Commit Graph

23 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Scott Mitchell
74627483d7 [#3724] HTTP/2 Headers END_STREAM results in RST_STREAM
Motivation:
If headers are sent on a stream that does not yet exist and the END_STREAM flag is set we will send a RST_STREAM frame. We should send the HEADERS frame and no RST_STREAM.

Modifications:
DefaultHttp2RemoteFlowController should allow frames to be sent if stream is created in the 'half closed (local)' state.

Result:
We can send HEADERS frame with the END_STREAM flag sent without sending a RST_STREAM frame.
2015-05-07 08:31:05 -07:00
nmittler
4ae8bdc6ec Allowing inbound HTTP/2 frames after sending GOAWAY
Motivation:

If the client closes, a GOWAY is sent with a lastKnownStream of zero (since the remote side never created a stream). If there is still an exchange in progress, inbound frames for streams created by the client will be ignored because our ignore logic doesn't check to see if the stream was created by the remote endpoint. Frames for streams created by the local endpoint should continue to come through after sending GOAWAY.

Modifications:

Changed the decoder's streamCreatedAfterGoAwaySent logic to properly ensure that the stream was created remotely.

Result:

We now propertly process frames received after sending GOAWAY.
2015-05-05 15:03:56 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
af0dd72184 HTTP/2 Warnings Cleanup
Motiviation:
There are a few spots in the HTTP/2 codec where warnings were generated and can be avoided.

Modifications:
Clean up the cause of the warnings.

Result:
Less warnings.
2015-04-29 11:45:34 -07:00
nmittler
70a2608325 Optimizing user-defined stream properties.
Motivation:

Streams currently maintain a hash map of user-defined properties, which has been shown to add significant memory overhead as well as being a performance bottleneck for lookup of frequently used properties.

Modifications:

Modifying the connection/stream to use an array as the storage of user-defined properties, indexed by the class that identifies the index into the array where the property is stored.

Result:

Stream processing performance should be improved.
2015-04-23 12:41:14 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
ee9233d8fa HTTP/2 Flow Controller required memory reduction
Motivation:
Currently we allocate the full amount of state for each stream as soon as the stream is created, and keep that state until the stream is GC. The full set of state is only needed when the stream can support flow controlled frames. There is an opportunity to reduce the required amount of memory, and make memory eligible for GC sooner by only allocating what is necessary for flow control stream state.

Modifications:

Introduce objects which require 'less' state for local/remote flow control stream state.
Use these new objects when streams have been created but will not transition out of idle AND when streams are no longer eligible for flow controlled frame transfer but still must persist in the priority tree.
Result:
Memory allocations are reduced to what is actually needed, and memory is made eligible for GC potentially sooner.
2015-04-22 14:40:21 -07:00
nmittler
ab925abc7d Ignore frames for streams that may have previously existed.
Motivation:

The recent PR that discarded the Http2StreamRemovalPolicy causes connection errors when receiving a frame for a stream that no longer exists. We should ignore these frames if we think there's a chance that the stream has existed previously

Modifications:

Modified the Http2Connection interface to provide a `streamMayHaveExisted` method. Also removed the requireStream() method to identify all of the places in the code that need to be updated.

Modified the encoder and decoder to properly handle cases where a stream may have existed but no longer does.

Result:

Fixes #3643
2015-04-21 20:47:01 -07:00
nmittler
26a7a5ec25 Always consume bytes for closed HTTP/2 streams.
Motivation:

The current local flow controller does not guarantee that unconsumed bytes for a closed stream will be restored to the connection window.  This may lead to degradation of the connection window over time.

Modifications:

Modified DefaultHttp2LocalFlowController to guarantee that any unconsumed bytes are returned to the connection window as soon as the stream is closed. We also immediately consume any bytes when receiving DATA for a closed stream.

Result:

Fixes #3668
2015-04-21 12:33:57 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
541137cc93 HTTP/2 Flow Controller interface updates
Motivation:
Flow control is a required part of the HTTP/2 specification but it is currently structured more like an optional item. It must be accessed through the property map which is time consuming and does not represent its required nature. This access pattern does not give any insight into flow control outside of the codec (or flow controller implementation).

Modifications:
1. Create a read only public interface for LocalFlowState and RemoteFlowState.
2. Add a LocalFlowState localFlowState(); and RemoteFlowState remoteFlowState(); to Http2Stream.

Result:
Flow control is not part of the Http2Stream interface. This clarifies its responsibility and logical relationship to other interfaces. The flow controller no longer must be acquired though a map lookup.
2015-04-20 20:02:02 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
970529e1a8 HTTP/2 Priority tree circular link
Motivation:
If an exclusive dependency change stream B should be an exclusive dependency of stream A is requested and stream B is already a child of stream A...then we will add B to B's own children map and create a circular link in the priority tree. This leads to an infinite recursive loop and a stack overflow exception.

