view http_header_buffers.t @ 1606:e4e0695552ed

Tests: fixed stream_proxy_ssl_conf_command.t. The stream_proxy_ssl_conf_command.t test used stream return module to return the response. Since this ignores actual request, but the perl test code used http_get(). This might result in the request being sent after the response is returned and the connection closed by the server, resulting in RST being generated and no response seen by the client at all. Fix is to use "stream(...)->read()" instead of http_get(), so no request is sent at all, eliminating possibility of RST being generated.
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Tue, 10 Nov 2020 05:03:29 +0300
parents 66c7dee0431c
children
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/perl

# (C) Maxim Dounin
# (C) Nginx, Inc.

# Tests for large_client_header_buffers directive.

###############################################################################

use warnings;
use strict;

use Test::More;

use Socket qw/ CRLF /;

BEGIN { use FindBin; chdir($FindBin::Bin); }

use lib 'lib';
use Test::Nginx;

###############################################################################

select STDERR; $| = 1;
select STDOUT; $| = 1;

my $t = Test::Nginx->new()->has(qw/http rewrite/)->plan(10)
	->write_file_expand('nginx.conf', <<'EOF');

%%TEST_GLOBALS%%

daemon off;

events {
}

http {
    %%TEST_GLOBALS_HTTP%%

    connection_pool_size 128;
    client_header_buffer_size 128;

    server {
        listen       127.0.0.1:8080;
        server_name  five;

        large_client_header_buffers 5 256;

        return 204;
    }

    server {
        listen       127.0.0.1:8080;
        server_name  ten;

        large_client_header_buffers 10 256;

        return 204;
    }

    server {
        listen       127.0.0.1:8080;
        server_name  one;

        large_client_header_buffers 1 256;

        return 204;
    }

    server {
        listen       127.0.0.1:8080;
        server_name  foo;

        large_client_header_buffers 5 256;

        add_header X-URI $uri;
        add_header X-Foo $http_x_foo;
        return 204;
    }
}

EOF

$t->run();

###############################################################################

TODO: {
todo_skip 'overflow', 2 unless $ENV{TEST_NGINX_UNSAFE};

# if hc->busy is allocated before the virtual server is selected,
# and then additional buffers are allocated in a virtual server with larger
# number of buffers configured, hc->busy will be overflowed

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.0" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"Host: ten" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr/204|400/, 'additional buffers in virtual server');

# for pipelined requests large header buffers are saved to hc->free;
# it sized for number of buffers in the current virtual server, but
# saves previously allocated buffers, and there may be more buffers if
# allocatad before the virtual server was selected

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"Host: one" . CRLF .
	CRLF .
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: one" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr/204/, 'pipelined with too many buffers');

}

# check if long header and long request lines are correctly returned
# when nginx allocates a long header buffer

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.0" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr/X-Foo: foo(1234567890){20}bar/, 'long header');

like(http(
	"GET /foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar HTTP/1.0" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr!X-URI: /foo(1234567890){20}bar!, 'long request line');

# the same as the above, but with pipelining, so there is a buffer
# allocated in the previous request

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF .
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr/X-Foo: foo(1234567890){20}bar/, 'long header after pipelining');

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF .
	"GET /foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr!X-URI: /foo(1234567890){20}bar!, 'long request line after pipelining');

# the same as the above, but with keepalive; this ensures that previously
# allocated buffers are properly cleaned up when we set keepalive handler

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF,
sleep => 0.1, body =>
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr/X-Foo: foo(1234567890){20}bar/, 'long header after keepalive');

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF,
sleep => 0.1, body =>
	"GET /foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr!X-URI: /foo(1234567890){20}bar!, 'long request line after keepalive');

# the same as the above, but with pipelining and then keepalive;
# this ensures that previously allocated buffers are properly cleaned
# up when we set keepalive handler, including hc->free

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF .
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF,
sleep => 0.1, body =>
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr/X-Foo: foo(1234567890){20}bar/, 'long header after both');

like(http(
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF .
	"GET / HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"X-Foo: " . ("1234567890" x 20) . CRLF .
	CRLF,
sleep => 0.1, body =>
	"GET /foo" . ("1234567890" x 20) . "bar HTTP/1.1" . CRLF .
	"Host: foo" . CRLF .
	"Connection: close" . CRLF .
	CRLF
), qr!X-URI: /foo(1234567890){20}bar!, 'long request line after both');

###############################################################################