caddy/modules/caddyhttp/reverseproxy/reverseproxy.go

863 lines
25 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 Matthew Holt and The Caddy Authors
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package reverseproxy
import (
"bytes"
"context"
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"io"
"log"
"net"
"net/http"
"net/url"
"strings"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
"github.com/caddyserver/caddy/v2"
"github.com/caddyserver/caddy/v2/modules/caddyhttp"
"golang.org/x/net/http/httpguts"
)
func init() {
caddy.RegisterModule(Handler{})
}
type Handler struct {
TransportRaw json.RawMessage `json:"transport,omitempty"`
LoadBalancing *LoadBalancing `json:"load_balancing,omitempty"`
HealthChecks *HealthChecks `json:"health_checks,omitempty"`
// UpstreamStorageRaw json.RawMessage `json:"upstream_storage,omitempty"` // TODO:
Upstreams HostPool `json:"upstreams,omitempty"`
// UpstreamProvider UpstreamProvider `json:"-"` // TODO:
Transport http.RoundTripper `json:"-"`
}
// CaddyModule returns the Caddy module information.
func (Handler) CaddyModule() caddy.ModuleInfo {
return caddy.ModuleInfo{
Name: "http.handlers.reverse_proxy",
New: func() caddy.Module { return new(Handler) },
}
}
func (h *Handler) Provision(ctx caddy.Context) error {
if h.TransportRaw != nil {
val, err := ctx.LoadModuleInline("protocol", "http.handlers.reverse_proxy.transport", h.TransportRaw)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("loading transport module: %s", err)
}
h.Transport = val.(http.RoundTripper)
h.TransportRaw = nil // allow GC to deallocate - TODO: Does this help?
}
if h.LoadBalancing != nil && h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicyRaw != nil {
val, err := ctx.LoadModuleInline("policy",
"http.handlers.reverse_proxy.selection_policies",
h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicyRaw)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("loading load balancing selection module: %s", err)
}
h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicy = val.(Selector)
h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicyRaw = nil // allow GC to deallocate - TODO: Does this help?
}
if h.Transport == nil {
h.Transport = defaultTransport
}
if h.LoadBalancing == nil {
h.LoadBalancing = new(LoadBalancing)
}
if h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicy == nil {
h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicy = RandomSelection{}
}
if h.LoadBalancing.TryDuration > 0 && h.LoadBalancing.TryInterval == 0 {
// a non-zero try_duration with a zero try_interval
// will always spin the CPU for try_duration if the
// upstream is local or low-latency; default to some
// sane waiting period before try attempts
h.LoadBalancing.TryInterval = caddy.Duration(250 * time.Millisecond)
}
for _, upstream := range h.Upstreams {
// url parser requires a scheme
if !strings.Contains(upstream.Address, "://") {
upstream.Address = "http://" + upstream.Address
}
u, err := url.Parse(upstream.Address)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid upstream address %s: %v", upstream.Address, err)
}
upstream.hostURL = u
// if host already exists from a current config,
// use that instead; otherwise, add it
// TODO: make hosts modular, so that their state can be distributed in enterprise for example
// TODO: If distributed, the pool should be stored in storage...
