Mercurial > hg > nginx-quic
view src/os/unix/ngx_socket.c @ 8551:c35b255d80dc quic
HTTP/3: close connection on keepalive_requests * 2.
After receiving GOAWAY, client is not supposed to create new streams. However,
until client reads this frame, we allow it to create new streams, which are
gracefully rejected. To prevent client from abusing this algorithm, a new
limit is introduced. Upon reaching keepalive_requests * 2, server now closes
the entire QUIC connection claiming excessive load.
author | Roman Arutyunyan <arut@nginx.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 29 Jul 2021 16:01:37 +0300 |
parents | d620f497c50f |
children |
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/* * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc. */ #include <ngx_config.h> #include <ngx_core.h> /* * ioctl(FIONBIO) sets a non-blocking mode with the single syscall * while fcntl(F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK) needs to learn the current state * using fcntl(F_GETFL). * * ioctl() and fcntl() are syscalls at least in FreeBSD 2.x, Linux 2.2 * and Solaris 7. * * ioctl() in Linux 2.4 and 2.6 uses BKL, however, fcntl(F_SETFL) uses it too. */ #if (NGX_HAVE_FIONBIO) int ngx_nonblocking(ngx_socket_t s) { int nb; nb = 1; return ioctl(s, FIONBIO, &nb); } int ngx_blocking(ngx_socket_t s) { int nb; nb = 0; return ioctl(s, FIONBIO, &nb); } #endif #if (NGX_FREEBSD) int ngx_tcp_nopush(ngx_socket_t s) { int tcp_nopush; tcp_nopush = 1; return setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_TCP, TCP_NOPUSH, (const void *) &tcp_nopush, sizeof(int)); } int ngx_tcp_push(ngx_socket_t s) { int tcp_nopush; tcp_nopush = 0; return setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_TCP, TCP_NOPUSH, (const void *) &tcp_nopush, sizeof(int)); } #elif (NGX_LINUX) int ngx_tcp_nopush(ngx_socket_t s) { int cork; cork = 1; return setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_TCP, TCP_CORK, (const void *) &cork, sizeof(int)); } int ngx_tcp_push(ngx_socket_t s) { int cork; cork = 0; return setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_TCP, TCP_CORK, (const void *) &cork, sizeof(int)); } #else int ngx_tcp_nopush(ngx_socket_t s) { return 0; } int ngx_tcp_push(ngx_socket_t s) { return 0; } #endif