puma 4.3.6 → 5.6.4

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Files changed (92) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/History.md +1486 -518
  3. data/LICENSE +23 -20
  4. data/README.md +120 -36
  5. data/bin/puma-wild +3 -9
  6. data/docs/architecture.md +63 -26
  7. data/docs/compile_options.md +21 -0
  8. data/docs/deployment.md +60 -69
  9. data/docs/fork_worker.md +33 -0
  10. data/docs/images/puma-connection-flow-no-reactor.png +0 -0
  11. data/docs/images/puma-connection-flow.png +0 -0
  12. data/docs/images/puma-general-arch.png +0 -0
  13. data/docs/jungle/README.md +9 -0
  14. data/{tools → docs}/jungle/rc.d/README.md +1 -1
  15. data/{tools → docs}/jungle/rc.d/puma +2 -2
  16. data/{tools → docs}/jungle/rc.d/puma.conf +0 -0
  17. data/docs/kubernetes.md +66 -0
  18. data/docs/nginx.md +1 -1
  19. data/docs/plugins.md +15 -15
  20. data/docs/rails_dev_mode.md +28 -0
  21. data/docs/restart.md +46 -23
  22. data/docs/signals.md +13 -11
  23. data/docs/stats.md +142 -0
  24. data/docs/systemd.md +85 -128
  25. data/ext/puma_http11/PumaHttp11Service.java +2 -4
  26. data/ext/puma_http11/ext_help.h +1 -1
  27. data/ext/puma_http11/extconf.rb +46 -9
  28. data/ext/puma_http11/http11_parser.c +68 -57
  29. data/ext/puma_http11/http11_parser.h +1 -1
  30. data/ext/puma_http11/http11_parser.java.rl +1 -1
  31. data/ext/puma_http11/http11_parser.rl +1 -1
  32. data/ext/puma_http11/http11_parser_common.rl +1 -1
  33. data/ext/puma_http11/mini_ssl.c +275 -122
  34. data/ext/puma_http11/no_ssl/PumaHttp11Service.java +15 -0
  35. data/ext/puma_http11/org/jruby/puma/Http11.java +3 -3
  36. data/ext/puma_http11/org/jruby/puma/Http11Parser.java +51 -51
  37. data/ext/puma_http11/org/jruby/puma/MiniSSL.java +105 -61
  38. data/ext/puma_http11/puma_http11.c +32 -51
  39. data/lib/puma/app/status.rb +47 -36
  40. data/lib/puma/binder.rb +225 -106
  41. data/lib/puma/cli.rb +24 -18
  42. data/lib/puma/client.rb +174 -91
  43. data/lib/puma/cluster/worker.rb +173 -0
  44. data/lib/puma/cluster/worker_handle.rb +94 -0
  45. data/lib/puma/cluster.rb +212 -220
  46. data/lib/puma/commonlogger.rb +2 -2
  47. data/lib/puma/configuration.rb +58 -49
  48. data/lib/puma/const.rb +18 -9
  49. data/lib/puma/control_cli.rb +93 -76
  50. data/lib/puma/detect.rb +29 -2
  51. data/lib/puma/dsl.rb +364 -96
  52. data/lib/puma/error_logger.rb +104 -0
  53. data/lib/puma/events.rb +55 -34
  54. data/lib/puma/io_buffer.rb +9 -2
  55. data/lib/puma/jruby_restart.rb +0 -58
  56. data/lib/puma/json_serialization.rb +96 -0
  57. data/lib/puma/launcher.rb +117 -46
  58. data/lib/puma/minissl/context_builder.rb +14 -9
  59. data/lib/puma/minissl.rb +128 -46
  60. data/lib/puma/null_io.rb +13 -1
  61. data/lib/puma/plugin/tmp_restart.rb +0 -0
  62. data/lib/puma/plugin.rb +3 -12
  63. data/lib/puma/queue_close.rb +26 -0
  64. data/lib/puma/rack/builder.rb +1 -5
  65. data/lib/puma/rack/urlmap.rb +0 -0
  66. data/lib/puma/rack_default.rb +0 -0
  67. data/lib/puma/reactor.rb +85 -369
  68. data/lib/puma/request.rb +472 -0
  69. data/lib/puma/runner.rb +46 -61
  70. data/lib/puma/server.rb +287 -743
  71. data/lib/puma/single.rb +9 -65
  72. data/lib/puma/state_file.rb +47 -8
  73. data/lib/puma/systemd.rb +46 -0
  74. data/lib/puma/thread_pool.rb +125 -57
  75. data/lib/puma/util.rb +20 -1
  76. data/lib/puma.rb +46 -0
  77. data/lib/rack/handler/puma.rb +2 -3
  78. data/tools/{docker/Dockerfile → Dockerfile} +1 -1
  79. data/tools/trickletest.rb +0 -0
  80. metadata +28 -24
  81. data/docs/tcp_mode.md +0 -96
  82. data/ext/puma_http11/io_buffer.c +0 -155
  83. data/ext/puma_http11/org/jruby/puma/IOBuffer.java +0 -72
  84. data/lib/puma/accept_nonblock.rb +0 -29
  85. data/lib/puma/tcp_logger.rb +0 -41
  86. data/tools/jungle/README.md +0 -19
  87. data/tools/jungle/init.d/README.md +0 -61
  88. data/tools/jungle/init.d/puma +0 -421
  89. data/tools/jungle/init.d/run-puma +0 -18
  90. data/tools/jungle/upstart/README.md +0 -61
  91. data/tools/jungle/upstart/puma-manager.conf +0 -31
  92. data/tools/jungle/upstart/puma.conf +0 -69
data/LICENSE CHANGED
@@ -1,26 +1,29 @@
1
- Some code copyright (c) 2005, Zed Shaw
2
- Copyright (c) 2011, Evan Phoenix
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+ BSD 3-Clause License
2
+
3
+ Copyright (c) 2019, Evan Phoenix. Some code by Zed Shaw, (c) 2005.
3
4
  All rights reserved.
4
5
 