var host Host = new(upstreamHost)
activeHost, loaded := hosts.LoadOrStore(u.String(), host)
if loaded {
host = activeHost.(Host)
}
upstream.Host = host
// if the passive health checker has a non-zero "unhealthy
// request count" but the upstream has no MaxRequests set
// (they are the same thing, but one is a default value for
// for upstreams with a zero MaxRequests), copy the default
// value into this upstream, since the value in the upstream
// is what is used during availability checks
if h.HealthChecks != nil &&
h.HealthChecks.Passive != nil &&
h.HealthChecks.Passive.UnhealthyRequestCount > 0 &&
upstream.MaxRequests == 0 {
upstream.MaxRequests = h.HealthChecks.Passive.UnhealthyRequestCount
}
// TODO: active health checks
if h.HealthChecks != nil {
// upstreams need independent access to the passive
// health check policy so they can, you know, passively
// do health checks
upstream.healthCheckPolicy = h.HealthChecks.Passive
}
}
return nil
}
func (h *Handler) Cleanup() error {
// TODO: finish this up, make sure it takes care of any active health checkers or whatever
for _, upstream := range h.Upstreams {
hosts.Delete(upstream.hostURL.String())
}
return nil
}
func (h *Handler) ServeHTTP(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, next caddyhttp.Handler) error {
// prepare the request for proxying; this is needed only once
err := h.prepareRequest(r)
if err != nil {
return caddyhttp.Error(http.StatusInternalServerError,
fmt.Errorf("preparing request for upstream round-trip: %v", err))
}
start := time.Now()
var proxyErr error
for {
// choose an available upstream
upstream := h.LoadBalancing.SelectionPolicy.Select(h.Upstreams, r)
if upstream == nil {
if proxyErr == nil {
proxyErr = fmt.Errorf("no available upstreams")
}
if !h.tryAgain(start, proxyErr) {
break
}
continue
}
// proxy the request to that upstream
proxyErr = h.reverseProxy(w, r, upstream)
if proxyErr == nil {
return nil
}
// remember this failure (if enabled)
h.countFailure(upstream)
// if we've tried long enough, break
if !h.tryAgain(start, proxyErr) {
break
}
}
return caddyhttp.Error(http.StatusBadGateway, proxyErr)
}
// prepareRequest modifies req so that it is ready to be proxied,
// except for directing to a specific upstream. This method mutates
// headers and other necessary properties of the request and should
// be done just once (before proxying) regardless of proxy retries.
// This assumes that no mutations of the request are performed
// by h during or after proxying.
func (h Handler) prepareRequest(req *http.Request) error {
// ctx := req.Context()
// TODO: do we need to support CloseNotifier? It was deprecated years ago.
// All this does is wrap CloseNotify with context cancel, for those responsewriters
// which didn't support context, but all the ones we'd use should nowadays, right?
// if cn, ok := rw.(http.CloseNotifier); ok {
// var cancel context.CancelFunc
// ctx, cancel = context.WithCancel(ctx)
// defer cancel()
// notifyChan := cn.CloseNotify()
// go func() {
// select {
// case <-notifyChan:
// cancel()
// case <-ctx.Done():
// }
// }()
// }
// TODO: do we need to call WithContext, since we won't be changing req.Context() above if we remove the CloseNotifier stuff?
// TODO: (This is where references to req were originally "outreq", a shallow clone, which I think is unnecessary in our case)
// req = req.WithContext(ctx) // includes shallow copies of maps, but okay
if req.ContentLength == 0 {
req.Body = nil // Issue golang/go#16036: nil Body for http.Transport retries
}
// TODO: is this needed?
// req.Header = cloneHeader(req.Header)
req.Close = false
// if User-Agent is not set by client, then explicitly
// disable it so it's not set to default value by std lib
if _, ok := req.Header["User-Agent"]; !ok {
req.Header.Set("User-Agent", "")
}
reqUpType := upgradeType(req.Header)
removeConnectionHeaders(req.Header)
// Remove hop-by-hop headers to the backend. Especially
// important is "Connection" because we want a persistent
// connection, regardless of what the client sent to us.
for _, h := range hopHeaders {
hv := req.Header.Get(h)
if hv == "" {
continue
}
if h == "Te" && hv == "trailers" {
// Issue golang/go#21096: tell backend applications that
// care about trailer support that we support
// trailers. (We do, but we don't go out of
// our way to advertise that unless the
// incoming client request thought it was
// worth mentioning)
continue
}
req.Header.Del(h)
}
// After stripping all the hop-by-hop connection headers above, add back any
// necessary for protocol upgrades, such as for websockets.
if reqUpType != "" {
req.Header.Set("Connection", "Upgrade")
req.Header.Set("Upgrade", reqUpType)
}
if clientIP, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(req.RemoteAddr); err == nil {
// If we aren't the first proxy retain prior
// X-Forwarded-For information as a comma+space
// separated list and fold multiple headers into one.
if prior, ok := req.Header["X-Forwarded-For"]; ok {
clientIP = strings.Join(prior, ", ") + ", " + clientIP
}
req.Header.Set("X-Forwarded-For", clientIP)
}
return nil
}
// TODO:
// this code is the entry point to what was borrowed from the net/http/httputil package in the standard library.
