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They'll continue to be maintained, but we're no longer advertising
them. Also, favor lowercase "unicorn" while we're at it since that
matches the executable and gem name to avoid unnecessary escaping
for RDoc.
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Literal regexps cost over 450 bytes of memory per-site and
unnecessary use of them costs memory in places where raw execution
speed does not matter. Nowadays, we can rely on String#end_with?
(introduced in 1.8.7) for improved readability, too.
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We had HTTPS support but dropped it(*) and some wacky servers out
there do work better with TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT disabled.
(*) No, we will not support HTTP/2, that is for nginx
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We're requiring Ruby 1.9.3+, so we can safely depend
on IO#autoclose= being available in 1.9+ and shave off
some bloat.
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In Ruby 1.9.2+, socket options may be specified using symbols
instead of constants to avoid the need to import Socket::Constants
into the namespace. This also has a nice side-effect of reducing
the size of the bytecode by trading 3 instructions (getinlinecache,
getconstant, setinlinecache) for one "putobject" instruction.
Nowadays, we may also avoid defining OS-specific constants ourselves
since 1.9+ versions of Ruby already provide them to further reduce
bytecode size.
getsockopt also returns Socket::Option objects in 1.9.2+,
allowing us to avoid the larger "unpack('i')" method dispatch
for an operand-free "int" method call.
Finally, favor Object#nil? calls rather than "== nil" comparisons
to reduce bytecode size even more.
Since this code is only called at startup time, it does not benefit
from inline caching of constant lookups in current mainline Ruby.
Combined, these changes reduce YARV bytecode size by around 2K on a
64-bit system.
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Ruby 1.9 and later includes IO#autoclose=, so we can use it
and prevent some dead IO objects from hanging around.
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This allows users to start an independent instance of unicorn on
a the same port as a running unicorn (as long as both instances
use :reuseport).
ref: https://lwn.net/Articles/542629/
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On a certain FreeBSD 8.1 installation, explicitly setting
TCP_NOPUSH to zero (off) can cause EADDRNOTAVAIL errors and also
resets the listen backlog to 5. Enabling TCP_NOPUSH explicitly
did not exhibit this issue for the user who (privately) reported
this issue.
To be on the safe side, we won't set/unset TCP_NOPUSH/TCP_CORK
at all, which will leave it off on all current systems.
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Oops :x
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Even LANs can break or be unreliable sometimes and socket
disconnect messages get lost, which means we fall back to
the global (kill -9) timeout in Unicorn.
While the default global timeout is much shorter (60s) than
typical TCP timeouts, some HTTP application dispatches take much
I/O or computational time (streaming many gigabytes), so the
global timeout becomes ineffective.
Under Linux, sysadmins are encouraged to lower the default
net.ipv4.tcp_keepalive_* knobs in sysctl. There should be
similar knobs in other operating systems (the default keepalive
intervals are usually ridiculously high, too high for anything).
When the listen socket has SO_KEEPALIVE set, the flag should be
inherited by accept()-ed sockets.
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We favor low latency and consistency with the Unix socket
behavior even with TCP.
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I corrupted a Ruby build and SOL_TCP didn't get defined :x
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Backtraces are now formatted properly (with timestamps) and
exceptions will be logged more consistently and similar to
Logger defaults:
"#{exc.message} (#{e.class})"
backtrace.each { |line| ... }
This may break some existing monitoring scripts, but errors
will be more standardized and easier to check moving forward.
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These TCP settings are a closer match to the behavior of
Unix domain sockets and what users expect for fast streaming
responses even if nginx can't provide them just now...
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Enabling this flag for an IPv6 TCP listener allows users to
specify IPv6-only listeners regardless of the OS default.
This should be interest to Rainbows! users.
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Don't clutter up our RDoc/website with things that users
of Unicorn don't need to see. This should make user-relevant
documentation easier to find, especially since Unicorn is
NOT intended to be an API.
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Oops! Ugh, not my day...
