* Support BUILD_TLS=module to be loaded as a module via config file or
command line. e.g. redis-server --loadmodule redis-tls.so
* Updates to redismodule.h to allow it to be used side by side with
server.h by defining REDISMODULE_CORE_MODULE
* Changes to server.h, redismodule.h and module.c to avoid repeated
type declarations (gcc 4.8 doesn't like these)
* Add a mechanism for non-ABI neutral modules (ones who include
server.h) to refuse loading if they detect not being built together with
redis (release.c)
* Fix wrong signature of RedisModuleDefragFunc, this could break
compilation of a module, but not the ABI
* Move initialization of listeners in server.c to be after loading
the modules
* Config TLS after initialization of listeners
* Init cluster after initialization of listeners
* Add TLS module to CI
* Fix a test suite race conditions:
Now that the listeners are initialized later, it's not sufficient to
wait for the PID message in the log, we need to wait for the "Server
Initialized" message.
* Fix issues with moduleconfigs test as a result from start_server
waiting for "Server Initialized"
* Fix issues with modules/infra test as a result of an additional module
present
Notes about Sentinel:
Sentinel can't really rely on the tls module, since it uses hiredis to
initiate connections and depends on OpenSSL (won't be able to use any
other connection modules for that), so it was decided that when TLS is
built as a module, sentinel does not support TLS at all.
This means that it keeps using redis_tls_ctx and redis_tls_client_ctx directly.
Example code of config in redis-tls.so(may be use in the future):
RedisModuleString *tls_cfg = NULL;
void tlsInfo(RedisModuleInfoCtx *ctx, int for_crash_report) {
UNUSED(for_crash_report);
RedisModule_InfoAddSection(ctx, "");
RedisModule_InfoAddFieldLongLong(ctx, "var", 42);
}
int tlsCommand(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, RedisModuleString **argv, int argc)
{
if (argc != 2) return RedisModule_WrongArity(ctx);
return RedisModule_ReplyWithString(ctx, argv[1]);
}
RedisModuleString *getStringConfigCommand(const char *name, void *privdata) {
REDISMODULE_NOT_USED(name);
REDISMODULE_NOT_USED(privdata);
return tls_cfg;
}
int setStringConfigCommand(const char *name, RedisModuleString *new, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err) {
REDISMODULE_NOT_USED(name);
REDISMODULE_NOT_USED(err);
REDISMODULE_NOT_USED(privdata);
if (tls_cfg) RedisModule_FreeString(NULL, tls_cfg);
RedisModule_RetainString(NULL, new);
tls_cfg = new;
return REDISMODULE_OK;
}
int RedisModule_OnLoad(void *ctx, RedisModuleString **argv, int argc)
{
....
if (RedisModule_CreateCommand(ctx,"tls",tlsCommand,"",0,0,0) == REDISMODULE_ERR)
return REDISMODULE_ERR;
if (RedisModule_RegisterStringConfig(ctx, "cfg", "", REDISMODULE_CONFIG_DEFAULT, getStringConfigCommand, setStringConfigCommand, NULL, NULL) == REDISMODULE_ERR)
return REDISMODULE_ERR;
if (RedisModule_LoadConfigs(ctx) == REDISMODULE_ERR) {
if (tls_cfg) {
RedisModule_FreeString(ctx, tls_cfg);
tls_cfg = NULL;
}
return REDISMODULE_ERR;
}
...
}
Co-authored-by: zhenwei pi <pizhenwei@bytedance.com>
Signed-off-by: zhenwei pi <pizhenwei@bytedance.com>
Update CI so that warnings cause build failures.
Also fix a warning in `test-sanitizer-address`:
```
In function ‘strncpy’,
inlined from ‘clusterUpdateMyselfIp’ at cluster.c:545:13:
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/bits/string_fortified.h:106:10:
error: ‘__builtin_strncpy’ specified bound 46 equals destination size [-Werror=stringop-truncation]
106 | return __builtin___strncpy_chk (__dest, __src, __len, __bos (__dest));
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
```
- Added sanitizer support. `address`, `undefined` and `thread` sanitizers are available.
- To build Redis with desired sanitizer : `make SANITIZER=undefined`
- There were some sanitizer findings, cleaned up codebase
- Added tests with address and undefined behavior sanitizers to daily CI.
- Added tests with address sanitizer to the per-PR CI (smoke out mem leaks sooner).
