puma 5.5.0 → 5.5.2

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data/History.md CHANGED
@@ -1,3 +1,13 @@
1
+ ## 5.5.2 / 2021-10-12
2
+
3
+ * Bugfixes
4
+ * Allow UTF-8 in HTTP header values
5
+
6
+ ## 5.5.1 / 2021-10-12
7
+
8
+ * Security
9
+ * Do not allow LF as a line ending in a header (CVE-2021-41136)
10
+
1
11
  ## 5.5.0 / 2021-09-19
2
12
 
3
13
  * Features
@@ -251,6 +261,11 @@
251
261
  * Support parallel tests in verbose progress reporting ([#2223])
252
262
  * Refactor error handling in server accept loop ([#2239])
253
263
 
264
+ ## 4.3.9 / 2021-10-12
265
+
266
+ * Security
267
+ * Do not allow LF as a line ending in a header (CVE-2021-41136)
268
+
254
269
  ## 4.3.8 / 2021-05-11
255
270
 
256
271
  * Security
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -187,21 +187,38 @@ Need a bit of security? Use SSL sockets:
187
187
  ```
188
188
  $ puma -b 'ssl://127.0.0.1:9292?key=path_to_key&cert=path_to_cert'
189
189
  ```
190
- #### Self-signed SSL certificates (via _localhost_ gem, for development use):
190
+ #### Self-signed SSL certificates (via the [`localhost`] gem, for development use):
191
191
 
192
- Puma supports [localhost](https://github.com/socketry/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, `localhost-authority` can be used only in MRI. To use [localhost](https://github.com/socketry/localhost), you have to `require "localhost/authority"`:
192
+ 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.
193
+
194
+ Puma automatically configures SSL when the [`localhost`] gem is loaded in a `development` environment:
193
195
 
194
196
  ```ruby
195
- # config.ru
197
+ # Add the gem to your Gemfile
198
+ group(:development) do
199
+ gem 'localhost'
200
+ end
201
+
202
+ # And require it implicitly using bundler
203
+ require "bundler"
204
+ Bundler.require(:default, ENV["RACK_ENV"].to_sym)
205
+
206
+ # Alternatively, you can require the gem in config.ru:
196
207
  require './app'
197
- require 'localhost/authority'
208
+ require 'localhost'
198
209
  run Sinatra::Application
210
+ ```
199
211
 
200
- ...
212
+ Additionally, Puma must be listening to an SSL socket:
201
213
 
214
+ ```shell
202
215
  $ puma -b 'ssl://localhost:9292' config.ru
216
+
217
+ # The following options allow you to reach Puma over HTTP as well:
218
+ $ puma -b ssl://localhost:9292 -b tcp://localhost:9393 config.ru
203
219
  ```
204
220
 
221
+ [`localhost`]: https://github.com/socketry/localhost
205
222
 
206
223
  #### Controlling SSL Cipher Suites
207
224
 
@@ -270,7 +287,7 @@ You can also provide a configuration file with the `-C` (or `--config`) flag:
270
287
  $ puma -C /path/to/config
271
288
  ```
272
289
 
273
- 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` or the `RAILS_ENV` environment variables, Puma first looks for configuration at `config/puma/<environment_name>.rb`, and then falls back to `config/puma.rb`.
290
+ 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`.
274
291
 
275
292
  If you want to prevent Puma from looking for a configuration file in those locations, include the `--no-config` flag:
276
293
 
data/docs/architecture.md CHANGED
@@ -4,38 +4,71 @@
4
4
 
5
5
  ![https://bit.ly/2iJuFky](images/puma-general-arch.png)
6
6
 
7
- Puma is a threaded Ruby HTTP application 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
10
 
10
- Puma processes (there can be one or many) accept connections from the socket via a thread (in the [`Reactor`](../lib/puma/reactor.rb) class). The connection, once fully buffered and read, moves in to the `todo` list, where it will be picked up by a free/waiting thread in the threadpool (the [`ThreadPool`](../lib/puma/thread_pool.rb) class).