5
- Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6
+ Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6
7
  modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
7
8
 
8
- * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
9
- list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10
- * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice
11
- this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
12
- and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13
- * Neither the name of the Evan Phoenix nor the names of its contributors
14
- may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
15
- without specific prior written permission.
9
+ 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
10
+ list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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+
12
+ 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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+ this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
14
+ and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15
+
16
+ 3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
17
+ contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
18
+ this software without specific prior written permission.
16
19
 
17
- THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
18
- AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
19
- IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
20
- DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
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- FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
22
- DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
23
- SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
24
- CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
25
- OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
20
+ THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
21
+ AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
22
+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
23
+ DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
24
+ FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
25
+ DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
26
+ SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
27
+ CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
28
+ OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
26
29
  OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -2,22 +2,21 @@
2
2
  <img src="https://puma.io/images/logos/puma-logo-large.png">
3
3
  </p>
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4
 
5
- # Puma: A Ruby Web Server Built For Concurrency
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-
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- [![Gitter](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/puma/puma?utm\_source=badge&utm\_medium=badge&utm\_campaign=pr-badge)
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- [![Actions Build Status](https://github.com/puma/puma/workflows/Puma/badge.svg)](https://github.com/puma/puma/actions)
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- [![Travis Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/puma/puma.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/puma/puma)
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+ # Puma: A Ruby Web Server Built For Parallelism
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6
 
7
+ [![Actions MRI](https://github.com/puma/puma/workflows/MRI/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://github.com/puma/puma/actions?query=workflow%3AMRI)
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+ [![Actions non MRI](https://github.com/puma/puma/workflows/non_MRI/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://github.com/puma/puma/actions?query=workflow%3Anon_MRI)
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9
  [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/puma/puma.svg)](https://codeclimate.com/github/puma/puma)
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10
  [![SemVer](https://api.dependabot.com/badges/compatibility_score?dependency-name=puma&package-manager=bundler&version-scheme=semver)](https://dependabot.com/compatibility-score.html?dependency-name=puma&package-manager=bundler&version-scheme=semver)
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+ [![StackOverflow](https://img.shields.io/badge/stackoverflow-Puma-blue.svg)]( https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/puma )
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12
 
14
- Puma is a **simple, fast, multi-threaded, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby/Rack applications**.
13
+ Puma is a **simple, fast, multi-threaded, and highly parallel HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby/Rack applications**.
15
14
 
