Holt
95d944613b
Export Replacer and use concrete type instead of interface
The interface was only making things difficult; a concrete pointer is
probably best.
2019-12-29 13:12:52 -07:00
Matthew Holt
95ed603de7
Improve godocs all around
These will be used in the new automated documentation system
2019-12-23 12:45:35 -07:00
Mohammed Al Sahaf
93bc1b72e3 core: Use port ranges to avoid OOM with bad inputs (#2859)
* fix OOM issue caught by fuzzing

* use ParsedAddress as the struct name for the result of ParseNetworkAddress

* simplify code using the ParsedAddress type

* minor cleanups
2019-11-11 15:33:38 -07:00
Matthew Holt
1e31be8de0
reverse_proxy: Allow dynamic backends (closes #990 and #1539)
This PR enables the use of placeholders in an upstream's Dial address.

A Dial address must represent precisely one socket after replacements.

See also #998 and #1639.
2019-10-11 14:25:39 -06:00
Matthew Holt
e73b117332
reverse_proxy: Ability to mutate headers; set upstream placeholders 2019-09-14 13:25:26 -06:00
Matthew Holt
b4f4fcd437
Migrate some selection policy tests over to v2 2019-09-09 21:44:58 -06:00
Matthew Holt
0830fbad03
Reconcile upstream dial addresses and request host/URL information
My goodness that was complicated

Blessed be request.Context

Sort of
2019-09-05 13:14:39 -06:00
Matthew Holt
acb8f0e0c2
Integrate circuit breaker modules with reverse proxy 2019-09-03 19:06:54 -06:00
Matthew Holt
652460e03e
Some cleanup and godoc 2019-09-03 16:56:09 -06:00