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APACHE 2.x ROADMAP | |
================== | |
Last modified at [$Date$] | |
WORKS IN PROGRESS | |
----------------- | |
* Source code should follow style guidelines. | |
OK, we all agree pretty code is good. Probably best to clean this | |
up by hand immediately upon branching a 2.1 tree. | |
Status: Justin volunteers to hand-edit the entire source tree ;) | |
Justin says: | |
Recall when the release plan for 2.0 was written: | |
Absolute Enforcement of an "Apache Style" for code. | |
Watch this slip into 3.0. | |
David says: | |
The style guide needs to be reviewed before this can be done. | |
http://httpd.apache.org/dev/styleguide.html | |
The current file is dated April 20th 1998! | |
OtherBill offers: | |
It's survived since '98 because it's welldone :-) Suggest we | |
simply follow whatever is documented in styleguide.html as we | |
branch the next tree. Really sort of straightforward, if you | |
dislike a bit within that doc, bring it up on the dev@httpd | |
list prior to the next branch. | |
So Bill sums up ... let's get the code cleaned up in CVS head. | |
Remember, it just takes cvs diff -b (that is, --ignore-space-change) | |
to see the code changes and ignore that cruft. Get editing Justin :) | |
* Replace stat [deferred open] with open/fstat in directory_walk. | |
Justin, Ian, OtherBill all interested in this. Implies setting up | |
the apr_file_t member in request_rec, and having all modules use | |
that file, and allow the cleanup to close it [if it isn't a shared, | |
cached file handle.] | |
* The Async Apache Server implemented in terms of APR. | |
[Bill Stoddard's pet project.] | |
Message-ID: <008301c17d42$9b446970$01000100@sashimi> (dev@apr) | |
OtherBill notes that this can proceed in two parts... | |
Async accept, setup, and tear-down of the request | |
e.g. dealing with the incoming request headers, prior to | |
dispatching the request to a thread for processing. | |
This doesn't need to wait for a 2.x/3.0 bump. | |
Async delegation of the entire request processing chain | |
Too many handlers use stack storage and presume it is | |
available for the life of the request, so a complete | |
async implementation would need to happen 3.0 release. | |
Brian notes that async writes will provide a bigger | |
scalability win than async reads for most servers. | |
We may want to try a hybrid sync-read/async-write MPM | |
as a next step. This should be relatively easy to | |
build: start with the current worker or leader/followers | |
model, but hand off each response brigade to a "completion | |
thread" that multiplexes writes on many connections, so | |
that the worker thread doesn't have to wait around for | |
the sendfile to complete. | |
MAKING APACHE REPOSITORY-AGNOSTIC | |
(or: remove knowledge of the filesystem) | |
[ 2002/10/01: discussion in progress on items below; this isn't | |
planned yet ] | |
* dav_resource concept for an HTTP resource ("ap_resource") | |
* r->filename, r->canonical_filename, r->finfo need to | |
disappear. All users need to use new APIs on the ap_resource | |
object. | |
(backwards compat: today, when this occurs with mod_dav and a | |
custom backend, the above items refer to the topmost directory | |
mapped by a location; e.g. docroot) | |
Need to preserve a 'filename'-like string for mime-by-name | |
sorts of operations. But this only needs to be the name itself | |
and not a full path. | |
Justin: Can we leverage the path info, or do we not trust the | |
user? | |
gstein: well, it isn't the "path info", but the actual URI of | |
the resource. And of course we trust the user... that is | |
the resource they requested. | |
dav_resource->uri is the field you want. path_info might | |
still exist, but that portion might be related to the | |
CGI concept of "path translated" or some other further | |
resolution. | |
To continue, I would suggest that "path translated" and | |
having *any* path info is Badness. It means that you did | |
not fully resolve a resource for the given URI. The | |
"abs_path" in a URI identifies a resource, and that | |
should get fully resolved. None of this "resolve to | |
<here> and then we have a magical second resolution | |
(inside the CGI script)" or somesuch. | |
Justin: Well, let's consider mod_mbox for a second. It is sort of | |
a virtual filesystem in its own right - as it introduces | |
it's own notion of a URI space, but it is intrinsically | |
tied to the filesystem to do the lookups. But, for the | |
portion that isn't resolved on the file system, it has | |
its own addressing scheme. Do we need the ability to | |
layer resolution? | |
* The translate_name hook goes away | |
