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libwebsockets/lib/core/context.c

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/*
* libwebsockets - small server side websockets and web server implementation
*
* Copyright (C) 2010-2019 Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation:
* version 2.1 of the License.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston,
* MA 02110-1301 USA
*/
#include "core/private.h"
#ifndef LWS_BUILD_HASH
#define LWS_BUILD_HASH "unknown-build-hash"
#endif
static const char *library_version = LWS_LIBRARY_VERSION " " LWS_BUILD_HASH;
/**
* lws_get_library_version: get version and git hash library built from
*
* returns a const char * to a string like "1.1 178d78c"
* representing the library version followed by the git head hash it
* was built from
*/
LWS_VISIBLE const char *
lws_get_library_version(void)
{
return library_version;
}
LWS_VISIBLE struct lws_context *
lws_create_context(const struct lws_context_creation_info *info)
{
struct lws_context *context = NULL;
2017-03-03 12:38:10 +08:00
struct lws_plat_file_ops *prev;
#ifndef LWS_NO_DAEMONIZE
pid_t pid_daemon = get_daemonize_pid();
#endif
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
int n;
#endif
#if defined(__ANDROID__)
struct rlimit rt;
#endif
lwsl_info("Initial logging level %d\n", log_level);
lwsl_info("Libwebsockets version: %s\n", library_version);
#ifdef LWS_WITH_IPV6
if (!lws_check_opt(info->options, LWS_SERVER_OPTION_DISABLE_IPV6))
lwsl_info("IPV6 compiled in and enabled\n");
else
lwsl_info("IPV6 compiled in but disabled\n");
#else
lwsl_info("IPV6 not compiled in\n");
#endif
lwsl_info(" LWS_DEF_HEADER_LEN : %u\n", LWS_DEF_HEADER_LEN);
lwsl_info(" LWS_MAX_PROTOCOLS : %u\n", LWS_MAX_PROTOCOLS);
lwsl_info(" LWS_MAX_SMP : %u\n", LWS_MAX_SMP);
lwsl_info(" sizeof (*info) : %ld\n", (long)sizeof(*info));
2017-05-07 10:02:03 +08:00
#if defined(LWS_WITH_STATS)
lwsl_info(" LWS_WITH_STATS : on\n");
2017-05-07 10:02:03 +08:00
#endif
lwsl_info(" SYSTEM_RANDOM_FILEPATH: '%s'\n", SYSTEM_RANDOM_FILEPATH);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_HTTP2)
lwsl_info(" HTTP2 support : available\n");
#else
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lwsl_info(" HTTP2 support : not configured\n");
#endif
if (lws_plat_context_early_init())
return NULL;
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context = lws_zalloc(sizeof(struct lws_context), "context");
if (!context) {
lwsl_err("No memory for websocket context\n");
return NULL;
}
context->uid = info->uid;
context->gid = info->gid;
context->username = info->username;
context->groupname = info->groupname;
/* if he gave us names, set the uid / gid */
if (lws_plat_drop_app_privileges(context, 0))
goto bail;
2019-01-15 06:59:48 +08:00
lwsl_info("context created\n");
#if defined(LWS_WITH_TLS) && defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
#if defined(LWS_WITH_MBEDTLS)
context->tls_ops = &tls_ops_mbedtls;
#else
context->tls_ops = &tls_ops_openssl;
#endif
#endif
if (info->pt_serv_buf_size)
context->pt_serv_buf_size = info->pt_serv_buf_size;
else
context->pt_serv_buf_size = 4096;
#if defined(LWS_ROLE_H2)
role_ops_h2.init_context(context, info);
#endif
#if LWS_MAX_SMP > 1
lws_mutex_refcount_init(&context->mr);
#endif
2017-09-11 10:23:30 +08:00
#if defined(LWS_WITH_ESP32)
context->last_free_heap = esp_get_free_heap_size();
#endif
/* default to just the platform fops implementation */
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context->fops_platform.LWS_FOP_OPEN = _lws_plat_file_open;
context->fops_platform.LWS_FOP_CLOSE = _lws_plat_file_close;
context->fops_platform.LWS_FOP_SEEK_CUR = _lws_plat_file_seek_cur;
context->fops_platform.LWS_FOP_READ = _lws_plat_file_read;
context->fops_platform.LWS_FOP_WRITE = _lws_plat_file_write;
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context->fops_platform.fi[0].sig = NULL;
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/*
* arrange a linear linked-list of fops starting from context->fops
*
* platform fops
* [ -> fops_zip (copied into context so .next settable) ]
* [ -> info->fops ]
*/
context->fops = &context->fops_platform;
prev = (struct lws_plat_file_ops *)context->fops;
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#if defined(LWS_WITH_ZIP_FOPS)
/* make a soft copy so we can set .next */
context->fops_zip = fops_zip;
prev->next = &context->fops_zip;
prev = (struct lws_plat_file_ops *)prev->next;
#endif
/* if user provided fops, tack them on the end of the list */
if (info->fops)
2017-03-03 12:38:10 +08:00
prev->next = info->fops;
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context->reject_service_keywords = info->reject_service_keywords;
if (info->external_baggage_free_on_destroy)
context->external_baggage_free_on_destroy =
info->external_baggage_free_on_destroy;
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#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
