| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Although it has better implementation status than HTTP/3 server push,
it remains of limited use, with adoption numbers seen as negligible.
Per IETF 102 materials, server push was used only in 0.04% of sessions.
It was considered to be "difficult to use effectively" in RFC 9113.
Its use is further limited by badly matching to fetch/cache/connection
models in browsers, see related discussions linked from [1].
Server push was disabled in Chrome 106 [2].
The http2_push, http2_push_preload, and http2_max_concurrent_pushes
directives are made obsolete. In particular, this essentially reverts
7201:641306096f5b and 7207:3d2b0b02bd3d.
[1] https://jakearchibald.com/2017/h2-push-tougher-than-i-thought/
[2] https://chromestatus.com/feature/6302414934114304
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The directive enables HTTP/2 in the current server. The previous way to
enable HTTP/2 via "listen ... http2" is now deprecated. The new approach
allows to share HTTP/2 and HTTP/0.9-1.1 on the same port.
For SSL connections, HTTP/2 is now selected by ALPN callback based on whether
the protocol is enabled in the virtual server chosen by SNI. This however only
works since OpenSSL 1.0.2h, where ALPN callback is invoked after SNI callback.
For older versions of OpenSSL, HTTP/2 is enabled based on the default virtual
server configuration.
For plain TCP connections, HTTP/2 is now auto-detected by HTTP/2 preface, if
HTTP/2 is enabled in the default virtual server. If preface is not matched,
HTTP/0.9-1.1 is assumed.
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Instead, size of one large_client_header_buffers buffer and all large
client header buffers are used.
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Instead, keepalive_timeout and keepalive_requests are now used. This
is expected to simplify HTTP/2 code and usage. This also matches
directives used by upstream module for all protocols.
In case of default settings, this effectively changes maximum number
of requests per connection from 1000 to 100. This looks acceptable,
especially given that HTTP/2 code now properly supports lingering close.
Further, this changes default keepalive timeout in HTTP/2 from 300 seconds
to 75 seconds. This also looks acceptable, and larger than PING interval
used by Firefox (network.http.spdy.ping-threshold defaults to 58s),
the only browser to use PINGs.
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Instead, the client_header_timeout is now used for HTTP/2 reading.
Further, the timeout is changed to be set once till no further data
left to read, similarly to how client_header_timeout is used in other
places.
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Resources to be pushed are configured with the "http2_push" directive.
Also, preload links from the Link response headers, as described in
https://www.w3.org/TR/preload/#server-push-http-2, can be pushed, if
enabled with the "http2_push_preload" directive.
Only relative URIs with absolute paths can be pushed.
The number of concurrent pushes is normally limited by a client, but
cannot exceed a hard limit set by the "http2_max_concurrent_pushes"
directive.
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The new directive "http2_max_requests" is introduced. From users point of
view it works quite similar to "keepalive_requests" but has significantly
bigger default value that is more suitable for HTTP/2.
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Previously, the stream's window was kept zero in order to prevent a client
from sending the request body before it was requested (see 887cca40ba6a for
details). Until such initial window was acknowledged all requests with
data were rejected (see 0aa07850922f for details).
That approach revealed a number of problems:
1. Some clients (notably MS IE/Edge, Safari, iOS applications) show an error
or even crash if a stream is rejected;
2. This requires at least one RTT for every request with body before the
client receives window update and able to send data.
To overcome these problems the new directive "http2_body_preread_size" is
introduced. It sets the initial window and configures a special per stream
preread buffer that is used to save all incoming data before the body is
requested and processed.
If the directive's value is lower than the default initial window (65535),
as previously, all streams with data will be rejected until the new window
is acknowledged. Otherwise, no special processing is used and all requests
with data are welcome right from the connection start.
The default value is chosen to be 64k, which is bigger than the default
initial window. Setting it to zero is fully complaint to the previous
behavior.
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The SPDY support is removed, as it's incompatible with the new module.
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