16
- ## Built For Speed &amp; Concurrency
15
+ ## Built For Speed &amp; Parallelism
17
16
 
18
- Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request using a thread pool. Each request is served in a separate thread, so truly concurrent Ruby implementations (JRuby, Rubinius) will use all available CPU cores.
17
+ Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request using a thread pool. Each request is served in a separate thread, so truly parallel Ruby implementations (JRuby, Rubinius) will use all available CPU cores.
19
18
 
20
- Puma was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](https://rubinius.com), but also works well with JRuby and MRI.
19
+ Originally designed as a server for [Rubinius](https://github.com/rubinius/rubinius), Puma also works well with Ruby (MRI) and JRuby.
21
20
 
22
21
  On MRI, there is a Global VM Lock (GVL) that ensures only one thread can run Ruby code at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing IO waiting to be done in parallel.
23
22
 
@@ -28,7 +27,16 @@ $ gem install puma
28
27
  $ puma
29
28
  ```
30
29
 
31
- Without arguments, puma will look for a rackup (.ru) file in the current working directory called `config.ru`.
30
+ Without arguments, puma will look for a rackup (.ru) file in
31
+ working directory called `config.ru`.
32
+
33
+ ## SSL Connection Support
34
+
35
+ Puma will install/compile with support for ssl sockets, assuming OpenSSL
36
+ development files are installed on the system.
37
+
38
+ If the system does not have OpenSSL development files installed, Puma will
39
+ install/compile, but it will not allow ssl connections.
32
40
 
33
41
  ## Frameworks
34
42
 
@@ -56,19 +64,29 @@ You can run your Sinatra application with Puma from the command line like this:
56
64
  $ ruby app.rb -s Puma
57
65
  ```
58
66
 
59
- Or you can configure your Sinatra application to always use Puma:
67
+ In order to actually configure Puma using a config file, like `puma.rb`, however, you need to use the `puma` executable. To do this, you must add a rackup file to your Sinatra app:
60
68
 
61
69
  ```ruby
62
- require 'sinatra'
63
- configure { set :server, :puma }
70
+ # config.ru
71
+ require './app'
72
+ run Sinatra::Application
73
+ ```
74
+
75
+ You can then start your application using:
76
+
77
+ ```
78
+ $ bundle exec puma
64
79
  ```
65
80
 
66
81
  ## Configuration
67
82
 
68
- Puma provides numerous options. Consult `puma -h` (or `puma --help`) for a full list of CLI options, or see [dsl.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/dsl.rb).
83
+ Puma provides numerous options. Consult `puma -h` (or `puma --help`) for a full list of CLI options, or see `Puma::DSL` or [dsl.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/dsl.rb).
69
84
 
70
85
  You can also find several configuration examples as part of the
71
- [test](test/config) suite.
86
+ [test](https://github.com/puma/puma/tree/master/test/config) suite.
87
+
88
+ For debugging purposes, you can set the environment variable `PUMA_LOG_CONFIG` with a value
89
+ and the loaded configuration will be printed as part of the boot process.
72
90
 