context->time_up = time(NULL);
2019-01-15 06:59:48 +08:00
#endif
context->pcontext_finalize = info->pcontext;
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context->simultaneous_ssl_restriction =
info->simultaneous_ssl_restriction;
2017-03-16 10:46:31 +08:00
unix plat: add minimal wsi fd map option An lws context usually contains a processwide fd -> wsi lookup table. This allows any possible fd returned by a *nix type OS to be immediately converted to a wsi just by indexing an array of struct lws * the size of the highest possible fd, as found by ulimit -n or similar. This works modestly for Linux type systems where the default ulimit -n for a process is 1024, it means a 4KB or 8KB lookup table for 32-bit or 64-bit systems. However in the case your lws usage is much simpler, like one outgoing client connection and no serving, this represents increasing waste. It's made much worse if the system has a much larger default ulimit -n, eg 1M, the table is occupying 4MB or 8MB, of which you will only use one. Even so, because lws can't be sure the OS won't return a socket fd at any number up to (ulimit -n - 1), it has to allocate the whole lookup table at the moment. This patch looks to see if the context creation info is setting info->fd_limit_per_thread... if it leaves it at the default 0, then everything is as it was before this patch. However if finds that (info->fd_limit_per_thread * actual_number_of_service_threads) where the default number of service threads is 1, is less than the fd limit set by ulimit -n, lws switches to a slower lookup table scheme, which only allocates the requested number of slots. Lookups happen then by iterating the table and comparing rather than indexing the array directly, which is obviously somewhat of a performance hit. However in the case where you know lws will only have a very few wsi maximum, this method can very usefully trade off speed to be able to avoid the allocation sized by ulimit -n. minimal examples for client that can make use of this are also modified by this patch to use the smaller context allocations.
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context->options = info->options;
#ifndef LWS_NO_DAEMONIZE
if (pid_daemon) {
context->started_with_parent = pid_daemon;
lwsl_info(" Started with daemon pid %u\n", (unsigned int)pid_daemon);
}
#endif
#if defined(__ANDROID__)
n = getrlimit(RLIMIT_NOFILE, &rt);
if (n == -1) {
lwsl_err("Get RLIMIT_NOFILE failed!\n");
return NULL;
}
context->max_fds = rt.rlim_cur;
#else
#if defined(WIN32) || defined(_WIN32) || defined(LWS_AMAZON_RTOS)
context->max_fds = getdtablesize();
#else
context->max_fds = sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX);
#endif
#endif
2019-06-08 10:29:08 +01:00
if (context->max_fds < 0) {
lwsl_err("%s: problem getting process max files\n",
__func__);
return NULL;
}
if (info->count_threads)
context->count_threads = info->count_threads;
else
context->count_threads = 1;
if (context->count_threads > LWS_MAX_SMP)
context->count_threads = LWS_MAX_SMP;
unix plat: add minimal wsi fd map option An lws context usually contains a processwide fd -> wsi lookup table. This allows any possible fd returned by a *nix type OS to be immediately converted to a wsi just by indexing an array of struct lws * the size of the highest possible fd, as found by ulimit -n or similar. This works modestly for Linux type systems where the default ulimit -n for a process is 1024, it means a 4KB or 8KB lookup table for 32-bit or 64-bit systems. However in the case your lws usage is much simpler, like one outgoing client connection and no serving, this represents increasing waste. It's made much worse if the system has a much larger default ulimit -n, eg 1M, the table is occupying 4MB or 8MB, of which you will only use one. Even so, because lws can't be sure the OS won't return a socket fd at any number up to (ulimit -n - 1), it has to allocate the whole lookup table at the moment. This patch looks to see if the context creation info is setting info->fd_limit_per_thread... if it leaves it at the default 0, then everything is as it was before this patch. However if finds that (info->fd_limit_per_thread * actual_number_of_service_threads) where the default number of service threads is 1, is less than the fd limit set by ulimit -n, lws switches to a slower lookup table scheme, which only allocates the requested number of slots. Lookups happen then by iterating the table and comparing rather than indexing the array directly, which is obviously somewhat of a performance hit. However in the case where you know lws will only have a very few wsi maximum, this method can very usefully trade off speed to be able to avoid the allocation sized by ulimit -n. minimal examples for client that can make use of this are also modified by this patch to use the smaller context allocations.
