view src/os/unix/ngx_alloc.h @ 7680:39501ce97e29

gRPC: generate error when response size is wrong. As long as the "Content-Length" header is given, we now make sure it exactly matches the size of the response. If it doesn't, the response is considered malformed and must not be forwarded (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7540#section-8.1.2.6). While it is not really possible to "not forward" the response which is already being forwarded, we generate an error instead, which is the closest equivalent. Previous behaviour was to pass everything to the client, but this seems to be suboptimal and causes issues (ticket #1695). Also this directly contradicts HTTP/2 specification requirements. Note that the new behaviour for the gRPC proxy is more strict than that applied in other variants of proxying. This is intentional, as HTTP/2 specification requires us to do so, while in other types of proxying malformed responses from backends are well known and historically tolerated.
author Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru>
date Mon, 06 Jul 2020 18:36:25 +0300
parents d620f497c50f
children
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/*
 * Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev
 * Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc.
 */


#ifndef _NGX_ALLOC_H_INCLUDED_
#define _NGX_ALLOC_H_INCLUDED_


#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>


void *ngx_alloc(size_t size, ngx_log_t *log);
void *ngx_calloc(size_t size, ngx_log_t *log);

#define ngx_free          free


/*
 * Linux has memalign() or posix_memalign()
 * Solaris has memalign()
 * FreeBSD 7.0 has posix_memalign(), besides, early version's malloc()
 * aligns allocations bigger than page size at the page boundary
 */

#if (NGX_HAVE_POSIX_MEMALIGN || NGX_HAVE_MEMALIGN)

void *ngx_memalign(size_t alignment, size_t size, ngx_log_t *log);

#else

#define ngx_memalign(alignment, size, log)  ngx_alloc(size, log)

#endif


extern ngx_uint_t  ngx_pagesize;
extern ngx_uint_t  ngx_pagesize_shift;
extern ngx_uint_t  ngx_cacheline_size;


#endif /* _NGX_ALLOC_H_INCLUDED_ */