func (h *Handler) reverseProxy(rw http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request, upstream *Upstream) error {
// TODO: count this active request
// point the request to this upstream
h.directRequest(req, upstream)
// do the round-trip
start := time.Now()
res, err := h.Transport.RoundTrip(req)
latency := time.Since(start)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// perform passive health checks (if enabled)
if h.HealthChecks != nil && h.HealthChecks.Passive != nil {
// strike if the status code matches one that is "bad"
for _, badStatus := range h.HealthChecks.Passive.UnhealthyStatus {
if caddyhttp.StatusCodeMatches(res.StatusCode, badStatus) {
h.countFailure(upstream)
}
}
// strike if the roundtrip took too long
if h.HealthChecks.Passive.UnhealthyLatency > 0 &&
latency >= time.Duration(h.HealthChecks.Passive.UnhealthyLatency) {
h.countFailure(upstream)
}
}
// Deal with 101 Switching Protocols responses: (WebSocket, h2c, etc)
if res.StatusCode == http.StatusSwitchingProtocols {
h.handleUpgradeResponse(rw, req, res)
return nil
}
removeConnectionHeaders(res.Header)
for _, h := range hopHeaders {
res.Header.Del(h)
}
copyHeader(rw.Header(), res.Header)
// The "Trailer" header isn't included in the Transport's response,
// at least for *http.Transport. Build it up from Trailer.
announcedTrailers := len(res.Trailer)
if announcedTrailers > 0 {
trailerKeys := make([]string, 0, len(res.Trailer))
for k := range res.Trailer {
trailerKeys = append(trailerKeys, k)
}
rw.Header().Add("Trailer", strings.Join(trailerKeys, ", "))
}
rw.WriteHeader(res.StatusCode)
err = h.copyResponse(rw, res.Body, h.flushInterval(req, res))
if err != nil {
defer res.Body.Close()
// Since we're streaming the response, if we run into an error all we can do
// is abort the request. Issue golang/go#23643: ReverseProxy should use ErrAbortHandler
// on read error while copying body.
// TODO: Look into whether we want to panic at all in our case...
if !shouldPanicOnCopyError(req) {
// p.logf("suppressing panic for copyResponse error in test; copy error: %v", err)
return err
}
panic(http.ErrAbortHandler)
}
res.Body.Close() // close now, instead of defer, to populate res.Trailer
if len(res.Trailer) > 0 {
// Force chunking if we saw a response trailer.
// This prevents net/http from calculating the length for short
// bodies and adding a Content-Length.
if fl, ok := rw.(http.Flusher); ok {
fl.Flush()
}
}
if len(res.Trailer) == announcedTrailers {
copyHeader(rw.Header(), res.Trailer)
return nil
}
for k, vv := range res.Trailer {
k = http.TrailerPrefix + k
for _, v := range vv {
rw.Header().Add(k, v)
}
}
return nil
}
// tryAgain takes the time that the handler was initially invoked
// as well as any error currently obtained and returns true if
// another attempt should be made at proxying the request. If
// true is returned, it has already blocked long enough before
// the next retry (i.e. no more sleeping is needed). If false is
// returned, the handler should stop trying to proxy the request.
func (h Handler) tryAgain(start time.Time, proxyErr error) bool {
// if downstream has canceled the request, break
if proxyErr == context.Canceled {
return false
}
// if we've tried long enough, break
if time.Since(start) >= time.Duration(h.LoadBalancing.TryDuration) {
return false
}
// otherwise, wait and try the next available host
time.Sleep(time.Duration(h.LoadBalancing.TryInterval))
return true
}
// directRequest modifies only req.URL so that it points to the
// given upstream host. It must modify ONLY the request URL.
func (h Handler) directRequest(req *http.Request, upstream *Upstream) {
target := upstream.hostURL
req.URL.Scheme = target.Scheme
req.URL.Host = target.Host
req.URL.Path = singleJoiningSlash(target.Path, req.URL.Path) // TODO: This might be a bug (if any part of the path was augmented from a previously-tried upstream; need to start from clean original path of request, same for query string!)