2019-05-17 01:20:07 +01:00
/*
* deal with any max_fds override, if it's reducing (setting it to
* more than ulimit -n is meaningless). The platform init will
* figure out what if this is something it can deal with.
*/
if (info->fd_limit_per_thread) {
int mf = info->fd_limit_per_thread * context->count_threads;
unix plat: add minimal wsi fd map option An lws context usually contains a processwide fd -> wsi lookup table. This allows any possible fd returned by a *nix type OS to be immediately converted to a wsi just by indexing an array of struct lws * the size of the highest possible fd, as found by ulimit -n or similar. This works modestly for Linux type systems where the default ulimit -n for a process is 1024, it means a 4KB or 8KB lookup table for 32-bit or 64-bit systems. However in the case your lws usage is much simpler, like one outgoing client connection and no serving, this represents increasing waste. It's made much worse if the system has a much larger default ulimit -n, eg 1M, the table is occupying 4MB or 8MB, of which you will only use one. Even so, because lws can't be sure the OS won't return a socket fd at any number up to (ulimit -n - 1), it has to allocate the whole lookup table at the moment. This patch looks to see if the context creation info is setting info->fd_limit_per_thread... if it leaves it at the default 0, then everything is as it was before this patch. However if finds that (info->fd_limit_per_thread * actual_number_of_service_threads) where the default number of service threads is 1, is less than the fd limit set by ulimit -n, lws switches to a slower lookup table scheme, which only allocates the requested number of slots. Lookups happen then by iterating the table and comparing rather than indexing the array directly, which is obviously somewhat of a performance hit. However in the case where you know lws will only have a very few wsi maximum, this method can very usefully trade off speed to be able to avoid the allocation sized by ulimit -n. minimal examples for client that can make use of this are also modified by this patch to use the smaller context allocations.
2019-05-17 01:20:07 +01:00
if (mf < context->max_fds) {
context->max_fds_unrelated_to_ulimit = 1;
context->max_fds = mf;
}
}
context->token_limits = info->token_limits;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
/*
* set the context event loops ops struct
*
* after this, all event_loop actions use the generic ops
*/
#if defined(LWS_WITH_POLL)
context->event_loop_ops = &event_loop_ops_poll;
#endif
if (lws_check_opt(context->options, LWS_SERVER_OPTION_LIBUV))
#if defined(LWS_WITH_LIBUV)
context->event_loop_ops = &event_loop_ops_uv;
#else
goto fail_event_libs;
#endif
if (lws_check_opt(context->options, LWS_SERVER_OPTION_LIBEV))
#if defined(LWS_WITH_LIBEV)
context->event_loop_ops = &event_loop_ops_ev;
#else
goto fail_event_libs;
#endif
if (lws_check_opt(context->options, LWS_SERVER_OPTION_LIBEVENT))
#if defined(LWS_WITH_LIBEVENT)
context->event_loop_ops = &event_loop_ops_event;
#else
goto fail_event_libs;
#endif
if (!context->event_loop_ops)
goto fail_event_libs;
lwsl_info("Using event loop: %s\n", context->event_loop_ops->name);
#endif
#if defined(LWS_WITH_TLS) && defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
time(&context->tls.last_cert_check_s);
if (info->alpn)
context->tls.alpn_default = info->alpn;
else {
char *p = context->tls.alpn_discovered, first = 1;
LWS_FOR_EVERY_AVAILABLE_ROLE_START(ar) {
if (ar->alpn) {
if (!first)
*p++ = ',';
p += lws_snprintf(p,
context->tls.alpn_discovered +
sizeof(context->tls.alpn_discovered) -
2 - p, "%s", ar->alpn);
first = 0;
}
} LWS_FOR_EVERY_AVAILABLE_ROLE_END;
context->tls.alpn_default = context->tls.alpn_discovered;
}
lwsl_info("Default ALPN advertisment: %s\n", context->tls.alpn_default);
#endif
if (info->timeout_secs)
context->timeout_secs = info->timeout_secs;
else
context->timeout_secs = AWAITING_TIMEOUT;
context->ws_ping_pong_interval = info->ws_ping_pong_interval;
lwsl_info(" default timeout (secs): %u\n", context->timeout_secs);
2014-07-29 15:36:06 +03:00