73
91
  ### Thread Pool
74
92
 
@@ -78,7 +96,7 @@ Puma uses a thread pool. You can set the minimum and maximum number of threads t
78
96
  $ puma -t 8:32
79
97
  ```
80
98
 
81
- Puma will automatically scale the number of threads, from the minimum until it caps out at the maximum, based on how much traffic is present. The current default is `0:16`. Feel free to experiment, but be careful not to set the number of maximum threads to a large number, as you may exhaust resources on the system (or cause contention for the Global VM Lock, when using MRI).
99
+ Puma will automatically scale the number of threads, from the minimum until it caps out at the maximum, based on how much traffic is present. The current default is `0:16` and on MRI is `0:5`. Feel free to experiment, but be careful not to set the number of maximum threads to a large number, as you may exhaust resources on the system (or cause contention for the Global VM Lock, when using MRI).
82
100
 
83
101
  Be aware that additionally Puma creates threads on its own for internal purposes (e.g. handling slow clients). So, even if you specify -t 1:1, expect around 7 threads created in your application.
84
102
 
@@ -119,6 +137,11 @@ This code can be used to setup the process before booting the application, allow
119
137
  you to do some Puma-specific things that you don't want to embed in your application.
120
138
  For instance, you could fire a log notification that a worker booted or send something to statsd. This can be called multiple times.
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139
 
140
+ Constants loaded by your application (such as `Rails`) will not be available in `on_worker_boot`.
141
+ However, these constants _will_ be available if `preload_app!` is enabled, either explicitly in your `puma` config or automatically if
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+ using 2 or more workers in cluster mode.
143
+ If `preload_app!` is not enabled and 1 worker is used, then `on_worker_boot` will fire, but your app will not be preloaded and constants will not be available.
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+
122
145
  `before_fork` specifies a block to be run before workers are forked:
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146
 
124
147
  ```ruby
@@ -128,14 +151,14 @@ before_fork do
128
151
  end
129
152
  ```
130
153
 
131
- Preloading can’t be used with phased restart, since phased restart kills and restarts workers one-by-one, and preload_app copies the code of master into the workers.
154
+ Preloading can’t be used with phased restart, since phased restart kills and restarts workers one-by-one, and `preload_app!` copies the code of master into the workers.
132
155
 
133
156
  ### Error handling
134
157
 
135
158
  If puma encounters an error outside of the context of your application, it will respond with a 500 and a simple
136
- textual error message (see `lowlevel_error` in [this file](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/server.rb)).
159
+ textual error message (see `Puma::Server#lowlevel_error` or [server.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/server.rb)).
137
160
  You can specify custom behavior for this scenario. For example, you can report the error to your third-party
138
- error-tracking service (in this example, [rollbar](http://rollbar.com)):
161
+ error-tracking service (in this example, [rollbar](https://rollbar.com)):
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162
 
140
163
  ```ruby
141
164
  lowlevel_error_handler do |e|
@@ -169,6 +192,38 @@ Need a bit of security? Use SSL sockets:
169
192
  ```
170
193
  $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?key=path_to_key&cert=path_to_cert'
171
194
  ```
195
+ #### Self-signed SSL certificates (via the [`localhost`] gem, for development use):
196
+
197
+ Puma supports the [`localhost`] gem for self-signed certificates. This is particularly useful if you want to use Puma with SSL locally, and self-signed certificates will work for your use-case. Currently, the integration can only be used in MRI.
198
+
199
+ Puma automatically configures SSL when the [`localhost`] gem is loaded in a `development` environment:
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+
201
+ ```ruby
202
+ # Add the gem to your Gemfile
203
+ group(:development) do
204
+ gem 'localhost'
205
+ end
206
+
207
+ # And require it implicitly using bundler
208
+ require "bundler"
209
+ Bundler.require(:default, ENV["RACK_ENV"].to_sym)
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+
211
+ # Alternatively, you can require the gem in config.ru:
212
+ require './app'
213
+ require 'localhost'
214
+ run Sinatra::Application
215
+ ```
216
+
217
+ Additionally, Puma must be listening to an SSL socket:
218
+
219
+ ```shell
220
+ $ puma -b 'ssl://localhost:9292' config.ru
221
+
222
+ # The following options allow you to reach Puma over HTTP as well:
223
+ $ puma -b ssl://localhost:9292 -b tcp://localhost:9393 config.ru
224
+ ```
225
+
226
+ [`localhost`]: https://github.com/socketry/localhost
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227
 
173
228
  #### Controlling SSL Cipher Suites
174
229
 
@@ -186,7 +241,7 @@ $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?key=path_to_key&cert=path_to_cert&ssl_cipher_fil
186
241
  $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?keystore=path_to_keystore&keystore-pass=keystore_password&ssl_cipher_list=TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA,TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA'
187
242
  ```
188
243
 
189
- See https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.0.2/apps/ciphers.html for cipher filter format and full list of cipher suites.
244
+ See https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.1.1/man1/ciphers.html for cipher filter format and full list of cipher suites.
190
245
 
191
246
  Disable TLS v1 with the `no_tlsv1` option:
192
247
 
@@ -194,6 +249,23 @@ Disable TLS v1 with the `no_tlsv1` option:
194
249
  $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?key=path_to_key&cert=path_to_cert&no_tlsv1=true'
195
250
  ```
196
251
 