if target.RawQuery == "" || req.URL.RawQuery == "" {
req.URL.RawQuery = target.RawQuery + req.URL.RawQuery
} else {
req.URL.RawQuery = target.RawQuery + "&" + req.URL.RawQuery
}
}
func (h Handler) handleUpgradeResponse(rw http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request, res *http.Response) {
reqUpType := upgradeType(req.Header)
resUpType := upgradeType(res.Header)
if reqUpType != resUpType {
// p.getErrorHandler()(rw, req, fmt.Errorf("backend tried to switch protocol %q when %q was requested", resUpType, reqUpType))
return
}
copyHeader(res.Header, rw.Header())
hj, ok := rw.(http.Hijacker)
if !ok {
// p.getErrorHandler()(rw, req, fmt.Errorf("can't switch protocols using non-Hijacker ResponseWriter type %T", rw))
return
}
backConn, ok := res.Body.(io.ReadWriteCloser)
if !ok {
// p.getErrorHandler()(rw, req, fmt.Errorf("internal error: 101 switching protocols response with non-writable body"))
return
}
defer backConn.Close()
conn, brw, err := hj.Hijack()
if err != nil {
// p.getErrorHandler()(rw, req, fmt.Errorf("Hijack failed on protocol switch: %v", err))
return
}
defer conn.Close()
res.Body = nil // so res.Write only writes the headers; we have res.Body in backConn above
if err := res.Write(brw); err != nil {
// p.getErrorHandler()(rw, req, fmt.Errorf("response write: %v", err))
return
}
if err := brw.Flush(); err != nil {
// p.getErrorHandler()(rw, req, fmt.Errorf("response flush: %v", err))
return
}
errc := make(chan error, 1)
spc := switchProtocolCopier{user: conn, backend: backConn}
go spc.copyToBackend(errc)
go spc.copyFromBackend(errc)
<-errc
return
}
// flushInterval returns the p.FlushInterval value, conditionally
// overriding its value for a specific request/response.
func (h Handler) flushInterval(req *http.Request, res *http.Response) time.Duration {
resCT := res.Header.Get("Content-Type")
// For Server-Sent Events responses, flush immediately.
// The MIME type is defined in https://www.w3.org/TR/eventsource/#text-event-stream
if resCT == "text/event-stream" {
return -1 // negative means immediately
}
// TODO: more specific cases? e.g. res.ContentLength == -1?
// return h.FlushInterval
return 0
}
func (h Handler) copyResponse(dst io.Writer, src io.Reader, flushInterval time.Duration) error {
if flushInterval != 0 {
if wf, ok := dst.(writeFlusher); ok {
mlw := &maxLatencyWriter{
dst: wf,
latency: flushInterval,
}
defer mlw.stop()
dst = mlw
}
}
// TODO: Figure out how we want to do this... using custom buffer pool type seems unnecessary
// or maybe it is, depending on how we want to handle errors,
// see: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/21814
// buf := bufPool.Get().(*bytes.Buffer)
// buf.Reset()
// defer bufPool.Put(buf)
// _, err := io.CopyBuffer(dst, src, )
var buf []byte
// if h.BufferPool != nil {
// buf = h.BufferPool.Get()
// defer h.BufferPool.Put(buf)
// }
_, err := h.copyBuffer(dst, src, buf)
return err
}
// copyBuffer returns any write errors or non-EOF read errors, and the amount
// of bytes written.
func (h Handler) copyBuffer(dst io.Writer, src io.Reader, buf []byte) (int64, error) {
if len(buf) == 0 {
buf = make([]byte, 32*1024)
}
var written int64
for {
nr, rerr := src.Read(buf)
if rerr != nil && rerr != io.EOF && rerr != context.Canceled {
// TODO: this could be useful to know (indeed, it revealed an error in our
// fastcgi PoC earlier; but it's this single error report here that necessitates
// a function separate from io.CopyBuffer, since io.CopyBuffer does not distinguish
// between read or write errors; in a reverse proxy situation, write errors are not
// something we need to report to the client, but read errors are a problem on our
// end for sure. so we need to decide what we want.)
// p.logf("copyBuffer: ReverseProxy read error during body copy: %v", rerr)
}
if nr > 0 {
nw, werr := dst.Write(buf[:nr])
if nw > 0 {
written += int64(nw)
}
if werr != nil {
return written, werr
}
if nr != nw {
return written, io.ErrShortWrite
}
}
if rerr != nil {
if rerr == io.EOF {
rerr = nil
}
return written, rerr
}
}
}
// countFailure remembers 1 failure for upstream for the
// configured duration. If passive health checks are
// disabled or failure expiry is 0, this is a no-op.