if (info->max_http_header_data)
context->max_http_header_data = info->max_http_header_data;
else
if (info->max_http_header_data2)
context->max_http_header_data =
info->max_http_header_data2;
else
context->max_http_header_data = LWS_DEF_HEADER_LEN;
if (info->max_http_header_pool)
context->max_http_header_pool = info->max_http_header_pool;
else
if (info->max_http_header_pool2)
context->max_http_header_pool =
info->max_http_header_pool2;
else
context->max_http_header_pool = context->max_fds;
if (info->fd_limit_per_thread)
context->fd_limit_per_thread = info->fd_limit_per_thread;
else
context->fd_limit_per_thread = context->max_fds /
context->count_threads;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
/*
* Allocate the per-thread storage for scratchpad buffers,
* and header data pool
*/
for (n = 0; n < context->count_threads; n++) {
context->pt[n].serv_buf = lws_malloc(context->pt_serv_buf_size,
"pt_serv_buf");
if (!context->pt[n].serv_buf) {
lwsl_err("OOM\n");
return NULL;
}
context->pt[n].context = context;
context->pt[n].tid = n;
#if defined(LWS_ROLE_H1) || defined(LWS_ROLE_H2)
context->pt[n].http.ah_list = NULL;
context->pt[n].http.ah_pool_length = 0;
#endif
lws_pt_mutex_init(&context->pt[n]);
}
lwsl_info(" Threads: %d each %d fds\n", context->count_threads,
context->fd_limit_per_thread);
if (!info->ka_interval && info->ka_time > 0) {
lwsl_err("info->ka_interval can't be 0 if ka_time used\n");
return NULL;
}
#if defined(LWS_WITH_PEER_LIMITS)
/* scale the peer hash table according to the max fds for the process,
* so that the max list depth averages 16. Eg, 1024 fd -> 64,
* 102400 fd -> 6400
*/
context->pl_hash_elements =
(context->count_threads * context->fd_limit_per_thread) / 16;
context->pl_hash_table = lws_zalloc(sizeof(struct lws_peer *) *
2017-10-04 07:10:39 +08:00
context->pl_hash_elements, "peer limits hash table");
context->ip_limit_ah = info->ip_limit_ah;
context->ip_limit_wsi = info->ip_limit_wsi;
#endif
2017-10-28 07:42:44 +08:00
lwsl_info(" mem: context: %5lu B (%ld ctx + (%ld thr x %d))\n",
(long)sizeof(struct lws_context) +
(context->count_threads * context->pt_serv_buf_size),
(long)sizeof(struct lws_context),
(long)context->count_threads,
context->pt_serv_buf_size);
#if defined(LWS_ROLE_H1) || defined(LWS_ROLE_H2)
unix plat: add minimal wsi fd map option An lws context usually contains a processwide fd -> wsi lookup table. This allows any possible fd returned by a *nix type OS to be immediately converted to a wsi just by indexing an array of struct lws * the size of the highest possible fd, as found by ulimit -n or similar. This works modestly for Linux type systems where the default ulimit -n for a process is 1024, it means a 4KB or 8KB lookup table for 32-bit or 64-bit systems. However in the case your lws usage is much simpler, like one outgoing client connection and no serving, this represents increasing waste. It's made much worse if the system has a much larger default ulimit -n, eg 1M, the table is occupying 4MB or 8MB, of which you will only use one. Even so, because lws can't be sure the OS won't return a socket fd at any number up to (ulimit -n - 1), it has to allocate the whole lookup table at the moment. This patch looks to see if the context creation info is setting info->fd_limit_per_thread... if it leaves it at the default 0, then everything is as it was before this patch. However if finds that (info->fd_limit_per_thread * actual_number_of_service_threads) where the default number of service threads is 1, is less than the fd limit set by ulimit -n, lws switches to a slower lookup table scheme, which only allocates the requested number of slots. Lookups happen then by iterating the table and comparing rather than indexing the array directly, which is obviously somewhat of a performance hit. However in the case where you know lws will only have a very few wsi maximum, this method can very usefully trade off speed to be able to avoid the allocation sized by ulimit -n. minimal examples for client that can make use of this are also modified by this patch to use the smaller context allocations.
