From: Eric Wong <e@80x24.org>
To: Simon Eskildsen <simon.eskildsen@shopify.com>
Cc: unicorn-public@bogomips.org, raindrops-public@bogomips.org
Subject: Re: check_client_connection using getsockopt(2)
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2017 18:33:52 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20170222183352.GA28771@starla> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAO3HKM49+aLD=KLij3zhJqkWnR7bCWVan0mOvxD85xfrW8RXOw@mail.gmail.com>
Simon Eskildsen <simon.eskildsen@shopify.com> wrote:
<snip> great to know it's still working after all these years :>
> This confirms Eric's comment that the existing
> `check_client_connection` works perfectly on loopback, but as soon as
> you put an actual network between the Unicorn and client—it's only
> effective 20% of the time, even with `TCP_NODELAY`. I'm assuming, due
> to buffering, even when disabling Nagle's. As we're changing our
> architecture, we move from ngx (lb) -> ngx (host) -> unicorn to ngx
> (lb) -> unicorn. That means this patch will no longer work for us.
Side comment: I'm a bit curious how you guys arrived at removing
nginx at the host level (if you're allowed to share that info)
I've mainly kept nginx on the same host as unicorn, but used
haproxy or similar (with minimal buffering) at the LB level.
That allows better filesystem load distribution for large uploads.
> I propose instead of the early `write(2)` hack, that we use
> `getsockopt(2)` with the `TCP_INFO` flag and read the state of the
> socket. If it's in `CLOSE_WAIT` or `CLOSE`, we kill the connection and
> move on to the next.
>
> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/8fa3b6f9392bf6d90cb7b908e07bd90166639f0a/include/uapi/linux/tcp.h#L163
>
> This is not going to be portable, but we can do this on only Linux
> which I suspect is where most production deployments of Unicorn that
> would benefit from this feature run. It's not useful in development
> (which is likely more common to not be Linux). We could also introduce
> it under a new configuration option if desired. In my testing, this
> works to reject 100% of requests early when not on loopback.
Good to know about it's effectiveness! I don't mind adding
Linux-only features as long as existing functionality still
works on the server-oriented *BSDs.
> The code is essentially:
>
> def client_closed?
> tcp_info = socket.getsockopt(Socket::SOL_TCP, Socket::TCP_INFO)
> state = tcp_info.unpack("c")[0]
> state == TCP_CLOSE || state == TCP_CLOSE_WAIT
> end
+Cc: raindrops-public@bogomips.org -> https://bogomips.org/raindrops-public/
Fwiw, raindrops (already a dependency of unicorn) has TCP_INFO
support under Linux:
https://bogomips.org/raindrops.git/tree/ext/raindrops/linux_tcp_info.c
I haven't used it, much, but FreeBSD also implements a subset of
this feature, nowadays, and ought to be supportable, too. We
can look into adding it for raindrops.
I don't know about other BSDs...
> This could be called at the top of `#process_client` in `http_server.rb`.
>
> Would there be interest in this upstream? Any comments on this
> proposed implementation? Currently, we're using a middleware with the
> Rack hijack API, but this seems like it belongs at the webserver
> level.
I guess hijack means you have to discard other middlewares and
the normal rack response handling in unicorn? If so, ouch!
Unfortunately, without hijack, there's no portable way in Rack
to get at the underlying IO object; so I guess this needs to
be done at the server level...
So yeah, I guess it belongs in the webserver.
I think we can automatically use TCP_INFO if available for
check_client_connection; then fall back to the old early write
hack for Unix sockets and systems w/o TCP_INFO (which would set
the response_start_sent flag).
No need to introduce yet another configuration option.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2017-02-22 18:33 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2017-02-22 12:02 check_client_connection using getsockopt(2) Simon Eskildsen
2017-02-22 18:33 ` Eric Wong [this message]
2017-02-22 20:09 ` Simon Eskildsen
2017-02-23 1:42 ` Eric Wong
2017-02-23 2:42 ` Simon Eskildsen
2017-02-23 3:52 ` Eric Wong
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