252
+ #### Controlling OpenSSL Verification Flags
253
+
254
+ To enable verification flags offered by OpenSSL, use `verification_flags` (not available for JRuby):
255
+
256
+ ```
257
+ $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?key=path_to_key&cert=path_to_cert&verification_flags=PARTIAL_CHAIN'
258
+ ```
259
+
260
+ You can also set multiple verification flags (by separating them with coma):
261
+
262
+ ```
263
+ $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?key=path_to_key&cert=path_to_cert&verification_flags=PARTIAL_CHAIN,CRL_CHECK'
264
+ ```
265
+
266
+ List of available flags: `USE_CHECK_TIME`, `CRL_CHECK`, `CRL_CHECK_ALL`, `IGNORE_CRITICAL`, `X509_STRICT`, `ALLOW_PROXY_CERTS`, `POLICY_CHECK`, `EXPLICIT_POLICY`, `INHIBIT_ANY`, `INHIBIT_MAP`, `NOTIFY_POLICY`, `EXTENDED_CRL_SUPPORT`, `USE_DELTAS`, `CHECK_SS_SIGNATURE`, `TRUSTED_FIRST`, `SUITEB_128_LOS_ONLY`, `SUITEB_192_LOS`, `SUITEB_128_LOS`, `PARTIAL_CHAIN`, `NO_ALT_CHAINS`, `NO_CHECK_TIME`
267
+ (see https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/man3/X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set_hostflags.html#VERIFICATION-FLAGS).
268
+
197
269
  ### Control/Status Server
198
270
 
199
271
  Puma has a built-in status and control app that can be used to query and control Puma.
@@ -202,7 +274,7 @@ Puma has a built-in status and control app that can be used to query and control
202
274
  $ puma --control-url tcp://127.0.0.1:9293 --control-token foo
203
275
  ```
204
276
 
205
- Puma will start the control server on localhost port 9293. All requests to the control server will need to include control token (in this case, `token=foo`) as a query parameter. This allows for simple authentication. Check out [status.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/app/status.rb) to see what the status app has available.
277
+ Puma will start the control server on localhost port 9293. All requests to the control server will need to include control token (in this case, `token=foo`) as a query parameter. This allows for simple authentication. Check out `Puma::App::Status` or [status.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/app/status.rb) to see what the status app has available.
206
278
 
207
279
  You can also interact with the control server via `pumactl`. This command will restart Puma:
208
280
 
@@ -220,27 +292,31 @@ You can also provide a configuration file with the `-C` (or `--config`) flag:
220
292
  $ puma -C /path/to/config
221
293
  ```
222
294
 
223
- If no configuration file is specified, Puma will look for a configuration file at `config/puma.rb`. If an environment is specified, either via the `-e` and `--environment` flags, or through the `RACK_ENV` environment variable, Puma looks for configuration at `config/puma/<environment_name>.rb`.
295
+ If no configuration file is specified, Puma will look for a configuration file at `config/puma.rb`. If an environment is specified (via the `--environment` flag or through the `APP_ENV`, `RACK_ENV`, or `RAILS_ENV` environment variables) Puma looks for a configuration file at `config/puma/<environment_name>.rb` and then falls back to `config/puma.rb`.
224
296
 
225
- If you want to prevent Puma from looking for a configuration file in those locations, provide a dash as the argument to the `-C` (or `--config`) flag:
297
+ If you want to prevent Puma from looking for a configuration file in those locations, include the `--no-config` flag:
226
298
 
227
299
  ```
300
+ $ puma --no-config
301
+
302
+ # or
303
+
228
304
  $ puma -C "-"
229
305
  ```
230
306
 
231
- The other side-effects of setting the environment are whether to show stack traces (in `development` or `test`), and setting RACK_ENV may potentially affect middleware looking for this value to change their behavior. The default puma RACK_ENV value is `development`. You can see all config default values [here](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/12d1706ddc71b89ed2ee26275e31c788e94ff541/lib/puma/configuration.rb#L170).
307
+ The other side-effects of setting the environment are whether to show stack traces (in `development` or `test`), and setting RACK_ENV may potentially affect middleware looking for this value to change their behavior. The default puma RACK_ENV value is `development`. You can see all config default values in `Puma::Configuration#puma_default_options` or [configuration.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/61c6213fbab/lib/puma/configuration.rb#L182-L204).
232
308
 