2019-05-17 01:20:07 +01:00
lwsl_info(" mem: http hdr size: (%u + %lu), max count %u\n",
context->max_http_header_data,
(long)sizeof(struct allocated_headers),
context->max_http_header_pool);
#endif
unix plat: add minimal wsi fd map option An lws context usually contains a processwide fd -> wsi lookup table. This allows any possible fd returned by a *nix type OS to be immediately converted to a wsi just by indexing an array of struct lws * the size of the highest possible fd, as found by ulimit -n or similar. This works modestly for Linux type systems where the default ulimit -n for a process is 1024, it means a 4KB or 8KB lookup table for 32-bit or 64-bit systems. However in the case your lws usage is much simpler, like one outgoing client connection and no serving, this represents increasing waste. It's made much worse if the system has a much larger default ulimit -n, eg 1M, the table is occupying 4MB or 8MB, of which you will only use one. Even so, because lws can't be sure the OS won't return a socket fd at any number up to (ulimit -n - 1), it has to allocate the whole lookup table at the moment. This patch looks to see if the context creation info is setting info->fd_limit_per_thread... if it leaves it at the default 0, then everything is as it was before this patch. However if finds that (info->fd_limit_per_thread * actual_number_of_service_threads) where the default number of service threads is 1, is less than the fd limit set by ulimit -n, lws switches to a slower lookup table scheme, which only allocates the requested number of slots. Lookups happen then by iterating the table and comparing rather than indexing the array directly, which is obviously somewhat of a performance hit. However in the case where you know lws will only have a very few wsi maximum, this method can very usefully trade off speed to be able to avoid the allocation sized by ulimit -n. minimal examples for client that can make use of this are also modified by this patch to use the smaller context allocations.
2019-05-17 01:20:07 +01:00
/*
* fds table contains pollfd structs for as many pollfds as we can
* handle... spread across as many service threads as we have going
*/
n = sizeof(struct lws_pollfd) * context->count_threads *
context->fd_limit_per_thread;
2017-10-04 07:10:39 +08:00
context->pt[0].fds = lws_zalloc(n, "fds table");
if (context->pt[0].fds == NULL) {
lwsl_err("OOM allocating %d fds\n", context->max_fds);
goto bail;
}
unix plat: add minimal wsi fd map option An lws context usually contains a processwide fd -> wsi lookup table. This allows any possible fd returned by a *nix type OS to be immediately converted to a wsi just by indexing an array of struct lws * the size of the highest possible fd, as found by ulimit -n or similar. This works modestly for Linux type systems where the default ulimit -n for a process is 1024, it means a 4KB or 8KB lookup table for 32-bit or 64-bit systems. However in the case your lws usage is much simpler, like one outgoing client connection and no serving, this represents increasing waste. It's made much worse if the system has a much larger default ulimit -n, eg 1M, the table is occupying 4MB or 8MB, of which you will only use one. Even so, because lws can't be sure the OS won't return a socket fd at any number up to (ulimit -n - 1), it has to allocate the whole lookup table at the moment. This patch looks to see if the context creation info is setting info->fd_limit_per_thread... if it leaves it at the default 0, then everything is as it was before this patch. However if finds that (info->fd_limit_per_thread * actual_number_of_service_threads) where the default number of service threads is 1, is less than the fd limit set by ulimit -n, lws switches to a slower lookup table scheme, which only allocates the requested number of slots. Lookups happen then by iterating the table and comparing rather than indexing the array directly, which is obviously somewhat of a performance hit. However in the case where you know lws will only have a very few wsi maximum, this method can very usefully trade off speed to be able to avoid the allocation sized by ulimit -n. minimal examples for client that can make use of this are also modified by this patch to use the smaller context allocations.