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).
11
16
 
12
- Puma works in two main modes: cluster and single. In single mode, only one Puma process is booted. In cluster mode, a `master` process is booted, which prepares (and may boot) the application, and then uses the `fork()` system call to create 1 or more `child` processes. These `child` processes all listen to the same socket. The `master` process does not listen to the socket or process requests - its purpose is mostly to manage and listen for UNIX signals and possibly kill or boot `child` processes.
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.
13
24
 
14
- We sometimes call `child` processes (or Puma processes in `single` mode) _workers_, and we sometimes call the threads created by Puma's [`ThreadPool`](../lib/puma/thread_pool.rb) _worker threads_.
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_.
15
28
 
16
29
  ## How Requests Work
17
30
 
18
31
  ![https://bit.ly/2zwzhEK](images/puma-connection-flow.png)
19
32
 
20
33
  * Upon startup, Puma listens on a TCP or UNIX socket.
21
- * The backlog of this socket is configured (with a default of 1024). This determines the size of the queue for unaccepted connections. Generally, this setting is unimportant and will never be hit in production use. If the backlog is full, the connection will be refused by the operating system.
22
- * This socket backlog is distinct from the `backlog` of work as reported by `Puma.stats` or the control server. The backlog as reported by Puma is the number of connections in the process' `todo` set waiting for a thread from the [`ThreadPool`](../lib/puma/thread_pool.rb).
23
- * By default, a single, separate thread (created by the [`Reactor`](../lib/puma/reactor.rb) class) is used to read and buffer requests from the socket.
24
- * When at least one worker thread is available for work, the reactor thread listens to the socket and accepts a request, if one is waiting.
34
+ * The backlog of this socket is configured (with a default of 1024). The
35
+ backlog determines the size of the queue for unaccepted connections.
36
+ Generally, you'll never hit the backlog cap in production. If the backlog is
37
+ full, the operating system refuses 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).
25
47
  * The reactor thread waits for the entire HTTP request to be received.
26
- * 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).
27
- * Once fully buffered and received, the connection is pushed into the "todo" set.
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.
28
53
  * Worker threads pop work off the "todo" set for processing.
29
- * The worker thread processes the request via `call`ing the configured Rack application. The Rack application generates the HTTP response.
30
- * The worker thread writes the response to the connection. Note that while Puma buffers requests via a separate thread, it does not use a separate thread for responses.
31
- * Once done, the thread become available to process another connection in the "todo" set.
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.
32
61
 
33
62
  ### `queue_requests`
34
63
 
35
64
  ![https://bit.ly/2zxCJ1Z](images/puma-connection-flow-no-reactor.png)
36
65
 
37
- The `queue_requests` option is `true` by default, enabling the separate reactor thread used to buffer requests as described above.
66
+ The `queue_requests` option is `true` by default, enabling the separate reactor
67
+ thread used to buffer requests as described above.
38
68
 
39
- If set to `false`, this buffer will not be used for connections while waiting for the request to arrive.
69
+ If set to `false`, this buffer will not be used for connections while waiting
70
+ for the request to arrive.
40
71
 
41
- 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.
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.
@@ -1,10 +1,12 @@
1
1
  # Compile Options
2
2
 
3
- There are some `cflags` provided to change Puma's default configuration for its C extension.
3
+ There are some `cflags` provided to change Puma's default configuration for its
4
+ C extension.
4
5
 
5
6
  ## Query String, `PUMA_QUERY_STRING_MAX_LENGTH`
6
7
 
7
- By default, the max length of `QUERY_STRING` is `1024 * 10`. But you may want to adjust it to allow accept larger queries in GET requests.
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.
