The php_request_shutdown() function calls sapi_deactivate() that tries to read
request body into a dummy buffer. In our case it's just waste of CPU cycles.
This change is also required for the following implementation of the
fastcgi_finish_request() function, where the request context can be
cleared by the time of finalization.
Application shared queue only capable to pass one shared memory buffer.
The rest buffers in chain needs to be send directly to application in response
to REQ_HEADERS_AC message.
The issue can be reproduced for configurations where 'body_buffer_size' is
greater than memory segment size (10 Mb). Requests with body size greater
than 10 Mb are just `stuck` e.g. not passed to application awaiting for more
data from router.
The bug was introduced in 1d84b9e4b459 (v1.19.0).
ASGI threads read all the requests from the queue before start processing it.
This why test need to wait a little to let the ASGI thread start request
processing and block. In virtual environment any thread or process may
be delayed and only method to avoid racing is a reasonable sleep increase.
When mount points reside within other mount points, this
patch sorts them by path length and then unmounts then
in an order reverse to their mounting. This results in
independent paths being unmounted first.
This fixes an issue in buildbots where dependent paths failed
to unmount, leading to the build script removing system-wide
language libraries.
The PORT_ACK message is the router's response to the application's NEW_PORT
message. After receiving PORT_ACK, the application is safe to process requests
using this port.
This message avoids a racing condition when the application starts processing a
request from the shared queue and sends REQ_HEADERS_ACK. The REQ_HEADERS_ACK
message contains the application port ID as reply_port, which the router uses
to send request data. When the application creates a new port, it
immediately sends it to the main router thread. Because the request is
processed outside the main thread, a racing condition can occur between the
receipt of the new port in the main thread and the receipt of REQ_HEADERS_ACK
in the worker router thread where the same port is specified as reply_port.
This fixes the router's crash on buildbot; the reason was an unexpected 'last'
response from the application to the router arriving before the response
headers. The last buffer is not a memory buffer, so the result of accessing
memory fields is unpredictable.
The unexpected 'last' message was caused by an error in libunit; fixed in
fee8fd855a00.