2019-05-17 01:20:07 +01:00
lwsl_info(" mem: pollfd map: %5u B\n", n);
#endif
if (info->server_string) {
context->server_string = info->server_string;
context->server_string_len = (short)
strlen(context->server_string);
}
#if LWS_MAX_SMP > 1
/* each thread serves his own chunk of fds */
for (n = 1; n < (int)context->count_threads; n++)
context->pt[n].fds = context->pt[n - 1].fds +
context->fd_limit_per_thread;
#endif
if (lws_plat_init(context, info))
goto bail;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
if (context->event_loop_ops->init_context)
if (context->event_loop_ops->init_context(context, info))
goto bail;
if (context->event_loop_ops->init_pt)
for (n = 0; n < context->count_threads; n++) {
void *lp = NULL;
if (info->foreign_loops)
lp = info->foreign_loops[n];
if (context->event_loop_ops->init_pt(context, lp, n))
goto bail;
}
2019-06-05 05:04:17 +01:00
#if !defined(LWS_AMAZON_RTOS)
if (lws_create_event_pipes(context))
goto bail;
2019-06-05 05:04:17 +01:00
#endif
#endif
lws_context_init_ssl_library(info);
context->user_space = info->user;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
/*
* if he's not saying he'll make his own vhosts later then act
* compatibly and make a default vhost using the data in the info
*/
if (!lws_check_opt(info->options, LWS_SERVER_OPTION_EXPLICIT_VHOSTS))
if (!lws_create_vhost(context, info)) {
lwsl_err("Failed to create default vhost\n");
2018-03-22 14:54:25 +08:00
for (n = 0; n < context->count_threads; n++)
lws_free_set_NULL(context->pt[n].serv_buf);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_PEER_LIMITS)
lws_free_set_NULL(context->pl_hash_table);
#endif
lws_free_set_NULL(context->pt[0].fds);
lws_plat_context_late_destroy(context);
lws_free_set_NULL(context);
return NULL;
}
lws_context_init_extensions(info, context);
lwsl_info(" mem: per-conn: %5lu bytes + protocol rx buf\n",
(unsigned long)sizeof(struct lws));
#endif
strcpy(context->canonical_hostname, "unknown");
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
lws_server_get_canonical_hostname(context, info);
#endif
2017-06-07 06:10:02 +08:00
#if defined(LWS_HAVE_SYS_CAPABILITY_H) && defined(LWS_HAVE_LIBCAP)
memcpy(context->caps, info->caps, sizeof(context->caps));
context->count_caps = info->count_caps;
#endif
/*
* drop any root privs for this process
* to listen on port < 1023 we would have needed root, but now we are
* listening, we don't want the power for anything else
*/
if (!lws_check_opt(info->options, LWS_SERVER_OPTION_EXPLICIT_VHOSTS))
if (lws_plat_drop_app_privileges(context, 1))
goto bail;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
/* expedite post-context init (eg, protocols) */
lws_cancel_service(context);
#endif
return context;
bail:
lws_context_destroy(context);
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return NULL;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
fail_event_libs:
lwsl_err("Requested event library support not configured, available:\n");
{
extern const struct lws_event_loop_ops *available_event_libs[];
const struct lws_event_loop_ops **elops = available_event_libs;
while (*elops) {
lwsl_err(" - %s\n", (*elops)->name);
elops++;
}
}
#endif
lws_free(context);
return NULL;
}
LWS_VISIBLE LWS_EXTERN int
lws_context_is_deprecated(struct lws_context *context)
{
return context->deprecated;
}
/*
* When using an event loop, the context destruction is in three separate
* parts. This is to cover both internal and foreign event loops cleanly.
*
* - lws_context_destroy() simply starts a soft close of all wsi and
* related allocations. The event loop continues.