8
10
 
9
11
  For manual install, pass the `PUMA_QUERY_STRING_MAX_LENGTH` option like this:
10
12
 
data/docs/deployment.md CHANGED
@@ -1,35 +1,32 @@
1
1
  # Deployment engineering for Puma
2
2
 
3
- Puma is software that is expected to be run in a deployed environment eventually.
4
- You can certainly use it as your dev server only, but most people look to use
5
- it in their production deployments as well.
3
+ Puma expects to be run in a deployed environment eventually. You can use it as
4
+ your development server, but most people use it in their production deployments.
6
5
 
7
- To that end, this is meant to serve as a foundation of wisdom how to do that
8
- in a way that increases happiness and decreases downtime.
6
+ To that end, this document serves as a foundation of wisdom regarding deploying
7
+ Puma to production while increasing happiness and decreasing downtime.
9
8
 
10
9
  ## Specifying Puma
11
10
 
12
- Most people want to do this by putting `gem "puma"` into their Gemfile, so we'll
13
- go ahead and assume that. Go add it now... we'll wait.
11
+ Most people will specify Puma by including `gem "puma"` in a Gemfile, so we'll
12
+ assume this is how you're using Puma.
14
13
 
15
- Welcome back!
14
+ ## Single vs. Cluster mode
16
15
 
17
- ## Single vs Cluster mode
16
+ Initially, Puma was conceived as a thread-only web server, but support for
17
+ processes was added in version 2.
18
18
 
19
- Puma was originally conceived as a thread-only web server, but grew the ability to
20
- also use processes in version 2.
19
+ To run `puma` in single mode (i.e., as a development environment), set the
20
+ number of workers to 0; anything higher will run in cluster mode.
21
21
 
22
- To run `puma` in single mode (e.g. for a development environment) you will need to
23
- set the number of workers to 0, anything above will run in cluster mode.
24
-
25
- Here are some rules of thumb for cluster mode:
22
+ Here are some tips for cluster mode:
26
23
 
27
24
  ### MRI
28
25
 
29
- * Use cluster mode and set the number of workers to 1.5x the number of cpu cores
30
- in the machine, minimum 2.
31
- * Set the number of threads to desired concurrent requests / number of workers.
32
- Puma defaults to 5 and that's a decent number.
26
+ * Use cluster mode and set the number of workers to 1.5x the number of CPU cores
27
+ in the machine, starting from a minimum of 2.
28
+ * Set the number of threads to desired concurrent requests/number of workers.
29
+ Puma defaults to 5, and that's a decent number.
33
30
 
34
31
  #### Migrating from Unicorn
35
32
 
@@ -37,7 +34,7 @@ Here are some rules of thumb for cluster mode:
37
34
  * Set workers to half the number of unicorn workers you're using
38
35
  * Set threads to 2
39
36
  * Enjoy 50% memory savings
40
- * As you grow more confident in the thread safety of your app, you can tune the
37
+ * As you grow more confident in the thread-safety of your app, you can tune the
41
38
  workers down and the threads up.
42
39
 
43
40
  #### Ubuntu / Systemd (Systemctl) Installation
@@ -48,54 +45,58 @@ See [systemd.md](systemd.md)
48
45
 
49
46
  **How do you know if you've got enough (or too many workers)?**
50
47
 
51
- A good question. Due to MRI's GIL, only one thread can be executing Ruby code at a time.
52
- But since so many apps are waiting on IO from DBs, etc., they can utilize threads
53
- to make better use of the process.
48
+ A good question. Due to MRI's GIL, only one thread can be executing Ruby code at
49
+ a time. But since so many apps are waiting on IO from DBs, etc., they can
50
+ utilize threads to use the process more efficiently.
54
51
 
55
- The rule of thumb is you never want processes that are pegged all the time. This
56
- means that there is more work to do than the process can get through. On the other
57
- hand, if you have processes that sit around doing nothing, then they're just eating
58
- up resources.
