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Author SHA1 Message Date
Loïc Hoguin
49be0f57cf
Implement dynamic socket buffer sizes
Cowboy will set the socket's buffer size dynamically to
better fit the current workload. When the incoming data
is small, a low buffer size reduces the memory footprint
and improves responsiveness and therefore performance.
When the incoming data is large, such as large HTTP
request bodies, a larger buffer size helps us avoid
doing too many binary appends and related allocations.

Setting a large buffer size for all use cases is
sub-optimal because allocating more than needed
necessarily results in a performance hit (not just
increased memory usage).

By default Cowboy starts with a buffer size of 8192 bytes.
It then doubles or halves the buffer size depending on
the size of the data it receives from the socket. It
stops decreasing at 8192 and increasing at 131072 by
default.

To keep track of the size of the incoming data Cowboy
maintains a moving average. It allows Cowboy to avoid
changing the buffer too often but still react quickly
when necessary. Cowboy will increase the buffer size
when the moving average is above 90% of the current
buffer size, and decrease when the moving average is
below 40% of the current buffer size.

The current buffer size and moving average are
propagated when switching protocols. The dynamic buffer
is implemented in HTTP/1, HTTP/2 and HTTP/1 Websocket.
HTTP/2 Websocket has it disabled because it doesn't
interact directly with the socket; in that case it
is HTTP/2 that has a dynamic buffer.

The dynamic buffer provides a very large performance improvement
in many scenarios, at minimal cost for others. Because it largely
depend on the underlying protocol the improvements are no all equal.
TLS and compression also impact the results.

The improvement when reading a large request body, with the
requests repeated in a fast loop are:

* HTTP: 6x to 20x faster
* HTTPS: 2x to 6x faster
* H2: 4x to 5x faster
* H2C: 20x to 40x faster

I am not sure why H2C's performance was so bad, especially compared
to H2, when using default buffer sizes. Dynamic buffers make H2C a
lot more viable with default settings.

The performance impact on "hello world" type requests is minimal,
it goes from -5% to +5% roughly.

Websocket improvements vary again depending on the protocol, but
also depending on whether compression is enabled:

* HTTP echo: roughly 2x faster
* HTTP send: roughly 4x faster
* H2C echo: roughly 2x faster
* H2C send: 3x to 4x faster

In the echo test we reply back, and Gun doesn't have the dynamic
buffer optimisation, so that probably explains the x2 difference.

With compression however there isn't much improvement. The results
are roughly within -10% to +10% of each other. Zlib compression
seems to be a bottleneck, or at least to modify the performance
profile to such an extent that the size of the buffer does not
matter. This happens to randomly generated binary data as well
so it is probably not caused by the test data.
2025-02-05 14:29:58 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
f060e6c4ff
Document reset_idle_timeout_on_send option 2024-01-23 14:48:15 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
8337aca4d3
Increase the default max_keepalive HTTP option to 1000
100 is very low for current deployments. 1000 is more
appropriate as a default value.
2020-05-20 11:08:58 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
db0d6f8d25
Use active,N
This reduces the number of times we need to ask for more packets,
and as a result we get a fairly large boost in performance,
especially with HTTP/1.1.

Unfortunately this makes Cowboy require at least Erlang/OTP 21.3+
because the ssl application did not have active,N. For simplicity
the version required will be Erlang/OTP 22+.

In addition this change improves hibernate handling in
cowboy_websocket. Hibernate will now work for HTTP/2 transport
as well, and stray or unrelated messages will no longer cancel
hibernate (the process will handle the message and go back into
hibernation).

Thanks go to Stressgrid for benchmarking an early version of this
commit: https://stressgrid.com/blog/cowboy_performance_part_2/
2020-01-06 12:58:14 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
cc54c207e3
Implement flow control for HTTP/1.1
We now stop reading from the socket unless asked to,
when we reach the request body. The option
initial_stream_flow_size controls how much data
we read without being asked, as an optimization.
We may also have received additional data along
with the request headers.

This commit also reworks the timeout handling for HTTP/1.1
because the stray timeout message was easily reproducible
after implementing the flow control. The issue should be
gone for good this time.
2019-10-09 20:54:33 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
fad0ac8fb6
Document the set_options stream handler command 2019-10-07 12:07:23 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
53bc54a860
Document the logger option 2019-10-07 11:43:44 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
6cc3b0ccca
Document cowboy_stream_h/cowboy_compress_h 2018-11-18 23:03:30 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
8d6d78575f
Add the chunked option for HTTP/1.1
It allows disabling the chunked transfer-encoding. It
can also be disabled on a per-request basis, although
it will be ignored for responses that are not streamed.
2018-11-18 13:25:12 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
15fb3187f5
Add some missing items to a few module changelogs 2018-11-14 18:04:32 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
6f57405b5c
Allow disabling keep-alive for HTTP/1.0 connections 2018-11-14 18:04:32 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
ef05956a5a
Document the proxy_header protocol option 2018-11-14 12:32:31 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
be09711687
Add an option to disable sendfile for a listener 2018-11-03 18:55:40 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
0e629f4799
Add option linger_timeout to cowboy_http 2018-05-16 16:01:30 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
b000d53855
Add more rfc7231 tests and a new max_skip_body_length option
The option controls how much body we accept to skip for HTTP/1.1
connections when the user code did not consume the body fully.
It defaults to 1MB.
2017-12-07 22:33:52 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
6f7b59886e
Remove NumAcceptors argument from start_clear/tls
They are now cowboy:start_clear/3 and cowboy:start_tls/3.
The NumAcceptors argument can be specified via the
num_acceptor transport option. Ranch has been updated
to 1.4.0 to that effect.
2017-06-07 15:15:54 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
7db724f04a
Add inactivity_timeout and other options improvements 2017-05-05 13:48:25 +02:00
Loïc Hoguin
95d2855f62
Add the idle_timeout HTTP/1.1 protocol option
This fixes the connection being dropped because of request_timeout
despite there being some active streams.
2017-05-03 17:44:00 +02:00
Sasan Hezarkhani
56e489f00a
Updates cowboy_http documents changelog
The changelog had a wrong reference to an option that was updated.
`max_header_request_line_length` -> `max_request_line_length`
2016-12-22 23:56:48 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
cbc7056395
Update cowboy_websocket_manual 2016-12-22 18:13:25 +01:00
Loïc Hoguin
a9d9c9d902
Add cowboy_http manual
Updates and replaces the cowboy_protocol manual.
2016-12-22 14:48:02 +01:00