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Oops!
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This is much like how nginx does it, except we always require a
port when explicitly binding to IPv6 using the "listen"
directive. This also adds support to listen with an
address-only, which can be useful to Rainbows! users.
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This reduces surprise when people (correctly) believe
removing an option from the config file will return
things back to our internal defaults.
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It's actually harmless since Unicorn only supports "fast"
applications that do not trickle, and we don't do keepalive so
we'll always flush-on-close. This should reduce wakeups on the
nginx proxy server if nginx is over TCP. Mongrel 1.x had
TCP_CORK enabled by default, too.
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This will allow Rainbows! to set :tcp_nodelay=>true
and possibly other things in the future.
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This should hopefully make the non-blocking accept()
situation more tolerable under Ruby 1.9.2.
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While we've always unlinked dead sockets from nuked/leftover
processes, blindly unlinking them can cause unnecessary failures
when an active process is already listening on them. We now
make a simple connect(2) check to ensure the socket is not in
use before unlinking it.
Thanks to Jordan Ritter for the detailed bug report leading to
this fix.
ref: http://mid.gmane.org/8D95A44B-A098-43BE-B532-7D74BD957F31@darkridge.com
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Instead of detecting at startup if filters may be used, just try
anyways and log the error. It is better to ask for forgiveness
than permission :)
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We only use this module in HttpServer and our unit test mocks
it properly.
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This is to allow Rainbows! to override the defaults.
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Under Linux, this allows users to tune the time (in seconds) to
defer connections before allowing them to be accepted. The
behavior of TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT changed with Linux 2.6.32 and idle
connections may still be accept()-ed after the specified value
in seconds. A small value of '1' remains the default for
Unicorn as Unicorn does not worry about slow clients. Higher
values provide better DoS protection for Rainbows! but also
increases kernel memory usage.
Allowing "dataready" for FreeBSD accept filters will allow
SSL sockets to be used in the future for HTTPS, too.
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This is useful as a :listeners argument when setting up
Raindrops::Middleware (http://raindrops.bogomips.org/),
as it can be done automatically.
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Since they're all optional, make them non-fatal, but make sure
we log them so we can diagnose what (if anything) is going
wrong.
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Typically UNIX domain sockets are created with more liberal
file permissions than the rest of the application. By default,
we create UNIX domain sockets to be readable and writable by
all local users to give them the same accessibility as
locally-bound TCP listeners.
This only has an effect on UNIX domain sockets.
This was inspired by Suraj Kurapati in
cfbcd2f00911121536rd0582b8u961f7f2a8c6e546a@mail.gmail.com
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It's compatible with both Ruby 1.8 and 1.9 without
needing a Range object.
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We may add support for the Gopher protocol in the future...
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This ensures any string literals that pop up in *our* code will
just be a bag of bytes. This shouldn't affect/fix/break
existing apps in most cases, but most constants will always have
the "correct" encoding (none!) to be consistent with HTTP/socket
expectations. Since this comment affects things only on a
per-source basis, it won't affect existing apps with the
exception of strings we pass to the Rack application.
This will eventually allow us to get rid of that Unicorn::Z
constant, too.
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Now that we support tunnelling arbitrary protocols over HTTP as
well as "100 Continue" responses, TCP_NODELAY actually becomes
useful to us. TCP_NODELAY is actually reasonably portable
nowadays; even.
While we're adding non-portable options, TCP_CORK/TCP_NOPUSH can
be enabled, too. Unlike some other servers, these can't be
disabled explicitly/intelligently to force a flush, however.
However, these may still improve performance with "normal" HTTP
applications (Mongrel has always had TCP_CORK enabled in Linux).
While we're adding OS-specific features, we might as well
support TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT in Linux and FreeBSD the "httpready"
accept filter to prevent abuse.
These options can all be enabled on a per-listener basis.
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We no longer have anything outside of SocketHelper module in
that file, so just give it a more obvious name.
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