52
+ Generally, you never want processes that are pegged all the time. That can mean
53
+ there is more work to do than the process can get through. On the other hand, if
54
+ you have processes that sit around doing nothing, then they're just eating up
55
+ resources.
59
56
 
60
- Watch your CPU utilization over time and aim for about 70% on average. This means
61
- you've got capacity still but aren't starving threads.
57
+ Watch your CPU utilization over time and aim for about 70% on average. 70%
58
+ utilization means you've got capacity still but aren't starving threads.
62
59
 
63
60
  **Measuring utilization**
64
61
 
65
- Using a timestamp header from an upstream proxy server (eg. nginx or haproxy), it's
66
- possible to get an indication of how long requests have been waiting for a Puma
67
- thread to become available.
62
+ Using a timestamp header from an upstream proxy server (e.g., `nginx` or
63
+ `haproxy`) makes it possible to indicate how long requests have been waiting for
64
+ a Puma thread to become available.
68
65
 
69
66
  * Have your upstream proxy set a header with the time it received the request:
70
67
  * nginx: `proxy_set_header X-Request-Start "${msec}";`
71
- * haproxy >= 1.9: `http-request set-header X-Request-Start t=%[date()]%[date_us()]`
68
+ * haproxy >= 1.9: `http-request set-header X-Request-Start
69
+ t=%[date()]%[date_us()]`
72
70
  * haproxy < 1.9: `http-request set-header X-Request-Start t=%[date()]`
73
- * In your Rack middleware, determine the amount of time elapsed since `X-Request-Start`.
74
- * To improve accuracy, you will want to subtract time spent waiting for slow clients:
75
- * `env['puma.request_body_wait']` contains the number of milliseconds Puma spent
76
- waiting for the client to send the request body.
77
- * haproxy: `%Th` (TLS handshake time) and `%Ti` (idle time before request) can
78
- can also be added as headers.
71
+ * In your Rack middleware, determine the amount of time elapsed since
72
+ `X-Request-Start`.
73
+ * To improve accuracy, you will want to subtract time spent waiting for slow
74
+ clients:
75
+ * `env['puma.request_body_wait']` contains the number of milliseconds Puma
76
+ spent waiting for the client to send the request body.
77
+ * haproxy: `%Th` (TLS handshake time) and `%Ti` (idle time before request)
78
+ can can also be added as headers.
79
79
 
80
80
  ## Should I daemonize?
81
81
 
82
- Daemonization was removed in Puma 5.0. For alternatives, continue reading.
82
+ The Puma 5.0 release removed daemonization. For older versions and alternatives,
83
+ continue reading.
83
84
 
84
- I prefer to not daemonize my servers and use something like `runit` or `systemd` to
85
- monitor them as child processes. This gives them fast response to crashes and
85
+ I prefer not to daemonize my servers and use something like `runit` or `systemd`
86
+ to monitor them as child processes. This gives them fast response to crashes and
86
87
  makes it easy to figure out what is going on. Additionally, unlike `unicorn`,
87
- puma does not require daemonization to do zero-downtime restarts.
88
+ Puma does not require daemonization to do zero-downtime restarts.
88
89
 
89
- I see people using daemonization because they start puma directly via capistrano
90
- task and thus want it to live on past the `cap deploy`. To these people I say:
91
- You need to be using a process monitor. Nothing is making sure puma stays up in
92
- this scenario! You're just waiting for something weird to happen, puma to die,
93
- and to get paged at 3am. Do yourself a favor, at least the process monitoring
94
- your OS comes with, be it `sysvinit` or `systemd`. Or branch out
95
- and use `runit` or hell, even `monit`.
90
+ I see people using daemonization because they start puma directly via Capistrano
91
+ task and thus want it to live on past the `cap deploy`. To these people, I say:
92
+ You need to be using a process monitor. Nothing is making sure Puma stays up in
93
+ this scenario! You're just waiting for something weird to happen, Puma to die,
94
+ and to get paged at 3 AM. Do yourself a favor, at least the process monitoring
95
+ your OS comes with, be it `sysvinit` or `systemd`. Or branch out and use `runit`
96
+ or hell, even `monit`.
