view src/core/ngx_syslog.h @ 8338:0f9e9786b90d quic

Added primitive flow control mechanisms. + MAX_STREAM_DATA frame is sent when recv() is performed on stream The new value is a sum of total bytes received by stream + free space in a buffer; The sending of MAX_STREM_DATA frame in response to STREAM_DATA_BLOCKED frame is adjusted to follow the same logic as above. + MAX_DATA frame is sent when total amount of received data is 2x of current limit. The limit is doubled. + Default values of transport parameters are adjusted to more meaningful values: initial stream limits are set to quic buffer size instead of unrealistically small 255. initial max data is decreased to 16 buffer sizes, in an assumption that this is enough for a relatively short connection, instead of randomly chosen big number. All this allows to initiate a stable flow of streams that does not block on stream/connection limits (tested with FF 77.0a1 and 100K requests)
author Vladimir Homutov <vl@nginx.com>
date Wed, 15 Apr 2020 18:54:03 +0300
parents 7f9935f07fe9
children 29adacffdefa
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/*
 * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.
 */


#ifndef _NGX_SYSLOG_H_INCLUDED_
#define _NGX_SYSLOG_H_INCLUDED_


typedef struct {
    ngx_uint_t        facility;
    ngx_uint_t        severity;
    ngx_str_t         tag;

    ngx_addr_t        server;
    ngx_connection_t  conn;
    unsigned          busy:1;
    unsigned          nohostname:1;
} ngx_syslog_peer_t;


char *ngx_syslog_process_conf(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_syslog_peer_t *peer);
u_char *ngx_syslog_add_header(ngx_syslog_peer_t *peer, u_char *buf);
void ngx_syslog_writer(ngx_log_t *log, ngx_uint_t level, u_char *buf,
    size_t len);
ssize_t ngx_syslog_send(ngx_syslog_peer_t *peer, u_char *buf, size_t len);


#endif /* _NGX_SYSLOG_H_INCLUDED_ */