func (h Handler) countFailure(upstream *Upstream) {
// only count failures if passive health checking is enabled
// and if failures are configured have a non-zero expiry
if h.HealthChecks == nil || h.HealthChecks.Passive == nil {
return
}
failDuration := time.Duration(h.HealthChecks.Passive.FailDuration)
if failDuration == 0 {
return
}
// count failure immediately
err := upstream.Host.CountFail(1)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("[ERROR] proxy: upstream %s: counting failure: %v",
upstream.hostURL, err)
}
// forget it later
go func(host Host, failDuration time.Duration) {
time.Sleep(failDuration)
err := host.CountFail(-1)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("[ERROR] proxy: upstream %s: expiring failure: %v",
upstream.hostURL, err)
}
}(upstream.Host, failDuration)
}
type writeFlusher interface {
io.Writer
http.Flusher
}
type maxLatencyWriter struct {
dst writeFlusher
latency time.Duration // non-zero; negative means to flush immediately
mu sync.Mutex // protects t, flushPending, and dst.Flush
t *time.Timer
flushPending bool
}
func (m *maxLatencyWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
m.mu.Lock()
defer m.mu.Unlock()
n, err = m.dst.Write(p)
if m.latency < 0 {
m.dst.Flush()
return
}
if m.flushPending {
return
}
if m.t == nil {
m.t = time.AfterFunc(m.latency, m.delayedFlush)
} else {
m.t.Reset(m.latency)
}
m.flushPending = true
return
}
func (m *maxLatencyWriter) delayedFlush() {
m.mu.Lock()
defer m.mu.Unlock()
if !m.flushPending { // if stop was called but AfterFunc already started this goroutine
return
}
m.dst.Flush()
m.flushPending = false
}
func (m *maxLatencyWriter) stop() {
m.mu.Lock()
defer m.mu.Unlock()
m.flushPending = false
if m.t != nil {
m.t.Stop()
}
}
// switchProtocolCopier exists so goroutines proxying data back and
// forth have nice names in stacks.
type switchProtocolCopier struct {
user, backend io.ReadWriter
}
func (c switchProtocolCopier) copyFromBackend(errc chan<- error) {
_, err := io.Copy(c.user, c.backend)
errc <- err
}
func (c switchProtocolCopier) copyToBackend(errc chan<- error) {
_, err := io.Copy(c.backend, c.user)
errc <- err
}
// shouldPanicOnCopyError reports whether the reverse proxy should
// panic with http.ErrAbortHandler. This is the right thing to do by
// default, but Go 1.10 and earlier did not, so existing unit tests
// weren't expecting panics. Only panic in our own tests, or when
// running under the HTTP server.
// TODO: I don't know if we want this at all...
func shouldPanicOnCopyError(req *http.Request) bool {
// if inOurTests {
// // Our tests know to handle this panic.
// return true
// }
if req.Context().Value(http.ServerContextKey) != nil {
// We seem to be running under an HTTP server, so
// it'll recover the panic.
return true
}
// Otherwise act like Go 1.10 and earlier to not break
// existing tests.
return false
}
func copyHeader(dst, src http.Header) {
for k, vv := range src {
for _, v := range vv {
dst.Add(k, v)
}
}
}
func cloneHeader(h http.Header) http.Header {
h2 := make(http.Header, len(h))
for k, vv := range h {
vv2 := make([]string, len(vv))
copy(vv2, vv)
h2[k] = vv2
}
return h2
}
func upgradeType(h http.Header) string {
if !httpguts.HeaderValuesContainsToken(h["Connection"], "Upgrade") {
return ""
}
return strings.ToLower(h.Get("Upgrade"))
}
func singleJoiningSlash(a, b string) string {
aslash := strings.HasSuffix(a, "/")
bslash := strings.HasPrefix(b, "/")
switch {
case aslash && bslash:
return a + b[1:]
case !aslash && !bslash:
return a + "/" + b
}
return a + b
}
// removeConnectionHeaders removes hop-by-hop headers listed in the "Connection" header of h.