96
97
 
97
98
  ## Restarting
98
99
 
99
100
  You probably will want to deploy some new code at some point, and you'd like
100
- puma to start running that new code. There are a few options for restarting
101
- puma, described separately in our [restart documentation](restart.md).
101
+ Puma to start running that new code. There are a few options for restarting
102
+ Puma, described separately in our [restart documentation](restart.md).
data/docs/plugins.md CHANGED
@@ -3,22 +3,22 @@
3
3
  Puma 3.0 added support for plugins that can augment configuration and service
4
4
  operations.
5
5
 
6
- 2 canonical plugins to look to aid in development of further plugins:
6
+ There are two canonical plugins to aid in the development of new plugins:
7
7
 
8
8
  * [tmp\_restart](https://github.com/puma/puma/blob/master/lib/puma/plugin/tmp_restart.rb):
9
9
  Restarts the server if the file `tmp/restart.txt` is touched
10
10
  * [heroku](https://github.com/puma/puma-heroku/blob/master/lib/puma/plugin/heroku.rb):
11
- Packages up the default configuration used by puma on Heroku (being sunset with the release of Puma 5.0)
11
+ Packages up the default configuration used by Puma on Heroku (being sunset
12
+ with the release of Puma 5.0)
12
13
 
13
- Plugins are activated in a puma configuration file (such as `config/puma.rb'`)
14
+ Plugins are activated in a Puma configuration file (such as `config/puma.rb'`)
14
15
  by adding `plugin "name"`, such as `plugin "heroku"`.
15
16
 
16
- Plugins are activated based simply on path requirements so, activating the
17
- `heroku` plugin will simply be doing `require "puma/plugin/heroku"`. This
18
- allows gems to provide multiple plugins (as well as unrelated gems to provide
19
- puma plugins).
17
+ Plugins are activated based on path requirements so, activating the `heroku`
18
+ plugin is much like `require "puma/plugin/heroku"`. This allows gems to provide
19
+ multiple plugins (as well as unrelated gems to provide Puma plugins).
20
20
 
21
- The `tmp_restart` plugin is bundled with puma, so it can always be used.
21
+ The `tmp_restart` plugin comes with Puma, so it is always available.
22
22
 
23
23
  To use the `heroku` plugin, add `puma-heroku` to your Gemfile or install it.
24
24
 
@@ -26,13 +26,13 @@ To use the `heroku` plugin, add `puma-heroku` to your Gemfile or install it.
26
26
 
27
27
  ## Server-wide hooks
28
28
 
29
- Plugins can use a couple of hooks at server level: `start` and `config`.
29
+ Plugins can use a couple of hooks at the server level: `start` and `config`.
30
30
 
31
- `start` runs when the server has started and allows the plugin to start other
32
- functionality to augment puma.
31
+ `start` runs when the server has started and allows the plugin to initiate other
32
+ functionality to augment Puma.
33
33
 
34
- `config` runs when the server is being configured and is passed a `Puma::DSL`
35
- object that can be used to add additional configuration.
34
+ `config` runs when the server is being configured and receives a `Puma::DSL`
35
+ object that is useful for additional configuration.
36
36
 
37
- Any public methods in [`Puma::Plugin`](../lib/puma/plugin.rb) are the public API that any plugin may
38
- use.
37
+ Public methods in [`Puma::Plugin`](../lib/puma/plugin.rb) are treated as a
38
+ public API for plugins.
@@ -2,16 +2,15 @@
2
2
 
3
3
  ## "Loopback requests"
4
4
 
5
- Be cautious of "loopback requests", where a Rails application executes a request to a server that in turn, results in another request back to the same Rails application before the first request is completed. Having a loopback request will trigger [Rails' load interlock](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/threading_and_code_execution.html#load-interlock) mechanism. The load interlock mechanism prevents a thread from using Rails autoloading mechanism to load constants while the application code is still running inside another thread.
