view conf/fastcgi.conf @ 9191:618132842e7c

QUIC: ignore duplicate PATH_CHALLENGE frames. According to RFC 9000, an endpoint SHOULD NOT send multiple PATH_CHALLENGE frames in a single packet. The change adds a check to enforce this claim to optimize server behavior. Previously each PATH_CHALLENGE always resulted in a single response datagram being sent to client. The effect of this was however limited by QUIC flood protection. Also, PATH_CHALLENGE is explicitly disabled in Initial and Handshake levels, see RFC 9000, Table 3. However, technically it may be sent by client in 0-RTT over a new path without actual migration, even though the migration itself is prohibited during handshake. This allows client to coalesce multiple 0-RTT packets each carrying a PATH_CHALLENGE and end up with multiple PATH_CHALLENGEs per datagram. This again leads to suboptimal behavior, see above. Since the purpose of sending PATH_CHALLENGE frames in 0-RTT is unclear, these frames are now only allowed in 1-RTT. For 0-RTT they are silently ignored.
author Roman Arutyunyan <arut@nginx.com>
date Wed, 22 Nov 2023 14:48:12 +0400
parents 62869a9b2e7d
children
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fastcgi_param  SCRIPT_FILENAME    $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_param  QUERY_STRING       $query_string;
fastcgi_param  REQUEST_METHOD     $request_method;
fastcgi_param  CONTENT_TYPE       $content_type;
fastcgi_param  CONTENT_LENGTH     $content_length;

fastcgi_param  SCRIPT_NAME        $fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_param  REQUEST_URI        $request_uri;
fastcgi_param  DOCUMENT_URI       $document_uri;
fastcgi_param  DOCUMENT_ROOT      $document_root;
fastcgi_param  SERVER_PROTOCOL    $server_protocol;
fastcgi_param  REQUEST_SCHEME     $scheme;
fastcgi_param  HTTPS              $https if_not_empty;

fastcgi_param  GATEWAY_INTERFACE  CGI/1.1;
fastcgi_param  SERVER_SOFTWARE    nginx/$nginx_version;

fastcgi_param  REMOTE_ADDR        $remote_addr;
fastcgi_param  REMOTE_PORT        $remote_port;
fastcgi_param  SERVER_ADDR        $server_addr;
fastcgi_param  SERVER_PORT        $server_port;
fastcgi_param  SERVER_NAME        $server_name;

# PHP only, required if PHP was built with --enable-force-cgi-redirect
fastcgi_param  REDIRECT_STATUS    200;