Modifications:
-when removeAllChildren is called it should not remove the exclusive dependency.
-unit test to ensure this case is covered.

Result:
No more circular link in the priority tree.
2015-04-15 14:26:05 -07:00
nmittler
c388f3f085 Removing Http2StreamRemovalPolicy
Motivation:

Due to a recent flurry of cleanup and fixes, we no longer need the stream removal policy to protect against recently removed streams. We should get rid of it.

Modifications:

Removed Http2StreamRemovalPolicy and everywhere it's used.

Result:

Fixes #3448
2015-04-13 12:18:59 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
4a79c5899c HTTP/2 Connection Listener Unchecked Exceptions
Motivation:
The DefaultHttp2Connection is not checking for RuntimeExceptions when invoking Http2Connection.Listener methods. This is a problem for a few reasons: 1. The state of DefaultHttp2Connection will be corrupted if a listener throws a RuntimeException. 2. If the first listener throws then no other listeners will be notified, which may further corrupt state that is updated as a result of listeners being notified.

Modifications:
- Document that RuntimeExceptions are not supported for Http2Connection.Listener methods, and will be logged as an error.
- Update DefaultHttp2Connection to handle and exception for each listener that is notified, and be sure that 1 listener throwing an exception does not prevent others from being notified.

Result:
More robust DefaultHttp2Connection.
2015-04-13 08:54:14 -07:00
nmittler
e3374e5b1d Removing direct access to HTTP/2 child streams.
Motivation:

We've removed access to the activeStreams collection, we should do the same for the children of a stream to provide a consistent interface.

Modifications:

Moved Http2StreamVisitor to a top-level interface. Removed unnecessary child operations from the Http2Stream interface so that we no longer require a map structure.

Result:

Cleaner and more consistent interface for iterating over child streams.
2015-04-10 08:52:26 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
83ce8a9187 HTTP/2 Prevent modification of activeStreams while iterating
Motivation:
The Http2Connection interface exposes an activeStreams() method which allows direct iteration over the underlying collection. There are a few places that make copies of this collection to avoid modification while iterating, and a few places that do not make copies. The copy operation can be expensive on hot code paths and also we are not consistently iterating over the activeStreams collection.

Modifications:
- The Http2Connection interface should reduce the exposure of the underlying collection and just expose what is necessary for the interface to function.  This is just a means to iterate over the collection.
- The DefaultHttp2Connection should use this new interface and protect it's internal state while iteration is occurring.

Result:
Reduction in surface area of the Http2Connection interface.  Consistent iteration of the set of active streams.  Concurrent modification exceptions are handled in 1 encapsulated spot.
2015-04-07 20:55:48 -07:00
Jakob Buchgraber
d5d932a739 Fix GOAWAY logic in Http2Encoder and Http2Decoder.
Motivation:

1) The current implementation doesn't allow for HEADERS, DATA, PING, PRIORITY and SETTINGS
   frames to be sent after GOAWAY.

2) When receiving or sending a GOAWAY frame, all streams with ids greater than the lastStreamId
   of the GOAWAY frame should be closed. That's not happening.

Modifications:

1) Allow sending of HEADERS and DATA frames after GOAWAY for streams with ids < lastStreamId.
2) Always allow sending PING, PRIORITY AND SETTINGS frames.
3) Allow sending multiple GOAWAY frames with decreasing lastStreamIds.
4) After receiving or sending a GOAWAY frame, close all streams with ids > lastStreamId.

Result:

The GOAWAY handling is more correct.
2015-04-07 20:32:28 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
3ae343b768 HTTP/2 DefaultHttp2Connection recursive call fix
Motivation:
There are methods to manipulate the prioritzable count for streams which have the '0' postfix which are designed to be used during recursion.  However these methods are calling out to an external method without the '0' during the recursive process.  This is doing uneccessary conditional checks during recursion.

Modifications:
Change the decrementPrioritizableForTree to decrementPrioritizableForTree0 while in recursive method.
Change the incrementPrioritizableForTree to incrementPrioritizableForTree0 while in recursive method.

Result:
Less overhead during recursive calls.
2015-04-06 17:12:41 -07:00
Jakob Buchgraber
e40c27d9ed Avoid object allocations for HTTP2 child streams.
Motivation:

We are allocating a hash map for every HTTP2 Stream to store it's children.
Most streams are leafs in the priority tree and don't have children.