5
+ Be cautious of "loopback requests," where a Rails application executes a request to a server that, in turn, results in another request back to the same Rails application before the first request completes. Having a loopback request will trigger [Rails' load interlock](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/threading_and_code_execution.html#load-interlock) mechanism. The load interlock mechanism prevents a thread from using Rails autoloading mechanism to load constants while the application code is still running inside another thread.
6
6
 
7
7
  This issue only occurs in the development environment as Rails' load interlock is not used in production environments. Although we're not sure, we believe this issue may not occur with the new `zeitwerk` code loader.
8
8
 
9
9
  ### Solutions
10
10
 
11
-
12
11
  #### 1. Bypass Rails' load interlock with `.permit_concurrent_loads`
13
12
 
14
- Wrap the first request inside a block that will allow concurrent loads, [`ActiveSupport::Dependencies.interlock.permit_concurrent_loads`](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/threading_and_code_execution.html#permit-concurrent-loads). Anything wrapped inside the `.permit_concurrent_loads` block will bypass the load interlock mechanism, allowing new threads to access the Rails environment and boot properly.
13
+ Wrap the first request inside a block that will allow concurrent loads: [`ActiveSupport::Dependencies.interlock.permit_concurrent_loads`](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/threading_and_code_execution.html#permit-concurrent-loads). Anything wrapped inside the `.permit_concurrent_loads` block will bypass the load interlock mechanism, allowing new threads to access the Rails environment and boot properly.
15
14
 
16
15
  ###### Example
17
16
 
data/docs/restart.md CHANGED
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
1
- Puma provides three distinct kinds of restart operations, each for different use cases. Hot restarts and phased restarts are described here. The third kind of restart operation is called "refork" and is described in the documentation for [`fork_worker`](fork_worker.md).
1
+ Puma provides three distinct kinds of restart operations, each for different use cases. This document describes "hot restarts" and "phased restarts." The third kind of restart operation is called "refork" and is described in the documentation for [`fork_worker`](fork_worker.md).
2
2
 
3
3
  ## Hot restart
4
4
 
5
- To perform a "hot" restart, Puma performs an `exec` operation to start the process up again, so no memory is shared between the old process and the new process. As a result, it is safe to issue a restart any place where you would manually stop Puma and start it again. In particular, it is safe to upgrade Puma itself using a hot restart.
5
+ To perform a "hot" restart, Puma performs an `exec` operation to start the process up again, so no memory is shared between the old process and the new process. As a result, it is safe to issue a restart at any place where you would manually stop Puma and start it again. In particular, it is safe to upgrade Puma itself using a hot restart.
6
6
 
7
7
  If the new process is unable to load, it will simply exit. You should therefore run Puma under a process monitor when using it in production.
8
8
 
@@ -16,14 +16,14 @@ Any of the following will cause a Puma server to perform a hot restart:
16
16
 
17
17
  ### Supported configurations
18
18
 
19
- * Works in cluster mode and in single mode
19
+ * Works in cluster mode and single mode
20
20
  * Supported on all platforms
21
21
 
22
22
  ### Client experience
23
23
 
24
- * All platforms: for clients with an in-flight request, those clients will be served responses before the connection is closed gracefully. Puma gracefully disconnects any idle HTTP persistent connections before restarting.
24
+ * All platforms: clients with an in-flight request are served responses before the connection is closed gracefully. Puma gracefully disconnects any idle HTTP persistent connections before restarting.
25
25
  * On MRI or TruffleRuby on Linux and BSD: Clients who connect just before the server restarts may experience increased latency while the server stops and starts again, but their connections will not be closed prematurely.
26
- * On Windows and on JRuby: Clients who connect just before a restart may experience "connection reset" errors.
