This clears up a couple of issues with client connect.
- if CLIENT_CONNECTION_ERROR is coming, which of the many
ways the rejection may have happened is documented in the
in argument. It's still possible if it just got hung up on
in will be NULL, but now it has MANY more canned strings
describing the issue available at the callback
"getaddrinfo (ipv6) failed"
"unknown address family"
"getaddrinfo (ipv4) failed"
"set socket opts failed"
"insert wsi failed"
"lws_ssl_client_connect1 failed"
"lws_ssl_client_connect2 failed"
"Peer hung up"
"read failed"
"HS: URI missing"
"HS: Redirect code but no Location"
"HS: URI did not parse"
"HS: Redirect failed"
"HS: Server did not return 200"
"HS: OOM"
"HS: disallowed by client filter"
"HS: disallowed at ESTABLISHED"
"HS: ACCEPT missing"
"HS: ws upgrade response not 101"
"HS: UPGRADE missing"
"HS: Upgrade to something other than websocket"
"HS: CONNECTION missing"
"HS: UPGRADE malformed"
"HS: PROTOCOL malformed"
"HS: Cannot match protocol"
"HS: EXT: list too big"
"HS: EXT: failed setting defaults"
"HS: EXT: failed parsing defaults"
"HS: EXT: failed parsing options"
"HS: EXT: Rejects server options"
"HS: EXT: unknown ext"
"HS: Accept hash wrong"
"HS: Rejected by filter cb"
"HS: OOM"
"HS: SO_SNDBUF failed"
"HS: Rejected at CLIENT_ESTABLISHED"
- until now the user code did not get the new wsi that was created
in the client connection action until it returned. However the
client connection action may provoke callbacks like
CLIENT_CONNECTION_ERROR before then, if multiple client connections
are initiated it makes it unknown to user code which one the callback
applies to. The wsi is provided in the callback but it has not yet
returned from the client connect api to give that wsi to the user code.
To solve that there is a new member added to client connect info struct,
pwsi, which lets you pass a pointer to a struct wsi * in the user code
that will get filled in with the new wsi. That happens before any
callbacks could be provoked, and it is updated to NULL if the connect
action fails before returning from the client connect api.
When using http/1.1+ keepalive and mounts, the relationship between
a connection and a protocol becomes dynamic. The same connection might
visit different bits of the url space served by different mounts using
different protocols.
This patch ensures protocols can cleanly manage their per-connection
allocations by using the following callbacks when the protocol changes
LWS_CALLBACK_HTTP_BIND_PROTOCOL
LWS_CALLBACK_HTTP_DROP_PROTOCOL
For example if the pss wants to malloc stuff at runtime, it should do it
in LWS_CALLBACK_HTTP_BIND_PROTOCOL or later, and clean it up in
...DROP_PROTOCOL.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This gives protocols a way to talk to each other via per-vhost callbacks,
one per protocol (including the sender).
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This adds
- simple lws_urlencode()
- simple lws_urldecode()
- simple lws_sql_purify
Those expect the data to all be there and process it up until
the first '\0'.
There is also a larger opaque apis for handling POST_BODY urldecode. To
enable these, you need to give cmake -DLWS_WITH_STATEFUL_URLDECODE=1 (or
arrange any larger feature that relies on it sets that in CMakeLists.txt)
- stateful urldecode with parameter array
These have create / process / destroy semantics on a struct that maintains
decode state.
Stateful urldecode is capable of dealing with large POST data in multiple
POST_BODY callbacks cleanly, eg, file transfer by POST.
Stateful urldecode with parameter array wraps the above with a canned
callback that stores the urldecoded data and indexes them in a pointer
array matching an array of parameter names.
You may also pass it an optional callback when creating it, that will recieve
uploaded file content.
The test html is updated to support both urlencoded and multipart forms,
with some javascript to do clientside validation of an arbitrary 100KB
file size limit (there is no file size limit in the apis).
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
Adds a convenient way to directly get the value of a URL
argument like ...?x=y&v=1, regardless of position in the
parameter list.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This makes it easy for user code to choose the size of the per-thread
buffer used by various things in lws, including file transfer chunking.
Previously it was 4096, if you leave info.pt_serv_buf_size as zero that
is still the default.
With some caveats, you can increase transfer efficiency by increasing it
to, eg, 128KiB, if that makes sense for your memory situation.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
https://github.com/warmcat/libwebsockets/issues/526
On master, cleanups and refactor mean the last two problems already
don't exist (array is gone from main.c and http.c is deleted)
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
Also add lwsws "enable-client-ssl": "1" vhost option to match.
Client cert iclient ssl is not supported in lwsws, if someone wants it, it can be added.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
If OOT lws plugins will be packaged as separate projects,
they're going to want to install their plugins somewhere
that makes sense for the package instead of one big lws
plugin dir.
This patch changes info to have a const char ** to a NULL
terminated array of directories it should search for
plugins. lwsws knows about this and you can add to the
dir array using config fragments like
{
"global": {
"plugin-dir": "/usr/local/share/coherent-timeline/plugins"
}
}
if the config fragment in /etc/lwsws/conf.d/ is also managed by the
package with the plugin, it can very cleanly add and remove itself
from lwsws based on package install status.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
There's no reason to not have the mounts linked list init also in the info
struct, rather than provide as a paramater to lws_create_vhost(). Now
is a good time to normalize that since this api only exists in master.
This also allows oldstyle "do everything at context creation time in one
vhost" guys to leverage mounts.
Also there's no reason the mounts linked-list pointer and all uses in lws
are non-const, so make them all explicitly const *.
Update the info struct docs to clarify which members are used when creating
a vhost and which for context creation.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
https://github.com/warmcat/libwebsockets/issues/501
This demonstrates how to do a 303 redirect on POST and provide
the results there, in both libwebsockets-test-server and the
plugin version.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This allows mounts to define the caching policy of the files inside them.
Support is added in lwsws for controlling it from the config files.
The api for serializing a mount struct opaquely is removed and lws_http_mount struct
made public... it was getting out of control trying to hide the options.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
Chrome deals with it without on desktop, but Android chrome
waits for the connection to time out before actioning the
redirect, since it feels there might be html payload coming.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
This adds the ability to store apache-compatible logs to a file given at
vhost-creation time.
lwsws conf can set it per-vhost using "access-log": "<filepath>"
The feature defaults to disabled at cmake, it can be set independently but
LWS_WITH_LWSWS set it on.
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>