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208 lines
8.2 KiB
208 lines
8.2 KiB
Random thoughts, miscellaneous ramblings -- keithmo, 11/30/98
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1. The user-mode interface to the open-file-handle-cache is problematic,
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especially regarding thread security context (impersonation). We can't
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use the IIS-style "match-the-thread-token-handle" technique, as the
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cache is accessible from multiple processes which may (probably will)
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have different handle values for the same security token. I suspect that
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we'd need to actually snapshot the security token whenever an new entry
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is inserted into the cache, then compare that snapshot with the incoming
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token when testing for a cache hit. Ugh.
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I say we yank the user-mode interface.
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2. The current thinking for the response-cache has "weak" references to
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the open-file-handle-cache. This allows open-file-handle-cache entries
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to come & go independently of the response-cache. I think we could
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simplify the implementation somewhat by "strengthening" this reference
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so that a response-cache entry becomes invalidated whenever any of
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the referenced open-file-handle-cache entries are invalidated. This
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could be useful as a cheap & easy filesystem "change notify" mechanism
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for user-mode worker processes. (See below.)
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3. Along the same lines as #2, it may be useful to allow "zero-length"
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byte ranges in UL_HTTP_RESPONSE structures. This would allow user-mode
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code to establish a relationship between a response-cache entry and
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an open-file-handle-cache entry solely for the purposes of invalidation.
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Imagine a response-cache entry representing the dynamic output from a
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.XSP file. The UL_HTTP_RESPONSE structure representing this response
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could contain a zero-length byte range referring to the source .XSP
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file. If the .XSP file was flushed from the open-file-handle-cache
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(say, due to an oplock break) then the user-mode process would receive
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a "normal" cache miss notification.
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4. It may be useful to provide a "notification type" value in the
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UL_HTTP_REQUEST returned by the UlReceiveHttpRequest() API. This
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value would give a "hint" indication for the reason the request
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was passed up to user-mode. Possible reasons include:
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response-cache miss - The incoming URL was *not* present in
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the response-cache.
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open-file-handle-cache miss - The incoming URL *was* present
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in the response-cache, but one or more of the referenced
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files were *not* present in the open-file-handle-cache.
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cache policy miss - The incoming URL *was* present in the
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response-cache, but the cache-control information set on
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the cache entry was incompatible with the incoming request.
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security - The incoming URL *was* present in the response-cache,
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but the cache entry is configured for a security provider
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requring user-mode intervention.
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etc, etc, etc
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5. Need to add a UlSendHttpResponseFromCache() API. This should take a
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UL_HTTP_REQUEST structure as returned by UlReceiveHttpRequest(), hit
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the response-cache, and send the cached response if successful. If
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the URL is not in the response-cache, then API fails with a
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distinguished error value.
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6. Probably need a UlReceiveEntityBody() API to read the "leftover" part
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of the entity body that could not fit into the original request
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buffer.
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7. User-mode worker processes issue one or more UlReceiveHttpRequest()
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APIs that pend if necessary, waiting for incoming requests. What
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happens if the supplied buffer is too small for the incoming request
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header?
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For each *process*, UL needs a separate queue of pending requests. This
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queue represents the set of requests for which either a) an attempt was
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made to deliver the request to user-mode but the supplied request buffer
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was too small, or b) unread entity body data is remaining.
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8. Need a mechanism to notify user-mode whenever an established connection
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is disconnected. This is especially useful for worker-processes that
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support the old ISAPI filter mechanism.
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Unfortunately, we cannot leverage the existing UlReadHttpRequest()
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API for these notifications. Consider a Web Garden in which multiple
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processes receive requests for a single connection. Which process
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gets the notification? The first? The last? All of them?
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We'll probably need a separate API for disconnect notifications.
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9. With the new handle-based app pool open/creation APIs, UL needs
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a reliable way to distinguish three separate open modes:
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1. Open a control channel
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2. Create a new app pool
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3. Open an existing app pool
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The "control channel" cases can be distinguished from the "app pool"
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cases by the presence of the filename buffer in the FILE_OBJECT. If
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there is a name, it's an app pool, if not, it's a control channel.
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Distinguishing app pool "create" from "open" is a bit trickier. Some
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spelunking uncovered a way: The Disposition parameter to NtCreateFile()
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is propagated in the IRP_MJ_CREATE IRP, stuffed into the high byte of
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IO_STACK_LOCATION.Parameters.Create.Options.
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The creation becomes:
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if (pIrpSp->FileObject->FileName.Buffer == NULL)
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{
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//
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// Open a control channel.
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//
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status = UlpOpenControlChannel( pIrp, pIrpSp );
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}
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else
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{
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//
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// IO passes the creation disposition in the high byte of
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// the Options field. Extract & decode it.
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//
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switch ((pIrpSp->Parameters.Create.Options >> 24) & 0xFF)
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{
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case FILE_CREATE:
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//
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// Create a new app pool. This will fail if the app pool
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// already exists.
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//
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status = UlpCreateAppPool( pIrp, pIrpSp );
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break;
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case FILE_OPEN:
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//
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// Open an existing app pool. This will fail if the app
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// pool does not already exist.
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//
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status = UlpOpenAppPool( pIrp, pIrpSp );
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break;
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default:
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//
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// No need to be flexible here. Fail the request.
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//
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status = STATUS_INVALID_PARAMETER;
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break;
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}
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}
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10. We still need to think carefully through the whole URL canonicalization
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mess. How do we canonicalize an incoming URL if there's no host
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header in the request?
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Henry has suggested a separate IP-address-to-host-name lookaside
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table in UL, configured by user-mode (probably the application
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manager).
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11. We still need to define the exact contents of the UL_CACHE_POLICY
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structure (the one that defines the caching characteristis of
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a specific HTTP response).
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12. The opaque ID package needs refinement. See objtable.c for one
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proposed solution.
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13. UL needs a ton of bug fixes on its disconnect logic. The logic is
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related to the HTTP protocol version, the transfer encoding, and
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whether or not the data is streamed from user-mode:
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Version Chunked Non-Chunked
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~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ Non-Streamed Streamed
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~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
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0.9 N/A CLOSE CLOSE
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1.0 N/A CLOSE IF !PC CLOSE
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1.1 SEND EMPTY CHUNK, CLOSE IF !PC CLOSE
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CLOSE IF !PC
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14. We currently use Named Pipes (and MCourage's most-excellent IPM
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wrapper) for IPC between WAS and WP. This works great under NT,
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but Named Pipes are not supported on Win9x or WinCE.
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We could use anonymous pipes (via the CreatePipe() API). However,
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while anonymous pipes ARE supported under WinNT and Win9x, they're
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NOT supported under WinCE. This may not be a big deal (we probably
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won't have a robust process model under WinCE anyway). A bigger
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drawback to anonymous pipes is that they are synchronous only
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(no overlapped I/O). Yuck.
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After further investigation, it appears that we're almost totally
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hozed when it comes to IPC on WinCE. As near as I can tell, the
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only reasonable IPC mechanism available in WinCE is sockets...
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