26
+ * On Windows and JRuby: Clients who connect just before a restart may experience "connection reset" errors.
27
27
 
28
28
  ### Additional notes
29
29
 
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ Any of the following will cause a Puma server to perform a hot restart:
32
32
 
33
33
  ## Phased restart
34
34
 
35
- Phased restarts replace all running workers in a Puma cluster. This is a useful way to gracefully upgrade the application that Puma is serving. A phased restart works by first killing an old worker, then starting a new worker, waiting until the new worker has successfully started before proceeding to the next worker. This process continues until all workers have been replaced. The master process is not restarted.
35
+ Phased restarts replace all running workers in a Puma cluster. This is a useful way to upgrade the application that Puma is serving gracefully. A phased restart works by first killing an old worker, then starting a new worker, waiting until the new worker has successfully started before proceeding to the next worker. This process continues until all workers are replaced. The master process is not restarted.
36
36
 
37
37
  ### How-to
38
38
 
data/docs/signals.md CHANGED
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
1
- The [unix signal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_signal) is a method of sending messages between [processes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_(computing)). When a signal is sent, the operating system interrupts the target process's normal flow of execution. There are standard signals that are used to stop a process but there are also custom signals that can be used for other purposes. This document is an attempt to list all supported signals that Puma will respond to. In general, signals need only be sent to the master process of a cluster.
1
+ The [unix signal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_signal) is a method of sending messages between [processes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_(computing)). When a signal is sent, the operating system interrupts the target process's normal flow of execution. There are standard signals that are used to stop a process, but there are also custom signals that can be used for other purposes. This document is an attempt to list all supported signals that Puma will respond to. In general, signals need only be sent to the master process of a cluster.
2
2
 
3
3
  ## Sending Signals
4
4
 
5
- If you are new to signals it can be useful to see how they can be used. When a process is created in a *nix like operating system it will have a [PID - or process identifier](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_identifier) that can be used to send signals to the process. For demonstration we will create an infinitely running process by tailing a file:
5
+ If you are new to signals, it can be helpful to see how they are used. When a process starts in a *nix-like operating system, it will have a [PID - or process identifier](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_identifier) that can be used to send signals to the process. For demonstration, we will create an infinitely running process by tailing a file:
6
6
 
7
7
  ```sh
8
8
  $ echo "foo" >> my.log
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ $ irb
10
10
  > pid = Process.spawn 'tail -f my.log'
11
11
  ```
12
12
 
13
- From here we can see that the tail process is running by using the `ps` command:
13
+ From here, we can see that the tail process is running by using the `ps` command:
14
14
 
15
15
  ```sh
16
16
  $ ps aux | grep tail
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ Process.detach(pid) # https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.1.1/Process.html#method-c-deta
27
27
  Process.kill("TERM", pid)
28
28
  ```
29
29
 
30
- Now you will see via `ps` that there is no more `tail` process. Sometimes when referring to signals the `SIG` prefix will be used for instance `SIGTERM` is equivalent to sending `TERM` via `Process.kill`.
30
+ Now you will see via `ps` that there is no more `tail` process. Sometimes when referring to signals, the `SIG` prefix will be used. For example, `SIGTERM` is equivalent to sending `TERM` via `Process.kill`.
31
31
 
32
32
  ## Puma Signals
33
33
 
@@ -35,13 +35,13 @@ Puma cluster responds to these signals:
35
35
 
36
36
  - `TTIN` increment the worker count by 1
37
37
  - `TTOU` decrement the worker count by 1
38
- - `TERM` send `TERM` to worker. Worker will attempt to finish then exit.
39
- - `USR2` restart workers. This also reloads puma configuration file, if there is one.
40
- - `USR1` restart workers in phases, a rolling restart. This will not reload configuration file.
41
- - `HUP ` reopen log files defined in stdout_redirect configuration parameter. If there is no stdout_redirect option provided it will behave like `INT`
42
- - `INT ` equivalent of sending Ctrl-C to cluster. Will attempt to finish then exit.