Basically, there are three types of issues :
**1- Unaligned load/store** : Most probably, this issue may cause a crash on a platform that
does not support unaligned access. Redis does unaligned access only on supported platforms.
**2- Signed integer overflow.** Although, signed overflow issue can be problematic time to time
and change how compiler generates code, current findings mostly about signed shift or simple
addition overflow. For most platforms Redis can be compiled for, this wouldn't cause any issue
as far as I can tell (checked generated code on godbolt.org).
**3 -Minor leak** (redis-cli), **use-after-free**(just before calling exit());
UB means nothing guaranteed and risky to reason about program behavior but I don't think any
of the fixes here worth backporting. As sanitizers are now part of the CI, preventing new issues
will be the real benefit.
Making sure Redis builds properly on older compiler is important given the wide range of systems it is built for. So far Ubuntu 16.04 has been used for this purpose, but as it's getting phased out we'll move to `oldoldstable` Debian as an "old system" precursor.
This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against
external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as
part of the test fixture.
This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options.
However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests.
Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues:
* Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves,
and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other
tests.
* Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors).
This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite
against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to
handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands,
limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc.
The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this
works.
This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes:
* Tests can now be tagged.
* Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`.
* More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests.
* Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a
global level and on a per-test file basis.
* Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing
(a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places).
* Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the
future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests
fail).
* Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
* Add bash temporarily to allow sentinel fd leaks test to run.
* Use vmactions-freebsd rdist sync to work around bind permission denied
and slow execution issues.
* Upgrade to tcl8.6 to be aligned with latest Ubuntu envs.
* Concat all command executions to avoid ignoring failures.
* Skip intensive fuzzer on FreeBSD. For some yet unknown reason, generate_fuzzy_traffic_on_key causes TCL to significantly bloat on FreeBSD resulting with out of memory.
Redis 6.0 introduces I/O threads, it is so cool and efficient, we use C11
_Atomic to establish inter-thread synchronization without mutex. But the
compiler that must supports C11 _Atomic can compile redis code, that brings a
lot of inconvenience since some common platforms can't support by default such
as CentOS7, so we want to implement redis atomic type to make it more portable.
We have implemented our atomic variable for redis that only has 'relaxed'
operations in src/atomicvar.h, so we implement some operations with
'sequentially-consistent', just like the default behavior of C11 _Atomic that
can establish inter-thread synchronization. And we replace all uses of C11
_Atomic with redis atomic variable.
Our implementation of redis atomic variable uses C11 _Atomic, __atomic or
__sync macros if available, it supports most common platforms, and we will
detect automatically which feature we use. In Makefile we use a dummy file to
detect if the compiler supports C11 _Atomic. Now for gcc, we can compile redis
code theoretically if your gcc version is not less than 4.1.2(starts to support
__sync_xxx operations). Otherwise, we remove use mutex fallback to implement
redis atomic variable for performance and test. You will get compiling errors
if your compiler doesn't support all features of above.
For cover redis atomic variable tests, we add other CI jobs that build redis on
CentOS6 and CentOS7 and workflow daily jobs that run the tests on them.
For them, we just install gcc by default in order to cover different compiler
versions, gcc is 4.4.7 by default installation on CentOS6 and 4.8.5 on CentOS7.
We restore the feature that we can test redis with Helgrind to find data race
errors. But you need install Valgrind in the default path configuration firstly
before running your tests, since we use macros in helgrind.h to tell Helgrind
inter-thread happens-before relationship explicitly for avoiding false positives.
Please open an issue on github if you find data race errors relate to this commit.
Unrelated:
- Fix redefinition of typedef 'RedisModuleUserChangedFunc'
For some old version compilers, they will report errors or warnings, if we
re-define function type.
this test is time sensitive and it sometimes fail to pass below the
latency threshold, even on strong machines.
this test was the reson we're running just 2 parallel tests in the
github actions CI, revering this.
it seems that running two clients at a time is ok too, resuces action
time from 20 minutes to 10. we'll use this for now, and if one day it
won't be enough we'll have to run just the sensitive tests one by one
separately from the others.
this commit also fixes an issue with the defrag test that appears to be
very rare.
seems that github actions are slow, using just one client to reduce
false positives.
also adding verbose, testing only on latest ubuntu, and building on
older one.
when doing that, i can reduce the test threshold back to something saner