Modification:

 - Only allocate children when we actually use them.
 - Make EmptyIntObjectMap not throw a UnsupportedOperationException on remove, but return null instead (as is stated in it's javadoc).

Result:

Fewer unnecessary allocations.
2015-04-03 11:57:31 -07:00
Jakob Buchgraber
35b9aa9302 Replace LinkedHashSet by ArrayList to avoid iterators.
Motivation:

In a simple load test that creates and closes several 10k streams per second
I have seen Iterator objects using roughly 1.6% of the total committed heap.

Modifications:

Use an ArrayList instead of a LinkedHashSet to store the connection listeners.
That way we can iterate over the list without creating an iterator every time.

Result:

Zero Iterator allocations due to notifying connection listeners.
2015-04-03 20:13:53 +02:00
Scott Mitchell
7f2ddb2162 HTTP/2 Closed Streams Conditional Priority Tree Removal
Motivation:
The HTTP/2 specification allows for closed (and streams in any state) to exist in the priority tree. The current code removes streams from the priority tree as soon as they are closed (subject to the removal policy). This may lead to undesired distribution of resources from the peer's perspective.

Modifications:
- We should only remove streams from the priority tree when they have no descendant streams in a viable state.
- We should track when tree edges change or nodes are removed if inviable nodes can then be removed.

Result:
Priority tree doesn't remove closed streams until descendant are all closed, or there are no descendants.
2015-03-31 16:24:25 -07:00
nmittler
9737cc6cc9 Include error code and message in GOAWAY events.
Motivation:

The Connection.Listener GOAWAY event handler currently provides no additional information, requiring applications to hack in other ways to get at the error code and debug message.

Modifications:

Modified the Connection.Listener interface to pass on the error code and message that triggered the GOAWAY.

Result:

Application can now use Connection.Listener for all GOAWAY processing.
2015-03-31 09:18:26 -07:00
Scott Mitchell
ab74dccd23 Http/2 Priority on CLOSED stream
Motivation:
The encoder/decoder currently do not handle streams which have previously existed but no longer exist because they were closed. The specification requires supporting this.

Modifications:
- encoder/decoder should tolerate the frame or the dependent frame not existing in the streams map due to the fact that it may have previously existed.

Result:
encoder/decoder are more compliant with the specification.
2015-03-28 19:10:43 -07:00
nmittler
c91eaace5e Cleaning up HTTP/2 method names for max_concurrent_streams
Motivation:

The current documentation for Endpoint methods referring to concurrent streams and the SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS setting are a bit confusing.

Modifications:

Renamed a few of the methods and added more clear documentation.

Result:

Fixes #3451
2015-03-16 10:17:39 -07:00
nmittler
bc76bfa199 Consolidating HTTP/2 stream state
Motivation:

Http2Stream has several methods that provide state information. We need
to simplify how state is used and consolidate as many of these fields as
possible.

Modifications:

Since we already have a concept of a stream being active or inactive,
I'm now separating the deactivation of a stream from the act of closing
it.  The reason for this is the case of sending a frame with
endOfStream=true. In this case we want to close the stream immediately
in order to disallow further writing, but we don't want to mark the
stream as inactive until the write has completed since the inactive
event triggers the flow controller to cancel any pending writes on the
stream.

With deactivation separated out, we are able to eliminate most of the
additional state methods with the exception of `isResetSent`.  This is
still required because we need to ignore inbound frames in this case (as
per the spec), since the remote endpoint may not yet know that the
stream has been closed.

Result:

Fixes #3382
2015-02-04 11:53:00 -08:00
Nitesh Kant
2d24e1f27d Back port HTTP/2 codec from master to 4.1
Motivation:

HTTP/2 codec was implemented in master branch.
Since, master is not yet stable and will be some time before it gets released, backporting it to 4.1, enables people to use the codec with a stable netty version.

Modification:

The code has been copied from master branch as is, with minor modifications to suit the `ChannelHandler` API in 4.x.
Apart from that change, there are two backward incompatible API changes included, namely,

- Added an abstract method:

  `public abstract Map.Entry<CharSequence, CharSequence> forEachEntry(EntryVisitor<CharSequence> visitor)
            throws Exception;`

to `HttpHeaders` and implemented the same in `DefaultHttpHeaders` as a delegate to the internal `TextHeader` instance.

- Added a method:

`FullHttpMessage copy(ByteBuf newContent);`

in `FullHttpMessage` with the implementations copied from relevant places in the master branch.

- Added missing abstract method related to setting/adding short values to `HttpHeaders`

Result:

HTTP/2 codec can be used with netty 4.1
2015-01-23 11:06:11 -05:00