233
- Check out [dsl.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/dsl.rb) to see all available options.
309
+ Check out `Puma::DSL` or [dsl.rb](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/dsl.rb) to see all available options.
234
310
 
235
311
  ## Restart
236
312
 
237
313
  Puma includes the ability to restart itself. When available (MRI, Rubinius, JRuby), Puma performs a "hot restart". This is the same functionality available in *Unicorn* and *NGINX* which keep the server sockets open between restarts. This makes sure that no pending requests are dropped while the restart is taking place.
238
314
 
239
- For more, see the [restart documentation](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/docs/restart.md).
315
+ For more, see the [Restart documentation](docs/restart.md).
240
316
 
241
317
  ## Signals
242
318
 
243
- Puma responds to several signals. A detailed guide to using UNIX signals with Puma can be found in the [signals documentation](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/docs/signals.md).
319
+ Puma responds to several signals. A detailed guide to using UNIX signals with Puma can be found in the [Signals documentation](docs/signals.md).
244
320
 
245
321
  ## Platform Constraints
246
322
 
@@ -248,10 +324,11 @@ Some platforms do not support all Puma features.
248
324
 
249
325
  * **JRuby**, **Windows**: server sockets are not seamless on restart, they must be closed and reopened. These platforms have no way to pass descriptors into a new process that is exposed to Ruby. Also, cluster mode is not supported due to a lack of fork(2).
250
326
  * **Windows**: Cluster mode is not supported due to a lack of fork(2).
327
+ * **Kubernetes**: The way Kubernetes handles pod shutdowns interacts poorly with server processes implementing graceful shutdown, like Puma. See the [kubernetes section of the documentation](docs/kubernetes.md) for more details.
251
328
 
252
329
  ## Known Bugs
253
330
 
254
- For MRI versions 2.2.7, 2.2.8, 2.2.9, 2.2.10 2.3.4 and 2.4.1, you may see ```stream closed in another thread (IOError)```. It may be caused by a [Ruby bug](https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13632). It can be fixed with the gem https://rubygems.org/gems/stopgap_13632:
331
+ For MRI versions 2.2.7, 2.2.8, 2.2.9, 2.2.10, 2.3.4 and 2.4.1, you may see ```stream closed in another thread (IOError)```. It may be caused by a [Ruby bug](https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13632). It can be fixed with the gem https://rubygems.org/gems/stopgap_13632:
255
332
 
