For HTTP/2, read timer starts when there is no downstream, and timer
stops when there is at least one downstream. For HTTP/1, read timer
starts when request handling finished, and timer stops when request
handling starts.
Previously, we use one Http2Session object per DownstreamAddrGroup.
This is not flexible, and we have to provision how many HTTP/2
connection is required in advance. The new strategy is we add
Http2Session object on demand. We measure the number of attached
downstream connection object and server advertised concurrency limit.
As long as former is smaller than the latter, we attach new downstream
connection to it. Once the limit is reached, we create new
Http2Session object. If the number lowers the limit, we start to
share Http2Session object again.
To achieve host-path backend routing, we changed behaviour of
--backend-http2-connections-per-worker. It now sets the number of
HTTP/2 physical connections per pattern group if pattern is used in -b
option.
Fixes GH-292
-b option syntax is now <HOST>,<PORT>[;<PATTERN>[:...]]. The optional
<PATTERN>s specify the request host and path it is used for. The
<PATTERN> can contain path, host + path or host. The matching rule is
closely designed to ServeMux in Go programming language.
Currently, we use same number of HTTP/2 sessions per worker with given
backend addresses. New option to specify the number of HTTP/2 session
per worker will follow.
SSL_write requires the same arguments (buf pointer and its length) on
SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ or SSL_ERROR_WANT_WRITE. get_write_limit() may
return smaller length than previously passed to SSL_write, which
violates OpenSSL assumption. To avoid this, we keep last legnth
passed to SSL_write to tls_last_writelen_ if SSL_write indicated I/O
blocking.
For HTTP/1 backend, -b option can be used several times to specify
multiple backend address. HTTP/2 backend does not support multiple
addresses and only uses first address even if multiple addresses are
specified.
This commit adds functionality to customize access logging format in
nghttpx. The format variables are inspired by nginx. The default
format is combined format.
Use the same behaviour the current Google server does: start with 1300
TLS record size and after transmitting 1MiB, change record size to
16384. After 1 second idle time, reset to 1300. Only applies to
HTTP/2 and SPDY upstream connections.