// See RFC 7230, section 6.1
func removeConnectionHeaders(h http.Header) {
if c := h.Get("Connection"); c != "" {
for _, f := range strings.Split(c, ",") {
if f = strings.TrimSpace(f); f != "" {
h.Del(f)
}
}
}
}
type LoadBalancing struct {
SelectionPolicyRaw json.RawMessage `json:"selection_policy,omitempty"`
TryDuration caddy.Duration `json:"try_duration,omitempty"`
TryInterval caddy.Duration `json:"try_interval,omitempty"`
SelectionPolicy Selector `json:"-"`
}
type Selector interface {
Select(HostPool, *http.Request) *Upstream
}
type HealthChecks struct {
Active *ActiveHealthChecks `json:"active,omitempty"`
Passive *PassiveHealthChecks `json:"passive,omitempty"`
}
type ActiveHealthChecks struct {
Path string `json:"path,omitempty"`
Port int `json:"port,omitempty"`
Interval caddy.Duration `json:"interval,omitempty"`
Timeout caddy.Duration `json:"timeout,omitempty"`
MaxSize int `json:"max_size,omitempty"`
ExpectStatus int `json:"expect_status,omitempty"`
ExpectBody string `json:"expect_body,omitempty"`
}
type PassiveHealthChecks struct {
MaxFails int `json:"max_fails,omitempty"`
FailDuration caddy.Duration `json:"fail_duration,omitempty"`
UnhealthyRequestCount int `json:"unhealthy_request_count,omitempty"`
UnhealthyStatus []int `json:"unhealthy_status,omitempty"`
UnhealthyLatency caddy.Duration `json:"unhealthy_latency,omitempty"`
}
// Hop-by-hop headers. These are removed when sent to the backend.
// As of RFC 7230, hop-by-hop headers are required to appear in the
// Connection header field. These are the headers defined by the
// obsoleted RFC 2616 (section 13.5.1) and are used for backward
// compatibility.
var hopHeaders = []string{
"Connection",
"Proxy-Connection", // non-standard but still sent by libcurl and rejected by e.g. google
"Keep-Alive",
"Proxy-Authenticate",
"Proxy-Authorization",
"Te", // canonicalized version of "TE"
"Trailer", // not Trailers per URL above; https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php?eid=4522
"Transfer-Encoding",
"Upgrade",
}
var bufPool = sync.Pool{
New: func() interface{} {
return new(bytes.Buffer)
},
}
//////////////////////////////////
// TODO:
type Host interface {
NumRequests() int
Fails() int
Unhealthy() bool
CountRequest(int) error
CountFail(int) error
}
type HostPool []*Upstream
type upstreamHost struct {
numRequests int64 // must be first field to be 64-bit aligned on 32-bit systems (see https://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG)
fails int64
unhealthy int32
}
func (uh upstreamHost) NumRequests() int {
return int(atomic.LoadInt64(&uh.numRequests))
}
func (uh upstreamHost) Fails() int {
return int(atomic.LoadInt64(&uh.fails))
}
func (uh upstreamHost) Unhealthy() bool {
return atomic.LoadInt32(&uh.unhealthy) == 1
}
func (uh *upstreamHost) CountRequest(delta int) error {
result := atomic.AddInt64(&uh.numRequests, int64(delta))
if result < 0 {
return fmt.Errorf("count below 0: %d", result)
}
return nil
}
func (uh *upstreamHost) CountFail(delta int) error {
result := atomic.AddInt64(&uh.fails, int64(delta))
if result < 0 {
return fmt.Errorf("count below 0: %d", result)
}
return nil
}
type Upstream struct {
Host `json:"-"`
Address string `json:"address,omitempty"`
MaxRequests int `json:"max_requests,omitempty"`
// TODO: This could be really cool, to say that requests with
// certain headers or from certain IPs always go to this upstream
// HeaderAffinity string
// IPAffinity string
healthCheckPolicy *PassiveHealthChecks
hostURL *url.URL
}
func (u Upstream) Available() bool {
return u.Healthy() && !u.Full()
}
func (u Upstream) Healthy() bool {
healthy := !u.Host.Unhealthy()
if healthy && u.healthCheckPolicy != nil {
healthy = u.Host.Fails() < u.healthCheckPolicy.MaxFails
}
return healthy
}
func (u Upstream) Full() bool {
return u.MaxRequests > 0 && u.Host.NumRequests() >= u.MaxRequests
}
func (u Upstream) URL() *url.URL {
return u.hostURL
}
var hosts = caddy.NewUsagePool()
// TODO: ...
type UpstreamProvider interface {
}
// Interface guards
var (
_ caddyhttp.MiddlewareHandler = (*Handler)(nil)
_ caddy.Provisioner = (*Handler)(nil)
_ caddy.CleanerUpper = (*Handler)(nil)
)