256
333
  ```ruby
257
334
  if %w(2.2.7 2.2.8 2.2.9 2.2.10 2.3.4 2.4.1).include? RUBY_VERSION
@@ -266,25 +343,32 @@ end
266
343
 
267
344
  Puma has support for Capistrano with an [external gem](https://github.com/seuros/capistrano-puma).
268
345
 
269
- It is common to use process monitors with Puma. Modern process monitors like systemd or upstart
346
+ It is common to use process monitors with Puma. Modern process monitors like systemd or rc.d
270
347
  provide continuous monitoring and restarts for increased
271
348
  reliability in production environments:
272
349
 
273
- * [tools/jungle](https://github.com/puma/puma/tree/master/tools/jungle) for sysvinit (init.d) and upstart
274
- * [docs/systemd](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/docs/systemd.md)
350
+ * [rc.d](docs/jungle/rc.d/README.md)
351
+ * [systemd](docs/systemd.md)
352
+
353
+ Community guides:
275
354
 
276
- ## Community Plugins
355
+ * [Deploying Puma on OpenBSD using relayd and httpd](https://gist.github.com/anon987654321/4532cf8d6c59c1f43ec8973faa031103)
356
+
357
+ ## Community Extensions
358
+
359
+ ### Plugins
277
360
 
278
- * [puma-heroku](https://github.com/evanphx/puma-heroku) — default Puma configuration for running on Heroku
279
361
  * [puma-metrics](https://github.com/harmjanblok/puma-metrics) — export Puma metrics to Prometheus
280
362
  * [puma-plugin-statsd](https://github.com/yob/puma-plugin-statsd) — send Puma metrics to statsd
281
363
  * [puma-plugin-systemd](https://github.com/sj26/puma-plugin-systemd) — deeper integration with systemd for notify, status and watchdog
282
364
 
283
- ## Contributing
365
+ ### Monitoring
284
366
 
285
- Find details for contributing in the [contribution guide].
367
+ * [puma-status](https://github.com/ylecuyer/puma-status) — Monitor CPU/Mem/Load of running puma instances from the CLI
368
+
369
+ ## Contributing
286
370
 
287
- [contribution guide]: https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md
371
+ Find details for contributing in the [contribution guide](CONTRIBUTING.md).
288
372
 
289
373
  ## License
290
374
 
data/bin/puma-wild CHANGED
@@ -5,24 +5,18 @@
5
5
 
6
6
  require 'rubygems'
7
7
 
8
- gems = ARGV.shift
8
+ cli_arg = ARGV.shift
9
9
 
10
10
  inc = ""
11
11
 
12
- if gems == "-I"
12
+ if cli_arg == "-I"
13
13
  inc = ARGV.shift
14
14
  $LOAD_PATH.concat inc.split(":")
15
- gems = ARGV.shift
16
- end
17
-
18
- gems.split(",").each do |s|
19
- name, ver = s.split(":",2)
20
- gem name, ver
21
15
  end
22
16
 
23
17
  module Puma; end
24
18
 
25
- Puma.const_set("WILD_ARGS", ["-I", inc, gems])
19
+ Puma.const_set("WILD_ARGS", ["-I", inc])
26
20
 
27
21
  require 'puma/cli'
28
22
 
data/docs/architecture.md CHANGED
@@ -2,36 +2,73 @@
2
2
 
3
3
  ## Overview
4
4
 
5
- ![http://bit.ly/2iJuFky](images/puma-general-arch.png)
5
+ ![https://bit.ly/2iJuFky](images/puma-general-arch.png)
6
6
 
7
- Puma is a threaded web server, processing requests across a TCP or UNIX socket.
7
+ Puma is a threaded Ruby HTTP application server processing requests across a TCP
8
+ and/or UNIX socket.
8
9
 
9
- Workers accept connections from the socket and a thread in the worker's thread pool processes the client's request.
10
10
 
11
- Clustered mode is shown/discussed here. Single mode is analogous to having a single worker process.
11
+ Puma processes (there can be one or many) accept connections from the socket via
12
+ a thread (in the [`Reactor`](../lib/puma/reactor.rb) class). The connection,
13
+ once fully buffered and read, moves into the `todo` list, where an available
14
+ thread will pick it up (in the [`ThreadPool`](../lib/puma/thread_pool.rb)
15
+ class).
12
16
 
13
- ## Connection pipeline
17
+ Puma works in two main modes: cluster and single. In single mode, only one Puma
18
+ process boots. In cluster mode, a `master` process is booted, which prepares
19
+ (and may boot) the application and then uses the `fork()` system call to create
20
+ one or more `child` processes. These `child` processes all listen to the same
21
+ socket. The `master` process does not listen to the socket or process requests -
22
+ its purpose is primarily to manage and listen for UNIX signals and possibly kill
23
+ or boot `child` processes.
14
24
 
15
- ![http://bit.ly/2zwzhEK](images/puma-connection-flow.png)
25
+ We sometimes call `child` processes (or Puma processes in `single` mode)
26
+ _workers_, and we sometimes call the threads created by Puma's
27
+ [`ThreadPool`](../lib/puma/thread_pool.rb) _worker threads_.
28
+
29
+ ## How Requests Work
30
+
31
+ ![https://bit.ly/2zwzhEK](images/puma-connection-flow.png)
16
32
 
17
33
  * Upon startup, Puma listens on a TCP or UNIX socket.
18