Wrowe altogether disagrees. translate_name today even operates | |
on URIs ... this mechansim needs to be preserved. | |
* The doc for map_to_storage is totally opaque to me. It has | |
something to do with filesystems, but it also talks about | |
security and per_dir_config and other stuff. I presume something | |
needs to happen there -- at least better doc. | |
Wrowe agrees and will write it up. | |
* The directory_walk concept disappears. All configuration is | |
tagged to Locations. The "mod_filesystem" module might have some | |
internal concept of the same config appearing in multiple | |
places, but that is handled internally rather than by Apache | |
core. | |
Wrowe suggests this is wrong, instead it's private to filesystem | |
requests, and is already invoked from map_to_storage, not the core | |
handler. <Directory > and <Files > blocks are preserved as-is, | |
but <Directory > sections become specific to the filesystem handler | |
alone. Because alternate filesystem schemes could be loaded, this | |
should be exposed, from the core, for other file-based stores to | |
share. Consider an archive store where the layers become | |
<Directory path> -> <Archive store> -> <File name> | |
Justin: How do we map Directory entries to Locations? | |
* The "Location tree" is an in-memory representation of the URL | |
namespace. Nodes of the tree have configuration specific to that | |
location in the namespace. | |
Something like: | |
typedef struct { | |
const char *name; /* name of this node relative to parent */ | |
struct ap_conf_vector_t *locn_config; | |
apr_hash_t *children; /* NULL if no child configs */ | |
} ap_locn_node; | |
The following config: | |
<Location /server-status> | |
SetHandler server-status | |
Order deny,allow | |
Deny from all | |
Allow from 127.0.0.1 | |
</Location> | |
Creates a node with name=="server_status", and the node is a | |
child of the "/" node. (hmm. node->name is redundant with the | |
hash key; maybe drop node->name) | |
In the config vector, mod_access has stored its Order, Deny, and | |
Allow configs. mod_core has stored the SetHandler. | |
During the Location walk, we merge the config vectors normally. | |
Note that an Alias simply associates a filesystem path (in | |
mod_filesystem) with that Location in the tree. Merging | |
continues with child locations, but a merge is never done | |
through filesystem locations. Config on a specific subdir needs | |
to be mapped back into the corresponding point in the Location | |
tree for proper merging. | |
* Config is parsed into a tree, as we did for the 2.0 timeframe, | |
but that tree is just a representation of the config (for | |
multiple runs and for in-memory manipulation and usage). It is | |
unrelated to the "Location tree". | |
* Calls to apr_file_io functions generally need to be replaced | |
with operations against the ap_resource. For example, rather | |
than calling apr_dir_open/read/close(), a caller uses | |
resource->repos->get_children() or somesuch. | |
Note that things like mod_dir, mod_autoindex, and mod_negotiation | |
need to be converted to use these mechanisms so that their | |
functions will work on logical repositories rather than just | |
filesystems. | |
* How do we handle CGI scripts? Especially when the resource may | |
not be backed by a file? Ideally, we should be able to come up | |
with some mechanism to allow CGIs to work in a | |
repository-independent manner. | |
- Writing the virtual data as a file and then executing it? | |
- Can a shell be executed in a streamy manner? (Portably?) | |
- Have an 'execute_resource' hook/func that allows the | |
repository to choose its manner - be it exec() or whatever. | |
- Won't this approach lead to duplication of code? Helper fns? | |
gstein: PHP, Perl, and Python scripts are nominally executed by | |
a filter inserted by mod_php/perl/python. I'd suggest | |
that shell/batch scripts are similar. | |
But to ask further: what if it is an executable | |
*program* rather than just a script? Do we yank that out | |
of the repository, drop it onto the filesystem, and run | |
it? eeewwwww... | |
I'll vote -0.9 for CGIs as a filter. Keep 'em handlers. | |
Justin: So, do we give up executing CGIs from virtual repositories? | |
That seems like a sad tradeoff to make. I'd like to have | |
my CGI scripts under DAV (SVN) control. | |
* How do we handle overlaying of Location and Directory entries? | |
Right now, we have a problem when /cgi-bin/ is ScriptAlias'd and | |
mod_dav has control over /. Some people believe that /cgi-bin/ | |
shouldn't be under DAV control, while others do believe it | |
should be. What's the right strategy? |