Mercurial > hg > nginx
view src/misc/ngx_google_perftools_module.c @ 8006:32b0ba4855a6
HTTP/2: made it possible to flush response headers (ticket #1743).
Response headers can be buffered in the SSL buffer. But stream's fake
connection buffered flag did not reflect this, so any attempts to flush
the buffer without sending additional data were stopped by the write filter.
It does not seem to be possible to reflect this in fc->buffered though, as
we never known if main connection's c->buffered corresponds to the particular
stream or not. As such, fc->buffered might prevent request finalization
due to sending data on some other stream.
Fix is to implement handling of flush buffers when the c->need_flush_buf
flag is set, similarly to the existing last buffer handling. The same
flag is now used for UDP sockets in the stream module instead of explicit
checking of c->type.
author | Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 03 Feb 2022 01:44:38 +0300 |
parents | a27e0c7e198c |
children |
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/* * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc. */ #include <ngx_config.h> #include <ngx_core.h> /* * declare Profiler interface here because * <google/profiler.h> is C++ header file */ int ProfilerStart(u_char* fname); void ProfilerStop(void); void ProfilerRegisterThread(void); static void *ngx_google_perftools_create_conf(ngx_cycle_t *cycle); static ngx_int_t ngx_google_perftools_worker(ngx_cycle_t *cycle); typedef struct { ngx_str_t profiles; } ngx_google_perftools_conf_t; static ngx_command_t ngx_google_perftools_commands[] = { { ngx_string("google_perftools_profiles"), NGX_MAIN_CONF|NGX_DIRECT_CONF|NGX_CONF_TAKE1, ngx_conf_set_str_slot, 0, offsetof(ngx_google_perftools_conf_t, profiles), NULL }, ngx_null_command }; static ngx_core_module_t ngx_google_perftools_module_ctx = { ngx_string("google_perftools"), ngx_google_perftools_create_conf, NULL }; ngx_module_t ngx_google_perftools_module = { NGX_MODULE_V1, &ngx_google_perftools_module_ctx, /* module context */ ngx_google_perftools_commands, /* module directives */ NGX_CORE_MODULE, /* module type */ NULL, /* init master */ NULL, /* init module */ ngx_google_perftools_worker, /* init process */ NULL, /* init thread */ NULL, /* exit thread */ NULL, /* exit process */ NULL, /* exit master */ NGX_MODULE_V1_PADDING }; static void * ngx_google_perftools_create_conf(ngx_cycle_t *cycle) { ngx_google_perftools_conf_t *gptcf; gptcf = ngx_pcalloc(cycle->pool, sizeof(ngx_google_perftools_conf_t)); if (gptcf == NULL) { return NULL; } /* * set by ngx_pcalloc() * * gptcf->profiles = { 0, NULL }; */ return gptcf; } static ngx_int_t ngx_google_perftools_worker(ngx_cycle_t *cycle) { u_char *profile; ngx_google_perftools_conf_t *gptcf; gptcf = (ngx_google_perftools_conf_t *) ngx_get_conf(cycle->conf_ctx, ngx_google_perftools_module); if (gptcf->profiles.len == 0) { return NGX_OK; } profile = ngx_alloc(gptcf->profiles.len + NGX_INT_T_LEN + 2, cycle->log); if (profile == NULL) { return NGX_OK; } if (getenv("CPUPROFILE")) { /* disable inherited Profiler enabled in master process */ ProfilerStop(); } ngx_sprintf(profile, "%V.%d%Z", &gptcf->profiles, ngx_pid); if (ProfilerStart(profile)) { /* start ITIMER_PROF timer */ ProfilerRegisterThread(); } else { ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_CRIT, cycle->log, ngx_errno, "ProfilerStart(%s) failed", profile); } ngx_free(profile); return NGX_OK; } /* ProfilerStop() is called on Profiler destruction */