- * The backlog of this socket is configured (with a default of 1024), determining how many established but unaccepted connections can exist concurrently.
19
- * This socket backlog is distinct from the "backlog" of work as reported by the control server stats. The latter is the number of connections in that worker's "todo" set waiting for a worker thread.
20
- * By default, a single, separate thread is used to receive HTTP requests across the socket.
21
- * When at least one worker thread is available for work, a connection is accepted and placed in this request buffer
22
- * This thread waits for entire HTTP requests to be received over the connection
23
- * The time spent waiting for the HTTP request body to be received is exposed to the Rack app as `env['puma.request_body_wait']` (milliseconds)
24
- * Once received, the connection is pushed into the "todo" set
25
- * Worker threads pop work off the "todo" set for processing
26
- * The thread processes the request via the rack application (which generates the HTTP response)
27
- * The thread writes the response to the connection
28
- * Finally, the thread become available to process another connection in the "todo" set
29
-
30
- ### Disabling `queue_requests`
31
-
32
- ![http://bit.ly/2zxCJ1Z](images/puma-connection-flow-no-reactor.png)
33
-
34
- The `queue_requests` option is `true` by default, enabling the separate thread used to buffer requests as described above.
35
-
36
- If set to `false`, this buffer will not be used for connections while waiting for the request to arrive.
37
- In this mode, when a connection is accepted, it is added to the "todo" queue immediately, and a worker will synchronously do any waiting necessary to read the HTTP request from the socket.
34
+ * The backlog of this socket is configured with a default of 1024, but the
35
+ actual backlog value is capped by the `net.core.somaxconn` sysctl value.
36
+ The backlog determines the size of the queue for unaccepted connections. If
37
+ the backlog is full, the operating system is not accepting new connections.
38
+ * This socket backlog is distinct from the `backlog` of work as reported by
39
+ `Puma.stats` or the control server. The backlog that `Puma.stats` refers to
40
+ represents the number of connections in the process' `todo` set waiting for
41
+ a thread from the [`ThreadPool`](../lib/puma/thread_pool.rb).
42
+ * By default, a single, separate thread (created by the
43
+ [`Reactor`](../lib/puma/reactor.rb) class) reads and buffers requests from the
44
+ socket.
45
+ * When at least one worker thread is available for work, the reactor thread
46
+ listens to the socket and accepts a request (if one is waiting).
47
+ * The reactor thread waits for the entire HTTP request to be received.
48
+ * Puma exposes the time spent waiting for the HTTP request body to be
49
+ received to the Rack app as `env['puma.request_body_wait']`
50
+ (milliseconds).
51
+ * Once fully buffered and received, the connection is pushed into the "todo"
52
+ set.
53
+ * Worker threads pop work off the "todo" set for processing.
54
+ * The worker thread processes the request via `call`ing the configured Rack
55
+ application. The Rack application generates the HTTP response.
56
+ * The worker thread writes the response to the connection. While Puma buffers
57
+ requests via a separate thread, it does not use a separate thread for
58
+ responses.
59
+ * Once done, the thread becomes available to process another connection in the
60
+ "todo" set.
61
+
62
+ ### `queue_requests`
63
+
64
+ ![https://bit.ly/2zxCJ1Z](images/puma-connection-flow-no-reactor.png)
65
+
66
+ The `queue_requests` option is `true` by default, enabling the separate reactor
67
+ thread used to buffer requests as described above.
68
+
69
+ If set to `false`, this buffer will not be used for connections while waiting
70
+ for the request to arrive.
71
+
72
+ In this mode, when a connection is accepted, it is added to the "todo" queue
73
+ immediately, and a worker will synchronously do any waiting necessary to read
74
+ the HTTP request from the socket.
@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
1
+ # Compile Options
2
+
3
+ There are some `cflags` provided to change Puma's default configuration for its
4
+ C extension.
5
+
6
+ ## Query String, `PUMA_QUERY_STRING_MAX_LENGTH`
7
+
8
+ By default, the max length of `QUERY_STRING` is `1024 * 10`. But you may want to
9
+ adjust it to accept longer queries in GET requests.
10
+
11
+ For manual install, pass the `PUMA_QUERY_STRING_MAX_LENGTH` option like this:
12
+
13
+ ```
14
+ gem install puma -- --with-cflags="-D PUMA_QUERY_STRING_MAX_LENGTH=64000"
15
+ ```
16
+
17
+ For Bundler, use its configuration system:
18
+
19
+ ```
20
+ bundle config build.puma "--with-cflags='-D PUMA_QUERY_STRING_MAX_LENGTH=64000'"
21
+ ```