38
+ - `TERM` send `TERM` to worker. The worker will attempt to finish then exit.
39
+ - `USR2` restart workers. This also reloads the Puma configuration file, if there is one.
40
+ - `USR1` restart workers in phases, a rolling restart. This will not reload the configuration file.
41
+ - `HUP ` reopen log files defined in stdout_redirect configuration parameter. If there is no stdout_redirect option provided, it will behave like `INT`
42
+ - `INT ` equivalent of sending Ctrl-C to cluster. Puma will attempt to finish then exit.
43
43
  - `CHLD`
44
- - `URG ` refork workers in phases from worker 0, if `fork_workers` option is enabled.
44
+ - `URG ` refork workers in phases from worker 0 if `fork_workers` option is enabled.
45
45
 
46
46
  ## Callbacks order in case of different signals
47
47
 
data/docs/stats.md CHANGED
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1
- ## accessing stats
1
+ ## Accessing stats
2
2
 
3
3
  Stats can be accessed in two ways:
4
4
 
@@ -47,18 +47,18 @@ end
47
47
 
48
48
  ## Explanation of stats
49
49
 
50
- `Puma.stats` returns different information and a different structure depending on if Puma is in single vs cluster mode. There is one top-level attribute that is common to both modes:
50
+ `Puma.stats` returns different information and a different structure depending on if Puma is in single vs. cluster mode. There is one top-level attribute that is common to both modes:
51
51
 
52
- * started_at: when puma was started
52
+ * started_at: when Puma was started
53
53
 
54
54
  ### single mode and individual workers in cluster mode
55
55
 
56
- When Puma is run in single mode, these stats are available at the top level. When Puma is run in cluster mode, these stats are available within the `worker_status` array in a hash labeled `last_status`, in an array of hashes, one hash for each worker.
56
+ When Puma runs in single mode, these stats are available at the top level. When Puma runs in cluster mode, these stats are available within the `worker_status` array in a hash labeled `last_status`, in an array of hashes where one hash represents each worker.
57
57
 
58
58
  * backlog: requests that are waiting for an available thread to be available. if this is above 0, you need more capacity [always true?]
59
59
  * running: how many threads are running
60
- * pool_capacity: the number of requests that the server is capable of taking right now. For example if the number is 5 then it means there are 5 threads sitting idle ready to take a request. If one request comes in, then the value would be 4 until it finishes processing. If the minimum threads allowed is zero, this number will still have a maximum value of the maximum threads allowed.
61
- * max_threads: the maximum number of threads puma is configured to spool up per worker
60
+ * pool_capacity: the number of requests that the server is capable of taking right now. For example, if the number is 5, then it means there are 5 threads sitting idle ready to take a request. If one request comes in, then the value would be 4 until it finishes processing. If the minimum threads allowed is zero, this number will still have a maximum value of the maximum threads allowed.
61
+ * max_threads: the maximum number of threads Puma is configured to spool per worker
62
62
  * requests_count: the number of requests this worker has served since starting
63
63
 
64
64
 
@@ -72,9 +72,9 @@ When Puma is run in single mode, these stats are available at the top level. Whe
72
72
 
73
73
  ### worker status
74
74
 
75
- * started_at: when the worker was started
75
+ * started_at: when the worker started
76
76
  * pid: the process id of the worker process
77
- * index: each worker gets a number. if puma is configured to have 3 workers, then this will be 0, 1, or 2
77
+ * index: each worker gets a number. if Puma is configured to have 3 workers, then this will be 0, 1, or 2
78
78
  * booted: if it's done booting [?]
79
79
  * last_checkin: Last time the worker responded to the master process' heartbeat check.
80
80
  * last_status: a hash of info about the worker's state handling requests. See the explanation for this in "single mode and individual workers in cluster mode" section above.