*
* As the closes complete in the event loop, reference counting is used
* to determine when everything is closed. It then calls
* lws_context_destroy2().
*
* - lws_context_destroy2() cleans up the rest of the higher-level logical
* lws pieces like vhosts. If the loop was foreign, it then proceeds to
* lws_context_destroy3(). If it the loop is internal, it stops the
* internal loops and waits for lws_context_destroy() to be called again
* outside the event loop (since we cannot destroy the loop from
* within the loop). That will cause lws_context_destroy3() to run
* directly.
*
* - lws_context_destroy3() destroys any internal event loops and then
* destroys the context itself, setting what was info.pcontext to NULL.
*/
/*
* destroy the actual context itself
*/
static void
lws_context_destroy3(struct lws_context *context)
{
struct lws_context **pcontext_finalize = context->pcontext_finalize;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
int n;
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lwsl_debug("%s\n", __func__);
for (n = 0; n < context->count_threads; n++) {
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#if defined(LWS_ROLE_H1) || defined(LWS_ROLE_H2)
struct lws_context_per_thread *pt = &context->pt[n];
#endif
if (context->event_loop_ops->destroy_pt)
context->event_loop_ops->destroy_pt(context, n);
lws_free_set_NULL(context->pt[n].serv_buf);
#if defined(LWS_ROLE_H1) || defined(LWS_ROLE_H2)
while (pt->http.ah_list)
_lws_destroy_ah(pt, pt->http.ah_list);
#endif
}
if (context->pt[0].fds)
lws_free_set_NULL(context->pt[0].fds);
#endif
lws_free(context);
lwsl_info("%s: ctx %p freed\n", __func__, context);
if (pcontext_finalize)
*pcontext_finalize = NULL;
}
/*
* really start destroying things
*/
void
lws_context_destroy2(struct lws_context *context)
{
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
struct lws_vhost *vh = NULL, *vh1;
#endif
#if defined(LWS_WITH_PEER_LIMITS)
uint32_t nu;
#endif
lwsl_info("%s: ctx %p\n", __func__, context);
2018-06-27 07:49:04 +08:00
lws_context_lock(context, "context destroy 2"); /* ------ context { */
context->being_destroyed2 = 1;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
/*
* free all the per-vhost allocations
*/
vh = context->vhost_list;
while (vh) {
vh1 = vh->vhost_next;
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__lws_vhost_destroy2(vh);
vh = vh1;
}
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lwsl_debug("%p: post vh listl\n", __func__);
/* remove ourselves from the pending destruction list */
while (context->vhost_pending_destruction_list)
/* removes itself from list */
2018-06-27 07:49:04 +08:00
__lws_vhost_destroy2(context->vhost_pending_destruction_list);
#endif
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lwsl_debug("%p: post pdl\n", __func__);
lws_stats_log_dump(context);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
lws_ssl_context_destroy(context);
#endif
lws_plat_context_late_destroy(context);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_PEER_LIMITS)
for (nu = 0; nu < context->pl_hash_elements; nu++) {
lws_start_foreach_llp(struct lws_peer **, peer,
context->pl_hash_table[nu]) {
struct lws_peer *df = *peer;
*peer = df->next;
lws_free(df);
continue;
} lws_end_foreach_llp(peer, next);
}
lws_free(context->pl_hash_table);
#endif
2019-03-21 09:27:45 +08:00
lwsl_debug("%p: baggage\n", __func__);
if (context->external_baggage_free_on_destroy)
free(context->external_baggage_free_on_destroy);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
lws_check_deferred_free(context, 0, 1);
#endif
#if LWS_MAX_SMP > 1
lws_mutex_refcount_destroy(&context->mr);
#endif
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
if (context->event_loop_ops->destroy_context2)
if (context->event_loop_ops->destroy_context2(context)) {
2018-08-01 06:52:03 +08:00
lws_context_unlock(context); /* } context ----------- */
context->finalize_destroy_after_internal_loops_stopped = 1;
return;
}
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lwsl_debug("%p: post dc2\n", __func__);
2018-10-10 13:54:43 +08:00
if (!context->pt[0].event_loop_foreign) {
int n;
for (n = 0; n < context->count_threads; n++)
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if (context->pt[n].inside_service) {
2019-03-21 09:27:45 +08:00
lwsl_debug("%p: bailing as inside service\n", __func__);
2018-08-01 06:52:03 +08:00
lws_context_unlock(context); /* } context --- */
return;
2018-08-01 06:52:03 +08:00
}
2018-10-10 13:54:43 +08:00
}
#endif
2018-06-27 07:49:04 +08:00
lws_context_unlock(context); /* } context ------------------- */
lws_context_destroy3(context);
}
/*
* Begin the context takedown
*/
LWS_VISIBLE void
lws_context_destroy(struct lws_context *context)
{
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
volatile struct lws_foreign_thread_pollfd *ftp, *next;
volatile struct lws_context_per_thread *vpt;
struct lws_vhost *vh = NULL;
struct lws wsi;
int n, m;
#endif
if (!context)
return;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
if (context->finalize_destroy_after_internal_loops_stopped) {
if (context->event_loop_ops->destroy_context2)
context->event_loop_ops->destroy_context2(context);
lws_context_destroy3(context);
return;
}
#endif
if (context->being_destroyed1) {
if (!context->being_destroyed2) {
lws_context_destroy2(context);
return;
}
lwsl_info("%s: ctx %p: already being destroyed\n",
2017-09-23 12:55:21 +08:00
__func__, context);
lws_context_destroy3(context);
return;
}
lwsl_info("%s: ctx %p\n", __func__, context);
context->being_destroyed = 1;
context->being_destroyed1 = 1;
context->requested_kill = 1;
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
m = context->count_threads;
memset(&wsi, 0, sizeof(wsi));
wsi.context = context;
#ifdef LWS_LATENCY
if (context->worst_latency_info[0])
lwsl_notice("Worst latency: %s\n", context->worst_latency_info);
#endif
while (m--) {
2018-10-10 13:54:43 +08:00
struct lws_context_per_thread *pt = &context->pt[m];
vpt = (volatile struct lws_context_per_thread *)pt;
ftp = vpt->foreign_pfd_list;
while (ftp) {
next = ftp->next;
lws_free((void *)ftp);
ftp = next;
}
vpt->foreign_pfd_list = NULL;
for (n = 0; (unsigned int)n < context->pt[m].fds_count; n++) {
struct lws *wsi = wsi_from_fd(context, pt->fds[n].fd);
if (!wsi)
continue;
if (wsi->event_pipe)
lws_destroy_event_pipe(wsi);
else
lws_close_free_wsi(wsi,
2018-02-03 13:48:18 +08:00
LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_NOSTATUS_CONTEXT_DESTROY,
"ctx destroy"
/* no protocol close */);
n--;
}
lws_pt_mutex_destroy(pt);
}
/*
* inform all the protocols that they are done and will have no more
* callbacks.
*
* We can't free things until after the event loop shuts down.
*/
if (context->protocol_init_done)
vh = context->vhost_list;
while (vh) {
2017-10-11 19:42:45 +08:00
struct lws_vhost *vhn = vh->vhost_next;
lws_vhost_destroy1(vh);
2017-10-11 19:42:45 +08:00
vh = vhn;
}
#endif
lws_plat_context_early_destroy(context);
#if defined(LWS_WITH_NETWORK)
/*
* We face two different needs depending if foreign loop or not.
*
* 1) If foreign loop, we really want to advance the destroy_context()
* past here, and block only for libuv-style async close completion.
*
* 2a) If poll, and we exited by ourselves and are calling a final
* destroy_context() outside of any service already, we want to
* advance all the way in one step.
*
* 2b) If poll, and we are reacting to a SIGINT, service thread(s) may
* be in poll wait or servicing. We can't advance the
* destroy_context() to the point it's freeing things; we have to
* leave that for the final destroy_context() after the service
* thread(s) are finished calling for service.
*/
if (context->event_loop_ops->destroy_context1) {
context->event_loop_ops->destroy_context1(context);
return;
}
#endif
2019-06-05 05:04:17 +01:00
#if defined(LWS_WITH_ESP32)
#if defined(LWS_AMAZON_RTOS)
context->last_free_heap = xPortGetFreeHeapSize();
#else
context->last_free_heap = esp_get_free_heap_size();
#endif
#endif
lws_context_destroy2(context);
}
2019-06-05 05:04:17 +01:00